Omar Agha
Omar Agha | |
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Dey-Pasha of Algiers Sultan of Algiers Dey of Algiers | |
Omar Agha (Sitting on the couch) | |
Reign | 11 April 1815-8 September 1817 |
Predecessor | Mohamed Kharnadji |
Successor | Ali Khodja |
Born | Omar ben Mohammed c. 1773 Lesbos[1] |
Died | 8 September 1817 Algiers |
Arabic | عمر آغا |
Omar Agha was the Dey of the Deylik of Algiers from April 1815 to September 1817, after the assassination of his predecessor Mohamed Kharnadji on 7 April 1815, who had been in office for only 17 days.
Early life
He was born on the island of Lesbos.[2] His name was Omar ben Mohammed. He left for Algiers at an unknown date, and first became a privateer, then a janissary. He soon became Agha of the Odjak of Algiers.
Rule
He launched a war against Tunis, and led the attacks of Barbary privateers on American ships. An expedition of the US Navy led by Commodore Stephen Decatur in command of a squadron of nine ships, was conducted in 1815 against the Regency of Algiers. The episode is known as the Second Barbary War. The operation forced Dey Omar to sign a treaty ending attacks of piracy, a treaty that he denounced shortly thereafter.
The Congress of Vienna, which addressed the problem of Christian slaves from Barbary piracy, charged the United Kingdom and the Netherlands to negotiate with the Dey of Algiers and the Beys of Tunis and Tripoli. Although the latter two were agreeable, Omar Agha was not. It would take the 9-hour Bombardment of Algiers (1816) on 27 August 1816, by an Anglo-Dutch naval force commanded by British Admiral Lord Exmouth, to compel the Dey to abolish Christian slavery. However, the bombardment of Algiers did not destroy Barbary power. Despite the signing of the treaty and the release of 3,000 Christian slaves, Dey Omar set to rebuilding the city's defences, putting its Jewish inhabitants to forced labour in the place of Christian slaves.[3] Moreover, the problem remained such that it was one of the main areas of contention at the Congress of Aix-la-Chapelle (1818).
Death
Thanks to the series of defeats, at the hands of Europeans, he was strangled on September 8, 1817, and he was buried within an hour.[4] His successor was Ali ben Ahmed.[5]
Preceded by | Dey of the Regency of Algiers 1815–1817 | Succeeded by |
References
- ^ sir Robert Lambert Playfair (1878). A handbook for travellers in Algeria (and Tunis) [by sir R.L. Playfair. pp. 53–.
- ^ Weinert, Richard P.; Dupuy, R. Ernest; Baumer, William H. (December 1969). "The Little Wars of the United States: A Compact History from 1798 to 1920". Military Affairs. 33 (3): 419. doi:10.2307/1985162. ISSN 0026-3931. JSTOR 1985162.
- ^ Taylor, Stephen (2012). Commander: The Life and Exploits of Britain's Greatest Frigate Captain. London: faber and faber. pp. 295. ISBN 978-0-571-27711-7.
- ^ FO 3/19, McDonell to Bathhurst, 8 September 1817
- ^ Nettement, Alfred (1805-1869) Auteur du texte (1867). Histoire de la conquête d'Alger : écrite sur des documents inédits et authentiques (Nouvelle édition revue et corrigée) / par M. Alfred Nettement.
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: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
- Raïs Hamidou: Le dernier corsaire barbaresque d'Alger [1] Par Paul Desprès
- La piraterie barbaresque en Méditerranée: XVI-XIXe siècle [2] Par Roland Courtinat
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the Kingdom of Tlemcen
(1235–1556)
- Yaghmurasen Ibn Zyan
- Abu Said Uthman I
- Abu Zayyan I
- Abu Hammu I
- Abu Tashufin I
- Abu Said Uthman II
- Abu Thabid I
- Abu Hammu II Musa
- Abu Zayyan Muhammad II ibn Uthman
- Abu Tashufin II
- Abu Thabid II
- Abul Hadjdjadj I
- Abu Zayyan II
- Abu Muh I
- Abu Abdallah I
- Abd er Rahman I bin Abu Muh
- Said I bin Abu Tashufin
- Abu Malek I
- Abu Abdallah II
- Abu Abbas Ahmad I
- Abu Abdallah III
- Abu Tashufin III
- Abu Abdallah IV
- Abu Abdallah V
- Abu Hammu III
- Abu Muh II
- Abu Abdallah VI
- Abu Zayyan III
- Al Hassan ben Abu Muh
the Regency of Algiers
(1517–1710)
- Aruj Barbarossa
- Hayreddin Barbarossa
- Hasan Agha
- Hadji Pasha
- Hasan Pasha
- Khalifa Saffah
- Salah Rais
- Hasan Corso
- Muhammad Kurdogli
- Mehmed Tekkelerli
- Yusuf I Pasha
- Yahyia Pasha
- Hasan Khüsro Aga
- Ahmed Bostandji
- Ahmad Pasha Qabia
- Muhamad Pasha
- Uluç Ali Reis
- Mehmet Pasha
- Arab Ahmed Pasha
- Ramdan Pasha
- Hassan Veneziano
- Djafar Pasha
- Mami Muhammad Pasha
- Dali Ahmed Pasha
- Hızır Pasha
- Hadji Shaban Pasha
- Mustapha Pasha
- Daly Hassan Pasha
- Soliman Pasha
- Muhammad II the eunuch
- Mustapha II Pasha
- Rizvan Pasha
- Köse Mustafa Pacha
- Hasan IV
- Mustapha IV Pasha
- Soliman Katanya
- Kassan Kaid Koça
- Hizir Pasha
- Mustafa III Pasha
- Khüsrev Pacha
- Murat Pasha
- Hassan Khodja
- Yusuf II Pasha
- Ali Bitchin
- Mahmud Bursali Pacha
- Ahmed I Pasha
- Yusuf III Pasha
- Murad Pasha
- Buzenak-Muhammad
- Ahmed II Pasha
- Ibrahim Pasha
- Ismail Pasha
- Khalil Aga
- Ramadan Aga
- Shaban Aga
- Ali Aga
- Hadj Mohamed Dey
- Baba Hassan
- Mezzo Morto Hüseyin Pasha
- Ahmed Sharban
- Hadji Ahmed ben al-Hadji
- Hassan Chaouch
- Hadji Mustapha
- Hussein Kodja
- Mohamed Bektach
- Deli Ibrahim
the Deylik of Algiers
(1710–1830)
- Ali I
- Muhammad III
- Abdy Pasha
- Mohammed Arslan
- Ibrahim III
- Ibrahim IV
- Muhammad IV
- Ali II
- Muhammad V
- Sidi Hassan
- Mustapha II
- Ahmed II
- Ali III
- Ali IV
- Mohammed Khaznadji
- Omar Agha
- Ali V
- Muhammad VI ben Ali
- Hussein Dey
of French Algeria
(1830–1962)
- Louis-Auguste-Victor
- Bertrand Clauzel
- Pierre Berthezène
- Anne Jean Marie René Savary
- Théophile Voirol
- Jean-Baptiste Drouet, comte d'Erlon
- Bertrand Clauzel
- Charles-Marie Denys de Damrémont
- Sylvain Charles Valée
- Thomas Robert Bugeaud
- Louis Juchault de Lamoricière
- Marie Alphonse Bedeau
- Henri d'Orleans
- Louis-Eugène Cavaignac
- Nicolas Théodule Changarnier
- Viala Charon
- Alphonse Henri d'Hautpoul
- Aimable Pélissier
- Jacques Louis Randon
- Napoléon Joseph Charles Paul Bonaparte
- Prosper de Chasseloup-Laubat
- Edmond-Charles de Martimprey
- Patrice de MacMahon
- François Louis Alfred Durrieu
- Jean Walsin-Esterhazy
- Henri-Gabriel Didier
- Charles de Bouzet
- Romuald Vuillermoz
- Alexis Lambert
- Louis Henri de Gueydon
- Antoine Chanzy
- Albert Grévy
- Louis Tirman
- Jules Cambon
- Auguste Loze
- Louis Lépine
- Édouard Laferrière
- Charles Jonnart
- Paul Révoil
- Maurice Varnier
- Charles Lutaud
- Jean-Baptiste Abel
- Théodore Steeg
- Henri Dubief
- Maurice Viollette
- Pierre Bordes
- Jules-Gaston Henri Carde
- Georges le Beau
- Jean-Marie Charles Abrial
- Maxime Weygand
- Yves-Charles Chatel
- Marcel-Edmond Peyrouton
- Georges Catroux
- Yves Chataigneau
- Marcel-Edmond Naegelen
- Roger Léonard
- Jacques Soustelle
- Georges Catroux
- Robert Lacoste
- André Mutter
- Raoul Salan
- Paul Albert Louis Delouvrier
- Jean Morin
- Christian Fouchet
Republic of Algeria
(1962–present)
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