Fashioning Insurrection

From Imperial Resistance To American Orientalisms

About the Exhibit

Bombardement et prise d’Alger (The Bombardment and Capture of Algiers)

View original record

Hand-colored engraving
Paris, France: F. Dubreuil, 1830
Brown University Library, Anne S. K. Brown Military Collection


Until 1830, Algiers, along with Tunis and Tripoli, reigned as one of three regencies under the suzerainty of the Ottoman sultan in Constantinople. Though Ottoman control was little more than nominal, it was still acknowledged from investiture of the position by the sultan and the sultan’s receipt of regular tribute. The Barbary States exerted power over Mediterranean trade routes by plundering merchant vessels and taking captives in exchange for ransom from European and American governments. In July 1830, French expeditionary forces conquered the city of Algiers, and by 1847, they subdued nearly all of what is now Algeria to the north of the Sahara. The conquest ended nearly 400 years of Ottoman rule and ushered in over 130 years of French colonial governance. The inscription reads, “France by the courage and the value of its soldiers has the honor alone to make the trade of the seas free to all nations.”