Şuluk Mehmed Pasha (1525 – 7 October 1571), better known in Europe as Mehmed Siroco or Mahomet Sirocco,[1][2] and also spelled Sulik, Chulouk, Şolok, Seluk, or Suluc and known with the titles Pasha, Reis, or Bey, was the OttomanBey (regional governor) of Alexandria in the mid-16th century.[3][4] Both the foreign and the Turkish nicknames (and their various spellings) were derived from the name of the southern Mediterranean wind Sirocco, from Greek σιρόκοςsirokos and the hence derived Levantine Arabic شلوقshlūq, respectively.[1][5]
Mehmed Siroco was appointed admiral in command of the Turkish right at the Battle of Lepanto (1571).[6][7][8] Fighting the Lega Santa led by Admiral Agostino Barbarigo, he was known as the most aggressive attacker of the battle.[4][9] He was wounded and killed in action when he struggled against Venetians at the Battle of Lepanto, as was Barbarigo.[10] Mehmed Siroco was beheaded by the sword of Giovanni Contarini the Venetian.[11]
^Feist, Aubrey (1971). The lion of St. Mark: Venice: the story of a city from Attila to Napoleon. Indianapolis.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
^Roberto Muñoz Bolaños. ALMENA (ed.). Battle of Lepanto, 1571. ISBN9783042754810.