Massacre in Nicosia
The Massacre in Nicosia was the massacre of over 20,000 Greeks in Nicosia, Cyprus, committed by forces of the Ottoman Empire during the Ottoman–Venetian War of 1570–1573.
Events
On 3 July 1570, Cyprus was invaded by troops of the Ottoman Empire. On 22 July Piali Pasha, having captured Paphos, Limassol and Larnaca, marched his army towards Nicosia and laid siege to the city. The city managed to last for over a month under siege until its fall on 9 September 1570. On that day, the 15th assault succeeded in breaching the walls after the defenders had exhausted their ammunition. Approximately 20,000 Greek inhabitants died during and following the siege and every church, public building, and palace was looted. Even the city's pigs, regarded as unclean by Muslims, were killed, and only women and boys who were captured to be sold as slaves were spared.A combined Christian fleet of 200 vessels, composed of Venetian, Papal, and Neapolitan/Genoese/Spanish squadrons that had belatedly been assembled at Crete by late August and was sailing towards Cyprus, turned back when it received news of Nicosia's fall.
Aftermath
Nicosia had an estimated population of 21,100 before the Ottoman invasion and, based on the Ottoman census data of 1572, the population was reduced to 1,100–1,200. The devastation of the city was so extensive that, for several years after the conquest, a number of Cypriot villages had a larger population than the city. The main churches, including Saint [Sophia Cathedral, Nicosia|Saint Sophia Cathedral], were converted into mosques.Arnaude de Rocas is a legendary figure from Cyprus, remembered there as a martyr and a Cypriot heroine.