White Gold

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by Giles Milton


  Istanbul

  Italian captives

  Italian city-states

  James I, King

  James II, King

  James, William

  James Island

  Janszoon, Jan (Murad Rais)

  ej-Jebli, Kaid el-Arbi ben Abbou ould

  Jersey

  Jesus Christ

  Jews: buyers at slave auctions; circumcision; suppliers of brandy ingredients; at Kasbah Temsna taxation; Ismail’s relations with; Namias burned alive community looks after Pellow

  Johnston, William

  Jones, Jezreel

  Kasbah Tadla

  Kasbah Temsna

  Kasem, al-Hasan bin

  el-Kasri, Abdallah ben Ali

  Kemach, Abraham

  Kerouaille, Louise de, Duchess of Portsmouth

  King’s College, Cambridge

  King’s Head, Pudding Lane, London

  Kirke, Colonel Percy

  Koran

  Ladire, Jean

  Larache

  Latin School, Penryn

  Laudian rite

  Laureano (later Sidi Achmet)

  le Clerc, Francis

  le Magdeleine, Monsieur

  Leghorn

  Leslie, Sir James

  Lisbon

  London; captives in Salé raids; Moroccan ambassador visits; merchants face ruin; return of the slaves (1721); Pellow arrives in

  London, Bishop of

  London Bridge

  London Journal

  Looe, Cornwall

  Louis XIV King

  Lucas, Hamet

  Lundy Island

  Madeira

  Madinat el-Riyad, Meknes

  al-Magiri

  Maimaran, Abraham

  Maimaran, Joseph

  Majorca

  Mamora; capture of

  Manault, Adrian de

  Marrakesh; al-Badi palace; Jews in

  Marten, Sir Henry

  Massachusetts

  Massion, Bertrand

  Mather, Cotton; “The Glory of Goodness” (sermon); “A Pastoral Letter to the English Captives in Africa,”

  Mazagan (El Jadida)

  Mecca

  el-Mediouni, Admiral Abderrahman

  Mediterranean region

  Meggison,Thomas

  Mehdiya

  Mehemet (Turkish adviser)

  Meknes; Gate of the Winds; Dar Kbira imperial palace; Dar el Makhzen; Bab Mansour; Pellow describes life in; capitulates to Moulay al-Rashid; Ismail made governor; Ismail’s return; Ismail’s meeting with Kirke; Delaval negotiates release of more English slaves; last captives freed; Pellow and company arrive in; slaves taken to Ismail; slave pens ; Gonzales negotiates with Moulay Ismail; infirmary; slave population; Dar al-Mansur palace; scale of building works; Madinat el-Riyad; harem; Jews in; new mission to; distance from the Atlantic; French padres in; ed-Dehebi flees from; ed-Dehebi’s forces triumph in; ed-Dehebi rules in; Pellow escapes

  Meknes palace. See Dar Kbira palace

  mellahs (ghettoes)

  Merenid kings

  metadore (professional guide)

  middle passage

  Middleton, Sir Henry

  Milar

  Minorca

  Mohammed, Moulay

  Mohammed, Prophet

  Mohammed, Sidi

  Montagu, Lady Mary Wortley

  Moore, J.

  Morgan, Joseph

  Moriscos: expelled from Spain (1610)

  Moroccan civil war

  Morocco; English captives marched to the capital; Ismail rebuilds; Spanish and Portuguese garrisons; ambassador visits (1682); treaty with England (1682); treaty of ; bastinading; apostasy ; Christian enclaves; series of bloody revolutions; another power struggle under way ; renounces slavery

  Mouette, Germain

  Moulay Idris, shrine of

  Mount el-Hedid

  Mount’s Bay, Cornwall

  Mousa, Sidi Ahmed ou, shrine of

  msakhkharim (ceremonial guards)

  Mundy, Peter

  Murad Rais (Jan Janszoon)

  Mustafa (Turkish adviser)

  Namias, Salom

  Naples

  Napoleonic wars

  al-Nasari, Ahmad bin Khahlid

  al-Nasari, Ahmed ben

  Navarra, Father Garcia

  Neant, Nolasque

  Nebuchadnezzar

  Netherlands

  New England

  New Salé

  Newcastle, Duke of

  Newfoundland

  Newfoundland Banks

  Newgent, Thomas

  Newmarket

  Nffîs River

  Norbury, Coninsby

  Nore, the

  North Africa: slave population; Americans enslaved; slave markets; bastinading; apostasy ceremonies; Pellew’s aim

  North America: white slaves from; blacks dispatched to England’s colonies; English trading voyage to; little interest in the world of Islam; liberated American slaves

  North Atlantic

  North Sea

  Norway

  Nugent (an Irish renegade)

  Ockley, Simon; History of the Saracens

  Okeley, William

  Omar, Kaid

  Osborne, John

  Osborne, Tom

  Othman, Si Mohammed ben

  Ottur, Kaid Muhammad ben Haddu

  Oued Noun oasis

  Oxford

  Oxford, Earl of

  Oxford University

  Padstow, Cornwall

  Peacock, Captain

  Pellew, Sir Edward: destroys Algiers; given a hero’s welcome in Cornwall

  Pellow, Captain John; warned of the perils of his voyage; ability to read and write; disciplines nephew; captured; first taste of life as a slave; confined in the matamores; inspection by Ismail, separated from Thomas; in Meknes slave pen; Dunnal’s funeral; and work on Ismail’s building projects; death

  Pellow, Elizabeth

  Pellow, Thomas; education; sails from Cornwall, aged eleven; disciplined by his uncle; captured; xebecs broken up; public humiliation; confined in the matamores; journey from Salé to Meknes; arrives in Meknes; selected by Ismail; given to Moulay es-Sfa; forced conversion to Islam; Dunnal’s funeral; death of his uncle; Norbury’s behavior; groomed as a palace retainer; guardian of the imperial harem; becomes Ismail’s personal attendant; improved diet; marriage; at Kasbah Temsna; leads slave-soldiers into battle; Ismail’s dissatisfaction with his booty; love of his daughter; Guzlan rebels; and Stewart; abandoned by Stewart; failed escapes; twice sentenced to death; told of Ismail’s death; meets Russell; appearance; marches to Meknes with the deposed sultan; wounded in battle for Fez; death of his wife and daughter; part of slave-gathering expedition to equatorial Africa; finally makes his escape; shot in the leg; cared for by Jewish community; sails from Willadia to Gibraltar; sails to London; inaccurate newspaper article; welcomed home in Penryn; The History of the Long Captivity and Adventures of Thomas Pellow

  Pellow, Thomas, Sr.

  Penalosa y Estrada, Don Juan

  Pendergrass, William

  Penryn

  Penzance

  Pepys, Samuel

  Peres, Abdelkader

  Phelps, Thomas

  Philip III, king of Spain

  Phoenix playhouse, London

  pirate flags

  Pisa

  Pitts, John

  Pitts, Joseph

  plague

  Plymouth; mayor of

  Pocock, Dr. Edward

  Pompadour, Madame de

  Pope, the

  Portsmouth

  Portugal: Salé corsairs attack; principal slave nation in Europe; hit-and-run raids by Barbary corsairs; English trading voyage to; treaty with Sultan Mohammed

  Portuguese captives

  prayer

  Prideaux, Humphrey, The TrueNature of Imposture, Fully Displayed in the Life of Mahomet

  Princes (ship)

  Privy Council

  Prosperous (ship)


  Protestants

  Purcell, Henry

  Puritans

  al-Qadiri, Muhammad: Chronicles

  Queen Charlotte (flagship)

  Rabat

  Rabat corsairs

  Rainsborough, Captain William: attacks Salé and releases slaves

  Ramadan

  al-Rashid, Sultan Moulay

  Rebecca and Mary

  Red Lion Fields, London

  Renegado, The (a farce)

  Reykjavik

  Rif, the

  al-Rifi, Kaid Ahmad ben Haddu

  Ripley Sarah

  Rome: palace of the Cardinal di San Giorgio

  Ross, Alexander

  Royal African Company

  Royal Navy

  Royal Society

  Russell, John

  Russian captives/renegades

  Saadians

  Sabine, Joseph

  Sackville, Colonel Edward

  Safi

  Sahara Desert

  Sahih of al-Bukhari

  St. Anthony’s College, Oxford

  St. Clement’s Coffee House, London

  St. Gluvias church, Penryn

  St. James’s Palace, London

  St. Louis Island

  St. Olon, Pidou de

  St. Paul’s cathedral, London

  Salame, Abraham

  Salé: described; trade in; Sallee Rovers; Murad Rais; slave markets; becomes a pirate republic; Adams’s suffering in; Harrison’s mission; released slaves; further English captives; Rainsborough attacks and releases slaves; slaves’ shackles; matamores; Oudaia Gate; Pellow stays in; gun carriages made in; Bab Mrisa; Souk el-Kebir

  Salé, governor of

  Salé forest

  Salé harbor

  Sallee Rovers (Salé corsairs); hailed as religious warriors; fleet of; successful plundering; Murad Rais; power and wealth; rule themselves; Harrison’s mission; Sidi Mohammed’s truce; prepare to attack England and Newfoundland; Rainsborough’s successful mission against; attacks on English shipping recommenced; continue to plunder English shipping; and Moulay Ismail; not mentioned in 1682 treatyTangier experiment fails to stop them; and treaty of 1714in the Straits of Gibraltar; capture of Francis, George and Southwark crews; Cornwall and; and Ismail’s harem; Hatfeild gathers intelligence on; Hatfeild’s resignation; attacks redoubled; Sultan Mohammed declares war on; Moulay Sulaiman II and

  Sampson, Captain Richard

  Sana’a, Aden

  Santa Cruz

  Sarah (ship)

  Sardinia

  Sbu River

  Scandinavian captives

  Senegal

  Senegal River. See also Wadnil

  Senegalese

  Sentences of Ali

  es-Sfa, Moulay

  Shaler, William

  Shaw, Mrs.

  Shott, Larbe

  Sicily

  Silvestre, Father Francisco

  slave auctions

  “slave widows,”

  Smith, Admiral Sir Sidney

  Society of Knights Liberators of the White Slaves of Africa

  Solent

  Sollicoffre, John Leonard

  Southwark (ship)

  Southwell, Seth

  Spain: expels Moors (1610); Salé corsairs attack; Charles I and; James I’s peace treaty; devastating raids on; English trading voyage to; treaty with Sultan Mohammed

  Spanish captives/renegades

  Spectator, The

  Spice Islands

  es-Srhir, Ba Ahmed

  Stanhope, James

  Stewart, Commodore Charles; chosen to lead the embassy to Meknes; earlier career; gifts for Ismail; relations with Hamet; signed treaty; meets Ismail; tours the palace complex; distributes gifts; watches Ramadan procession; disgusted at Ismail’s volte-face; Queen Umulez Ettabba intercedes for; liberation of some of the British and American slaves; homecoming; accounts of his rescue mission; persuades Hatfeild to remain at his post

  Stocker, Captain John

  Straits of Gibraltar

  Stuart, Francis

  Sulaiman II, Moulay

  Swavesey Cambridgeshire

  Sweden

  Sweet, Thomas

  Tafilalt

  Tangier; Omar’s failed attack; release of Moroccan prisoners of war; English abandonment of; Inspector crew enslaved

  Tangier garrison

  Taroudant

  Tatler

  Tensift River

  Ter Meetelen, Maria

  Tetouan

  Thames Estuary

  Tiflit River

  Tilbury,Thames Estuary

  Timbuktu

  Toobin, Captain

  Topsham

  Triffoe, Hammo

  Tripoli; slave market; apostasy; French mission; slave population; renounces slavery

  Tripoli corsairs

  Troughton, Thomas

  Truro (ship)

  Tunis; slave market; alliances with Hornacheros; apostasy; French mission; Spanish mission; slave population; renounces slavery

  Tunis, bey of

  Tunis corsairs

  Turkish army

  Turkish janissaries

  Tuscany

  Union (ship)

  United States of America: truce with Morocco (1786)

  Utrecht, Treaty of (1713)

  Venice, Republic of

  Versailles

  Volubulis

  Wadnil (Upper Nile). See also Senegal River

  Wales

  Waller, James

  Ward, John

  Weldon, Anthony

  West Country

  West Indies

  Westminster Abbey, London

  Whinyates, Lieutenant John

  Whitehall Palace, London

  Whitehead, John

  Willadia

  Willdon, John

  William III, King

  Winchester (ship)

  Windsor

  Windus, John: and Basha Hamet; notes the fear of Ismail; and Shott’s execution; meets Ismail; tours the palace complex; watches Ramadan procession

  Wren, Sir Christopher

  Yahyâ ben Bel’ayd kasbah

  ez-Zayyani, Ahmed

  Zeeland

  Zidan, Moulay

  Zidan, Sultan Moulay

  Zidana, Lala

  ILLUSTRATION ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

  © Martin Collins: Map of Morocco in the eighteenth century, xiii, map of the Mediterranean, xiv–xv. © British Library, London: The Cryes of the City of London ca. 1688, 9 bottom left. Pierre Dan Histoire van Barbaryen 1684 Amsterdam, 1, 3, 4, 7 bottom left, 8, 10 top, 12 bottom, 13 bottom. Pierre Dan Histoire de Barbarie et de ses Corsaires 1637 Paris, 10 bottom. Joseph Morgan Several Voyages to Barbary 1736, 5 top, 9 top. Monsieur de St. Olon The Present State of the Empire of Morocco 1695, 7 bottom right. F. Brooks Barbarian Cruelty 1698: 13 top.J. Davis History of the Second Queen’s Royal Regiment 1887: 2 top left.J. De la Faye Relation—du Voiage pour la Redemption des Captifs 1726: 12 top. © National Maritime Museum London: 11 top and bottom, 14. The National Archives: 5 bottom (TNA ref SP71/16), 9 bottom right (TNA ref SP17/16). © Giles Milton: 15, 16. G. Mouette Histoire des Conquests 1682: 6 bottom right. Private Collections: 6 top right and bottom left, 11 center. The Royal Collection © 2004 Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II: 2 top right. Thomas Troughton Barbarian Cruelty 1751: 2 bottom, 7 top. John Windus A Journey to Mequinez 1725: 6 top left.

  WHITE GOLD. Copyright © 2004 by Giles Milton. All rights reserved. No part of this book may be used or reproduced in any manner whatsoever without written permission except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles or reviews. For information, address Picador, 175 Fifth Avenue, New York, N.Y. 10010.

  www.picadorusa.com

  Picador® is a U.S. registered trademark and is used by Farrar, Straus and Giroux under license from Pan Books Limited.

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  as well as ordering, please contact Picador.

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  Originally published in 2004 by Hodder & Stoughton, Great Britain, as

  White Gold: The Extraordinary Story of Thomas Pellow and North Africa’s

  One Million European Slaves

  First published in the United States by Farrar, Straus and Giroux

  eISBN 9781466807273

  First eBook Edition : December 2011

  Acknowledgments for the illustrations appear on page 317.

  Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

  Milton, Giles.

  White gold: the extraordinary story of Thomas Pellow and Islam’s one million white slaves /Giles Milton.

  p. cm.

  Includes index.

  ISBN-13: 978-0-312-42529-6

  ISBN-10: 0-312-42529-5

  1. Slavery—Morocco—History. 2. Pellow, Thomas, b. 1704. 3. Morocco—Relations—Great Britain. 4. Great Britain—Relations—Morocco. 5. Morocco—History—1516–1830. 1.Title.

  HT1346.M55 2005

  306.3’62’0964—dc22

  2004026427

  First Picador Edition: July 2006

 

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