The
bombardment of Algiers
in 1683 was a French naval operation against the
Regency of Algiers
during the
French-Algerian War 1681?88
. It led to the rescue of more than 100 French prisoners,
[2]
in some cases after decades of captivity, but the great majority of Christian captives in Algiers were not liberated.
Background
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]
The previous year,
Louis XIV
had ordered
Duquesne
to
bombard Algiers
after the Dey declared war on France. At the head of a forty-strong fleet, Duquesne sailed to Algiers in July 1682, but bad weather delayed his attack. After several bombardments in August, the city suffered serious damage, but bad weather prevented the signing of a conclusive peace agreement, forcing Duquesne to return to France.
In the Spring of 1683, Duquesne set to sea once again with a fleet of 17
ships of the line
, 3
frigates
, 16
galleys
, 7
bomb galiots
, 48 longboats, 18
fluyts
and 8
tartanes
. This was a larger force than had been sent to Algiers the previous year. As well as being more numerous, the galiots were better equipped and manned by a special corps of bombardiers.
[3]
The fleet set sail from
Toulon
on 23 May.
Second bombardment of Algiers
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The bombardment began on the night of 26?27 June, and two hundred and twenty two bombs, launched in less than twenty four hours, started fires in Algiers and prompted general disorder as well as killing around 300 Algerians. Hassan Dey intended to resist nonetheless, but the population urged him to sue for peace. Duquesne agreed to a truce on condition that all Christian slaves were delivered to him. When the truce expired, Hassan Dey asked for, and received, an extension. Duquesne meanwhile set out his terms for agreeing a peace:
- freeing all Christian slaves
- an indemnity equal to the value of all the goods seized from France by pirates
- a solemn embassy to be sent to Louis XIV to ask his forgiveness for the hostile acts committed against his navy.
These terms resolved the Dey to continue resistance.
[3]
One of the Algerian commanders,
Mezzo Morto Huseyin Pasha
, then seized command and denounced the cowardice of the Dey, who had agreed to treat with the French. He had him put to death and was acclaimed as his successor by the
janissaries
. Before long a red flag, raised from the heights of the
Casbah
, announced to Duquesne that combat was resumed.
[3]
The Algerians replied to the bombs hurled at their city by tying the French consul,
Jean Le Vacher
to the mouth of a cannon.
[4]
On 28 July pieces of his shattered limbs fell on the decks of the French vessels, along with those of other French prisoners blown to pieces.
[2]
Despite the fierce resistance of the Algerians, the city was engulfed by an enormous fire which consumed palaces, mosques, and many other buildings across the city; the wounded could not find any refuge; and ammunition ran low. Algiers would have been reduced to ruins had not Duquesne himself run out of missiles. The bombardment ended on 29 July.
Louis XIV failed to either destroy Algiers or force the Algerians to make peace on his terms.
[5]
Aftermath
[
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In 1684, Louis XIV sent an envoy,
Tourville
, to Algiers. A peace treaty that retained the provisions of earlier treaties was signed.
[4]
Five years later, after Algiers violated the treaty, the French again bombarded the city.
Admiral d'Estrees
obliged the Dey to seek a new peace agreement, signed on 27 September 1688, which the Algerians respected. Thereafter the corsair captains, though they avoided the coasts of France, continued their raids elsewhere, causing considerable damage to the coastal regions of Spain.
[6]
See also
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References
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Bibliography
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]
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ISBN
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.
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ISBN
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.
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Une histoire de la marine de guerre francaise
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ISBN
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.
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ISBN
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.
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editions Robert Laffont
.
ISBN
978-2-221-12482-6
.
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Les 600 plus grandes batailles navales de l'Histoire
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ISBN
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.
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La piraterie barbaresque en Mediterranee: XVIe ? XIXe siecle
(in French). Serre Editeur. p. 61.
- Peter, Jean (1997).
Les barbaresques sous Louis XIV: le duel entre Alger et la Marine du Roi (1681-1698)
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- John A. Lynn
(2014).
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. editions Perrin.
ISBN
978-2-262-04755-9
.
- Henry Laurens
,
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, Gilles Veinstein,
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, Editions Odile Jacob, 2009
- Sue, Eugene
(1836).
Histoire de la marine francaise: XVIIe siecle - Jean Bart
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- Pellissier de Reynaud (1844).
Memoires historiques et geographiques sur l'Algerie
(in French). Paris: Imprimerie royale. p. 274 et suiv.
- Troude, Onesime (1867?1868).
Batailles navales de la France
(in French). Paris: Challamel aine.
- Charles Bourel de La Ronciere,
Le Bombardement d'Alger en 1683, d'apres une relation inedite
, Imprimerie nationale, 1916, 55 pages
(
lire en ligne
)
- La Ronciere, Charles (1920).
Histoire de la Marine francaise: La Guerre de Trente Ans, Colbert
(in French). Paris: Plon.