Algeria: Islam and the Arabs
Library of Congress Country Study
Privateers
Privateering was an age-old practice in the
Mediterranean. North African rulers engaged in it
increasingly in the late sixteenth and early seventeenth
century because it was so lucrative, and because their
merchant vessels, formerly a major source of income, were
not permitted to enter European ports. Although the methods
varied, privateering generally involved private vessels
raiding the ships of an enemy in peacetime under the
authority of a ruler. Its purposes were to disrupt an
opponent's trade and to reap rewards from the captives and
cargo.
Privateering was a highly disciplined affair conducted
under the command of the rais (captain) of the
fleets. Several captains became heros in Algerian lore for
their bravery and skill. The captains of the corsairs banded
together in a selfregulating taifa (community) to
protect and further the corporate interests of their trade.
The taifa came to be ethnically mixed,
incorporating those captured Europeans who agreed to convert
to Islam and supply information useful for future raids. The
taifa also gained prestige and political influence
because of its role in fighting the infidel and providing
the merchants and rulers of Algiers with a major source of
income. Algiers became the privateering city-state par
excellence, especially between 1560 and 1620. And it was two
privateer brothers who were instrumental in extending
Ottoman influence in Algeria.
-
Algeria: Islam and the Arabs
Library of Congress Country Study
European
Offensive <<< Contents
>>> Ottoman
Rule
|
This document is in the public domain.
You may copy, download, print and distribute this work as you see
fit.
Every effort has been made to present this text
accurately and cleanly, but no guarantees are made against errors.
Neither Melissa Snell nor About.com may be held liable for any
problems you experience with the text version or with any
electronic form of the document.