Fashioning Insurrection

From Imperial Resistance To American Orientalisms

About the Exhibit

“Review After the Taking of Constantine, October 1837,” from Algier

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Lithograph
Denis Auguste Marie Raffet (lithographer, 1804–60)
Brown University Library, Anne S. K. Brown Military Collection


Ahmed Bey bin Mohamed Sherif resisted French and other attempts to subjugate his beylik of Constantine. In November 1836, the French failed in their first attempt to capture Constantine but succeeded the following October. In the left of the foreground, toppled Muslim gravestones litter the ground, immediately identifiable by the turbans crowning the slabs, indicating the ranks of the deceased. These funerary representations of sartorial details make a fitting reminder of the Ottoman social order that had fallen in the region. The Arab tribesmen in white robes look toward the rows of French soldiers and the Zouaves enlisted from local populations. French officers designed the distinctive Zouave uniform for the North African troops they recruited shortly after the 1830 invasion. The success of the second Constantine expedition inspired an explosion of popular prints and photographs depicting Zouave uniforms, which solidified the place of the Armée d’Afrique in the French collective imagination.