Fashioning Insurrection

From Imperial Resistance To American Orientalisms

About the Exhibit

“Batterie Couverte. Servie par des Arabes et des Turcs (Covered Battery. Used by the Arabs and Turks)” from Prise de Constantine

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Denis Auguste Marie Raffet (lithographer, 1804–60)
Chromolithograph
Paris, France: Chez de Gihaut Freres, 1838
Brown University Library, Anne S. K. Brown Military Collection


This battle scene captures the intense guerrilla warfare used to defend the city of Constantine against the French invaders. Dark, cramped urban dwellings transformed into covered batteries from which Arabs and Turks repelled the French troops. The costumes of these North African soldiers also attest to the sartorial elements that the French would later adapt for the uniforms of native soldiers, known as Zouaves, that they would recruit into their own forces: loose pantaloons (shalvar), short jackets or vests and distinctive turbans wrapped around red fezzes. Admired for their ease of mobility, such outfits suited their wearers in the difficult terrain of this battle but would prove to have new applications and contexts abroad.