Jérôme Maurand
Jérôme Maurand was a 16th-century French priest of
Five French galleys under
Jérôme Maurand wrote a detailed account in Itinéraire d'Antibes à Constantinonple.[4] The fleet of Barbarossa had spent the winter of 1443–1544 in Toulon. The Franco-Ottoman fleet left Marseille on 23 May 1544. They arrived in Constantinople on 10 August 1544 to meet with Suleiman and give him an account of the joint campaign.[5] Polin and Maurand left Constantinople on 9 September 1544, and were back in Toulon on 2 October 1544.[5]
Maurand lamented about the depredation to his Christian coreligionists occasioned by the campaign: "To see so many poor Christians, and especially so many little boys and girls [enslaved] caused a very great pity." He also mentioned "the tears, wailings and cries of these poor Lipariotes, the father regarding his son and the mother her daughter... weeping while leaving their own city in order to be brought into slavery by those dogs who seemed like rapacious wolves amidst timid lambs".[6]
Notes
References
- Yann Bouvier, Récits de voyage et représentation de l'espace. La Méditerranée de Jérôme Maurand, un espace vécu, Mémoire de Master, Dir. par Pierre-Yves Beaurepaire, Université de Nice, 2007, 292 p. [1]
- Roger Crowley, Empire of the sea, 2008 Faber & Faber ISBN 978-0-571-23231-4
- Garnier, Edith L'Alliance Impie Editions du Felin, 2008, Paris
- "A Vile, Infamous, Diabolical Treaty" The Franco-Ottoman Alliance of Francis I and the Eclipse of the Christendom Ideal, by Anthony Carmen Piccirillo, Senior Honors Thesis in History, Georgetown University 2009 [2]