Fashioning Insurrection

From Imperial Resistance To American Orientalisms

About the Exhibit

The Abd el-Kader Quadrille

View original record

Carlo Minasi (composer, 1817–91)
Chromolithograph
Day & Son (lithographer), 1845
Brown University Library, Anne S. K. Brown Military Collection


Before the surrender of Abd el-Kader (1808–83) in December 1847, he actively resisted French colonizers, sparking recognition and admiration across the globe. His reputation of resistance even inspired commemorative pieces of music, including this eponymous quadrille. By this period, this genre of music often accompanied groups of four couples dancing in a square formation at balls and clubs. However, quadrilles originated in the seventeenth century as military parades wherein four mounted horsemen demonstrated square formations. Fittingly, the cover to this quadrille’s sheet music offers a nod to that past by portraying Abd el-Kader, sword in hand, dashing on horseback to join a battle against the French. Minasi, the composer of this sheet music, was a London-born son of an Italian immigrant. He composed over forty albums of music for the concertina and published over forty tutors for students of the concertina and various other instruments, which range from martial themes to women’s daily lives.