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Jan Janszoon

Jan Janszoon van Haarlem, commonly known as Reis Mourad the Younger (c. 1570 – c. 1641), was an Ottoman and Salé Rovers Dutch pirate in Algeria and Morocco who converted to Islam after being captured by a Moorish state in 1618. He began serving as a pirate, one of the most famous of the 17th-century "Salé Rovers". Together with other corsairs, he helped establish the independent Republic of Salé at the city of that name, serving as the first President and Commander. He also served as Governor of Oualidia.

Jan Janszoon
Grand Admiral of Salé
In office
1619–1627
Governor of Salé (ceremonial)
In office
1623–1627
Appointed bySultan Zidan Abu Maali
Governor of Oualidia
In office
1640–1641
Appointed bySultan Mohammed esh Sheikh es Seghir
Personal details
Born
Jan Janszoon van Salee / Van Haarlem

c. 1570
Haarlem, County of Holland
Died1641 or later
Morocco
NationalityDutch
ChildrenLysbeth Janszoon van Haarlem, Anthony Janszoon van Salee, Abraham Janszoon van Salee, Philip Janszoon van Salee, Cornelis Janszoon van Salee, Maaike Hendriksdr
OccupationAdmiral
Military service
AllegianceAlgeria, Morocco
RankCommodore (Reis)

Early life

Jan Janszoon van Haerlem was born in Haarlem in 1570, which is in Holland, then a province ruled by the Habsburg monarchy. The Eighty Years War between Dutch rebels and the Spanish Empire under King Philip II had started seven years before his birth; it lasted all his life. Little is known about his early life. He married Soutgen Cave in 1595 and had two children with her, Edward and Lysbeth.[citation needed]

Privateering

In 1600, Jan Janszoon began as a Dutch privateer sailing from his home port of Haarlem, working for the state with letters of marque to harass Spanish shipping during the Eighty Years' War. Janszoon overstepped the boundaries of his letters and found his way to the semi-independent port states of the Barbary Coast of North Africa, whence he could attack ships of every foreign state: when he attacked a Spanish ship, he flew the Dutch flag; when he attacked any other, he became an Ottoman Captain and flew the crescent moon and star flag of the Turks or the flag of any of various other Mediterranean principalities. During this period, he had abandoned his Dutch family.[1]

Capture by Barbary corsairs

 
Sail plan for a Polacca, first built by the Barbary pirates around the 16th century, many scholars believe the Polacca was extensively used by Jan Janszoon. The ship could sail with a large crew of 75 and was armed with 24 cannons.

Janszoon was captured in 1618 at Lanzarote (one of the Canary Islands) by Barbary corsairs and taken to Algiers as a captive. There he "turned Turk", or Muslim. Some historians speculate that the conversion was forced.[2] Janszoon himself, however, tried very hard to convert his fellow Europeans who were Christian to become Muslim and was a passionate Muslim missionary.[3] The Ottoman Turks maintained a precarious measure of influence on behalf of their Sultan by openly encouraging the Moors to advance themselves through piracy against the European powers, which long resented the Ottoman Empire. After Janszoon's conversion to Islam and the ways of his captors, he sailed with the famous corsair Sulayman Rais, also known as Slemen Reis, who himself was a Dutchman named De Veenboer,[4] whom Janszoon had known before his capture and who[5] had also converted to Islam. They were accompanied by Simon de Danser.[citation needed] But, because Algiers had concluded peace with several European nations, it was no longer a suitable port from which to sell captured ships or their cargo. So, after Sulayman Rais was killed by a cannonball in 1619, Janszoon moved to the ancient port of Salé and began operating from it as a Barbary corsair.

Republic of Salé

 
Salé in the 1600s

In 1619, Salé Rovers declared the port to be an independent republic free from the Sultan. They set up a government that consisted of 14 pirate leaders and elected Janszoon as their President. He would also serve as the Grand Admiral, known as Murat Reis, of their navy.[6] The Salé fleet totalled about eighteen ships, all small because of the very shallow harbour entrance.

After an unsuccessful siege of the city, the Sultan of Morocco acknowledged its semi-autonomy. Contrary to popular belief that Sultan Zidan Abu Maali had reclaimed sovereignty over Salé and appointed Janszoon the Governor in 1624, the Sultan acknowledged Janszoon's election as president by formally appointing him as his ceremonial governor.[7]

 
The walls of Marrakesh and El Badi Palace, by Adriaen Matham, 1640.

Under Janszoon's leadership, business in Salé thrived. The main sources of income of this republic remained piracy and its by-trades, shipping and dealing in stolen property. Historians have noted Janszoon's intelligence and bravery, which were expressed in his leadership ability. He was forced to find an assistant to keep up, resulting in the hiring of a fellow countryman from The Netherlands, Mathys van Bostel Oosterlinck, who would serve as his Vice-Admiral.[8]

Janszoon had become very wealthy from his income as pirate admiral, payments for anchorage and other harbour dues, and the brokerage of stolen goods. The political climate in Salé worsened toward the end of 1627, so Janszoon quietly moved his family and his entire operation back to semi-independent Algiers.

Plea from his Dutch family

Janszoon became bored by his new official duties from time to time and again sailed away on a pirate adventure. In 1622, Janszoon and his crews sailed into the English Channel with no particular plan but to try their luck there. When they ran low on supplies, they docked at the port of Veere, Zeeland, under the Moroccan flag, claiming diplomatic privileges from his official role as Admiral of Morocco (a very loose term in the environment of North African politics). The Dutch authorities could not deny the two ships access to Veere because, at the time, several peace treaties and trade agreements existed between the Sultan of Morocco and the Dutch Republic. During Janszoon's anchorage there, the Dutch authorities brought his Dutch first wife and children to the port to try to persuade him to give up piracy. Such strategies utterly failed with the men.[9] Janszoon and his crews left port with many new Dutch volunteers, despite a Dutch prohibition of piracy.

Diplomacy

Dutch captives

While in Morocco, Janszoon worked to secure the release of Dutch captives from other pirates and prevent them from being sold into slavery.[10]

Franco-Moroccan Treaty of 1631

Knowledgeable of several languages, while in Algiers he contributed to the establishment of the Franco-Moroccan Treaty of 1631 between French King Louis XIII and Sultan Abu Marwan Abd al-Malik II.[10]

Notable raids

 
Ólafur Egilsson was captured by Murat Reis the Younger

Lundy

In 1627, Janszoon captured the island of Lundy in the Bristol Channel and held it for five years, using it as a base for raiding expeditions.[11]

Iceland

In 1627, Janszoon used a Danish "slave" (most likely a crew member captured on a Danish ship taken as a pirate prize) to pilot him and his men to Iceland. There they raided the fishing village of Grindavík. Their takings were meagre, some salted fish and a few hides, but they also captured twelve Icelanders and three Danes who happened to be in the village. When they were leaving Grindavík, they managed to trick and capture a Danish merchant ship that was passing by means of flying a false flag.[citation needed]

The ships sailed to Bessastaðir, seat of the Danish governor of Iceland, to raid but were unable to make a landing – it is said they were thwarted by cannon fire from the local fortifications (Bessastaðaskans) and a quickly mustered group of lancers from the Southern Peninsula.[12] They decided to sail home to Salé, where they sold their captives as slaves.

Two corsair ships from Algiers, possibly connected to Janszoon's raid, came to Iceland on 4 July and plundered there. Then they sailed to Vestmannaeyjar off the southern coast and raided there for three days. Those events are collectively known in Iceland as Tyrkjaránið (the Turkish abductions), as the Barbary states were nominally a part of the Ottoman Empire.[13]

Accounts by enslaved Icelanders who spent time on the corsair ships claimed that the conditions for women and children were normal, in that they were permitted to move throughout the ship, except to the quarter deck. The pirates were seen giving extra food to the children from their own private stashes. A woman who gave birth on board a ship was treated with dignity, being afforded privacy and clothing by the pirates. The men were put in the hold of the ships and had their chains removed once the ships were far enough from land. Despite popular claims about the treatment of captives, Icelander accounts do not mention that slaves were raped on the voyage itself,[14] however, Guðríður Símonardóttir, one of the few captives to later return to Iceland, was sold into sex slavery as a concubine.[15]

Sack of Baltimore, Ireland

Having sailed for two months and with little to show for the voyage, Janszoon turned to a captive taken on the voyage, a Roman Catholic named John Hackett, for information on where a profitable raid could be made. The Protestant residents of Baltimore, a small town in West Cork, Ireland, were resented by the Roman Catholic native Irish because they were settled on lands confiscated from the O'Driscoll clan. Hackett directed Janszoon to this town and away from his own. Janszoon sacked Baltimore on 20 June 1631, seizing little property but taking 108 captives, whom he sold as slaves in North Africa. Janszoon was said to have released the Irish and taken only English captives. Shortly after the sack, Hackett was arrested and hanged for his crime. "Here was not a single Christian who was not weeping and who was not full of sadness at the sight of so many honest maidens and so many good women abandoned to the brutality of these barbarians".[16] Only two of the villagers ever returned to their homeland.[17]

Raids in the Mediterranean Sea

Murat Reis chose to make large profits by raiding Mediterranean islands such as the Balearic Islands, Corsica, Sardinia, and the southern coast of Sicily. He often sold most of his merchandise in Tunis, where he befriended the Dey. He is known to have sailed the Ionian Sea. He fought the Venetians near the coasts of Crete and Cyprus with a corsair crew consisting of Dutch, Moriscos, Arab, Turkish, and elite Janissaries.

Capture by Knights of Malta

In 1635, near the Tunisian coast, Murat Reis was outnumbered and surprised by a sudden attack. He and many of his men were captured by the Knights of Malta. He was imprisoned in the island's notorious dark dungeons. He was mistreated and tortured, and suffered ill health due to his time in the dungeon. In 1640, he barely escaped after a massive Corsair attack, which was carefully planned by the Dey of Tunis in order to rescue their fellow sailors and Corsairs. He was greatly honoured and praised upon his return to Morocco and the nearby Barbary States.

Escape and return to Morocco

After Janszoon returned to Morocco in 1640, he was appointed as Governor of the great fortress of Oualidia, near Safi. He resided at the Castle of Maladia. In December 1640, a ship arrived with a new Dutch consul, who brought Lysbeth Janszoon van Haarlem, Janszoon's daughter by his Dutch wife, to visit her father. When Lysbeth arrived, Janszoon "was seated in great pomp on a carpet, with silk cushions, the servants all around him".[18] She saw that Murat Reis had become a feeble, old man. Lysbeth stayed with her father until August 1641, when she returned to Holland. Little is known of Janszoon thereafter; he likely retired at last from both public life and piracy. The date of his death remains unknown.

Marriages and issue

In 1596, by an unknown Dutch woman, Janszoon's first child was born, Lysbeth Janszoon van Haarlem.[citation needed]

After becoming a pirate, Janszoon met an unknown woman in Cartagena, Spain, who he would marry. The identity of this woman is historically vague, but the consensus is that she was of a multi-ethnic background, considered "Morisco" in Spain. Historians have claimed her to be nothing more than a concubine, others claim she was a Muslim Mudéjar who worked for a Christian noble family, and other claims have been made that she was a "Moorish princess."[19] Through this marriage, Janszoon had four children: Abraham Janszoon van Salee (b.1602), Philip Janszoon van Salee (b. 1604), Anthony Janszoon van Salee (b.1607), and Cornelis Janszoon van Salee (b. 1608).

It is speculated that Janszoon married for a third time to the daughter of Sultan Moulay Ziden in 1624.[10]

Popular culture

In 2009, a play based on Janszoon's life as a pirate, "Jan Janszoon, de blonde Arabier", written by Karim El Guennouni toured The Netherlands.[20] "Bad Grandpa: The Ballad of Murad the Captain" is a children's poem about Janszoon published in 2007.[21]

In 2015, Janszoon was a key antagonist in the historical novel Slave to Fortune by D.J. Munro.[22]

Names

Janszoon was also known as Murat Reis the Younger. His Dutch names are also given as Jan Jansen and Jan Jansz; his adopted name as Morat Rais, Murat Rais, Morat; Little John Ward, John Barber, Captain John, and Caid Morato were some of his pirate names. "The Hairdresser" was a nickname of Janszoon.[10]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Karg and Spaite (2007): 36
  2. ^ "Murad Rais", Pirate Utopias, p. 96, retrieved 29 Sept 2009.
  3. ^ Stephen Snelders (2005), The Devil's Anarchy: The Sea Robberies of the Most Famous Pirate Claes G. Compaen, p. 24, ISBN 9781570271618, After his conversion, Jansz. proselytized actively for his new faith, trying to convert Christian slaves…
  4. ^ "De Veenboer", Zeerovery, retrieved 29 Sept 2009.
  5. ^ "Murad Reis", p. 36
  6. ^ "Murad Reis", Pirate Utopias, p. 97, Retrieved 30 September 2009.
  7. ^ "Murad Rais", p.98
  8. ^ "Murad Rais", p. 98
  9. ^ "Murad Rais", p.99
  10. ^ a b c d "VAN SICKELEN & VAN HOORN LINES continued" 2011-10-01 at the Wayback Machine, Michael A. Shoemaker. PCEZ. Accessed 9 September 2011
  11. ^ Konstam, Angus (2008). Piracy: The Complete History. Osprey Publishing. pp. 90–91. ISBN 978-1-84603-240-0. Retrieved 2011-04-29.
  12. ^ Vilhjálmur Þ. Gíslason, Bessastaðir: Þættir úr sögu höfuðbóls. Akureyri. 1947.
  13. ^ The Travels of Reverend Ólafur Egilsson. 2014-01-06 at the Wayback Machine
  14. ^ "Murad Rais", p. 129
  15. ^ "Saurbaer", Nordic Adventure Travel, Iceland.
  16. ^ Ekin, Des (2006). The Stolen Village. OBrien. p. 177. ISBN 978-0-86278-955-8.
  17. ^ "Murad Rais", p. 121, 129
  18. ^ "Murad Rais", p.140
  19. ^ "Anthony Jansen van Salee", Pirate Utopias, p. 206, Retrieved 29 September 2009.
  20. ^ "Jan Janszoon knipoogt naar het heden", 8 Weekly, Retrieved 30 September 2009.
  21. ^ "Bad Grandpa: The Ballad of Murad the Captain", Jim Billiter. Accessed 9 September 2011.
  22. ^ "Review: Slave to Fortune by D J Munro". 30 March 2020.

References

External links

  • Jan Janszoon, de blonde Arabier on YouTube theatrical production

janszoon, this, article, about, 17th, century, dutch, pirate, dutch, cartographer, janssonius, this, article, needs, more, complete, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, missing, citation, information, that, sources, clearly, . This article is about the 17th century Dutch pirate For the Dutch cartographer see Jan Janssonius This article needs more complete citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding missing citation information so that sources are clearly identifiable Citations should include title publication author date and for paginated material the page number s Several templates are available to assist in formatting Improperly sourced material may be challenged and removed September 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message Jan Janszoon van Haarlem commonly known as Reis Mourad the Younger c 1570 c 1641 was an Ottoman and Sale Rovers Dutch pirate in Algeria and Morocco who converted to Islam after being captured by a Moorish state in 1618 He began serving as a pirate one of the most famous of the 17th century Sale Rovers Together with other corsairs he helped establish the independent Republic of Sale at the city of that name serving as the first President and Commander He also served as Governor of Oualidia Jan JanszoonGrand Admiral of SaleIn office 1619 1627Governor of Sale ceremonial In office 1623 1627Appointed bySultan Zidan Abu MaaliGovernor of OualidiaIn office 1640 1641Appointed bySultan Mohammed esh Sheikh es SeghirPersonal detailsBornJan Janszoon van Salee Van Haarlemc 1570Haarlem County of HollandDied1641 or laterMoroccoNationalityDutchChildrenLysbeth Janszoon van Haarlem Anthony Janszoon van Salee Abraham Janszoon van Salee Philip Janszoon van Salee Cornelis Janszoon van Salee Maaike HendriksdrOccupationAdmiralMilitary serviceAllegianceAlgeria MoroccoRankCommodore Reis Contents 1 Early life 2 Privateering 3 Capture by Barbary corsairs 4 Republic of Sale 4 1 Plea from his Dutch family 5 Diplomacy 5 1 Dutch captives 5 2 Franco Moroccan Treaty of 1631 6 Notable raids 6 1 Lundy 6 2 Iceland 6 3 Sack of Baltimore Ireland 6 4 Raids in the Mediterranean Sea 7 Capture by Knights of Malta 8 Escape and return to Morocco 9 Marriages and issue 10 Popular culture 11 Names 12 See also 13 Notes 14 References 15 External linksEarly life EditJan Janszoon van Haerlem was born in Haarlem in 1570 which is in Holland then a province ruled by the Habsburg monarchy The Eighty Years War between Dutch rebels and the Spanish Empire under King Philip II had started seven years before his birth it lasted all his life Little is known about his early life He married Soutgen Cave in 1595 and had two children with her Edward and Lysbeth citation needed Privateering EditIn 1600 Jan Janszoon began as a Dutch privateer sailing from his home port of Haarlem working for the state with letters of marque to harass Spanish shipping during the Eighty Years War Janszoon overstepped the boundaries of his letters and found his way to the semi independent port states of the Barbary Coast of North Africa whence he could attack ships of every foreign state when he attacked a Spanish ship he flew the Dutch flag when he attacked any other he became an Ottoman Captain and flew the crescent moon and star flag of the Turks or the flag of any of various other Mediterranean principalities During this period he had abandoned his Dutch family 1 Capture by Barbary corsairs Edit Sail plan for a Polacca first built by the Barbary pirates around the 16th century many scholars believe the Polacca was extensively used by Jan Janszoon The ship could sail with a large crew of 75 and was armed with 24 cannons Janszoon was captured in 1618 at Lanzarote one of the Canary Islands by Barbary corsairs and taken to Algiers as a captive There he turned Turk or Muslim Some historians speculate that the conversion was forced 2 Janszoon himself however tried very hard to convert his fellow Europeans who were Christian to become Muslim and was a passionate Muslim missionary 3 The Ottoman Turks maintained a precarious measure of influence on behalf of their Sultan by openly encouraging the Moors to advance themselves through piracy against the European powers which long resented the Ottoman Empire After Janszoon s conversion to Islam and the ways of his captors he sailed with the famous corsair Sulayman Rais also known as Slemen Reis who himself was a Dutchman named De Veenboer 4 whom Janszoon had known before his capture and who 5 had also converted to Islam They were accompanied by Simon de Danser citation needed But because Algiers had concluded peace with several European nations it was no longer a suitable port from which to sell captured ships or their cargo So after Sulayman Rais was killed by a cannonball in 1619 Janszoon moved to the ancient port of Sale and began operating from it as a Barbary corsair Republic of Sale Edit Sale in the 1600s Main article Republic of Sale In 1619 Sale Rovers declared the port to be an independent republic free from the Sultan They set up a government that consisted of 14 pirate leaders and elected Janszoon as their President He would also serve as the Grand Admiral known as Murat Reis of their navy 6 The Sale fleet totalled about eighteen ships all small because of the very shallow harbour entrance After an unsuccessful siege of the city the Sultan of Morocco acknowledged its semi autonomy Contrary to popular belief that Sultan Zidan Abu Maali had reclaimed sovereignty over Sale and appointed Janszoon the Governor in 1624 the Sultan acknowledged Janszoon s election as president by formally appointing him as his ceremonial governor 7 The walls of Marrakesh and El Badi Palace by Adriaen Matham 1640 Under Janszoon s leadership business in Sale thrived The main sources of income of this republic remained piracy and its by trades shipping and dealing in stolen property Historians have noted Janszoon s intelligence and bravery which were expressed in his leadership ability He was forced to find an assistant to keep up resulting in the hiring of a fellow countryman from The Netherlands Mathys van Bostel Oosterlinck who would serve as his Vice Admiral 8 Janszoon had become very wealthy from his income as pirate admiral payments for anchorage and other harbour dues and the brokerage of stolen goods The political climate in Sale worsened toward the end of 1627 so Janszoon quietly moved his family and his entire operation back to semi independent Algiers Plea from his Dutch family Edit Janszoon became bored by his new official duties from time to time and again sailed away on a pirate adventure In 1622 Janszoon and his crews sailed into the English Channel with no particular plan but to try their luck there When they ran low on supplies they docked at the port of Veere Zeeland under the Moroccan flag claiming diplomatic privileges from his official role as Admiral of Morocco a very loose term in the environment of North African politics The Dutch authorities could not deny the two ships access to Veere because at the time several peace treaties and trade agreements existed between the Sultan of Morocco and the Dutch Republic During Janszoon s anchorage there the Dutch authorities brought his Dutch first wife and children to the port to try to persuade him to give up piracy Such strategies utterly failed with the men 9 Janszoon and his crews left port with many new Dutch volunteers despite a Dutch prohibition of piracy Diplomacy EditDutch captives Edit While in Morocco Janszoon worked to secure the release of Dutch captives from other pirates and prevent them from being sold into slavery 10 Franco Moroccan Treaty of 1631 Edit Knowledgeable of several languages while in Algiers he contributed to the establishment of the Franco Moroccan Treaty of 1631 between French King Louis XIII and Sultan Abu Marwan Abd al Malik II 10 Notable raids Edit olafur Egilsson was captured by Murat Reis the Younger Lundy Edit In 1627 Janszoon captured the island of Lundy in the Bristol Channel and held it for five years using it as a base for raiding expeditions 11 Iceland Edit In 1627 Janszoon used a Danish slave most likely a crew member captured on a Danish ship taken as a pirate prize to pilot him and his men to Iceland There they raided the fishing village of Grindavik Their takings were meagre some salted fish and a few hides but they also captured twelve Icelanders and three Danes who happened to be in the village When they were leaving Grindavik they managed to trick and capture a Danish merchant ship that was passing by means of flying a false flag citation needed The ships sailed to Bessastadir seat of the Danish governor of Iceland to raid but were unable to make a landing it is said they were thwarted by cannon fire from the local fortifications Bessastadaskans and a quickly mustered group of lancers from the Southern Peninsula 12 They decided to sail home to Sale where they sold their captives as slaves Two corsair ships from Algiers possibly connected to Janszoon s raid came to Iceland on 4 July and plundered there Then they sailed to Vestmannaeyjar off the southern coast and raided there for three days Those events are collectively known in Iceland as Tyrkjaranid the Turkish abductions as the Barbary states were nominally a part of the Ottoman Empire 13 Accounts by enslaved Icelanders who spent time on the corsair ships claimed that the conditions for women and children were normal in that they were permitted to move throughout the ship except to the quarter deck The pirates were seen giving extra food to the children from their own private stashes A woman who gave birth on board a ship was treated with dignity being afforded privacy and clothing by the pirates The men were put in the hold of the ships and had their chains removed once the ships were far enough from land Despite popular claims about the treatment of captives Icelander accounts do not mention that slaves were raped on the voyage itself 14 however Gudridur Simonardottir one of the few captives to later return to Iceland was sold into sex slavery as a concubine 15 Sack of Baltimore Ireland Edit Having sailed for two months and with little to show for the voyage Janszoon turned to a captive taken on the voyage a Roman Catholic named John Hackett for information on where a profitable raid could be made The Protestant residents of Baltimore a small town in West Cork Ireland were resented by the Roman Catholic native Irish because they were settled on lands confiscated from the O Driscoll clan Hackett directed Janszoon to this town and away from his own Janszoon sacked Baltimore on 20 June 1631 seizing little property but taking 108 captives whom he sold as slaves in North Africa Janszoon was said to have released the Irish and taken only English captives Shortly after the sack Hackett was arrested and hanged for his crime Here was not a single Christian who was not weeping and who was not full of sadness at the sight of so many honest maidens and so many good women abandoned to the brutality of these barbarians 16 Only two of the villagers ever returned to their homeland 17 Raids in the Mediterranean Sea Edit Murat Reis chose to make large profits by raiding Mediterranean islands such as the Balearic Islands Corsica Sardinia and the southern coast of Sicily He often sold most of his merchandise in Tunis where he befriended the Dey He is known to have sailed the Ionian Sea He fought the Venetians near the coasts of Crete and Cyprus with a corsair crew consisting of Dutch Moriscos Arab Turkish and elite Janissaries Capture by Knights of Malta Edit Fort Saint Angelo in Valletta Malta In 1635 near the Tunisian coast Murat Reis was outnumbered and surprised by a sudden attack He and many of his men were captured by the Knights of Malta He was imprisoned in the island s notorious dark dungeons He was mistreated and tortured and suffered ill health due to his time in the dungeon In 1640 he barely escaped after a massive Corsair attack which was carefully planned by the Dey of Tunis in order to rescue their fellow sailors and Corsairs He was greatly honoured and praised upon his return to Morocco and the nearby Barbary States Escape and return to Morocco EditAfter Janszoon returned to Morocco in 1640 he was appointed as Governor of the great fortress of Oualidia near Safi He resided at the Castle of Maladia In December 1640 a ship arrived with a new Dutch consul who brought Lysbeth Janszoon van Haarlem Janszoon s daughter by his Dutch wife to visit her father When Lysbeth arrived Janszoon was seated in great pomp on a carpet with silk cushions the servants all around him 18 She saw that Murat Reis had become a feeble old man Lysbeth stayed with her father until August 1641 when she returned to Holland Little is known of Janszoon thereafter he likely retired at last from both public life and piracy The date of his death remains unknown Marriages and issue EditIn 1596 by an unknown Dutch woman Janszoon s first child was born Lysbeth Janszoon van Haarlem citation needed After becoming a pirate Janszoon met an unknown woman in Cartagena Spain who he would marry The identity of this woman is historically vague but the consensus is that she was of a multi ethnic background considered Morisco in Spain Historians have claimed her to be nothing more than a concubine others claim she was a Muslim Mudejar who worked for a Christian noble family and other claims have been made that she was a Moorish princess 19 Through this marriage Janszoon had four children Abraham Janszoon van Salee b 1602 Philip Janszoon van Salee b 1604 Anthony Janszoon van Salee b 1607 and Cornelis Janszoon van Salee b 1608 It is speculated that Janszoon married for a third time to the daughter of Sultan Moulay Ziden in 1624 10 Popular culture EditIn 2009 a play based on Janszoon s life as a pirate Jan Janszoon de blonde Arabier written by Karim El Guennouni toured The Netherlands 20 Bad Grandpa The Ballad of Murad the Captain is a children s poem about Janszoon published in 2007 21 In 2015 Janszoon was a key antagonist in the historical novel Slave to Fortune by D J Munro 22 Names EditJanszoon was also known as Murat Reis the Younger His Dutch names are also given as Jan Jansen and Jan Jansz his adopted name as Morat Rais Murat Rais Morat Little John Ward John Barber Captain John and Caid Morato were some of his pirate names The Hairdresser was a nickname of Janszoon 10 See also EditMurat Reis the Elder Jack WardNotes Edit Karg and Spaite 2007 36 Murad Rais Pirate Utopias p 96 retrieved 29 Sept 2009 Stephen Snelders 2005 The Devil s Anarchy The Sea Robberies of the Most Famous Pirate Claes G Compaen p 24 ISBN 9781570271618 After his conversion Jansz proselytized actively for his new faith trying to convert Christian slaves De Veenboer Zeerovery retrieved 29 Sept 2009 Murad Reis p 36 Murad Reis Pirate Utopias p 97 Retrieved 30 September 2009 Murad Rais p 98 Murad Rais p 98 Murad Rais p 99 a b c d VAN SICKELEN amp VAN HOORN LINES continued Archived 2011 10 01 at the Wayback Machine Michael A Shoemaker PCEZ Accessed 9 September 2011 Konstam Angus 2008 Piracy The Complete History Osprey Publishing pp 90 91 ISBN 978 1 84603 240 0 Retrieved 2011 04 29 Vilhjalmur TH Gislason Bessastadir THaettir ur sogu hofudbols Akureyri 1947 The Travels of Reverend olafur Egilsson Archived 2014 01 06 at the Wayback Machine Murad Rais p 129 Saurbaer Nordic Adventure Travel Iceland Ekin Des 2006 The Stolen Village OBrien p 177 ISBN 978 0 86278 955 8 Murad Rais p 121 129 Murad Rais p 140 Anthony Jansen van Salee Pirate Utopias p 206 Retrieved 29 September 2009 Jan Janszoon knipoogt naar het heden 8 Weekly Retrieved 30 September 2009 Bad Grandpa The Ballad of Murad the Captain Jim Billiter Accessed 9 September 2011 Review Slave to Fortune by D J Munro 30 March 2020 References EditKarg Barb Arjean Spaite 2007 The everything pirates book Wilson Peter Lamborn birth name of Hakim Bey 1995 2003 Pirate Utopias Moorish Corsairs and European Renegadoes Brooklyn NY Autonomedia External links EditJan Janszoon de blonde Arabier on YouTube theatrical production Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Jan Janszoon amp oldid 1125021215, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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