1 / 13

The Barbary Pirates

The Barbary Pirates. Mr. Phipps U.S. History. The Barbary Coast. Consisted of four states : Morocco, Tripoli, Tunis, and Algieria Established by Barbarossa in the 16th century Pledged the states to the Ottoman Empire. Corsairs.

Télécharger la présentation

The Barbary Pirates

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. The Barbary Pirates Mr. Phipps U.S. History

  2. The Barbary Coast • Consisted of four states: Morocco, Tripoli, Tunis, and Algieria • Established by Barbarossa in the 16th century • Pledged the states to the Ottoman Empire

  3. Corsairs • The Barbary Corsairs were privateers who had been operating out of the Ottoman Empire since the Crusades • The leading Corsairs were Saracens • Were Muslims, preyed exclusively upon Christians • Operated out of several infamous ports including Algiers, Sale, Tripoli, and Tunis • Favored galleys that were fast and maneuverable in shallow water • Used terror tactics to force merchant vessels to surrender

  4. Importance • As Muslims, they were sworn to oppose Christians • Were created during the Crusades • Took slaves rather than killed them • Those who converted to Islam were treated as equals and avoided slavery • Sanctioned by a government

  5. Protection Money • The Barbary States demanded annual tribute from seafaring nations (tribute allowed their ships to sail unmolested across the Barbary Coast and to trade in African ports) • By the 18th Century, most of the European powers paid tribute routinely • After 1783, America was no longer under protection from the pirates (through relationship to Britain) • In the late 18th century, the U.S. gov’t agreed to pay tribute to each of the pirate states

  6. The Great Debate • Adams and Jefferson disagreed about how to handle the Corsairs • Adams strongly favored paying off the pirates • Jefferson vehemently disagreed

  7. The First Barbary War • In May 1801, both sides declared war • An American squadron chased the Corsairs back into the Mediterranean • The squadron accomplished little: • An unsuccessful blockade was enacted, with help from Sweden • Encouraged Sweden’s active participation, mutual benefit • Let the pirates know America would not tolerate them any longer • America tried numerous ineffective assaults over the course of the next few years

  8. The Philadelphia • In 1803, the American Frigate the Philadelphia pursued an enemy Xebec into an uncharted reef • The Philadelphia caught on a sandbar and was forced to an embarrassing surrender • American Commodore Edwin Preble was forced to decide the best course of action • He ordered a raid, and Lieutenant Stephen Decatur successfully carried it out • This was the most effective victory by the Americans to date in the war

  9. A New Course of Action • The United States opted to pit the Arabs against themselves • Yusuf Karamanli was the Bashaw of Tripoli, but his brother, Hamet, was the rightful owner to the throne • Hamet was convinced by the Americans to overthrow Yusuf • American marines and Hamet’s ragtag army marched hundreds of miles across the desert from Egypt • They successfully seized the city of Derna • Victory! Yusuf was compelled to sign a peace treaty

  10. War’s End? • Peace was negotiated, though Yusuf was never overthrown • The return of American prisoners was guaranteed • Overall, not much really changed • Only Tripoli made an agreement • The other Barbary States weren’t bound by terms • American vessels traded freely for about the next decade, until incidents with Algiers flared

  11. Importance • The Barbary Wars prompted the U.S. to build a navy • The wars united the American armed forces (people fought as marines rather than Georgians and New Yorkers) • Signaled the weakened status of the Barbary States • Proved that America could execute a war far from home (first real test of American military power) • Provided valuable military training • Made the Americans overconfident in their abilities--War of 1812

  12. The Second Barbary War • During the War of 1812, the pirate states increased their attacks on American shipping • Ended swiftly (the American navy was much more seasoned after the war of 1812) • Ended all tribute payments by the United States to pirate states • By 1830 most European nations had followed suit

  13. Importance • Tribute payments stopped because: • Britain and Holland followed America’s lead and bombarded the Algerian fleets and fortifications • French colonialism challenged American and Dutch activity • Italy overthrew the Bashaw of Tripoli and created Libya • 19th century Imperial colonialism put an end to the piracy • America’s victories against the pirates set the stage for this colonialism

More Related