The Rize Attack

The Rize Attack of 1547: Ottoman Conquest and the Fall of Lazistan
The history of the Laz people is marked by centuries of resistance, adaptation, and survival. Among the most significant and traumatic events in Laz collective memory is the Ottoman conquest of the Rize region in the mid-16th century — a pivotal moment that fundamentally transformed the political, religious, and cultural landscape of Lazistan forever.
Background: Lazistan Before the Ottomans
Before the Ottoman expansion into the eastern Black Sea coast, the Laz people had maintained varying degrees of autonomy for centuries. Following the decline of the ancient Kingdom of Lazica (Egrisi) in the 7th century, the region had passed through Byzantine, Georgian, and Trebizond Empire control. The Empire of Trebizond (1204–1461), a Greek successor state of Byzantium, governed much of the eastern Black Sea coast, including areas inhabited by the Laz. During this period, the Laz remained predominantly Orthodox Christian, with deep ties to both Byzantine and Georgian ecclesiastical traditions.
The fall of the Empire of Trebizond to Sultan Mehmed II in 1461 brought the western portions of the Black Sea coast under Ottoman control. However, the mountainous eastern regions — including the heartland of the Laz around modern Rize and Artvin — proved far more difficult to subdue. The rugged terrain, fierce local resistance, and the region’s distance from Ottoman power centers allowed Laz communities to maintain significant autonomy even as the empire expanded around them.
The Ottoman Campaign Against Rize
The Ottoman campaign to fully subjugate the Rize region intensified in the 1540s under Sultan Suleiman the Magnificent. The strategic importance of the eastern Black Sea coast — as a corridor to the Caucasus and a potential route for enemies approaching from the east — made its complete incorporation into the empire a military priority.
In 1547, Ottoman forces launched a major military campaign against the fortified Laz settlements of the Rize coast and its mountainous hinterland. The attack targeted local Laz lords (derebey) who had resisted Ottoman authority and continued to operate semi-independently. The campaign was brutal: villages were burned, fortifications were destroyed, and local leaders who refused to submit were killed or exiled.
The Laz defenders, though vastly outnumbered, mounted fierce resistance from their mountain strongholds. The steep terrain and dense forests of the region favored defensive warfare, and Ottoman forces struggled to penetrate the interior valleys. However, Ottoman naval superiority along the Black Sea coast allowed them to blockade Laz ports and cut off potential reinforcements or escape routes by sea.
Aftermath and Consequences
The fall of Rize and the surrounding Laz territories had profound and lasting consequences:
- Loss of Political Autonomy: The Laz lost their remaining semi-independent status and were fully incorporated into the Ottoman administrative system. Local Laz lords were either co-opted into the Ottoman hierarchy or replaced by appointed officials.
- Gradual Islamization: Perhaps the most significant long-term consequence was the gradual conversion of the Laz from Christianity to Islam. This process took several centuries (roughly from the 16th to the 18th century) and was driven by a combination of economic incentives, social pressure, and the administrative advantages of being Muslim in the Ottoman system. Tax exemptions, access to positions of power, and freedom from the devshirme (child levy) system all encouraged conversion.
- Cultural Transformation: While the Laz maintained their language and many cultural traditions, the shift from Christianity to Islam fundamentally altered their cultural orientation. Churches were converted to mosques, Christian festivals were replaced by Islamic ones, and the Laz’s historical connections to the Georgian and Byzantine Christian worlds gradually faded.
- Destruction of Historical Sites: Many Laz churches, monasteries, and fortifications were destroyed or fell into disrepair following the conquest. The ruins of these structures, scattered throughout the mountains of Rize and Artvin, remain silent witnesses to the Laz people’s Christian past.
Resistance and Adaptation
Despite the conquest, the Laz did not simply submit. Throughout the Ottoman period, Laz communities were known for their fierce independence and occasional rebellions against central authority. The mountainous terrain continued to provide a natural buffer against complete state control, and Laz communities maintained significant local autonomy in practice, even as they nominally accepted Ottoman sovereignty.
The Laz also adapted to the new political reality by leveraging their maritime skills and military prowess. Laz sailors and soldiers became valued assets of the Ottoman military, particularly in the Black Sea fleet. Many Laz rose to positions of prominence within the Ottoman system, demonstrating the pragmatic adaptability that has characterized the Laz people throughout their history.
Legacy
The Ottoman conquest of Rize and the subsequent transformation of Laz society remains a complex and sensitive topic. For some Laz, it represents a traumatic loss of independence and cultural identity. For others, it is simply a chapter in the long history of a people who have survived and adapted through countless upheavals. What is undeniable is that the events of the 16th century set in motion changes that continue to shape Laz identity to this day — from their predominantly Muslim faith to their complex relationship with the Turkish state and their Georgian cultural cousins across the border.
Understanding the Rize attack and its aftermath is essential to understanding the modern Laz people: a community that carries within it the memory of an ancient Christian kingdom, the reality of centuries of Ottoman and Turkish integration, and the enduring spirit of a people who refuse to disappear.








