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INDEX
Abdurrahman (Tripolitan ambassador)
Accidence, or The Path-way to Experience Necessary for All Young Sea-men, An (Smith)
Adams, John
Adams, John Quincy
Adams, William
Aderam, Mathew
Africa (Ogilby)
Africanus, Leo
Ahmad Karamanli
Ahmad Khuja Dey
Aix-la-Chapelle, Congress of
Aleppo
Algiers
America, peace with
American threat of war on
captive’s description of
captives in
corsairs at
economic dependence upon piracy and slavery
England, peace with
English attacks on
English blockade of
attack on corsair fleet
casualties and deficiencies
mission and instructions
officers and fleet
outcome
presentation of demands
proposal for
English ships, capture of
fortifications and defenses
France, peace with
French attack on
Great Mole
as Ottoman naval base
privateering renaissance during eighteenth century
slave quarters
state-sanctioned piracy
Ali Bitshnin
aliases
defeat in battle
leadership position
as slaveholder
Ali Minikshali
Allin, Thomas
Almeida, Don Luis de
Alwin, Elizabeth
America
Algiers, peace with
Algiers, threat of war on
loss of British protection in Mediterranean
Mediterranean trade
Morocco, peace with
tribute payments to Barbary states
Tripoli, peace with
Tripoli, war with
Tunis, peace with
Anthony, John
Aq Mohammed al-Haddad
Arte of Shooting in Great Ordnaunce, The (Bourne)
Ashe, Edward
al-Ayyashi, Mohammed “the Saint,”
Baba Hassan
Bainbridge, William
Baker, John
Baker, Thomas
appointment as consul to Tripoli
compassionate nature
daily life
fear of war
observation of corsair activity
political astuteness
recall from Tripoli
success as consul
voyage to Tripoli
Ballester, Giaume
Baltimore, Ireland
blame for pirate raid on
captives from
decline
defense against pirates
fishing industry
pirate raid on
Protestant community in
Banister, Daniel
Barbarossa, Hızır (later Khair ad-Din)
Barbarossa, Oruç
Barbary Coast
corsair culture
dress of Europeans
end of piracy
European bribes to maintain peace
European presence
European slaves
Europeans in governmental positions
language, lingua franca
living conditions for English consuls
major states
plague outbreak
slave trade
war on Christendom
See also specific states
Barker, Andrew
Beckman, Martin
Belasyse, Lord
Bendysh, Thomas
“Big Pete” (Grote Piet)
Bishop, Richard
Blake, Robert (English admiral)
Blake, Robert (merchant in Morocco)
Blanckley, Elizabeth
Boothouse, Samuel
Bourgeois gentilhomme, Le (Molière)
Bourne, William
Braudel, Fernand
Britain. See England
Broadbrook, Joan
Browne, Robert
Browne, Thomas
Buckingham, Lord Admiral
Buller, Richard
Burchett, Josiah
Butler, Thomas
Butter, Nathaniel
Button, John
Button, Thomas
Algiers expedition
corruption
patrol of Irish Sea
recall from Algiers
Byron, Lord George Gordon
Calvert, George
Caple, Henry
captives. See slaves and captives
Caratini, Giovanni Maria
Carew, George
Carter, Joseph
Cason, Edmund
Cave, Eusabey
Chandler, Henry
Charity, capture of
Charles, Duke of Guise
Charles I of England
Charles II of England
acquisition of Tangier
demolition of Tangier
designation of Tangier as free port
negotiations for peace in Tangier
order to protect Turks
Charles V of Spain
Chichester, Arthur
Cholmley, Hugh
Christian Turn’d Turk, A (Daborn)
Clarendon, Earl of
Cobbett, William
Coke, John
Complete History of Algiers (Morgan)
Conway, Viscount
Cooke, John
Córdoba, Don Luis Fajardo de
Cork, Earl of
Cornelius, Jacob
Correr, Marc’ Antonio
Corsair, The (Byron)
Cosimo II de’ Medici
Cottington, Francis
Cowdery, Jonathan
Crewkerne, John
Cromwell, Oliver
Curlew, Timothy
Daborn, Robert
Dan, Pierre
Danseker, Simon
Danseker, Simon, the younger
Danvers, Henry
D’Aranda, Emanuel
Dartmouth, Admiral Lord
Davies, John
Davis, George
Davys, John
Decatur, Stephen
Declaration of Paris
Dekker, Thomas
de Ruyter, Michiel
Discourse of the Beginnings, Practices, and Suppression of Pirates (Mainwaring)
Dolphin battle
Donaldson, Joseph
Drake, Francis
Dryden, John
Dunton, John
account of Morocco expedition
capture and enslavement
loss of son
in Morocco expedition
Duquesne, Abraham
Dutch Republic
Algiers, tribute payments to
ambassador in Istanbul
Barbary peace negotiation failure
Dutch pirates
expeditions to suppress piracy
ingratiation with Turks
Mediterranean trade
Morocco, blockade of
Morocco, tribute payments to
naval presence in Mediterranean
Ottoman Empire, trade treaty with
Portugal, war with
sail under English colors
Spain, war with
Tangier, interest in acquiring
Tripoli, peace with
Tripoli, war with
Tunis, tribute payments to
Eaton, William
Eben-ezer . . . (Okeley)
Eliot, John
Elizabeth I of England
Ell, William
Encina, Juan del
England
Act for the Relief of the Captives Taken by Turkish, Moorish and Other Pirates
Algiers, peace with
anti-Catholic sentiment
anti-slavery policy
Barbarians, popular concept of
Charles I,
Charles II
acquisition of Tangier
demolition of Tangier
designation of Tangier as free port
negotiations for peace in Tangier
order to protect Turks
Elizabeth I,
Henry IV,
Henry VIII
Islam, ignorance concerning
Istanbul, ambassador in
James I
ban on privateering
blockade of Algiers
diminishing of navy
pardon of pirates
permission for Dutch pursuit of pirates in Ireland
proclamations against piracy
Somerset House peace conference
levy on merchants for ransom money
Long Parliament
losses due to Algerian piracy
Mediterranean trade
Morocco, peace with
Offences at Sea Act
Ottoman Empire, trade treaties with
Parliamentary Committee for the Captives in Algiers
privateering and piracy
Royal Navy
Somerset House peace conference
Spain, peace with
Tripoli, peace with
Tunis, peace with
wives of captives
See also specific Barbary states; specific individuals
Esmond, Lord
Eston, Peter
Exchange, mutiny aboard
Exmouth, Admiral Lord
Fairborne, Palmes
Fasciardo, Don Luis
Fawlett, Edward
Fenner, James
Ferne, William
Fiennes, William
Fight at Sea, Famously Fought by the Dolphin of London
Finet, John
Fitzgeffry, Charles
Flood, Bessie
Foscarini, Antonio
Foxley (corsair commander)
France
Algiers, attacks on
Algiers, peace mission to
Algiers, peace treaty with
Algiers, tribute payments to
ambassador in Istanbul
endearment to Barbary
François I,
Henry IV,
losses due to Tunisian piracy
Morocco, control of
naval presence in Mediterranean
Ottoman Empire, trade treaties with
Tripoli, peace with
Tripoli, war with
Tunis, invasion and control of
Tunis, peace mission to
Francis, Edmond
François I of France
Frizzell, James
Frobisher, Martin
galley, as fighting ship
Genoa
Algerian slaves in
French attack on
mole at
as Ottoman enemy
under Sardinian control
al-Ghailan, Abd Allah
Giavarina, Francesco
Giffard, Richard
Gondomar, Count
Goodale, John
Goodwyn, Thomas
Gordon, Charles
Graves, William
Gunter, William
Hackett, James
Hadji Ali
Hadji Khalifa
Hajj Hasan
Hakluyt, Richard
Halkett, James
Hamidou Raïs
al-Hammami, Ali ben Abd Allah
Hammuda Bey (later Hammuda Pasha)
Hammuda ibn Ali
Harbord, William
Harris, James
Harris, John
Hasan Abaza Dey
Hasan Aga
Hasan Agha
Hawkins, John
Hawkins, Richard
in Algiers expedition
corruption
death
recall to England
report on condition of ships
Hayman, Richard
Henry IV of England
Henry IV of France
Henry VIII of England
Herbert, Arthur
Holland. See Dutch Republic
Hollar, Wenceslaus
Hooke, Francis
Hornachero rebels
Howard, Henry
Howell, James
Hughes, Captain
Hull, William
Hume, George
Ibn Abi Dinar
Ibrahim bin Ahmad
Ibrahim I,
If It Be Not Good, the Divel Is in It (Dekker)
Inchiquin, Earl of
Innes, Robert
Ireland
Baltimore
captives from
decline
defense against pirates
fishing industry
pirate raid on
Protestant community in
Dutch pursuit of pirates in
Great Rebellion
shelter to pirates
Islam
conversion ceremony
English ignorance concerning
forced conversion
religious wars
as world terror
Isma’il Pasha
Jacob, pirate attack on
James I of England
ban on privateering
blockade of Algiers
diminishing of navy
pardon of pirates
permission for Dutch pursuit of pirates in Ireland
proclamations against piracy
Somerset House peace conference
Janissaries
Jawdar ben Abd Allah
al-Jazairi, Ali
>
Jefferson, Thomas
Jenkins, Leoline
Jennings, John
Jephs, John
Jones, David
Jones, William
Karamanli, Yusuf
Karavilli Raïs (Anatolian corsair)
Karavilli Raïs (Tripolitan corsair)
el-Kasri, Abd Allah ben Ali
Kassan Qaid Kussa
Ken, Thomas
Khair ad-Din (formerly Hızır Barbarossa)
King, Richard
Kirke, Percy
Knight, Francis
Knights of Malta
Knights of St. John
Lake, Robert
Laud, Archbishop
Lawson, John
Leake, Richard
Lear, Tobias
Lesdiguières, Duke of
Levant Company
appeals for action against piracy
financing of diplomatic posts
levy on, for anti-piracy expedition
Mediterranean trade
Lewis diplomatic affair
Libertas, or Relief to the English Captives in Algier (Robinson)
Limberham, or The Kind Keeper (Dryden)
Ling, William
lingua franca
Lithgow, William
Loftus, Viscount
Longcastle, William
Lorye, Richard
Louis XIII,
Madison, James
Mainwaring, Henry
career as pirate
on forced servitude on pirate ships
on Irish hospitality toward pirates
king’s pardon of
transition to naval officer
writings on piracy
al-Malik, Abd
Malta
Mansell, Robert
in Algiers expedition
attack on corsair fleet
corruption
criticism of
final appearance at Westminster
glassmaking business
report on condition of ships
return from Algiers
Manwaring, Arthur
al-Maqqari, Ahmed bin Mohammed
marque, letters of
Mawlay Isma’il
Mawlay Zidan
Mehmed II,
Mehmed IV,
Mercedarians, Order of
Middleton, Earl of
Middleton, Roger
Mitchell, Stephen
Mohammed ech-Cheikh el-Ashgar
Mohammed IV,
Mohammed Laz Dey
Mohammed the Eunuch
Molière
Monroe, James
Monson, William
anti-piracy operation in Ireland
on conditions in Royal Navy
criticism of leader in Algiers expedition
fall from king’s favor
on modification of merchant ships for piracy
on navigation instruction for Turks
proposal of international anti-piracy force
Moore, John
Moore, Jonas
Morgan, Henry
Pirates of Barbary Page 38