Francesco Antonio Bertucci

Francesco Antonio Bertucci (Serbo-Croatian: Franjo Antun Brtučević, fl. 1595), was a Dalmatian Capuchin[3] and Knight Hospitaller[2][4] of disputed origin[5][6][7] who served as the titular prior of the commandry of the Order at the monastery located in Vrana, a town in present-day Croatia.[2] He is known for his remarkably consistent efforts to turn Habsburg-Ottoman Long War into crusade of Christian alliance against the Ottomans.[8]

Francesco Antonio Bertucci
Born
Franjo Antun Brtučević

DiedAutumn 1626[1]
NationalityHabsburg, Venetian
Other namesBertuzzi, Bartuccius[2]
Occupation(s)Dalmatian friar, Knight Hospitaller, adventurer and an agent of the Holy Roman Empire
Known forgaining support of the Holy Roman Empire and Pope for his plans to organize Holy League against the Ottomans

Originally from the town of Hvar, Bertucci was a relative of the Dalmatian poets Jerolim (Gerolamo) and Hortenzije Brtučević (Ortensio Bertucci).

Bertucci was a member of the Holy League of Pope Clement VIII.

In 1592 Bertucci was in Rome where he received Pope's order to catch and kill Marco Sciarra, the leader of rebels, which he did in April 1593.[3]

Plans for Anti-Ottoman crusade

Bertucci was at the heart of 1596 plans for the uprising in the eastern Adriatic region.[8] According to some suggestions, the main reason for his anti-Ottoman activities were his plans to recapture the Priory of Vrana from Ottomans.[8]

The contemporary Venetian sources and later sources that rely on them considered Bertucci as papal agent, while some other sources simply considered him as an adventurer who managed to achieve access to the Pope through emperor Ferdinand II.[8] Elisabeth Springer, an Austrian scholar who studied the career of Bertucci, emphasize that Bertucci's earlier attempts to access the pope (before he gained support of Ferdinand II) aimed to convince him to inspire general anti-Ottoman uprising in the Balkans and organize an anti-Ottoman crusade (Holy League), were not successful. Springer further concluded that Bertucci was actually an agent of Holy Roman Empire who initially gained support of Archduke Ferdinand of Graz and later emperor Ferdinand II and members of his court, for his anti-Ottoman plans.[8] According to Bertuccis plan, the rebels (including Uskoks) would first capture Klis, Herceg Novi and Scutari from the Ottomans.[9] That would trigger large Ottoman naval expedition into north Adriatic and draw Venetians, who otherwise refused to join the crusade, to join the alliance against the Ottomans.[8]

In the early 1590s the seat of anti-Ottoman conspiracy of Bertucci and his associates was in Ragusa.[8] According to some rumours, the Republic of Ragusa was ready to expel them because the Ottomans offered them some benefits if they did.[10] The seat of anti-Ottoman conspiracy was then moved to Split.[11]

In 1595 Bertucci tried to convince the Metropolitan of Cetinje Rufim Njeguš to accept union with Catholic Church.[12]

Battle of Klis

On 7 April 1596 a group of Uskoks who were Habsburg citizens and about thirty Venetian citizens attacked the Ottoman-held fortress of Klis (Battle of Klis (1596)) and captured it with the support of some members of the Ottoman garrison.[8] The Habsburgs and Papal State joint troops, led personally by Antonio Bertucci, were sent to reinforce weak Christian garrison in the newly captured fortress.[8] The releaf troops were supplied from the port of Senj.[13] The Ottoman forces first defeated reinforcement troops and then reoccupied Klis.[8] The Habsburg general who was supposed to lead relief troops blamed Bertucci for this defeat.[8] Bertucci was captured during this battle and briefly held in Ottoman captivity until he was ransomed.[8] This defeat had negative influence to his further attempts to convince Balkan Christian rulers to rebel against the Ottomans.[8]

References

  1. (Krokar 1973, p. 29): "Bertucci died soon after the visit to Spain, most likely in autumn of 1626"
  2. (Krokar 1973, p. 23)
  3. Elsie, Robert (2013). A Biographical Dictionary of Albanian History. I.B.Tauris. p. 57. ISBN 978-1-78076-431-3. Retrieved 25 December 2017.
  4. (Klaić 1973, p. 401)
  5. Sources variously describe him as Dalmatian, Italian, Albanian or Serbian. The Croatian Encyclopedia places his family's origin in Apulia, Italy.
  6. Hrvatska enciklopedija, Bartučević http://www.enciklopedija.hr/natuknica.aspx?id=6101
  7. Robert Elsie (2013). A Biographical Dictionary of Albanian History. I.B.Tauris, 2013. ISBN 9781780764313.
  8. (Krokar 1973, p. 30)
  9. umjetnosti, Jugoslavenska akademija znanosti i (1962). Starine. p. 360.
  10. Zlatar, Zdenko (1 January 1992). Our Kingdom Come: The Counter-Reformation, the Republic of Dubrovnik, and the Liberation of the Balkan Slavs. East European Monographs. p. 269. ISBN 978-0-88033-239-2. The latter was rumoured to be ready to expel Komulovic, "due to its (Ragusan government's) benefits derived from the Turks
  11. (zadruga 1993, p. 304)
  12. Posebna izdanja. Vol. 155. Srpska akademija nauka i umetnosti. 1950. p. 18. Retrieved 24 December 2017. У том смислу радио је у Црној Гори, 1595, фрањевац Фране Антун Бертучевић који је покушао да обрати црногорског владику Херу- вима (Ник. Милаш, Св. Василије Острошки (Дубровник 1913) стр. 29).
  13. (Krokar 1973, p. 31)

Sources

Further reading

  • Gligor Stanojević (1973). Senjski uskoci. Vojnoizdavački zavod.
  • Kukuljević Sakcinski, Ivan (1886). "Franjo Antun Brtučević prior Vranski" (PDF). Priorat vranski sa vitezi templari i hospitalci sv. Ivana u Hrvatskoj (in Croatian). Zagreb. p. 138. Retrieved 15 September 2017. Nakon duga reda svjetskih upravljatelja priorata vranskog pojavljuje se početkom 17 stoljeća opet jedan prior vranski reda sv. Ivana jerusolimškog. Prior taj bijaše Franjo Antun Brtučević. Franjo Brtučević poteče od stare vlasteoske porodice hvarske. Taljanski pisao se, po običaju onoga vremena Bertuzzi i Bertucci, hrvatski zvala i pisala se porodica Bartučević i Bertučević.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
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