Uthman Dey
Uthman Dey or Kara Osman Dey (died in September 1610) was Dey of Tunis from 1593 until his death.[1]
Biography
A Turkish soldier of Anatolian origin, where he had worked as a cobbler, he arrived with the forces of Koca Sinan Pasha which took Tunis from Spain in 1574. In 1593 he was elected as Dey of the Turkish militia of Tunis;[1] he thereby became the military commander of Tunis. Then in 1598 he truly took power by restricting the Pasha to a purely honorific role.[1]
Tunis entered a new era under his rule, with the pacification of the hinterland, the creation of a powerful fleet and a network of forts (borj) intended to guard the coast.
Dey also welcomed pirates, including Jack Ward, whom arranged a deal to use Dey's Tunis port as a base of operations for raiding and taking of European ships, with Dey guaranteed a portion of the loot.[6][7]
In his old age he became nervous about leaving the capital and the troublesome militia, so he create the position of
He married his daughter to his lieutenant and eventual successor,
Bibliography
- Alphonse Rousseau, Annales tunisiennes ou aperçu historique sur la régence de Tunis, éd. Bastide, Alger, 1864.
References
- ^ a b c Yvette Katan Bensamoun, Rama Chalak et Jacques-Robert Katan, Le Maghreb : de l'empire ottoman à la fin de la colonisation française, éd. Belin, Paris, 2007, p. 35
- ^ Ibn Abi Dhiaf, Présent des hommes de notre temps. Chroniques des rois de Tunis et du pacte fondamental, vol. II, éd. Maison tunisienne de l'édition, Tunis, 1990, p. 33
- ^ a b c Lionel Lévy, La nation juive portugaise : Livourne, Amsterdam, Tunis. 1591-1951, éd. L'Harmattan, Paris, 1999, p. 59
- ^ Nabil I. Matar, Europe through Arab eyes. 1578-1727, éd. Columbia University Press, New York, 2009, p. 219
- ^ Ibn Abi Dhiaf, op. cit., p. 35
- ^ Society, Ballad (1887). Publications. Ballad Society.
- ^ Tinniswood, A. (2010). Pirates of Barbary: Corsairs, Conquests and Captivity in the Seventeenth-Century Mediterranean. United States: Penguin Publishing Group.
- ^ Ibn Abi Dhiaf, op. cit., p. 34
- ^ (in French) Dar Othman (Qantara) Archived 2015-01-22 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ (in French) Pierre-Robert Baduel, Chantiers et défis de la recherche sur le Maghreb contemporain, éd. Karthala, Paris, 2009, p. 81