Fashioning Insurrection

From Imperial Resistance To American Orientalisms

About the Exhibit

Abd-el-Kader rendant visite au Prince-Président, dans sa loge, à la représentation extraordinaire donnée à l'Opéra

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Ange-Louis Janet (aka Janet-Lange) (artist, 1815–72)
Engraving
L’illustration 20 (October 28, 1852)
Paris, France: Armand le Chevalier et Cie
Brown University Library, Starred Book Collection


Following Abd el-Kader’s surrender in December 1847, the short-lived French Second Republic outlined a policy of assimilation and settlement. The 1848 Constitution declared Algeria to be a “French territory.” From 1852, the Second Empire strengthened the military in administering the territories, quelling resistance in oases of the Northern Sahara and, in 1857, Kabylia, the last independent stronghold at the heart of Algeria. Abd el-Kader was at last released from his detention in France on October 16, 1852. Napoleon III welcomed him to Paris, greeting him with all the pomp befitting a head of state and a worthy adversary of the French. This purely propagandistic gesture occurred at the Opéra’s performance of Rossini’s Mosé in Egitto (Moses in Egypt), where Napoleon hailed Abd el-Kader as the “Vercingétorix algérien,” comparing him to the Gaulish leader who capitulated to Caesar and became a symbol of a poetic primitive past in French folklore.