Battle of Vajkal Beteja e Vaikalit | |||||||
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Part of Albanian–Ottoman Wars (1432–1479) | |||||||
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Belligerents | |||||||
League of Lezhe | Ottoman Empire | ||||||
Commanders and leaders | |||||||
Skanderbeg | Ballaban Badera | ||||||
Strength | |||||||
4,500 [6] –5,500 [1] | 18,000 [1] | ||||||
Casualties and losses | |||||||
Unknown; Heavy casualties | Unknown; Heavy casualties |
The Battle of Vajkal or Battle of Valkal (Albanian : Beteja e Vaikalit) was fought in April of 1465 between the Albanian forces of Skanderbeg and an Ottoman army under Ballaban Pasha, an Ottoman commander of Albanian origin. Ballaban Badera, the new Ottoman sanjakbey of the Sanjak of Ohrid, was sent by Sultan Mehmed II to attack Albanian forces. The Albanians were ultimately victorious, but both sides suffered heavy losses. Some of Skanderbeg's officers were captured by the fleeing Ottomans and were then summarily executed.
The Vajkal valley is situated in a region that functions as the passage between Dibra and Mati. [7] Although different scholarly opinions have been formulated on the location of the battle of Vajkal - including possible locations near Dibra and Ohrid - the battle undoubtedly occurred near the modern village of Vajkal in Dibër and the corresponding Fusha e Vajkalit (the Field of Vajkal), which correspond best to the description of Vajkal given by Marin Barleti. The Tower of Skanderbeg was situated in Vajkal, overlooking the valley and the important road passing through it, and a variety of toponyms in the region related to both Vajkal and Skanderbeg are also considered to act as plausible evidence for the region being the site of the battle. The oldest form of the name 'Vajkal' is believed to have been Valkal, stemming from the Latin "vall(is)callis" (valley, road) or a compound of the Albanian words Val (valley) and Kalë (horse), meaning the "Valley of Horses". [1]
Sultan Mehmed II of the Ottoman Empire had given Ballaban Badera, the sanjakbey of the Sanjak of Ohrid, [8] the reins of the Ottoman campaigns in Albania. Ballaban had been a peasant in Skanderbeg's ancestral domains and was raised through the devsirme system to become a Janissary for the Sultan, much like Skanderbeg. [9]
Ballaban, conscious of the possibility of defeat, presented Skanderbeg with a series of gifts in the hopes that if the Ottoman commander was captured, the Albanian chieftain would mercifully spare him. Ballaban had known Skanderbeg when they were both in the Ottoman court, but he had always held great animosity towards Skanderbeg. Ballaban tried to come off as Skanderbeg's personal friend and ally, but he was always ready to move against him. Once he had learned that Skanderbeg had been camped in Vajkal with his men, Ballaban began his campaign against Skanderbeg. [6]
According to Marin Barleti, Skanderbeg's camp was situated in the open valley of Vajkal, whilst the Ottomans had set up camp on the other side of the valley near a mountain which marked the end of the Vajkal valley. [1]
Skanderbeg had been expecting an Ottoman assault and ensured that his troops were constantly prepared. The day before the battle, he formulated his plan of action; he aimed to trick the Ottomans into thinking that his forces were too weak and too frightened to fight. When the Ottomans were finally lured into the valley under a false sense of security, the Albanian warriors would attack them. The Ottoman forces would then be pursued all the way up to the hills and the Albanians would stop there to avoid a counterattack. [6]
The next day Ballaban came past the hills but unexpectedly charged at Skanderbeg's forces. Skanderbeg allowed them to approach before launching his own counterattack. A bloody battle followed, resulting in heavy casualties for both sides. Nonetheless, Skanderbeg and the Albanians held their ground and were victorious despite their losses as the Ottomans soon began to flee. [6] [1] Skanderbeg's plan had worked well and most of Skanderbeg's forces had halted after pursuing the Ottomans up to the hills. However, some of the Albanian officers failed to follow Skanderbeg's orders and continued to pursue the Ottomans, who eventually regrouped and ambushed these officers and their men. [10] [6] After being ambushed by the fleeing Ottomans, the Albanian officers fled to the top of a hill where they encountered Ottoman infantrymen. The Albanians had wrongfully believed the infantrymen to be Christians and were subsequently captured and sent to Ballaban Badera. [11]
After the Ottomans regrouped with their newly-acquired captives, Ballaban ordered his men to march back to Constantinople with the prisoners. [6] Among the Albanians captured by Ottoman soldiers after the battle were distinguished leaders such as Moisi Golemi, Vladan Gjurica (a relative of Skanderbeg), Muzakë Arianiti (a nephew of Skanderbeg), Gjin Muzaka, Gjon Përlati, Nikollë Berisha, Gjergj Kuka and Gjin Maneshi. [6] [1] Skanderbeg sent an ambassador to the Sultan begging him to return his officers unharmed or else he would execute his own prisoners of war. The Sultan was not moved and refused to free them after being informed of their importance by Ballaban Badera. The Sultan ordered a fifteen-day torture and execution of the Albanian officers in which they were skinned alive one by one. After their deaths, their bodies were thrown to the dogs. [10] [6] [11]
Mehmed ordered Ballaban to continue his campaigns against Albania. Ballaban invaded Albania again, only to be soundly defeated. [6] In the Second Battle of Vajkal in August of 1465, an Ottoman army of 24,000 men under Ballaban Pasha were utterly defeated by an Albanian army of 12,000 men under Skanderbeg. [1]
Skenderbeu korri fitore të shumta kundër armiqve më të mëdhenj në numër në një varg betejash si në Torvioll, Mokrenë, Oranik, Drin, Vajkal, Barletë etj...
... renegati Ballaban Pasha prej Mati, në inkursionin e tij të parë më 1465 vuri në shenjë Matin. Por Skënderbeu si vendosi kampin ne Petralbë, me 8 mijë kalorës e 4 mijë këmbësorë i doli para në Valkal te Bulqizës dhe e dërmoi...
... me 18,000 ushtarë në Vajkal të Bulqizës, por pësoi disfatë. Mirëpo, kjo fitore i kushtoi shtrejt Skënderbeut...
Në prill të vitit 1465, Ballaban Pasha me 18,000 ushtarë pësoi disfatë në Vajkal të Bulqizës...
Balaban Aga, qui a accordé des timar à ses propres soldats dans la Basse- Dibra et dans la Çermeniça, ainsi qu'à son neveu à Mati, doit être ce même Balaban Aga, sancakbeyi d'Ohrid, connu pour ses batailles sanglantes contre Skanderbeg.
Marin Barleti was a historian, humanist and Catholic priest from Shkodër. He is considered the first Albanian historian because of his 1504 eyewitness account of the 1478 siege of Shkodra. Barleti is better known for his second work, a biography on Skanderbeg, translated into many languages in the 16th to the 20th centuries.
The League of Lezhë, also commonly referred to as the Albanian League, was a military and diplomatic alliance of the Albanian aristocracy, created in the city of Lezhë on 2 March 1444. The League of Lezhë is considered the first unified independent Albanian country in the Medieval age, with Skanderbeg as leader of the regional Albanian chieftains and nobles united against the Ottoman Empire. Skanderbeg was proclaimed "Chief of the League of the Albanian People," while Skanderbeg always signed himself as "DominusAlbaniae".
Moisi Komnen Arianiti, also known as Moisi Golemi and Moisi of Dibra, was an Albanian nobleman and a commander of the League of Lezhë. In 1443–44 he captured all Ottoman holdings in the area of Dibër region. For a brief period in the 1450s he joined the Ottomans, but soon abandoned them and returned to the League. He died in 1464, when he was executed publicly in Constantinople after being captured by the Ottoman army.
Ballaban Badera was an Ottoman military officer from Albania. A conscript of the Devshirme child soldier system, he became a Pasha. Ballaban Badera was said to be the first one who climbed the walls of Constantinople during its siege. He held the position of sanjakbey of the Sanjak of Ohrid in 1464 and 1465.
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