The Barbary Pirates
were a band of privateers who served as part of
the naval forces of the Ottoman Empire, a huge,
multi-ethnic empire that spanned throughout southern
Europe, northern Africa, the Mediterranean region,
and the Middle East. The Barbary Pirates operated
in teams from ports in North Africa such as Algeirs,
Tunis and Tripoli. Their reign of terror in the
Mediterranean Sea and Atlantic Ocean lasted about
250 years from the late 1500's to the early 1800's.
By the 1700's, the Barbary Pirates had become so
fearsome that many nations, including the United
States for some time, agreed to pay them an annual
ransom to ensure their trading vessels sailed safely
in the Mediterranean.
The Barbary Pirates
frequently raided seafaring vessels and coastal
towns. They often captured Christians in Italy,
Spain, France, and Portugal and sold them as slaves
in Morrocco or Algeria. Others were forced to man
the oars of the pirate galleys and suffered horrible
abuses such as lashings and deprivation of food.
Such raids terrorized coastal populations and caused
many villages to be abandoned completely out of
fear. Treasures and slaves captured from raids
were divided amongst the pasha (the Muslim ruler
of Algeirs), privateers, and the soldiers who boarded
seized ships.
The end for the Barbary Pirates came in the early 1800's when they began seizing
American ships in the Atlantic Ocean and enslaving their crews. This resulted
in the birth of the U.S. Navy and the refusal of the American government to continue
to pay the one million dollar annual tribute for free passage in the Mediterranean
Sea (which they had done for nearly 10 years). The refusal resulted in the First
Barbary War (1801-1805) and then the Second Barbary War (1815), both decisive
American victories.
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