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Pirates of Barbary

Page 39

by Adrian Tinniswood

Morgan, John

  Morocco

  America, peace with

  captives in

  civil war

  Dutch blockade of harbor

  England, peace with

  English expedition against

  blockade of harbor

  commander

  English casualties

  proposal for

  release of captives

  return to England from

  French and Spanish control of

  Hornachero rebels

  Tangier, conflicts in

  Murad Bey

  Murad III,

  Murad Raïs (Dutch renegade)

  Murad Raïs (Genoese renegade)

  Muslims. See Islam

  Mustafa Laz Dey

  mutiny

  Narbrough, John

  Nassimbene, Andrea

  National Intelligencer

  Netherlands. See Dutch Republic

  Newes from Sea, of Two Notorious Pirates . . . (Nixon)

  Newport, Christopher

  Newton, Thomas

  Nichols, Mr. (master of Dolphin)

  Nixon, Anthony

  Nutt, John

  O’Driscoll, Cornelius

  Ogilby, John

  Okeley, William

  ambivalence toward Algerians

  capture by pirates

  complacency as slave

  escape

  publication of narrative

  religious observance

  return to England

  sale of

  servitude

  shopkeeping

  Omar Dey

  Oneby, Humphrey

  Ossory, Earl of

  Ottoman Empire

  attacks on Christian Europe

  Barbary Coast bases

  benefits of piracy

  extent of

  Janissary corps

  official language

  signing of Declaration of Paris outlawing privateering

  trade treaties with European nations

  See also Barbary Coast; specific states

  Pananti, Filippo

  Parker, Richard

  Penn, Giles

  Penn, William

  Pepwell, Henry

  Pepys, Samuel

  Perry, Oliver

  Peterborough, Henry Mordaunt, Earl of

  piracy

  attraction of

  capture of prey

  career path

  discipline aboard ship

  end of

  forced servitude

  galleys

  havens for

  Mediterranean hunting ground

  modification of merchant ships

  mutiny

  navigational skills and technology

  payment to crew

  personal qualities required

  versus privateering

  privateering as

  seasonal activity

  ships resisting at sea

  Plymouth, Earl of

  Ponder, Nathaniel

  Portugal

  Barbary outposts

  Dutch Republic, war with

  marriage treaty with Charles II,

  sanctuary for pirates

  Spain, war with

  Tangier, occupation of

  Tangier, surrender of

  Powell, J. R.

  privateering

  English ban on

  government’s share of prize

  letters of marque

  outlawing of

  versus piracy

  profitability of

  Purchas, Samuel

  Rainborow, William

  Algiers blockade, proposal for

  death

  hero’s welcome home

  Moroccan expedition

  on Parliamentary Committee for the Captives in Algiers

  Raleigh, Walter

  Ramadan Raïs (a.k.a. Henry Chandler)

  Randal, John

  al-Rashid, Mawlay

  Rashleigh, Jonathan

  Rawlins, John

  Rickles, John

  Roberts, Lewis

  Robinson, Henry

  Roe, Thomas

  Rolle, John

  Roper, John

  Roupe, Gilbert

  Rowlands, Samuel

  Rupert, Prince

  Ryswan Raïs

  Sackville, Edward

  Sandwich, Earl of

  Saxbridge, Tibault

  Selim I,

  Shaler, William

  Sheres, Henry

  on Algerian piracy problem

  construction of mole at Tangier

  defense of Pole Fort

  demolition of Tangier

  Sherley, Anthony

  Shirley, Robert

  Shugers, Gregory

  Simpson, Richard

  Skipwith, Henry

  Slanning, Nicholas

  slaves and captives

  Algerian economic dependence upon

  Algerian slave market

  Algerian slave quarters

  Algiers, captives in

  from Baltimore, Ireland

  Barbary, number of European slaves in

  Barbary slave trade

  Catholic redemptist orders

  English anti-slavery policy

  escape

  exchange of captives

  forced conversion to Islam

  master-slave relationship

  Morocco, captives in

  perforced-men

  punishments endured

  ransom

  slave narrative

  ambivalence toward captors

  capture by pirates

  complacency

  escape

  publication of narrative

  religious observance

  return to England

  sale of

  servitude

  shopkeeping

  Tripoli and Tunis, abolition of Christian slavery in

  Tunis, captives in

  wives of

  Smith, John

  Soderina, capture and refitting of

  Spain

  Algiers, tribute payments to

  Algiers expedition

  Barbary outposts

  Charles V,

  Dutch Republic, war with

  England, peace with

  losses due to English privateering

  Morocco, control of

  Portugal, war with

  sanctuary for pirates

  Tangier, interest in acquiring

  Tunis, tribute payments to

  Spencer, John and Thomas

  Spragge, Edward

  Spratt, Devereux

  Squibb, Thomas

  St. John, Captain

  St. Leger, William

  Stoakes, John

  Stokes, Captain

  Stuijt, Simon Maartsszoon

  Sulaiman the Lawgiver

  Sunderland, Earl of

  Swanton, Peter

  Sweet, Thomas

  Tangier

  description of

  English acquisition of

  English demolition of

  forts

  governors

  mole in harbor

  Moorish siege of fort

  Moors, conflicts with

  population

  Tariq, Mohammed

  Taverner, William

  Temple, William

  Teviot, Earl of

  “To a Reprobate Pirate That Hath Renounced Christ and Is Turn’d Turk” (Rowlands)

  Tooker, Samuel

  Torghud

  Trelawny, Captain

  Trinitarians, Order of

  Tripoli

  abolition of Christian slavery

  America, peace with

  America, tribute payments from

  America, war with

  American losses, compensation for

  corsair activity

  Dutch Republic, peace with

  Dutch Republic, war with

  economic dependence upon piracy

  E
ngland, peace with

  France, peace with

  France, war with

  governmental instability

  history

  Italian control of

  as Ottoman naval base

  True and Certain Report (Barker)

  Trumbull, William

  Tuckey, Robert

  Tunis

  abolition of Christian slavery

  America, peace with

  American losses, compensation for

  captives in

  corsair activity, government regulation of

  corsair fleet

  economic dependence upon piracy

  England, hostility toward

  England, peace with

  English attack on harbor

  French invasion of

  harbor

  legitimate commerce

  Ottoman conquest of

  as pirate haven

  power structure

  prosperity and cosmopolitan society

  Uluj Ali

  Umar ben Haddu

  United States. See America

  Usta Murad Dey

  Uthman Dey

  Uthman Pasha

  Vacher, Jean Le

  Venice

  battle with arch-pirate, Ward

  blockade of Istanbul

  Mediterranean trade

  Ottoman Empire, trade treaties with

  Tunis and Tripoli, tribute payments to

  Verney, Francis

  Villa Raïs

  Walsingham, Robert

  Ward, John

  capture of English merchant ship

  capture of Venetian merchant ship

  career path

  conversion to Islam

  in English navy

  personal characteristics

  in popular culture

  reputation

  retirement years and death

  return to piracy

  Tunis, pirate base at

  Watts, William

  Weale, John

  Wentworth, Thomas

  Whitbourne, Richard

  Wilson, John

  Winchilsea, Earl of

  Winwood, Ralph

  Wotton, Henry

  Wren, Christopher

  York, Duke of

  Yusuf Dey

  Yusuf II,

  Yusuf Karamanli

  Yusuf Pasha

  a Some quotations from older sources have been reworded for clarity, and their spellings modernized.

 

 

 


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