Venice, experiencing a long period of financial…
October 1644 CE
Venice, experiencing a long period of financial stagnation, has avoided foreign entanglements.
Pursuing a policy of peace and neutrality, the republic has made no attempt to provoke the Ottomans.
However, the Knights of Malta regularly raid Turkish ships from their base on Malta.
The Knights on September 28 had attacked an Ottoman convoy on its way from Constantinople to Alexandria, aboard which are a number of pilgrims bound for Mecca, including the exiled Kızlar Ağa (Chief Black Eunuch) Sünbül Ağa, the kadi of Cairo and the nurse of the future Sultan Mehmed IV.
Sünbül Ağa and most of the important pilgrims had been slain during the fight, while three hundred and fifty men and thirty women have been taken to be sold as slaves.
The Knights load their loot on a ship, which docks at a small harbor on the southern coast of Venetian-held Crete for a few days, where it disembarks a number of sailors and enslaved people.
The Ottomans are enraged at the incident, and the Porte accuses the Venetians of deliberate collusion with the Knights, something the Venetians vehemently deny.
With the hawkish party dominant in the Ottoman court, the incident is seen as a perfect pretext for war with a weakened Venice.