Menacing Tides: Security, Piracy and Empire in the Nineteenth-century Mediterranean

Publication date

2020-02-07

Authors

de Lange, E.ORCID 0000-0002-9475-3729ISNI 0000000492905068

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

de Graaf, B.A.ISNI 0000000053775900
Hoffenaar, JanISNI 0000000109554817

DOI

Document Type

Dissertation

License

Abstract

The fight against piracy changed the face of the Mediterranean forever. Over the course of the nineteenth century, the repression of the so-called ‘Barbary pirates’ from the North African states of Algiers, Tunis and Tripoli inspired diplomatic interventions, destructive bombardments and unprecedented forms of military cooperation. It also opened the door to European imperial expansion and colonial rule on the Mediterranean’s southern shores. Menacing Tides explains why the fight against Mediterranean piracy began and uncovers the importance of security thinking to this repressive effort. Starting in 1815, when peace in Europe brought different states together in new projects of cooperation, this work analyses how perceptions of a piratical threat were turned into implemented policies and military campaigns. Menacing Tides draws from various archives and tells the stories of high-ranking diplomats, pirate captains, ruined merchants and unsuspecting tourists, clarifying how the Mediterranean Sea was turned into a space of security.

Keywords

piracy, Mediterranean Sea, North Africa, security, imperialism, international relations, Post-Napoleonic Europe, Congress System, Barbary corsairs

Citation

de Lange, E 2020, 'Menacing Tides : Security, Piracy and Empire in the Nineteenth-century Mediterranean', Doctor of Philosophy, Universiteit Utrecht, Utrecht.