Holiday Villas

in the Peloponnese

 

 
 
 
 
 

 
 
Autour de Methoni - Pylos & Navarino
     
   
     
     

Nous faisons des excuses parce qu'une partie de ce texte est seulement en anglais à l'heure actuelle

Pylos

La ville de Pylos se situe à 8 Km de Methoni (10 minutes en voiture ou en bus) et est l’une des plus belles villes du Péloponnèse. Les maisons blanches se dressent sur les coteaux, depuis le port protégé de la haute mer par la baie de Navarino et l’île de Sphacteria, où les athéniens avaient finalement battu les spartiates en l’an 425 av JC. La place centrale est ombragée, grâce à d’immenses platanes, et en été, les habitants adorent s’assoir à la terrasse de leur bistrot favori pour boire du café ou de l’ouzo. Si vous souhaitez admirer la baie dans toute sa splendeur, laissez-vous tenter par un tour en bateau.

 

 

The Battle of Navarino Bay

An Allied force was sent in July 1827 to secure an end of military operations in Greece after the Ottomans adopted a ‘scorched earth’ policy in the Peloponnese to crush the Greek rebellion; starving the population and shipping civilians off to slavery in Egypt. The contradictory treaty authorised the allied commanders to “take all measures that circumstances may suggest” whilst forbidding them from taking sides in the conflict.
On 13 October Vice-Admiral Codrington , a hero of The Battle Of Trafalgar with 44 years experience, was joined off Navarino by his allies, a French squadron and a Russian squadron.

On 18 October Codrington decided to enter Navarino bay and anchor his ships face-to-face with the Ottoman/Egyptian fleet. Burning villages were visible from the Allied ships and the Messinians were close to mass starvation.

As his ship anchored in the middle of the Ottoman line, Codrington ordered a brass band to play on deck to convey his peaceful intentions. However, the entire crew was at battle stations. Meanwhile the Allied vessels moved into position, under orders to open fire only if they were attacked. Despite this, the stalemate didn’t last long and within a short time, there was a full-scale battle.

The Allies’ superior firepower was decisive. Within four hours the Ottoman fleet had been destroyed. Of the entire armada of  78 vessels, only 8 remained seaworthy.

As the guns fell silent in Navarino Bay, news of the outcome raced over the Peloponnese and to the rest of Greece. In village after village, church bells started pealing continuously as night fell. As people rushed into village squares, they were greeted by the news that the Ottoman Sultan and his hated vassal Ibrahim Pasha no longer had a Mediterranean fleet. Wild rejoicing broke out. Huge bonfires were lit on the mountaintops of the Peloponnese and Mt Parnassos in central Greece. Church bells all over Greece continued tolling for three days and nights.

The Battle of Navarino was the decisive turning point of the Greek War of Independence. The battle irreparably crippled Ottoman/Egyptian sea power, ensuring the survival of the fledgling Greek state.