
audiobook
by J. D. Jerrold (James Douglas Jerrold) Kelley, Stanley Lane-Poole
The Mediterranean of the early modern era was a restless crossroads of empire, faith, and trade, and from its southern shores rose a fleet of fearsome privateers known as the Barbary corsairs. Drawing on contemporary logs, shipbuilders' manuals, and diplomatic reports, the narrative paints a vivid picture of Algiers, Tunis and other ports that served as bases for swift galleys and larger vessels alike. Readers are guided through the political rivalries between the Ottoman sultanates, the Spanish and French crowns, and the uneasy negotiations that turned piracy into a semi‑legitimate enterprise.
Life aboard a corsair galley is rendered with striking detail: the cramped decks, the relentless rowing, and the brutal discipline that sustained long voyages across the sapphire sea. The book also follows the human cost of these raids, from the harrowing capture of European sailors to the complex negotiations for their ransom or enslavement. Richly illustrated with period maps and ship diagrams, the work offers a balanced view that illuminates both the terror and the economic necessity that drove the Barbary corsairs to dominance.
Language
en
Duration
~6 hours (370K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Juliet Sutherland, Sam W. and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
Release date
2007-07-28
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
1847–1922
A U.S. Navy officer turned writer, he brought maritime history and seafaring life to general readers in books on yachts, merchant shipping, and the Barbary corsairs. His work has the brisk, practical feel of someone who knew ships from the inside.
View all books
1854–1931
A Victorian-era scholar of the Islamic world, he wrote lively histories of Muslim Spain, medieval Egypt, and Saladin that still draw curious readers. His work mixed archaeology, numismatics, and storytelling in a way that made complex history feel approachable.
View all books