British Slaves and Barbary Corsairs is the first comprehensive study of the thousands of Britons captured and enslaved in North Africa in the early modern period, an issue of intense contemporary concern but almost wholly overlooked in modern histories of Britain. The study charts the course of victims' lives from capture to eventual liberation, death in Barbary, or, for a lucky few, escape. After sketching the outlines of Barbary's government and society, and the world of the corsairs, it describes the trauma of the slave-market, the lives of galley-slaves and labourers, and the fate of female captives. Most captives clung on to their Christian faith, but a significant minority apostatized and accepted Islam. For them, and for Britons who joined the corsairs voluntarily, identity became fluid and multi-layered. Bernard Capp also explores in depth how ransoms were raised by private and public initiatives, and how redemptions were organised by merchants, consuls, and other intermediaries. With most families too poor to raise any ransom, the state came under intense pressure to intervene. From the mid-seventeenth century, the navy played a significant role in 'gunboat diplomacy' that eventually helped end the corsair threat. The Barbary corsairs posed a challenge to most European powers, and the study places the British story within the wider context of Mediterranean slavery, which saw Moors and Christians as both captors and captives.
Here is a comprehensive study of the thousands of Britons captured and enslaved in North Africa in the early modern period, charting the course of victims' lives from capture to liberation, death, or, escape.
The Reinvention of Atlantic Slavery shows how, at a moment of crisis after the Age of Revolutions, ambitious planters in the Upper US South, Cuba, and Brazil forged a new set of relationships with one another to sidestep the financial ...
... 106, 176, 193 Inquisition 111 Irish college 81 Gallagher, Bishop Redmond (Killala, later Derry) 44, 52–3 Gallagher, Fr John 136 Gallagher, John Baptist 163 Gallagher, Redmond 68 Galway 35, 37, 39, 59, 86, 105, 117, 147, 167 Galway, ...
They were read by many people who read little else, and the works of Shakespeare and Jonson, among others, have numerous references to them. Professor Capp's fascinating book (Faber, 1979) is the first to study their history in depth.
John Taylor was a prolific and colourful popular writer who gives us a unique picture of England from James I to the civil war through the eyes of a London waterman.
In "The Fifth Monarchy Men "(Faber, 1972), Professor Capp places the movement in the context of the rise of millenarian thought in Europe from the Reformation and its rapid spread in England during the Civil Wars.
Aimed at social and cultural historians, this is an exploration of how women of the poorer and middling sorts in early Modern England negotiated a patriarchal culture.
82–5; Medieval Irish Saints' Lives: An Introduction to 'Vitae Sanctorum Hiberniae' (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1991), 319; Joseph Falaky Nagy, Conversing with Angels and Ancients (Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 1997), 296.
Old, blind, and crippled, Hayle had been maintained for years by his brother Thomas, with the help of a pittance from the local overseers. By 1620, however, Thomas had also sunk into destitution under his burden, and begged magistrates ...
Explores what happened once the monarchy had been swept away after the civil war and puritans found themselves in power.