Jean Parisot de Valette

Jean Parisot de Valette
Grand Master of the Order of Saint John
In office
21 August 1557 – 21 August 1568
MonarchPhilip II of Spain
Preceded byClaude de la Sengle
Succeeded byPierre de Monte
Governor of Tripoli
In office
1546–1549
Appointed byJuan de Homedes y Coscon
Preceded byCristofano de Solís Farfan
Succeeded byPedro Nuñez de Herrera
Personal details
Born4 February 1495
Parisot, Rouergue, France
Died21 August 1568 (1568-08-22) (aged 73)
Hospitaller Malta
Resting placeSt. John's Co-Cathedral (originally buried at the Church of Our Lady of Victories)
Domestic partner(s)Catherine Grecque and other mistresses
ChildrenBarthélemy de Valette
Isabella Guasconi
possibly other illegitimate children
Military service
AllegianceSovereign Military Order of Malta Order of Saint John
Years of service1514–1568
RankCaptain General of the Galleys (1554–1557)
Grand Master (1557–1568)
Battles/warsSiege of Rhodes
Great Siege of Malta

Fra' Jean "Parisot" de (la) Valette[a] (French pronunciation: [ʒɑ̃ paʁizo d(ə) (la) valɛt]; c. 4 February 1495 – 21 August 1568) was a French nobleman and 49th Grand Master of the Order of Malta, from 21 August 1557 to his death in 1568. As a Knight Hospitaller, joining the order in the Langue de Provence, he fought with distinction against the Turks at Rhodes. As Grand Master, Valette became the Order's hero and most illustrious leader, commanding the resistance against the Ottomans at the Great Siege of Malta in 1565, sometimes regarded as one of the greatest sieges of all time.[1]

The foundation stone of Valletta was laid by Grandmaster La Valette in 1566. He did not live to see Valletta completed, as he died in 1568 and was succeeded by Grandmaster Pierre de Monte.

Early life

He was born into the noble La Valette family in Quercy, South-western France, which had been an important family in France for many generations, various members having participated in the Crusades. Jean Parisot's grandfather, Bernard de La Valette, was a Knight and King's Orderly, and his father Guillot was a Chevalier de France. Jean Parisot was a distant cousin (through their mutual ancestor Almaric, Seigneur de Parisot) of Jean Louis de Nogaret de La Valette, first Duke of Épernon.[2]

Although his birth year is usually given as 1494, both chroniclers of the Great Siege of Malta, Francisco Balbi di Correggio and Hipolito Sans, say he was 67 at the time, thereby implying that he was born in 1498. In his history of the Order of St. John, the 18th-century historian Abbe Vertot (whose history is largely based on - but often contradicted - the earlier one of Giacomo Bosio) indicates that La Valette was indeed the same age as both Suleiman I and Kızılahmedli Mustafa Pasha (the commander of the Ottoman land forces), which would mean that he was actually 70 years old at the time of the siege.

Early career and rise within the Order

Great Siege of Malta
La Valette's armour at the Palace Armoury.

La Valette joined the Order when he was 20 years old in around 1514, and he never returned to France or his family estates from that day on.[2] He was present during the Great Siege of Rhodes in 1522, and accompanied Grand Master Philippe Villiers de L'Isle-Adam, after the Order's expulsion from Rhodes by the Ottoman Turks under Sultan Suleiman the Magnificent.[3]

After the loss of Rhodes, the Order was granted the Maltese Islands and Tripoli by Emperor Charles V. In 1538 he was imprisoned in the Gozo prison for four months after attacking a man.[4] In 1541 La Valette was involved in a naval battle against Abd-ur-Rahman Kust Aly, in which he was wounded and his galley, the San Giovanni, was captured. La Valette was taken as a galley slave for a year by Barbary pirates under the command of Turgut Reis but was later freed during an exchange of prisoners.[5] In 1546 La Valette became Governor of Tripoli, where he tried to restore order within the vulnerable city.[6]

In 1554 he was elected Captain General of the Order's galleys. This was a great honour to the Langue of Provence, as throughout most of the Order's history, the position of Grand Admiral was usually held by a Knight Grand Cross of the Italian Langue. In that capacity, he won a name that stood conspicuous in that age of great sea captains, and was held in the same regard as the Chevalier Mathurin Romegas – one of the greatest Christian maritime commanders of the age. In fact both sides had extremely talented sailors. If La Valette, Romegas and Juan de Austria could be considered the best commanders that the Christian forces could bring to the sea, the forces of Islam were able to call on the equally outstanding maritime and leadership skills of admirals such as Barbarossa and Dragut. La Valette was described by Abbe de Branthome as being a "very handsome man, speaking several languages fluently including Italian, Spanish, Greek, Arabic and Turkish."[7]

Grandmastership

Coat of arms of La Valette as Grandmaster

In 1557, upon the death of Grand Master Claude de la Sengle, the Knights, mindful of the attack that was sure to come, elected La Valette to be Grand Master. In 1560 he formed an alliance with the Habsburg Empire to reconquer Tripoli, but the expedition resulted in a Christian defeat at the Battle of Djerba. Despite this the Order's galleys were able to rescue several other Christian vessels, and later on in his reign, La Valette greatly strengthened the Order's navy.[2]

Great Siege of Malta

He organised the defence of Malta, fought during the siege, and successfully repulsed the Turks at the Great Siege of Malta in 1565. During the siege the vastly outnumbered Christians held out for over 3 months against an Ottoman force containing no less than 30,000 soldiers, including the Janissaries, as well as the Sultan's fleet of some 193 ships. The battle saw the fall of Fort St. Elmo after about a month of fierce fighting, but the Order managed to hold out in Birgu and Senglea until a relief force arrived. Ottoman specialist engineers had originally assessed the fortification of Saint Elmo, from local informants and conducting reconnoitring missions, saying it would fall in three days.

Knight Commander Le Sande, who had sailed from Sicily with reinforcements, ordered a general charge from the Maltese hills toward the end of the siege. They attacked the Ottoman forces until the Ottoman forces retreated to the sea, and at that point the sea had completely changed colour to red (from the sheer volume of blood lost). It was at that point the Ottoman forces boarded their ships, directed their course back to Constantinople. Whilst shaping course back to Constantinople they momentarily contemplated counterattacking. However, they had lost too many men, supplies, and the morale at that point to launch any substantial counterattack.

During the first days after the siege a Maltese soldier sitting around a campfire at night began to frame the words of a song which would later become famous in the Mediterranean:

Malta of gold, Malta of silver, Malta of precious metal,
We shall never take you.
No, not even if you were as soft as a gourd,
Not even if you were only protected by an onion skin!

And from her ramparts a voice replied:

I am she who has decimated the galleys of the Turk -
And all the warriors of Constantinople and Galatia!

As a result of the Order's victory La Valette gained much prestige in Europe, but he declined the offer of a cardinal's hat in order to maintain independence from the papacy. This has been attributed to his sense of modesty and his humility as a warrior monk.

Building of Valletta and death

After the great siege, he commissioned the construction of the new city of Valletta in 1566, laying the first stone with his own hands. This took place on the slopes of Mount Sciberras, where the flower of the Turkish army had died whilst trying to storm Fort Saint Elmo, which the Turks thought would fall within three or four days, but which, due to the bravery of the defenders, held out for 30 days.

The city named after its founder - Humilissima Civitas Vallettae - became known as the most aristocratic and exclusive fortress in Europe - a city most often referred to as "Superbissima" - the "Most Proud". Valletta remains the Maltese capital to this day.

La Valette suffered a stroke while praying in a chapel and died soon after on 21 August 1568, exactly eleven years after he became Grandmaster. La Valette never saw the completed city of Valletta. His tomb (in the form of a sarcophagus) can be found in the Crypt of the Conventual Church of the Order (now St. John's Co-Cathedral), situated within the walls of Valletta.[7] The inscription on his tomb, which was composed by his Latin Secretary, Sir Oliver Starkey, the last Knight of the English Langue at the time of the Great Siege, states in Latin:

Here lies La Valette.
Worthy of eternal honour,
He who was once the scourge of Africa and Asia,
And the shield of Europe,
Whence he expelled the barbarians by his Holy Arms,
Is the first to be buried in this beloved city,
Whose founder he was.

Personal life

La Valette has been referred to as one who never broke his vows, but it has been claimed that he had a mistress while in Rhodes called Catherine nicknamed Greque (Greek), and that he had an illegitimate son from her who was called Barthélemy de La Valette. Documentary evidence has been found by Bonello that proves Barthélemy was legitimatized in 1568 by a decree of King Charles IX of France.[8]

Claims have also been put forth that La Valette had at least another child, Isabella Guasconi, after a presumed affair with the wife of a Rhodiot nobleman of Florentine descent. Isabella later married a Florentine gentleman Stefano Buonaccorsi, but he murdered her on 31 July 1568, sometime after their marriage. After the murder, Buonaccorsi escaped the islands with Isabella's wealth and was never heard from again.[9]

Legacy

Pjazza Jean de Valette, Valletta.

La Valette is well known for being the Grandmaster who won the Great Siege and founded Valletta. A street in the town of Naxxar as well as the flagship of Virtu Ferries MV Jean de La Valette are both named after him. La Valette was also featured on Maltese stamps, coins, banknotes and telecards a number of times.

Jean de Valette Square

In 2012, a square was inaugurated in Valletta named Pjazza Jean de La Valette which also features a statue of the Grandmaster. The statue is 2.5m high and was cast in bronze by the local sculptor Joseph Chetcuti. In the statue, La Valette is shown in armour and holding Valletta's plan in one hand and a sword in the other.[10][11]

The new square in Valletta named after the Grandmaster uses the name de Valette instead of de La Valette
explanation of Piazza de Valette
La Valette

For many years, the widely accepted version of the Grandmaster's surname was de La Valette. However, during the unveiling of the statue at Pjazza Jean de Valette in November 2012, judge and historian Giovanni Bonello stated that the Grandmaster always signed his name as de Valette without the La. A week later, Désireé von la Valette Saint Georges, a descendant of the Grandmaster, stated that the family name was de la Valette not de Valette and since then, a dispute has started as to what his name actually was.[12]

Members of the various branches of the Valette family actually used both versions at the time, but the Grandmaster himself never used the La.[13][14] In fact, all 138 coins and 19 medals minted by the Order during de Valette's reign show the names de Valette, de Valetta or just Valette. Bonello additionally stated that the La possibly originated since the city of Valletta was commonly called La Valletta, so people started including the La and sometimes the double l in the Grandmaster's name.[15]

It is worth noting that an interesting development had occurred in 1539 when de Vallette was some 45 years old and already in Malta. It was then that Francis I, seeing the wide linguistic disparity in the use of various Romance and Germanic languages in France, enacted the Ordinance of Villers-Cotterêts which prescribed the use of standard French, mostly as spoken in northern France and in the Paris area where the langues d'oui prevailed.

The name de Valette is now used in Malta, although many still refer to him as de La Valette due to the collective memory.[16] The Order's successor, the Sovereign Military Order of Malta, call the Grandmaster Fra' Jean de La Vallette-Parisot.[17]

In literature

Due to his key role in holding Malta during the siege of 1565, de Valette has appeared as a main and supporting character in several works of literature:

  • Marthese Fenech'sSiege of Malta Trilogy includes Eight-Pointed Cross (2011), Falcon's Shadow (2020), and Ash Fall (2022), and all three novels feature Valette.
  • Angels in Iron is a 1997 pseudo-historic novel by Nicholas Prata; De Valette is the main character.[18]
  • Ironfire: An Epic Novel of War and Love is a 2005 adventure novel by David Ball. De Valette is a supporting character.[19]
  • The Religion: A Novel (2007) – by Tim Willocks De Valette is a supporting character.
  • The Course of Fortune (2015) – by Tony Rothman de Valette is a supporting character, with surname name de Valette and portrayed according to recent historical evidence.
  • The Great Siege is a 1961 historic account of the 1565 siege, as drawn from historic documents.
  • Πανάκεια (2008) / Panacea, a Greek adventure novel by Παναγιώτης Κονιδάρης. De Valette is a supporting character.

Further reading

See also

References

  1. ^ Hindley, Geoffrey (2009). Medieval Sieges & Siegecraft. Skyhorse Publishing. p. 158. ISBN 978-1602396333.
  2. ^ a b c "Jean Parisot de La Vallette". South African Relief Organisation of the Order of Malta. Retrieved 18 August 2014.
  3. ^ "6 little-known facts about Jean de Valette". The Malta Independent. 28 June 2020. Retrieved 2020-08-08.
  4. ^ "Old Prison". Heritage Malta. Archived from the original on 9 March 2021. Retrieved 3 April 2020.
  5. ^ "Jean Parisot de la Valette". Knights of Malta. Archived from the original on 17 August 2010. Retrieved 18 August 2014.
  6. ^ Vella, Andrew P. (1975). "The Order of Malta and the defence of Tripoli 1530–1551" (PDF). Melita Historica. 6 (4): 362–381. Archived from the original (PDF) on 9 July 2020.
  7. ^ a b "Grand Master Jean Parisot de Valette (1557–1568)". St John's Co-Cathedral. Archived from the original on 19 August 2014. Retrieved 18 August 2014.
  8. ^ Bonello, Giovanni (26 May 2013). "The love children of Grand Master Jean de La Valette". Times of Malta. Retrieved 18 August 2014.
  9. ^ Bonello, Giovanni (2 June 2013). "Murder of Grand Master de Valette's love-daughter, Isabella Buonaccorsi". Times of Malta. Retrieved 18 August 2014.
  10. ^ "New de Valette Square inaugurated in Valletta". Times of Malta. 21 November 2012. Retrieved 18 August 2014.
  11. ^ Rix, Juliet (2015). Malta and Gozo. Bradt Travel Guides. ISBN 9781784770259. p. 118.
  12. ^ Carabott, Sarah (27 November 2012). "Family of Grand Master say name is wrong". Times of Malta. Retrieved 18 August 2014.
  13. ^ De Lucca, Denis (13 January 2013). "de Valette or de La Valette?". Times of Malta. Retrieved 18 August 2014.
  14. ^ Zammit Ciantar, Joe (12 May 2013). "It is Grand Master Jean De la Valette". Times of Malta. Retrieved 18 August 2014.
  15. ^ Bonello, Giovanni (23 December 2012). "Is it La Valette or De Valette?". Times of Malta. Retrieved 18 August 2014.
  16. ^ Carabott, Sarah (10 December 2012). "The Grand Master we know". Times of Malta. Retrieved 18 August 2014.
  17. ^ "The 79 Grand Masters". Order of Malta. Archived from the original on 13 November 2011. Retrieved 18 August 2014.
  18. ^ Angels in Iron
  19. ^ Ironfire by David Ball

Notes

  1. ^ His official name was Jean de Valette, while "Parisot" was a commonly used nickname. He is often referred to as "Jean de La Valette" but he never actually used the "la" during his lifetime (although members of the Valette family used both versions at the time).
Preceded by Governor of Tripoli
1546–1549
Succeeded by
Preceded by Grand Master of the Knights Hospitaller
1557–1568
Succeeded by