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قراءة كتاب Sea-Wolves of the Mediterranean: The grand period of the Moslem corsairs

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Sea-Wolves of the Mediterranean: The grand period of the Moslem corsairs

Sea-Wolves of the Mediterranean: The grand period of the Moslem corsairs

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Project Gutenberg's Sea-Wolves of the Mediterranean, by E. Hamilton Currey

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Title: Sea-Wolves of the Mediterranean

Author: E. Hamilton Currey

Release Date: October 10, 2004 [EBook #13689]

Language: English

*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK SEA-WOLVES OF THE MEDITERRANEAN ***

Produced by Robert Connal and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team, from images generously provided by the Million Books Project.

SEA-WOLVES OF THE MEDITERRANEAN

[Illustration: KHEYR-ED-DIN BARBAROSSA—CORSAIR, ADMIRAL, AND KING.]

SEA-WOLVES OF THE MEDITERRANEAN

THE GRAND PERIOD OF THE MOSLEM CORSAIRS

BY COMMANDER E. HAMILTON CURREY, R.N.

WITH PORTRAITS AND ILLUSTRATIONS

  "Ships be but boards, sailors but men:
  There be land rats and water rats, land thieves and water thieves,
  I mean pirates."

Merchant of Venice.

LONDON

JOHN MURRAY, ALBEMARLE STREET, W

1910

TO THAT GRACIOUS LADY TO WHOSE COUNSEL AND ENCOURAGEMENT I OWE SO MUCH MORE THAN ANY ONE—SAVE I—CAN IMAGINE…

TO MY WIFE
I DEDICATE THIS BOOK

PREFACE

When the ship is ready for launching there comes a moment of tense excitement before the dogshores are knocked away and she slides down the ways. In the case of a ship this excitement is shared by many thousands, who have assembled to acclaim the birth of a perfected product of the industry of man; the emotion is shared by all those who are present. It is very different when a book has been completed. The launching has been arranged for and completed by expert hands; she like the ship gathers way and slides forth into an ocean: but, unlike the ship which is certain to float, the waters may close over and engulf her, or perchance she may be towed back to that haven of obscurity from which she emerged, to rust there in silence and neglect. There is excitement in the breast of one man alone—to wit, the author. If his book possesses one supreme qualification she will escape the fate mentioned, and this qualification is—interest. As the weeks lengthened into months, and these multiplied themselves to the tale of something like twenty-four, the conviction was strengthened that that which had so profoundly interested the writer, would not be altogether indifferent to others. For some inscrutable reason the deeds of sea-robbers have always possessed a fascination denied to those of their more numerous brethren of the land; and in the case of the Sea-wolves of the sixteenth century we are dealing with the very aristocrats of the profession. Circumstances over which they had no control flung the Moslem population of Southern Spain on to the shores of Northern Africa: to revenge themselves upon the Christian foe by whom this expropriation had been accomplished was natural to a warrior race; and those who heretofore had been land-folk pure and simple took to piracy as a means of livelihood. It is of the deeds of these men that this book treats; of their marvellous triumphs, of their apparently hopeless defeats, of the manner in which they audaciously maintained themselves against the principalities and the powers of Christendom always hungering for their destruction.

The quality which Napoleon is said to have ascribed to the British Infantry, "of never knowing when they were beaten," seems to have also characterised the Sea-wolves; as witness the marvellous recuperation of Kheyr-ed-Din Barbarossa when expelled from Tunis by Charles V.; and the escape of Dragut from the island of Jerba when apparently hopelessly trapped by the Genoese admiral, Andrea Doria. All through their history the leaders of the Sea-wolves show the resourcefulness of the real seamen that they had become by force of circumstances, and it was they who in the age in which they dwelt showed what sea power really meant. Sailing through the Mediterranean on my way to Malta in the spring of this year, as the good ship fared onwards I passed in succession all those lurking-places from which the Moslem Corsairs were wont to burst out upon their prey. Truly it seemed as if

"The spirits of their fathers might start from every wave,"

and in imagination one pictured the rush of the pirate galley, with its naked slaves straining at the oar of their taskmasters, its fierce, reckless, beturbaned crew clustered on the "rambades" at the bow and stern. It might be that they would capture some hapless "round-ship," a merchantman lumbering slowly along the coast; or again they might meet with a galley of the terrible Knights of St. John or of the ever-redoubtable Doria. In either case the Sea-wolves were equal to their fortune, to plunder or to fight in the name of Allah and his prophet.

That which differentiated the Sea-wolves from other pirates was the combination which they effected among themselves; the manner in which these lawless men could subordinate themselves to the will of one whom they recognised as a great leader. To obtain such recognition was no easy matter, and the manner in which this was done, by those who rose by sheer force of character to the summit of this remarkable hierarchy, has here been set forth.

E. HAMILTON CURREY.

CONTENTS

INTRODUCTORY 1

CHAPTER I THE CRESCENT AND THE CROSS 13
CHAPTER II THE COMING OF THE CORSAIRS 28
CHAPTER III URUJ BARBAROSSA 43
CHAPTER IV THE DEATH OF URUJ BARBAROSSA 59
CHAPTER V KHEYR-ED-DIN BARBAROSSA 75
CHAPTER VI THE TAKING OF THE PEÑON D'ALGER; ANDREA DORIA 91
CHAPTER VII THE APOTHEOSIS OF THE CORSAIR KING 107
CHAPTER VIII THE RAID ON THE COAST OF ITALY; JULIA GONZAGA 123
CHAPTER IX BARCELONA, MAY 1535; THE GATHERING OF THE CHRISTIAN HOSTS 139
CHAPTER X THE FALL OF TUNIS AND THE FLIGHT OF BARBAROSSA 155
CHAPTER XI ROXALANA AND THE MURDER OF IBRAHIM 172
CHAPTER XII THE PREVESA CAMPAIGN; THE GATHERING OF THE FLEETS 189
CHAPTER XIII THE BATTLE OF PREVESA 205
CHAPTER XIV THE NAVY OF OARS. THE GALLEY, THE GALEASSE, AND THE NEF 221
CHAPTER XV DRAGUT-REIS 238
CHAPTER XVI DRAGUT-REIS 254

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