#but then al andalus was full of slavery?
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(some) moroccans stop romanticising Al-Andalus and being modern-day colonialism apologists challenge
#and I'm saying this as someone who romanticises al andalus#listen al andalus might have been better than the other civilizations for some people *at the beginning*#like jewish people definitely had a reason to support the muslims#but then al andalus was full of slavery?#the muslims killed all pagans?#they forced jewish people to wear yellow? they prosecuted christians and jewish people?#hello? they weren't that better than the people who began the reconquista?#which btw started when the north of spain managed to stop the muslims from conquering it#also don't even get me started on the west sahara#it is *not* a part of spain and hasn't been a part of spain since franco died#what it *is* is a territory morocco wants to colonise because they feel like they have ownership over it while the indigenous population#wants to control their own territory#the west sahara isn't spanish nor moroccan don't be disgusting#al andalus#west sahara
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Jan Janszoon also known as Murat Reis the Younger (c. 1570-c. 1641) Dutch Barbary Pirate and founder/leader of a pirate republic, Republic of Sale...
Mention pirates and you may well conjure a number of images in the mind. It depends on the context you’re discussing in terms of history and placement in the world. The western world usually has an image of a swashbuckling and misunderstood rogue or misfit outcast who has been rejected from their society or can’t tolerate authority so they take to a life on the high seas in search of freedom, adventure and plunder. Edward Teach (1680-1718) better known as Blackbeard is sometimes cited as the archetypal pirate in many modern works of fiction. Or one might picture the character of Jack Sparrow in the Pirates of the Caribbean film franchise. Images that are based in elements of truth but probably watered down from the reality of the harsh existence pirates found themselves in and the harsh price they exacted from others.
Another type of pirate, widely talked about but not perhaps as well known in some parts of the world is that of the Barbary pirate or Barbary corsair. The Barbary pirate were privateers or pirates from an Islamic background typically and sometimes used a nominally religiously infused perspective to ply their trade. They usually hailed from or were based out of the so called Barbary Coast of North Africa, so named for the native Berber peoples who made up the majority of these lands, Berber being a corruption of the ancient Greek for Barbarian a term applied to all non Greco-Roman peoples in antiquity. These lands were the modern nations of Morocco, Algeria, Tunisia & Libya in particular. These pirates were largely in operation from the 16th-19th centuries with their zenith being in the early to mid 17th century. The modern states of North Africa were not full fledged nation states as they are today, in fact they were instead made up of various city states that with the exception of Morocco were nominal parts of the Turkish Ottoman Empire. These locations while part of the Ottoman sphere of influence had relative degrees of autonomy that fell to their local governors called dey or bey or pasha. All honorific titles taken from Turkish to roughly mean leader or governor. The pirates on behalf of their dey or pasha or sometimes on behalf of themselves had virtual control of over their city-states and the surrounding seas.
The most prominent grounds to find these pirates and their bases was the Western Mediterranean and Atlantic seaboard of Western Europe. Their primary focus was to engage in the plunder of merchant ships and occasionally raid coastal villages and towns. The main target wasn’t so much goods like money or inanimate objects but rather in the capture of people, mostly Europeans and later Americans to become part of the greater Islamic slave trade within the preexisting Ottoman and Arab slave trades which spanned from Asia to Africa and Europe. Now keep in mind slavery was not exclusive to any one society, culture or location, slavery and human trafficking was commonplace on virtually all continents among all peoples during the 16th-19th centuries. However, the focus of this post will be on the Barbary slave trade and to provide a snapshot of the practices within that context.
Not all Barbary pirates were born within the Islamic world, in fact some of the best known were originally Christian or Jewish and later converted to Islam. One of the best known was a Dutchman named Jan Janszoon (Jan Jansen) who took on the later moniker of Murat Reis the Younger...
Early Life...
-Not much of Jan’s early life is documented, other than he was born in the city of Haarlem in the Netherlands in roughly the year 1570. Sources don’t definitively state who his parents were other than we can determine his surname followed the Dutch patronymic naming system of Janszoon or Jansen meaning “son of Jan or son of John” in English.
-At the time of Jan’s birth, the Netherlands was technically part of the Catholic Spanish Empire. However, the ethnic Dutch who were primarily Protestants of the Calvinist Dutch Reformed Church were increasingly at odds with Spanish rule, what resulted was the Eighty Years War or War of Dutch Independence (1568-1648). Seven northern provinces of the Netherlands, one of the most powerful being Holland formed the united nucleus of new country determined to breakaway from Spanish rule. This became the Dutch Republic. What followed was a period of off and on warfare, colonial expansion and a flowering of cultural expression in art, commerce and the establishment of relatively tolerant values based in individualism. This was reflected in the largely Protestant personalized philosophy of their religion. The Dutch Republic became a place of comparative religious freedom within Europe and its government was run more by a legislative body than a monarch, though it had monarch like figures with varying degrees of power, more symbolic than absolute. This contrasted with the absolute monarchy and centralizing of power in most of 17th-18th century Europe.
-Jan’s profession wasn’t known either, other than at some point he took to a life at sea, it is speculated by some sources that he was apprenticed on merchant ships as a teenager which enabled him to learn the skills of sailing and nuances of trade and diplomacy in all dealings that would later serve him in life.
-In 1595, Jan is recorded as marrying a woman, presumably named Soutgen Cave with whom he had at least one daughter and possibly a son, Edward The daughter, Lysbeth, was definitively confirmed by virtually all sources and would play a role in her father’s later life.
-Jan would eventually abandon his family in the Netherlands and would never return to them in a long lasting fashion. Jan appears to have been restless and turned to a life at sea, first as a Dutch privateer on behalf of the Dutch Republic, raiding Spanish merchant ships in an effort to hurt the economy of the nation that nominally ruled over the Dutch Republic.
-However, in the early 17th century a nominal period of peace or truce was established between Spain and the Netherlands, though the war and issue of independence wasn’t officially resolved. Jan during these years appears to have left the official capacity of serving under the Dutch flag and instead made his way to Spain and North Africa and largely went into business for himself.
Algiers and Spain “Turning Turk”...
-The timeline is somewhat confused based on the sources we have but Jan’s adventures appear to have taken him to the Canary Islands off Africa’s coast where he was captured by Barbary pirates, possibly under the Ottoman privateer of Albanian extraction, Murat Reis (The Elder). Jan was conveyed to Algiers (modern capital of Algeria) where he was most likely considered for a life of slavery. However, it appear Jan either made the conversion to Islam outright to officially spare him the pain of slavery, since nominally Islam forbids the enslavement of other Muslims, though this was not always practiced since other Muslims were occasionally enslaved by the Barbary pirates. The other possibility is that Jan convinced his captors of his suitability as a sailor and guide and offered his services if not his faith, though it most likely he converted to Islam at this time, probably as a practical matter. The conversion in European circles was known as “turning Turk” since Turk became a blanket misnomer to all Muslims regardless of ethnicity at this time.
-Jan also made his was to Spain, in particular the port city of Cartagena where in the first decade of the 17th century, some of the last sizable remnants of a Muslim community lived, descended from Muslims that once controlled most of the Iberian Peninsula in the semi-autonomous province of Al-Andalus (Andalusia) from the 8th century to the year 1492.
-Since 1492, the Christian kingdoms of northern Spain and Portugal pushed backed the Muslims and “reconquered” Iberia from Muslim rule. The Spanish monarchy overtime changed from relative tolerance of Muslims and Jews to threats of expulsion, forced conversion or death for non-Christians. In the midst of all this Jan, either not yet a Muslim or a Muslim who as a European could pass for a Christian met a new woman, sources can’t confirm her identity beyond the Spanish name Margarita. Margarita was known to be a Spanish Moor or Muslim of mixed ethnic background, most likely Arab-Berber with roots in Morocco. She was part of a community known as Mujedars or Moriscos, Moors who nominally were converted Christianity but in private secretly maintained their Islamic faith and customs. Sources also vary on whether Margarita was a woman of high birth or nobility or a domestic servant to a Christian family. There is even a source that speculates her genealogy can be traced in part to the then ruling dynasty of Morocco, the Arab Saadi dynasty which claim descent from the Islamic prophet Muhammad through the Prophet’s daughter Fatima.
-What is known is that Margarita would become Jan’s wife, the first of four permissible simultaneous wives under Islamic law. It is not known if Jan ever took another wife. His first Christian marriage in the Netherlands would be viewed as invalid under from the Islamic viewpoint. Jan and Margarita also had four sons whose names are Abraham, Anthony, Philip & Cornelis. All four would have been raised as Muslims by their parents, from this point on this became Jan’s family. His Dutch family is variously reported to have been ignored or still the recipients of child/spousal support from Jan who would send portions of his earnings to them. There is evidently truth to this given that his daughter Lysbeth later visited him late in life, suggesting a good enough relationship if distant.
Sale...
-In roughly the period 1609-1612 the family would have left Spain for Algiers and later Morocco and settled in the city of Sale, today a twin city of the capital of Rabat. Sale had a long history but a number of thousands of expelled Muslims from Spain would come together to form the nucleus of a new period of history in Sale. These Muslims would have differed from the Berbers of Morocco despite their overlapping ethnic similarities, in that they grew up speaking Spanish probably in addition to Arabic and would have had Spanish influenced customs, this put them at odds with their fellow Moroccans.
-Jan in his travels would have been multilingual. In addition to his native Dutch he would have known Spanish and likely Arabic, English and possibly French at the very least.
-1619 saw the city of Sale which had a small Barbary pirate operation already declare itself an independent republic, not subject to the authority of the Sultans of Morocco, then ruled by two brothers of the Saadi dynasty in a virtual state of civil war At the center of this “revolt” was Jan himself, now known as Murat Reis (The Younger), taken after his former captor who had passed away a decade before. Jan was already successful in conducting raids for Algiers on European shipping, mostly of Spanish shipping and other nations. Though he was known to release or ransom his fellow Dutch from captivity in many instances.
-Sale in its newly declared independence was helmed by a ruling council of 14 leading pirates who elected Jan at its Grand Admiral (head of the fleet) and President. The newly minted Republic of Sale, was a functioning de-facto city-state that was run by and for Barbary pirates who enriched themselves off of the slave trade and sale of plunder of other goods taken from European ships.
-Sale’s fleet was small at first, numbering 18 ships, mainly of the “polacca” design, the ships were small, sleek and fast. The harbor at Sale was the mouth of the Bou Regreg river which divided Sale & Rabat on the north and south banks respectively. The harbor was protected by a sandbar and due to the small design of the ships with they had the ability to slide over the sandbar and dock in the shallow harbor, where European ships typically required deep ports for docking due to their deep and large hulls. Sale at the time also benefitted from relative isolation with next to no roads leading to the city from land and it was purely a port city.
-Jan is noted by all sources as an intelligent and brave fighter as well as able administrator, the docking fees, percentages of profits from slave sales and others good sold made Sale blossom financially under Jan’s administration. Nominal fees to the Sultan also helped maintain their semi-autonomy, in recognition of this and due to other deeper difficulties Sultan Zidan Abu Maali of the Saadi dynasty made Jan the ceremonial Governor of Sale.
-Jan and the Sale Rovers as his fleet was called in English sources was known for their guile. Carrying multiple flags on board Jan and fleet were known to approach ships and like a chameleon adapts to their surroundings by changing colors, the pirates would fly friendly flags as they approached their prey. This meant they kept informed on the latest diplomatic changes of the day and using this ruse got close to their quarry and then suddenly would raise their own flag of the two conjoined sabers on a field of green or the crescent moon of Islam and frighten their victims. Barbary pirates in general speaking foreign tongues with a fearsome appearance of swords and pistols in hand and dagger in mouth relied on intimidation and very often tried to capture their victims without an actual fight. Since the goal was enslavement harm or death to their prisoners was not ideal and psychological terror was their foremost weapon hence why they chose merchant and passenger ships and usually fled at the sight of military ships.
-According to the known accounts Jan and his men treated their prisoners relatively humanely given the circumstances as Barbary piracy was well known by this time, most knew their fate would not be good, few slaves ever returned to their homeland or another destination. Typically, women and children would be separated from the men, meaning families were often divided. Once arrived at port, they would be separated according to age and gender since they served different purposes. Men would typically be used for forced manual labor to their Muslim masters or serve as oarsmen or servants on ships, rarely setting foot on land for long periods of time. Children would be taken to serve as domestic servants in Muslim homes and women would typically be sold to become domestic servants as well. Occasionally women were made into sex slaves to their masters, sometimes ending up in the harems of the Sultan or other Muslim rulers. On the auction block as is true of slaves anywhere, one would be publicly displayed sometimes naked or asked to run and jump or to be prodded and inspected by prospective buyers. Those in good health commanded the highest price. Some slaves were also ransomed through funds raised by the family, government or Christian religious orders, though this fueled the Barbary pirates economy and perpetuated the cycle of enslavement. Jan is known to have made large profits to fund his family, fleet and home and is known to have had many servants, most probably being men to perform manual labor in maintaining his fleet for future slave runs.
-Jan also occasionally ventured outside of the Western Mediterranean and Atlantic near the Canary Islands, sight of his own capture years before. He was known to base himself on islands off the coast of England and even return to the Netherlands. Using his Dutch citizenship and his new found role as an Admiral nominally in the Moroccan navy, he had diplomatic immunity and for his service in attacking the hated Spanish, he was viewed with mixed feeling in his homeland as his fame had spread by this time. The authorities banned piracy officially and condemned it and thought him a bad example, even if he exacted a toll on the Spanish economy which rivalled the Dutch and was still at war with them. During one visit back to Amsterdam in 1622, the authorities located his first wife and their children in the hopes the sight of them would spurn him to give up his piracy, it failed. To make matters worse, he had somewhat a folk hero appeal that lead several Dutchmen to actually leave behind their lives in Amsterdam and leave to join his crew for a life of piracy, a testament to the charisma he probably possessed. His crew would have been multiethnic containing other Europeans including Dutch, Spanish, French, English and German crewmen alongside Arabs, Berbers and Turks. Spanish & Arabic would have probably served as lingua francas onboard.
Return to Algiers...
-By 1627, the political situation in Morocco had deteriorated and for safety reasons he took his family to Algiers. His son Anthony had by this time now an adult left Morocco for a life in the Netherlands and would eventually marry a Dutch woman and immigrate under the auspices of the Dutch West India Company to North America, settling in the colony of New Amsterdam, modern day New York City. Anthony was known as Anthony Janszoon Van Salee in Dutch. He was the first Muslim recorded to have been a long term settler in North America and kept the first known copy of a the Qu’ran in America as well, reputed to be a copy of the Moroccan Sultan’s personal Qu’ran which was a gift and a testament to the honorifics bestowed upon the Janszoon family. Anthony became a successful farmer, landowner and merchant in New Amsterdam and helped found settlements that made up modern day Brooklyn, New York. He was known to have an independent streak like his father and little regard for authority, making him a colorful character in colonial America. Through Anthony, Jan has many living descendants in America (see my previous post on Anthony) including the Vanderbilt family which became wealthy in the 19th century.
-Upon his return to Algiers, Jan resumed his piracy this time conducting two of his most famous raids in 1627 and 1631 respectively. First, he had his crew leave from England northward to Iceland of all places, where they captured a couple hundred Icelanders and a few Danes from Denmark, all were sold into slavery in Algiers where Jan continued his large profits. The second took place in Ireland at the village of Baltimore, once more he successfully made off with hundreds of prisoners, only two would ever return to Ireland. This latter raid was lamented in the 19th century Thomas Davis poem The Sack of Baltimore. In both instances, Jan’s crew went ashore and captured villagers from their homes, again using intimidation with probably only enough physical violence so as to intimidate and deter resistance. In the case of the Baltimore raid, Jan’s crew attacked in the middle of the night abducting people from their sleep.
Capture...
-1635 saw Jan captured while at sea in the Eastern Mediterranean, captured by the Christian military order, the Knights of Rhodes or Knights Hospitaller. He was kept on the island of Malta, the details of his confinement are murky, but he was known to have been beaten and subjected to torture though he never renounced Islam and was known to have become quite pious in his faith. He encouraged many European captives to convert and spare themselves slavery as Islam forbids enslavement of other Muslims. In fact, the Muslim view of Jan and his fellow Barbary pirates at the time was widely one of celebration and righteousness. Not only did it provide economic benefit but the enslavement of non-Muslims was viewed as an act of almost holy war waged against infidel peoples and the pirates were warriors of Islam acting in a righteous manner.
-Jan’s imprisonment lasted five years until he was freed by Tunisian Barbary pirates in a raid on Malta. He was heralded with great pomp in 1640 at his release having achieved fame in the Islamic world as well as have been a scourge to Christians in Europe.
Final return to Morocco...
-Jan was essentially in search of work despite his old age and feeble condition from his imprisonment.
-He returned to Morocco but not Sale where he made his name and fortune but instead, the new Sultan made him Governor of Oualidia further south on the Moroccan coast. The modern day seaside resort had a unique lagoon and a new fortress or “Kasbah” was built specifically for Jan. He also maintained a home in nearby Safi, no longer at sea, he retired and merely administered the area but appears to have been restored to his wealth, his wife Margarita is presumed to have predeceased him either in Algiers or Morocco before or during his imprisonment on Malta.
-In 1641 his daughter Lysbeth from his first marriage travelled with a Dutch embassy to Morocco to greet the new Sultan. Lysbeth and her husband met with Jan, supposedly both on their docked ship and and his many homes, he was described as being enfeebled but surrounded by luxury and comfort attended to by servants. Lysbeth stayed with her father for months, the only extended period of time since her childhood, presumably this meant despite his physical distance, their relationship was relatively good.
-No further sources of Jan’s life are known, its presumed he died shortly thereafter of natural causes and was buried in Safi, Morocco in an unmarked grave but no source has yet validated this.
#jan janszoon#barbary pirates#16th century#17th century#pirates#piracy#slave trade#islamic history#military history#morocco#arab world#berbers#moors#dutch republic#spain#al andalus#salee#rabat#algiers#malta#murat reis
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I'm flattered that you think I have expertise in the topic. Mostly I have a collection of fancy-that tidbits from lots of listening to audiobooks. With that said, here's my hot take: they already do, or at least, they both exist in the same 'genre' of myth-historical reputation-building. That is to say, there are certain things a dynasty must do to legitimate itself as more than just a sequence of individuals. It has to become a gestalt entity capable of having its own goals and motivations beyond those of the current dynastic head.
Ancestor worship (aka ghosts) is an easy way to do this. The presence of ancestors in the form of spirits, ghosts, voices, etc. both lends itself to dynastic unity (establishing that the current living head is not the sole voice of the dynasty) and legitimates the dynasty to the common people ("my dead grandpa's buried in a solid gold coffin and gives me tax advice, what does your dead grandpa do?")
Before moving on to concubines, a couple caveats: first, sex slavery is Bad, period. Secondly, the term 'concubine' encompasses a huge array of lived experiences -- varying not just by time and place but also varying wildly within the same building -- which were often kept secret and thus have very sparse historical records. The life of a concubine could be anything from 'kidnapped as a child and used as a breeding sow for male heirs' to 'just sit there looking pretty, knit your cakes, and pretend to be interested in the emperor's hobbies' to 'a glorified maid.'
But in any case, harems and concubines are fantastic tools for dynastic propaganda. For one, they served as displays of a male head of state's wealth, power, and virility. For two, in almost every dynasty, the male head of state would need to make another future male head of state. That's a surprisingly tall order before modern medicine and sanitation, so having a harem would help you play the odds.
So harems/concubines were much more than just sexpiles, they were political institutions, and (afaik) for anyone who wasn't extremely close to the head of state, most concubines might as well be ghosts, since they live off in their own compound with strictly-controlled access.
Tl;dr, being a ghost-concubine could possibly be kind of a sweet deal. "Sorry your majesty, I'm incorporeal and tied to this building so I can't join you on your hunting trip and pretend to be impressed all day. I'm just gonna sit here and play video games until you get back."
A few interesting tidbits that don't fit anywhere else:
the 17th century onward saw a whole subgenre of paintings of "harems" by Christian* artists. But since very few of these artists even visited any non-Christian empire (much less get access to one of its most private institutions), these paintings amounted to "I wonder what this harem looks like. I bet it's full of big-titty white girls." (Though big-titty white girls certainly existed in the Ottoman harem; Ibrahim the Mad once got turned on by looking at a cow vagina and, after making a golden cast of it, ordered his crew to bring him the fattest girl in all the land. They did so, bringing him a large Armenian woman that Ibrahim nicknamed "Sugar Cube" and fell madly in love with.)
On the topic of political and social institutions, there were something like workplace diversity requirements for Qing Dynasty concubines. Your average prince was expected to have at least one Mongolian, Manchu, and Han wife, and the emperr had to go further down the list and take in Uyghur and Korean wives to make a sort of United Nations But Sexy.
(* I say 'Christian' here because any attempt to concieve of ‘Europe’ or 'the West' that doesn't also include the Ottoman empire, the Abbasid Caliphate's presence in Italy, al-Andalus, etc etc is imo doomed to incoherency.)
being the supernatural lover of a historical head of state, visible only to them, while retaining all your current knowledge.
hmm what if concubines occupied the same mythohistorical role as ghosts? 🤔🤔🤔
@apricops seems like the kind of thing which could use your expertise be weighed in on
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