Fashioning Insurrection

From Imperial Resistance To American Orientalisms

About the Exhibit

Histoire de Barbarie, et de ses corsaires, divisée en sic livres…

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Father Pierre Dan (author, c. 1580–1649)
Engraving
Paris, France: Chez Pierre Rocolet, 1637
Brown University Library, Starred Book Collection


Historian Robert Davis estimated that one million Europeans were enslaved by Barbary corsairs between 1530 and 1780. Subsequent accounts of American captivity in the Barbary states marked the latest incarnation in a long tradition of a travel genre that peaked in the 1680s and enjoyed continued popularity through the eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries in pamphlets and full volumes. Most early Barbary accounts were not written by captives but by missionaries, including this book’s author, Father Pierre Dan, in order to free certain captives. Yet white captives could often escape slavery by converting to Islam and settling in North Africa. Later accounts from freed captives and those who escaped slavery preserve many sartorial details of Ottoman North Africans, also demonstrating a keen fascination with regional customs from religion and government to law and punishment. These themes also appear in contemporaneous costume albums depicting dress across the Ottoman Empire.