the spring of 1294 it broke into flame, in consequence of the seizure
in the Grecian seas of three Genoese vessels by a Venetian fleet.
This led to an action with a Genoese convoy which sought redress. The
fight took place off Ayas in the Gulf of Scanderoon,[6] and though the
Genoese were inferior in strength by one-third they gained a signal
victory, capturing all but three of the Venetian galleys, with rich
cargoes, including that of Marco Basilio (or Basegio), the commodore.
This victory over their haughty foe was in its completeness evidently
a surprise to the Genoese, as well as a source of immense exultation,
which is vigorously expressed in a ballad of the day, written in a
stirring salt-water rhythm.[7] It represents the Venetians, as they
enter the bay, in arrogant mirth reviling the Genoese with very
unsavoury epithets as having deserted their ships to skulk on shore.
They are described as saying:—
“‘Off they’ve slunk! and left us nothing;
We shall get nor prize nor praise;
Nothing save those crazy timbers
Only fit to make a blaze.’”
So they advance carelessly—
“On they come! But lo their blunder!
When our lads start up anon,
Breaking out like unchained lions,
With a roar, ‘Fall on! Fall on!’”[8]
After relating the battle and the thoroughness of the victory, ending
in the conflagration of five-and-twenty captured galleys, the poet
concludes by an admonition to the enemy to moderate his pride and curb
his arrogant tongue, harping on the obnoxious epithet _porci leproxi_,
which seems to have galled the Genoese.[9] He concludes:—
“Nor can I at all remember
Ever to have heard the story
Of a fight wherein the Victors
Reaped so rich a meed of glory!”[10]
The community of Genoa decreed that the victory should be commemorated
by the annual presentation of a golden pall to the monastery of St.
German’s, the saint on whose feast (28th May) it had been won.[11]
The startling news was received at Venice with wrath and grief, for
the flower of their navy had perished, and all energies were bent at
once to raise an overwhelming force.[12] The Pope (Boniface VIII.)
interfered as arbiter, calling for plenipotentiaries from both sides.
But spirits were too much inflamed, and this mediation came to nought.
Further outrages on both sides occurred in 1296. The Genoese
residences at Pera were fired, their great alum works on the coast of
Anatolia were devastated, and Caffa was stormed and sacked; whilst
on the other hand a number of the Venetians at Constantinople were
massacred by the Genoese, and Marco Bembo, their Bailo, was flung from
a house-top. Amid such events the fire of enmity between the cities
waxed hotter and hotter.
[Sidenote: Lamba Doria’s Expedition to the Adriatic.]