Fashioning Insurrection

From Imperial Resistance To American Orientalisms

About the Exhibit

Conference of Captn. Sir Jas. Brisbane with the Dey of Algiers, August 30th 1816

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George Francis Lyon (artist, 1795–1832)
Color aquatint
London, England: October 25, 1816
Brown University Library, Anne S. K. Brown Military Collection


Three days before the conference illustrated here, Anglo-Dutch fleets bombarded Algiers to retaliate against the dey's violation of an antislavery treaty. Abraham Salamé, the Ottoman dragoman (interpreter) for the British, relates that the dey had also recently detained the British consul to Algiers, but his family escaped disguised in midshipmen’s clothes. The resulting attack continued a campaign by various European and American navies to suppress piracy in the Barbary states. This conference determined its outcome. The dragoman, in a plain Ottoman kaftan and turban, simultaneously relays Brisbane’s demands to the dey, seated cross-legged on a divan. His accoutrements of status include an opium pipe under his hand and a gold fly whisk (to his right). The dragoman and Brisbane each appear with a hand raised, indicating speech. The dey agreed to the expedition's demands, including large sums to compensate the British consul and the repatriation of 1,200 Christians abducted from Naples and Sicily.