Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-8ctnn Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-28T17:05:14.206Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Rewriting the Barbary Captivity Narrative: The Perdicaris Affair and the Last Barbary Pirate

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  30 July 2009

Get access

Extract

In 1904, Teddy Roosevelt sent seven U.S. warships to Tangier to demand the release of the millionaire Ion Perdicaris, who had been captured and held for ransom by Raisuli, a sworn enemy of the Moroccan sultan. Rumors of invasion filtered into the national headlines and, at the Republican National Convention that summer, Roosevelt's secretary of state, John Hay, called for Raisuli's death. What later became known as the Perdicaris Affair stirred public outrage and rekindled memories of the nation's first postrevolutionary war when, in 1801, Thomas Jefferson sent the U.S. Navy to combat Barbary privateers. At that time, Barbary abduction was almost commonplace, and the genre of the Barbary captivity narrative flourished. While held hostage, Perdicaris wrote his own Barbary captivity narrative, which circulated widely, first in Leslie's Magazine and later in the National Geographic Magazine. The crisis, however, was soon forgotten after Roosevelt's successful reelection. The public might have altogether forgotten about Perdicaris but for John Milius's 1975 film, The Wind and The Lion. Milius, who both wrote and directed the film, based his account on Perdicaris's 1904 captivity episode and, in many ways, he preserved the popular image of the savage North African, even calling Perdicaris's captor the “Last of the Barbary Pirates.”

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1999

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Works Cited

An American Kidnapped by Moorish Brigands.” Literary Digest 28 (06 4, 1904): 799800.Google Scholar
Baepler, Paul. White Slaves, African Masters: An Anthology of American Barbary Captivity Narratives. Chicago: University Chicago Press, 1999.Google Scholar
Bemis, Samuel Flagg. Diplomatic History of the United States. New York: Henry Holt, 1936.Google Scholar
Bonsal, Stephen. “Raisuli, the Brigand Who Made Himself King: The Story of a Moorish Feud Which May Disturb the Peace of the World.” Harper's Weekly 51 (03 9, 1907): 338, 351.Google Scholar
Cathcart, James Leander. The Captives: Eleven Years a Prisoner in Algiers. Comp. J. B. Newkirk. La Porte, Ind.: Herald, 1899.Google Scholar
Davis, Harold E.The Citizenship of Jon Perdicaris.” Journal of Modern History 13: 517–26.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Etzold, Thomas H.Protection or Politics? ‘Perdicaris Alive or Dead.’Historian 37 (02 1975): 275304.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Forbes, Rosita. The Sultan of the Mountains: The Life Story of Raisuli. New York: Henry Holt, 1924.Google Scholar
“France Placed Between Morocco and the United States.” Literary Digest, 06 25, 1904, 924–25.Google Scholar
“France to the Rescue of Perdicaris.” Literary Digest, 06 11, 1904, 840.Google Scholar
Hall, Luella J.The United States and Morocco: 1776–1956. Metuchen, N.J.: Scarecrow, 1971. Harper's Weekly 48 (06 4, 1904): 853–54.Google Scholar
Harper's Weekly 48 (06 18, 1904): 926.Google Scholar
Harris, Walter B.Raisuli.” Independent 57 (07 28, 1904): 201–4.Google Scholar
Harris, Walter B.‘Three Weeks’ Captivity with the Moorish Rebels.” Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine 174 (09 1903): 323–26.Google Scholar
Hourihan, William James. Roosevelt and the Sultans: The United States Navy in the Mediterranean, 1904. Ph.D. diss., University of Massachusetts, Boston, 1975.Google Scholar
“Human Side of Raisuli.” Literary Digest, 07 2, 1904, 67.Google Scholar
The Kidnapping in Morocco.” American Monthly Review of Reviews 30 (07 1904): 2324.Google Scholar
Maguire, Doris D.Perdicaris and Others. Centreville, Md.: n.p., 1986.Google Scholar
Milius, John. The Wind and The Lion. MGM, 1975.Google Scholar
Perdicaris, Ion. The Hand of Fate. London: Holden and Hardingham, 1921.Google Scholar
Perdicaris, Ion. Mohammed Benani: A Story of Today. London: Sampson, Low, Marston, Searle, and Rivington, 1887.Google Scholar
Perdicaris, IonMorocco, ‘The Land of the Extreme West’ and The Story of My Captivity.” National Geographic Magazine 17 (03 1906): 117–57.Google Scholar
Perdicaris, Ion. “In Raissuli's Hands: The Story of My Captivity and Deliverance May 18 to June 26, 1904.” Leslie's Magazine 58 (09 1904): 510–22.Google Scholar
The Perfect Gentleman of Morocco.” Current Literature 43 (10 1907): 386–88.Google Scholar
Stone, Ellen Maria. “Six Months Among Brigands.” McClure's Magazine 19: 316, 99109, 222–31, 464–71, 562–70.Google Scholar
Tuchman, Barbara W. “‘Perdicaris Alive or Raisuli Dead.’” American Heritage 10 (08 1959): 1821, 98101.Google Scholar
Varley, Cromwell. “Captured by Moorish Brigands.” Independent 57 (08 25, 1904): 424–26.Google Scholar
We Should Deal with Morocco as We Dealt with Other Barbary Powers.” Harper's Weekly 48 (06 18, 1904): 928–29.Google Scholar
The Wind and The Lion. Dir. Milius, John. With Connery, Sean and Bergen, Candice. MGM, 1975.Google Scholar