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Franco-Algerian war (1681–1688)

The French-Algerian War of 1681–1688 was part of a wider campaign by France against the Barbary Pirates in the 1680s.

Franco-Algerian War 1681–1688

Bombardment of Algiers by the fleet of Admiral Duquesne in 1682
Date1681-1688
Location
Algiers,French Riviera
Result
Belligerents
France Regency of Algiers
Commanders and leaders
Louis XIV
Abraham Duquesne
Jean II d'Estrées
Baba Hassan
Mezzo Morto

Background edit

King Louis XIV sought to have the French flag respected in the Mediterranean, to preserve the economic advantages already obtained, and to play the role of "Most Christian King" (Rex Christianissimus) against Islamic powers, while seeing to the maintaining the French alliance with the Sublime Porte.[1] France tried to settle the question of the Bastion, and the Spaniards of Oran tried to occupy Tlemcen and the English fleet threatened Algiers. But Algiers did not yield to these intimidations: any concession was refused to the French, the Spaniards were pushed pack to Oran in 1675, and the raïs dispersed the English ships which in 1678 threatened the city of Algiers.[2]

In October 1680, Barbary pirates captured a number of French vessels, without declaration of war,[3] and took the captains and crews to Algiers as slaves. On 18 October the Dey of Algiers, Baba-Hassan, officially declared war on Louis XIV[4] and on 23 October, he announced the commencement to hostilities to the French consul, Jean Le Vacher.[5] At the same time, he also ordered twelve warships to sea. Learning of this, Louis XIV ordered his ministers to prepare a punitive expedition.

Bombardment of Algiers (1682) edit

 
French vessels bombing Algiers in 1682

In 1677, following an explosion in Algiers and several attempts on his life, Dey Mohammed Trik escaped to Tripoli, leaving Algiers to Baba Hassan.[6] Just one years into his rule he was already at war with one of the most powerful countries in Europe, the Kingdom of France. In 1682 France bombarded Algiers for the first time.[7] The outcome of the operation is difficult to assess. Around 500 Algerians were killed, and fifty buildings demolished.[8] The French fleet succeeded in inflicting serious damage on the port and city of Algiers, without suffering any major losses itself, and it forced the Dey to sue for peace. However Duquesne's mission had been to secure Dey's complete submission, which time and the weather had not permitted. When Louis XIV learned on 11 October that the mission had not achieved its aim, he made his displeasure clear. He nevertheless realised the overwhelming effect that relatively few bombs - some 280 - had had on the city. During the French bombardments which followed, in 1683, 1684 and 1688, Duquesne and then Tourville, would force the Dey to free all the Christians he held in slavery, but they did not succeed in ending the corsair war waged by the Regency of Algiers against European merchant vessels in the Mediterranean.

The Jews of Marseilles were suspected of passing warnings to their co-religionists in Algiers about the impending French assault, and this led to their being temporarily expelled from the city.[9]

The next year, Duquesne sailed again to bombard Algiers for the second time.[10]

Bombardment of Algiers (1683) edit

 
Bombardment of Algiers in 1683 by the French fleet

The bombardment began on the night of 26–27 June, and two hundred and twenty two bombs, launched in less than twenty four hours, started fires in Algiers and prompted general disorder as well as killing around 300 Algerians. Hassan Dey intended to resist nonetheless, but the population urged him to sue for peace. Duquesne agreed to a truce on condition that all Christian slaves were delivered to him. When the truce expired, Hassan Dey asked for, and received, an extension. Duquesne meanwhile set out his terms for agreeing a peace:

  • freeing all Christian slaves
  • an indemnity equal to the value of all the goods seized from France by pirates
  • a solemn embassy to be sent to Louis XIV to ask his forgiveness for the hostile acts committed against his navy.

These terms resolved the Dey to continue resistance.[11]

 
Dutch engraving showing the death of Consul le Vacher, 1698

Before a peace treaty could be signed though, Baba Hassan was deposed and killed by a Raïs called Mezzo Morto Hüseyin.[12] Continuing the war against France, the bombardments resumed, killing many victims. Mezzomorto threatened, if the firing did not cease, to put the Christian captives at the mouths of the cannons, still the bombardments continued. So he carried out his threats.[13]

One of the Algerian commanders, Mezzo Morto Hüseyin Pasha, then seized command and denounced the cowardice of the Dey, for agreeing to treat with the French. He had him put to death and was acclaimed as his successor by the janissaries. Before long a red flag, raised from the heights of the Casbah, announced to Duquesne that combat was resumed.[11] The Algerians replied to the bombs hurled at their city by tying the French consul, Jean Le Vacher, to the mouth of a cannon.[14] On 28 July pieces of his shattered limbs fell on the decks of the French vessels, along with those of other French prisoners blown to pieces.[15]

Despite the fierce resistance of the Algerians, the city was engulfed by an enormous fire which consumed palaces, mosques, and many other buildings across the city; the wounded could not find any refuge; and ammunition ran low. Algiers would have been reduced to ruins had not Duquesne himself run out of missiles. The bombardment ended on 29 July.

 
Engraving representing Tourville (left) in a meeting with his leader, Admiral Duquesne (right) during the second bombardment of Algiers in 1683.

The pride of the Algerian pirates was crushed, and as the French fleet returned to France, Algiers sent an embassy under Djiafar-Aga-Effendi to ask forgiveness of Louis XIV, for the injuries and cruelty that the corsairs had inflicted on France.[16][11]

The new Dey, Mezzo Morto Hüseyin Pasha agreed to free another 546 captives,[17][14] but refused to sign a peace agreement with Duquesne, who was then 79 years of age, so Louis XIV sent another envoy, Anne Hilarion de Tourville, to treat with him. A hundred-year peace was agreed, including After almost a month of negotiations, a treaty of "Tourville" was signed in April 1684, it included:[18]

  • Freedom of trade between the two countries,
  • Liberation of slaves,
  • Respect of the free passage for naval vessels,
  • Free exercise of the Christian religion,
  • Establishment of lists of products that are negotiable between the two countries,
  • Assurance given to the Dey that his ambassador in Paris could ensure compliance with the treaty.

Bombardment of Algiers (1688) edit

The agreement was not respected: French corsairs, encouraged by Marseille merchants, again attacked Algerian ships. The Dey retaliated by arresting French nationals and even the consul, without however denouncing the treaty in 1686. The King of France supported the Marseillais.[19]

 
French fleet in combat against Algerian vessels, 1688

In 1688 a military expedition was ordered by Louis XIV against the Regency of Algiers in order to enforce the peace treaty of 1683 which had been violated by Algerian pirates. The squadron, comprising 31 ships and 10 bomb galiots, was commanded by Jean II d'Estrées.[20][21][22][23]

D'Estrées' squadron arrived at Algiers on 26 June. The bombardment lasted several days, and succeeded in inflicting serious damage on the city. Hadj Mezzomorto killed more than forty Christians by cannon and the French responded by executing Muslim hostages on board. Algerian artillery defences had been strengthened since the previous French expeditions in 1682 and 1683, and so the Algerians sank several French ships.[24][25] Faced with determined resistance, the French fleet was obliged to retire after 16 days.[26] Mezzo Morto retaliated by attackin the French coast and shipping.[27][28]

Aftermath edit

By the end of 1688, the Ottoman Sultan Suleiman II, at the request of the King of France, sent a new pasha to Algiers. But the Dey felt so strong that he did not allow a delegate from Istanbul to land in Algiers. This show of force prompted the janissaries who were fearing for their influence to depose him and force him to flee.[26] They choose Hadj-Chaban as his successor.[29] The new Dey sent a plenipotentiary to Versailles; Stadtholder of the United Provinces William of Orange who was Louis XIV's most bitter personal enemy. Having become William III of England, immediately aroused a general coalition in Europe against the Sun King. The latter was then reduced to putting an end to the disputes which then opposed him to Pope Alexander VIII as well as to the Dey of Algiers.[30] Relations with France, which were restored in 1688, improved, especially after the Dey had sent the ambassador Mohammed-el-Amine to France.[29] On 24 September 1689, a treaty was signed in Algiers.[29]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Kaddache 2003, p. 416
  2. ^ Fisher, Godfrey (1957). Barbary Legend; War, Trade, and Piracy in North Africa, 1415-1830. Clarendon Press. pp. 230–239.
  3. ^ Eugène Sue (1836). Histoire de la marine française: XVIIe siècle - Jean Bart. F. Bonnaire. pp. 145–151.
  4. ^ Roland Courtinat (2003). La piraterie barbaresque en Méditerranée: XVI-XIXe siècle. SERRE EDITEUR. pp. 60–. ISBN 978-2-906431-65-2.
  5. ^ Henri Jean François Edmond Pellisier de Reynaud (1844). Mémoires historiques et géographiques sur l'Algérie. Imprimerie royale. p. 274.
  6. ^ Leaves from a Lady's Diary of Her Travels in Barbary. H. Colburn. 1850. pp. 139–.
  7. ^ Eugène Sue (1836). Histoire de la marine française XVIIe siècle Jean Bart (in French). Lyon Public Library. F. Bonnaire.
  8. ^ Joseph Wheelan (21 September 2004). Jefferson's War: America's First War on Terror 1801-1805. PublicAffairs. p. 41. ISBN 978-0-7867-4020-8.
  9. ^ Gillian Weiss (11 March 2011). Captives and Corsairs: France and Slavery in the Early Modern Mediterranean. Stanford University Press. p. 89. ISBN 978-0-8047-7784-1.
  10. ^ Eliakim Littell; Robert S. Littell (1854). Living Age ... Littell, Son and Company. p. 65.
  11. ^ a b c Michelant, L. "Bombardement d'Alger par Duquesne". Faits mémorables de l'histoire de France. Retrieved 21 April 2018.
  12. ^ Robert Lambert Playfair; Sir Robert Lambert Playfair (1884). The Scourge of Christendom: Annals of British Relations with Algiers Prior to the French Conquest. Smith, Elder & Company. pp. 142–.
  13. ^ France, Ministère de la marine et des colonies (1861–1896). Revue maritime et coloniale / Ministère de la marine et des colonies. Paris: Librairie de L. Hachette. p. 663.
  14. ^ a b Daniel Panzac (2005). The Barbary Corsairs: The End of a Legend, 1800-1820. BRILL. p. 33. ISBN 90-04-12594-9.
  15. ^ Clement Melchior Justin Maxime Fourcheux de Montrond (1860). Les marins les plus celebres. Par ---. 5. ed. Lefort. p. 55.
  16. ^ Alan G. Jamieson (15 February 2013). Lords of the Sea: A History of the Barbary Corsairs. Reaktion Books. p. 134. ISBN 978-1-86189-946-0.
  17. ^ Paul Eudel (1902). L'orf?vrerie alg?rienne et tunisienne. Рипол Классик. pp. 35–. ISBN 978-5-87318-342-5.
  18. ^ France, Ministère de la marine et des colonies (1861–1896). Revue maritime et coloniale / Ministère de la marine et des colonies. Paris: Librairie de L. Hachette. p. 663.
  19. ^ Kaddache 2003, p. 417
  20. ^ Geoffrey Symcox (2012). The Crisis of French Sea Power, 1688–1697: From the Guerre d'Escadre to the Guerre de Course. Springer Science & Business Media. p. 74. ISBN 978-94-010-2072-5.
  21. ^ Kaddache, Mahfoud (1982). L'Algérie des Algériens. Algiers: Société nationale d'édition et de diffusion. p. 417. ISBN 978-9-961-96621-1.
  22. ^ Geoffrey Symcox (6 December 2012). The Crisis of French Sea Power, 1688–1697: From the Guerre d'Escadre to the Guerre de Course. Springer Science & Business Media. p. 74. ISBN 978-94-010-2072-5.
  23. ^ Gaïd, Mouloud (1975). L'Algérie sous les Turcs. Maison tunisienne de l'édition. p. 148. Retrieved 22 April 2018.
  24. ^ Gaïd 2014, p. 148
  25. ^ Gaïd 1975, p. 75
  26. ^ a b Jörg Manfred Mössner (10 October 2013). Die Völkerrechtspersönlichkeit und die Völkerrechtspraxis der Barbareskenstaaten: (Algier, Tripolis, Tunis 1518-1830). De Gruyter. p. 15. ISBN 978-3-11-169567-9.
  27. ^ Babinger, Fr. (24 Apr 2012). "Mezzomorto". Brill. Retrieved 20 Jan 2022.
  28. ^ Phillip C. Naylor (2006). Historical Dictionary of Algeria. Scarecrow Press. p. 279. ISBN 978-0-8108-6480-1.
  29. ^ a b c Jörg Manfred Mössner (10 October 2013). Die Völkerrechtspersönlichkeit und die Völkerrechtspraxis der Barbareskenstaaten: (Algier, Tripolis, Tunis 1518-1830). De Gruyter. p. 15. ISBN 978-3-11-169567-9.
  30. ^ EUGÈNE PLANTET (1889). CORRESPONDANCE DES DEYS D'ALGER AVEC LA COUR DE FRANCE 1579 — 1833(CORRESPONDENCE OF THE DEYS OF ALGIERS WITH THE COURT OF FRANCE 1579 — 1833) (PDF). Paris: RECUEILLIE DANS LES DÉPÔTS D’ARCHIVES DES AFFAIRES ÉTRANGÈRES, DE LA MARINE, DES COLONIES ET DE LA CHAMBRE DE COMMERCE DE MARSEILLE. pp. XXI.

Sources edit

  • Gaïd, Mouloud (2014) [1975]. L'Algérie sous les Turcs [Algeria under the Turks] (in French). Mimouni. ISBN 978-9961-68-157-2.
  • Kaddache, Mahfoud (2003). L'Algérie des Algériens de la préhistoire à 1954 [Algeria of the Algerians: Prehistory to 1954] (in French). Paris-Méditerranée. ISBN 978-2-84272-166-4.
  • Panzac, Daniel (2005). The Barbary Corsairs: The End of a Legend, 1800-1820. BRILL. ISBN 978-90-04-12594-0.

franco, algerian, 1681, 1688, french, algerian, 1681, 1688, part, wider, campaign, france, against, barbary, pirates, 1680s, franco, algerian, 1681, 1688bombardment, algiers, fleet, admiral, duquesne, 1682date1681, 1688locationalgiers, french, rivieraresultbom. The French Algerian War of 1681 1688 was part of a wider campaign by France against the Barbary Pirates in the 1680s Franco Algerian War 1681 1688Bombardment of Algiers by the fleet of Admiral Duquesne in 1682Date1681 1688LocationAlgiers French RivieraResultBombardment of Algiers 1682 Algerian Victory Bombardment of Algiers 1683 Peace treaty Bombardment of Algiers 1688 Algerian Victory conclusive peace treaty Algiers heavily damagedBelligerentsFranceRegency of AlgiersCommanders and leadersLouis XIV Abraham Duquesne Jean II d EstreesBaba Hassan Mezzo Morto Contents 1 Background 2 Bombardment of Algiers 1682 3 Bombardment of Algiers 1683 4 Bombardment of Algiers 1688 5 Aftermath 6 See also 7 References 8 SourcesBackground editKing Louis XIV sought to have the French flag respected in the Mediterranean to preserve the economic advantages already obtained and to play the role of Most Christian King Rex Christianissimus against Islamic powers while seeing to the maintaining the French alliance with the Sublime Porte 1 France tried to settle the question of the Bastion and the Spaniards of Oran tried to occupy Tlemcen and the English fleet threatened Algiers But Algiers did not yield to these intimidations any concession was refused to the French the Spaniards were pushed pack to Oran in 1675 and the rais dispersed the English ships which in 1678 threatened the city of Algiers 2 In October 1680 Barbary pirates captured a number of French vessels without declaration of war 3 and took the captains and crews to Algiers as slaves On 18 October the Dey of Algiers Baba Hassan officially declared war on Louis XIV 4 and on 23 October he announced the commencement to hostilities to the French consul Jean Le Vacher 5 At the same time he also ordered twelve warships to sea Learning of this Louis XIV ordered his ministers to prepare a punitive expedition Bombardment of Algiers 1682 editMain article Bombardment of Algiers 1682 nbsp French vessels bombing Algiers in 1682 In 1677 following an explosion in Algiers and several attempts on his life Dey Mohammed Trik escaped to Tripoli leaving Algiers to Baba Hassan 6 Just one years into his rule he was already at war with one of the most powerful countries in Europe the Kingdom of France In 1682 France bombarded Algiers for the first time 7 The outcome of the operation is difficult to assess Around 500 Algerians were killed and fifty buildings demolished 8 The French fleet succeeded in inflicting serious damage on the port and city of Algiers without suffering any major losses itself and it forced the Dey to sue for peace However Duquesne s mission had been to secure Dey s complete submission which time and the weather had not permitted When Louis XIV learned on 11 October that the mission had not achieved its aim he made his displeasure clear He nevertheless realised the overwhelming effect that relatively few bombs some 280 had had on the city During the French bombardments which followed in 1683 1684 and 1688 Duquesne and then Tourville would force the Dey to free all the Christians he held in slavery but they did not succeed in ending the corsair war waged by the Regency of Algiers against European merchant vessels in the Mediterranean The Jews of Marseilles were suspected of passing warnings to their co religionists in Algiers about the impending French assault and this led to their being temporarily expelled from the city 9 The next year Duquesne sailed again to bombard Algiers for the second time 10 Bombardment of Algiers 1683 editMain article Bombardment of Algiers 1683 nbsp Bombardment of Algiers in 1683 by the French fleet The bombardment began on the night of 26 27 June and two hundred and twenty two bombs launched in less than twenty four hours started fires in Algiers and prompted general disorder as well as killing around 300 Algerians Hassan Dey intended to resist nonetheless but the population urged him to sue for peace Duquesne agreed to a truce on condition that all Christian slaves were delivered to him When the truce expired Hassan Dey asked for and received an extension Duquesne meanwhile set out his terms for agreeing a peace freeing all Christian slaves an indemnity equal to the value of all the goods seized from France by pirates a solemn embassy to be sent to Louis XIV to ask his forgiveness for the hostile acts committed against his navy These terms resolved the Dey to continue resistance 11 nbsp Dutch engraving showing the death of Consul le Vacher 1698 Before a peace treaty could be signed though Baba Hassan was deposed and killed by a Rais called Mezzo Morto Huseyin 12 Continuing the war against France the bombardments resumed killing many victims Mezzomorto threatened if the firing did not cease to put the Christian captives at the mouths of the cannons still the bombardments continued So he carried out his threats 13 One of the Algerian commanders Mezzo Morto Huseyin Pasha then seized command and denounced the cowardice of the Dey for agreeing to treat with the French He had him put to death and was acclaimed as his successor by the janissaries Before long a red flag raised from the heights of the Casbah announced to Duquesne that combat was resumed 11 The Algerians replied to the bombs hurled at their city by tying the French consul Jean Le Vacher to the mouth of a cannon 14 On 28 July pieces of his shattered limbs fell on the decks of the French vessels along with those of other French prisoners blown to pieces 15 Despite the fierce resistance of the Algerians the city was engulfed by an enormous fire which consumed palaces mosques and many other buildings across the city the wounded could not find any refuge and ammunition ran low Algiers would have been reduced to ruins had not Duquesne himself run out of missiles The bombardment ended on 29 July nbsp Engraving representing Tourville left in a meeting with his leader Admiral Duquesne right during the second bombardment of Algiers in 1683 The pride of the Algerian pirates was crushed and as the French fleet returned to France Algiers sent an embassy under Djiafar Aga Effendi to ask forgiveness of Louis XIV for the injuries and cruelty that the corsairs had inflicted on France 16 11 The new Dey Mezzo Morto Huseyin Pasha agreed to free another 546 captives 17 14 but refused to sign a peace agreement with Duquesne who was then 79 years of age so Louis XIV sent another envoy Anne Hilarion de Tourville to treat with him A hundred year peace was agreed including After almost a month of negotiations a treaty of Tourville was signed in April 1684 it included 18 Freedom of trade between the two countries Liberation of slaves Respect of the free passage for naval vessels Free exercise of the Christian religion Establishment of lists of products that are negotiable between the two countries Assurance given to the Dey that his ambassador in Paris could ensure compliance with the treaty Bombardment of Algiers 1688 editMain article Bombardment of Algiers 1688 The agreement was not respected French corsairs encouraged by Marseille merchants again attacked Algerian ships The Dey retaliated by arresting French nationals and even the consul without however denouncing the treaty in 1686 The King of France supported the Marseillais 19 nbsp French fleet in combat against Algerian vessels 1688 In 1688 a military expedition was ordered by Louis XIV against the Regency of Algiers in order to enforce the peace treaty of 1683 which had been violated by Algerian pirates The squadron comprising 31 ships and 10 bomb galiots was commanded by Jean II d Estrees 20 21 22 23 D Estrees squadron arrived at Algiers on 26 June The bombardment lasted several days and succeeded in inflicting serious damage on the city Hadj Mezzomorto killed more than forty Christians by cannon and the French responded by executing Muslim hostages on board Algerian artillery defences had been strengthened since the previous French expeditions in 1682 and 1683 and so the Algerians sank several French ships 24 25 Faced with determined resistance the French fleet was obliged to retire after 16 days 26 Mezzo Morto retaliated by attackin the French coast and shipping 27 28 Aftermath editBy the end of 1688 the Ottoman Sultan Suleiman II at the request of the King of France sent a new pasha to Algiers But the Dey felt so strong that he did not allow a delegate from Istanbul to land in Algiers This show of force prompted the janissaries who were fearing for their influence to depose him and force him to flee 26 They choose Hadj Chaban as his successor 29 The new Dey sent a plenipotentiary to Versailles Stadtholder of the United Provinces William of Orange who was Louis XIV s most bitter personal enemy Having become William III of England immediately aroused a general coalition in Europe against the Sun King The latter was then reduced to putting an end to the disputes which then opposed him to Pope Alexander VIII as well as to the Dey of Algiers 30 Relations with France which were restored in 1688 improved especially after the Dey had sent the ambassador Mohammed el Amine to France 29 On 24 September 1689 a treaty was signed in Algiers 29 See also editFranco Algerian war 1609 1628 References edit Kaddache 2003 p 416 Fisher Godfrey 1957 Barbary Legend War Trade and Piracy in North Africa 1415 1830 Clarendon Press pp 230 239 Eugene Sue 1836 Histoire de la marine francaise XVIIe siecle Jean Bart F Bonnaire pp 145 151 Roland Courtinat 2003 La piraterie barbaresque en Mediterranee XVI XIXe siecle SERRE EDITEUR pp 60 ISBN 978 2 906431 65 2 Henri Jean Francois Edmond Pellisier de Reynaud 1844 Memoires historiques et geographiques sur l Algerie Imprimerie royale p 274 Leaves from a Lady s Diary of Her Travels in Barbary H Colburn 1850 pp 139 Eugene Sue 1836 Histoire de la marine francaise XVIIe siecle Jean Bart in French Lyon Public Library F Bonnaire Joseph Wheelan 21 September 2004 Jefferson s War America s First War on Terror 1801 1805 PublicAffairs p 41 ISBN 978 0 7867 4020 8 Gillian Weiss 11 March 2011 Captives and Corsairs France and Slavery in the Early Modern Mediterranean Stanford University Press p 89 ISBN 978 0 8047 7784 1 Eliakim Littell Robert S Littell 1854 Living Age Littell Son and Company p 65 a b c Michelant L Bombardement d Alger par Duquesne Faits memorables de l histoire de France Retrieved 21 April 2018 Robert Lambert Playfair Sir Robert Lambert Playfair 1884 The Scourge of Christendom Annals of British Relations with Algiers Prior to the French Conquest Smith Elder amp Company pp 142 France Ministere de la marine et des colonies 1861 1896 Revue maritime et coloniale Ministere de la marine et des colonies Paris Librairie de L Hachette p 663 Panzac 2005 p 33 a b Daniel Panzac 2005 The Barbary Corsairs The End of a Legend 1800 1820 BRILL p 33 ISBN 90 04 12594 9 Clement Melchior Justin Maxime Fourcheux de Montrond 1860 Les marins les plus celebres Par 5 ed Lefort p 55 Alan G Jamieson 15 February 2013 Lords of the Sea A History of the Barbary Corsairs Reaktion Books p 134 ISBN 978 1 86189 946 0 Paul Eudel 1902 L orf vrerie alg rienne et tunisienne Ripol Klassik pp 35 ISBN 978 5 87318 342 5 France Ministere de la marine et des colonies 1861 1896 Revue maritime et coloniale Ministere de la marine et des colonies Paris Librairie de L Hachette p 663 Panzac 2005 p 33 Kaddache 2003 p 417 Geoffrey Symcox 2012 The Crisis of French Sea Power 1688 1697 From the Guerre d Escadre to the Guerre de Course Springer Science amp Business Media p 74 ISBN 978 94 010 2072 5 Kaddache Mahfoud 1982 L Algerie des Algeriens Algiers Societe nationale d edition et de diffusion p 417 ISBN 978 9 961 96621 1 Geoffrey Symcox 6 December 2012 The Crisis of French Sea Power 1688 1697 From the Guerre d Escadre to the Guerre de Course Springer Science amp Business Media p 74 ISBN 978 94 010 2072 5 Gaid Mouloud 1975 L Algerie sous les Turcs Maison tunisienne de l edition p 148 Retrieved 22 April 2018 Gaid 2014 p 148 Gaid 1975 p 75 a b Jorg Manfred Mossner 10 October 2013 Die Volkerrechtspersonlichkeit und die Volkerrechtspraxis der Barbareskenstaaten Algier Tripolis Tunis 1518 1830 De Gruyter p 15 ISBN 978 3 11 169567 9 Babinger Fr 24 Apr 2012 Mezzomorto Brill Retrieved 20 Jan 2022 Phillip C Naylor 2006 Historical Dictionary of Algeria Scarecrow Press p 279 ISBN 978 0 8108 6480 1 a b c Jorg Manfred Mossner 10 October 2013 Die Volkerrechtspersonlichkeit und die Volkerrechtspraxis der Barbareskenstaaten Algier Tripolis Tunis 1518 1830 De Gruyter p 15 ISBN 978 3 11 169567 9 EUGENE PLANTET 1889 CORRESPONDANCE DES DEYS D ALGER AVEC LA COUR DE FRANCE 1579 1833 CORRESPONDENCE OF THE DEYS OF ALGIERS WITH THE COURT OF FRANCE 1579 1833 PDF Paris RECUEILLIE DANS LES DEPOTS D ARCHIVES DES AFFAIRES ETRANGERES DE LA MARINE DES COLONIES ET DE LA CHAMBRE DE COMMERCE DE MARSEILLE pp XXI Sources editGaid Mouloud 2014 1975 L Algerie sous les Turcs Algeria under the Turks in French Mimouni ISBN 978 9961 68 157 2 Kaddache Mahfoud 2003 L Algerie des Algeriens de la prehistoire a 1954 Algeria of the Algerians Prehistory to 1954 in French Paris Mediterranee ISBN 978 2 84272 166 4 Panzac Daniel 2005 The Barbary Corsairs The End of a Legend 1800 1820 BRILL ISBN 978 90 04 12594 0 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Franco Algerian war 1681 1688 amp oldid 1218864697, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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