Enslaved Icelander Describes Horror of Barbary Pirate Raid (1627) // Diary of Ólafur Egilsson

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  • čas přidán 23. 03. 2022
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    Extracts taken from The Travels of Reverend Olafur Egilsson: The Story of the Barbary Corsair Raid on Iceland in 1627.
    by Olafur Egilsson (Author), Karl Smari Hreinsson (Translator), Adam Nichols (Translator)
    www.amazon.com/Travels-Revere...
    Thumbnail Art and Art by Alex Stoica.
    Stock footage taken from Videoblocks and Artgrid.
    Music from Epidemic Sound and Artlist.
    Image Credits:
    Westman Islands By Bruce McAdamCamera location62° 55′ 41.37″ N, 20° 27′ 25.92″ WView this and other nearby images on: OpenStreetMap - originally posted to Flickr as Vestmannaeyjar, CC BY-SA 2.0, commons.wikimedia.org/w/index...
    Grass Roof Houses By michael clarke stuff - originally posted to Flickr as Grass-roof houses, CC BY-SA 2.0, commons.wikimedia.org/w/index...

Komentáře • 18K

  • @VoicesofthePast
    @VoicesofthePast  Před 2 lety +932

    Huge thanks to Adam Nichols and Karl Smari Hreinsson for use of their fantastic translation - www.amazon.com/gp/aw/d/B081DLCZCZ/ref=tmm_kin_swatch_0?ie=UTF8&qid=&sr=

    • @temistogen
      @temistogen Před 2 lety +26

      This is an amazing era of extreme importance for the Balkans where I live.
      Can I ask you to search for a jurnal of a serb janissary that served in Serbian and Ottoman army,lived in Hungary and Poland and kept records of it.
      Konstantin Mihailovic
      The guy waged war from Croatia and Serbia,Bosnia,Albania,Byzantium,Romania and reached Euphrates with the Sultan.

    • @noahmpinto14
      @noahmpinto14 Před 2 lety +13

      can u do roman views of Hinduism and India?

    • @EM-tx3ly
      @EM-tx3ly Před 2 lety +14

      More accounts please

    • @starcapture3040
      @starcapture3040 Před 2 lety +4

      @@temistogen but wasn't he Muslim?

    • @maximvsdread1610
      @maximvsdread1610 Před 2 lety +14

      What about his son? ...and infant? Any account?

  • @charleslathrop9743
    @charleslathrop9743 Před 2 lety +3724

    I can't tell you how many times I have told people that the Muslims and Turks raided for slaves all over Europe, but people always argue with me like I don't know anything. It's incredible people's ignorance of this subject.

    • @Aku6Soku1Zan
      @Aku6Soku1Zan Před 2 lety +450

      Did you also tell them that it was done by both sides? Europeans enslaved Turks too. It was a war of sea domination.

    • @rogerr.8507
      @rogerr.8507 Před 2 lety +219

      you still talk to normies?

    • @CitrusMenace
      @CitrusMenace Před 2 lety +15

      please dont use this video to promote your racist agenda.
      most slavers were white

    • @lowercasepeople49
      @lowercasepeople49 Před 2 lety +81

      @@CitrusMenace are you humorously playing along with the first reply to this comment or being serious?

    • @_Lumiere_
      @_Lumiere_ Před 2 lety +472

      @@Aku6Soku1Zan It happened mainly in retaliation where muslims were taken as prisoners of war and it was limited to very few instances, notably in malta. It was no where near as extensive as the islamic slave trade, which involved slave raids and the enslavement of millions of people.

  • @kevinmccabe7263
    @kevinmccabe7263 Před 2 lety +3964

    6,500 "migrant workers" have died building the stadiums for Qatar's world cup. Slavery is still alive and well even to this day.

    • @secondchance6603
      @secondchance6603 Před 2 lety +468

      The slave markets re-opened in Tripoli when they got rid of Gadhafi, still running today but for some reason people want to go on and on about the slavery that was abolished in their country a hundred plus years ago. Guess there's still money to be made in it for some even though they've never been a victim of it.

    • @zapre2284
      @zapre2284 Před 2 lety +166

      And somehow I doubt the players will be kneeling or wearing rainbow laces

    • @sg-oe9wb
      @sg-oe9wb Před 2 lety +5

      @@ExecutionerHopkins There are written accounts of it.

    • @hyamick7584
      @hyamick7584 Před 2 lety +14

      Yeah that’s straight cap

    • @hyamick7584
      @hyamick7584 Před 2 lety

      @@secondchance6603 slavery exists in all parts of the world.

  • @Sokratees
    @Sokratees Před rokem +3169

    As a man of Icelandic blood, I demand reparations!

    • @user-kq1fi5nz8d
      @user-kq1fi5nz8d Před rokem

      ​@@abdelmalekmetidji get f*cked by French then

    • @BBWahoo
      @BBWahoo Před rokem +3

      You need to destroy more property than the amount of reparations, maybe you'll get it then one day 😭

    • @711employee6
      @711employee6 Před rokem +1

      I demand you come get your mother from my bedroom

    • @remilenoir1271
      @remilenoir1271 Před rokem +588

      ​@abdelmalek Metidji You're too poor to pay back anyways.

    • @Roblovjc
      @Roblovjc Před rokem +158

      @@abdelmalekmetidji you gonna let that slide?

  • @ellaeadig263
    @ellaeadig263 Před rokem +1221

    Broke my heart when his 11 year old son was taken away from him and he said, "I shall never forget him as long as I live".

    • @Celtopia
      @Celtopia Před rokem +155

      His son being taken broke my heart , i sit here in tears for all those from across Europe who suffered at the hands of these barbaric turks ,.......

    • @kadir1547
      @kadir1547 Před rokem +111

      I am a Turk living in Turkey. When I was in school our history teacher said that slaves, prisoners of war, and Christians childrens were recruited at a young age and raised as soldiers, and the entire janissary army (the unit that was an important part of the Ottoman Empire) was made up of them. I had done research on this subject and learned that this union was affiliated with the Bektasi sect, that means most of today's Turkish Alevis were actually Islamized foreigners, although I wasn't good at the history lesson very much, but this remained in my mind.It is brutal and unfair but at the past time slavery was common.

    • @yurgen5713
      @yurgen5713 Před rokem +7

      @@Celtopia Bruh

    • @xavierowens8032
      @xavierowens8032 Před rokem +8

      @@Celtopiawow you ppl are insane

    • @himanshusingh5214
      @himanshusingh5214 Před rokem +6

      @@kadir1547 Were your ancestors European?

  • @Joefest99
    @Joefest99 Před 2 lety +6377

    There is a sense of vindication in the fact that this amazing man’s story was heard by over a million people centuries later. God bless his soul and that of his family.

    • @allanfifield8256
      @allanfifield8256 Před 2 lety +46

      Why was he released and allowed to return home?

    • @averyj5446
      @averyj5446 Před 2 lety

      God is not going to bless them as they themselves took part of enslaving others.

    • @fyfyi6053
      @fyfyi6053 Před 2 lety +73

      @Hi everyone Are you sure it's not the other way around?
      Secondly he was sent to tell the story as a horror story back to his country. Not "released" cause boo hoo they felt bad for him.

    • @fyfyi6053
      @fyfyi6053 Před 2 lety +34

      @Hi everyone How many films do you know about the bad things that YOUR ancestors did vs the bad things that westerners did.

    • @fyfyi6053
      @fyfyi6053 Před 2 lety +15

      @Hi everyone Last time I checked hollywood can't wait

  • @Eddijon201
    @Eddijon201 Před rokem +2230

    I myself am from this island, this is widely taught in our schools. Finally someone noticed some of our past history.

    • @agskytter8977
      @agskytter8977 Před rokem +67

      Christianity is the worst thing that happened in the nordic countries.
      Do you think the pirates could have roamed free around Iceland with icelanders having the pre cristianity mindset?

    • @haakohaare2804
      @haakohaare2804 Před rokem +159

      @@agskytter8977 yes. the pagans were exterminated by far less powerful foes.

    • @simpsbelongtothegulags3702
      @simpsbelongtothegulags3702 Před rokem +34

      @@agskytter8977 what happened is not even Christianity

    • @tommurphree5630
      @tommurphree5630 Před rokem +2

      " taught " in our schools .

    • @tommurphree5630
      @tommurphree5630 Před rokem +46

      @@agskytter8977 Christianity has many virtuous teachings , such as Love thy neighbor as thyself , do unto others as you would have them do unto you ,
      etc. ,so I don't think that is the worst to happen to any country , but I see your point . If they were more hostile and vicious , perhaps they would have better defenses .

  • @bertbaker7067
    @bertbaker7067 Před 8 měsíci +609

    The Barbary pirates were no joke. To this day there are areas of Europe's coast where the population still hasn't fully recovered their past sizes from slave raids.
    In wasn't until France invaded Algeria that the Barbary pirates were finally stopped.

    • @endokrin7897
      @endokrin7897 Před 7 měsíci

      But most people only know about the "invasion" of Algeria, and the evils of imperialism.

    • @thePrahoable
      @thePrahoable Před 7 měsíci +2

      I read that for 200 years barbary pirates have kidnapped and sold to slavery in northern Africa roughly around 1 million Europeans. Crazy! And noone knows a damn about this but everyone points at the European colonization of Africa.

    • @dopaminedreams1122
      @dopaminedreams1122 Před 6 měsíci +141

      Based France

    • @FrederikJolle
      @FrederikJolle Před 6 měsíci +69

      Usa Sweden and Sicily fought them before that in the barbary wars and did their part in stopping it aswell

    • @senseishu937
      @senseishu937 Před 6 měsíci +79

      @@dopaminedreams1122 I wouldn't go that far. French rule in Algeria wasn't particularly... good for the population living there.

  • @glennmeade2390
    @glennmeade2390 Před 8 měsíci +282

    This happened in Ireland as well , a whole town vanished over night

    • @knightsnight5929
      @knightsnight5929 Před 8 měsíci +52

      And Cornwall

    • @Error-nc8yc
      @Error-nc8yc Před 8 měsíci +13

      Ottomans helped Ireland

    • @bobsmith5441
      @bobsmith5441 Před 5 měsíci +33

      ​@Error-nc8yc Yes, they did. Different era than what this video is discussing though.

    • @legaldinho
      @legaldinho Před 4 měsíci +13

      The Ottoman sultan didn't really control the Barbary (vassal) states. This was more of an industry / business for fortune seekers

    • @Jositoooo
      @Jositoooo Před 4 měsíci +15

      The Icelanders enslaved plenty of Irish. And each other.

  • @JM-kd3gm
    @JM-kd3gm Před 2 lety +3772

    The part where the father is torn from his son and begs him, no matter what, not to forsake his faith, is truly heartbreaking.

    • @jackdoran241
      @jackdoran241 Před 2 lety +118

      faith didn't do anything chief

    • @JM-kd3gm
      @JM-kd3gm Před 2 lety +433

      @@jackdoran241 how do you know that?

    • @thecolorfulsalesman8354
      @thecolorfulsalesman8354 Před 2 lety +78

      Agreed, that may have been the worst part to me.

    • @jonesjack6088
      @jonesjack6088 Před 2 lety +251

      When you realize what probably happened to him you want to throw up

    • @Monaghan3000
      @Monaghan3000 Před 2 lety +255

      @@jackdoran241 You're not only wrong, you're a bad human being. Grow up.

  • @TheZapan99
    @TheZapan99 Před 2 lety +3611

    There's still a commemorative plaque in the port of Reykjavík that claims the Ottoman killed more than a third of the island population during this series of raids.

    • @korayyy440
      @korayyy440 Před 2 lety +304

      And the guy doing it was a dutch guy working for Ottomans interestingly.

    • @zhain0
      @zhain0 Před 2 lety +297

      @John Rock what does that have to do with them being raided and a 3rd of the population killed?

    • @pavelp3442
      @pavelp3442 Před 2 lety +172

      @@zhain0 that their ancestors did the same to other countries a few centuries prior I guess

    • @zhain0
      @zhain0 Před 2 lety +291

      ​@@pavelp3442 so what? 'the Vikings' were centuries before this incident.
      so i will repeat myself, what the does that have to do with them being raided and a 3rd of the population killed? why is that relevant?

    • @GrigRP
      @GrigRP Před 2 lety +110

      @@zhain0 He already answered the question.

  • @etienneterblanche9717
    @etienneterblanche9717 Před rokem +782

    They were mainly Barbary pirates, from what is today Morocco and Algeria. There's a book titled "White Gold", well researched and worthwhile reading!

    • @kaporaldz922
      @kaporaldz922 Před rokem +29

      Que la Algérie 🇩🇿

    • @metallhak
      @metallhak Před rokem +62

      @@kaporaldz922 ruled by Ottoman Caliphate before it Byzantine Empire wasn't named algeria till the French took over

    • @algerianchaouki5705
      @algerianchaouki5705 Před rokem +83

      ​@@metallhakNo, before the French it was still called Algeria, read The beauties of the late Right Hon. Edmund Burke published many years before the French and he called Algeria a republic ( and in Arabic the country was always named Al-Jaza'ir)

    • @orwellianyoutube8978
      @orwellianyoutube8978 Před rokem +40

      They were French, English, German, Dane pirates working under the Ottomons.

    • @dindin8753
      @dindin8753 Před rokem +12

      It's because of Spanish inquisition that the Ashkenazi Jews such as Barbarossa the red beard if I still remember fighting against the christians and allied with ottomans bcz they need money And probably how the Barbary pirates were formed.

  • @Bruh73129
    @Bruh73129 Před 9 měsíci +15

    Fun fact : the most famous European slave in Morocco was a dutchman called van harlem he later became a General in the moroccan navy and later the governor of the city of al walidiya his son anthony brought a land in new York what is called today harlem

    • @Error-nc8yc
      @Error-nc8yc Před 8 měsíci +3

      Moroccan navy ? You mean ottoman navy 💀 , they worked for the Ottomans

    • @smerch3474
      @smerch3474 Před 6 měsíci

      morocco was never under ottoman rule @@Error-nc8yc

  • @shaiaheyes2c41
    @shaiaheyes2c41 Před 2 lety +3843

    The first time I heard about how the Ottoman pirats had taken as much as 1/10 of the Icelandic population as slaves, I was in shock on why these stories had never been thought. God bless this man and his whole family, and thank you for making his and others stories more known.

    • @exergyinfibiuseggsanomaly8234
      @exergyinfibiuseggsanomaly8234 Před 2 lety +131

      The ottomans were responding to what was happening to their own subjects under Catholic and British rule.

    • @francisd3740
      @francisd3740 Před 2 lety +669

      @@exergyinfibiuseggsanomaly8234 lol then about the thing they did Asia?

    • @ussrrocks
      @ussrrocks Před 2 lety +96

      fun fact is that, the ottoman pirate who discovered iceland first was a Dutch

    • @Dave-hu5hr
      @Dave-hu5hr Před 2 lety +591

      They don't want you to know - doesn't suit their agenda.. 👃

    • @Thorum13
      @Thorum13 Před 2 lety +55

      Hail Thor.

  • @sfyrisvasileios7799
    @sfyrisvasileios7799 Před rokem +1186

    Piracy was one of the reasons that the main cities of the Greek islands were built in the mainland instead of the coast and usually in a spot that could provide ample view of any incoming ship. Also the traditional settlement architecture (narrow curved streets, many terraces and narrow windows) is meant to allow city defenders to block attackers by not allowing them to freely employ their numbers.

    • @brenda726
      @brenda726 Před rokem

      didnt work too well since the greeks became the slaves of turks for almost 1,000 years

    • @sfyrisvasileios7799
      @sfyrisvasileios7799 Před rokem +22

      @@brenda726 yea sure, the Ottoman Empire didn't exist for more than 600 years though.....Turkey was created 100 years ago as well..... being historically illiterate is good and all, but showing your ignorance to such an extent....

    • @brenda726
      @brenda726 Před rokem +4

      @@sfyrisvasileios7799 could have been half a millenia. It was either a millenia or half a millenia. I remember my professor saying it and it shocked me.

    • @sfyrisvasileios7799
      @sfyrisvasileios7799 Před rokem +36

      @@brenda726 I thought you were trolling hence the sarcasm, so I apologize for the snarky attitude. Look, the Ottoman Empire was kind of special and very interesting. It didn't have very solid historical roots at its founding so it absorbed legislation, language and culture from the Byzantine and Persian Empire. For the first 150 years or so the official language of the State officials etc. was Greek as well. Overtime when the Islamic element became more pronounced there was an effort to convert masses to Islam by increasing taxes, taking male children for forced service as yanissaries etc. Nevertheless, as long as taxes were being paid Ottomans didn't do excessive acts of brutality like Nazis etc. The Orthodox church and the Sultan also had an equilibrium between them so the rights to freedom of religion for Orthodox Christians were kind of secure (if taxes were paid). If you have time to read Ottoman history, not the Turkish propaganda of nowdays, you will see that in reality all of the Empire's subjects were essentially slaves except for the royal family and that in reality many Sultans, viziers etc. were of Hellenic descent. The Byzantine Empire had 32 million people after the plague and they didn't just vanish just because 2 million Ottomans conquered the territories. Modern Turks have almost identical DNA with Greeks as well.

    • @brenda726
      @brenda726 Před rokem +5

      @@sfyrisvasileios7799 All humans have identical DNA. The only difference is the phenotype which is associated with your environment, say black people in africa and white people in antartica. Interesting, the Turks were actually nomadic warlike people who also mixed in with the mongolians and grew into an empire later on. It is a known fact that they are the dominating civilization that represented Islam for almost 1000 years on the world stage (as opposed to arabs). Even contemporarily, the Turkish war of indepenence, the Turks defeated 8 different nations and their belligerents (including the invading greeks from West who actually invaded and settled on to Turkish land) in one determined resistance and basically destroyed them all into retreat. New Zealand, Armenia, RUssia, Greece, French, British, Australia, India, Arabs, sure I am missing more. They are really not to be fucked with

  • @bioemiliano
    @bioemiliano Před rokem +283

    Damn, that part of the father asking the son not to forsake his faith really touched me

    • @carmenpeters728
      @carmenpeters728 Před 10 měsíci +3

      Bad advice. The boy would be killed. wouldn't a father want his son to live?

    • @david-468
      @david-468 Před 10 měsíci

      @@carmenpeters728no is Christian’s don’t listen to the devil in order to live like you Muslims, we don’t lie about our faith, what you see as weakness is strength but you’re too corrupted to notice, isa is your savior Muhammad is a con artist

    • @righthomosphere7962
      @righthomosphere7962 Před 9 měsíci +5

      pretty sure he made that up. it was their way to virtue signal

    • @david-468
      @david-468 Před 9 měsíci +69

      @@righthomosphere7962 it definitely wasn’t made up, you just know very little about real Christianity, you die a martyr before rejecting Christ

    • @mohammedxiii
      @mohammedxiii Před 9 měsíci +8

      ​@@david-468you mean rejecting Paul? Christ peace be upon him is free of the lies you attribute to him.
      You don't even follow a bit of the law that Jesus did which shows the dedication Christians have towards their faith.
      Muslims have more claim over Jesus than all of modern Christians.

  • @abdelmalekmetidji
    @abdelmalekmetidji Před rokem +341

    As an Algerian I say that slavery was and still a terrible thing for humanity , am not proud of any of this terrible practice.

    • @yourgrandmotherspimp1280
      @yourgrandmotherspimp1280 Před rokem +102

      But you shouldn't feel guilty about this, its not your doing and it was the way of the world back then, im sick of being told that I should feel guilty about something I had no part in, the best we can do is learn about the past and share the knowledge so as we can all acknowledge how bad and cruel this is so as to not repeat it

    • @mohamedfernades
      @mohamedfernades Před rokem

      علاش علاش علاش منك سيريو كونا مقودين هكا افتخر بيها شريكي

    • @BeruCampos
      @BeruCampos Před 9 měsíci +24

      Not your fault bud

    • @user-kk4xj4ku2m
      @user-kk4xj4ku2m Před 9 měsíci +1

      ​@@yourgrandmotherspimp1280
      200 years of colonisation...r y guilty to ?

    • @alandalusi8862
      @alandalusi8862 Před 9 měsíci +35

      vikings did far worst

  • @Ara_Arasaka
    @Ara_Arasaka Před rokem +555

    There’s something surreal about hearing a man speak who died centuries ago about horrors most will never contemplate.

    • @averdadeeumaso4003
      @averdadeeumaso4003 Před rokem +17

      "Most will never contemplate" X1nj4ng c0ncentration c4mps and n0rth k0rea is still a thing...

    • @muhammadeisa1459
      @muhammadeisa1459 Před rokem +12

      @@averdadeeumaso4003 still a small population compared to the rest of the world. So OP saying that most will never contemplate it is true.

    • @MouAresounTaPneusta
      @MouAresounTaPneusta Před rokem +14

      Some of the best books are autobiographies of this kind. I read one about a Hellene who was sent to Turkish labour camps and one of a London thief who was sent to penal colonies in Australia. It catholically/universally shatters the "glory of conquering" and the "Shame of the conquered" myths and make you not want to have anything to do with slavery of any kind or type.

    • @simon5045
      @simon5045 Před rokem +12

      God bless the Icelandic Christian martyrs.

    • @ohifonlyx33
      @ohifonlyx33 Před rokem

      many people (and many Christians) in many countries are persecuted... the middle east, China, Africa... millions. But yes, those of us in the developed world will likely never experience such a thing.

  • @phil8821
    @phil8821 Před 2 lety +2858

    At roughly the same time. The Ottoman pirates came to my country (Faroe Islands). Two ships with a crew of 500 each. They raided our southernmost island. Took all the women and killed most of the men. Some managed to hide away. When they returned, they could not bury the dead because everything of value, even the shovels, had been stolen.
    A danish guy, I do not remember if he had been a crew member on board one of the ships or sent from the danish crown to pay ransom money, said that the pirates intended to go north and raid all our islands, which would have meant the end of my people. But there was a terrible storm and one of the ships was sunk. This made them change their minds and the remaining ship returned south.

    • @user-ms7gt2km5f
      @user-ms7gt2km5f Před 2 lety +253

      I think the sad thing about this is the justification for it was retribution for the Muslims and Jews being exterminated in Spain. Evil upon evil, sadness upon sadness. We take it for granted that the world we live in today is safe, at least in our limited places we live, but forget that war has killed and separated and kidnapped and trafficked millions even today. We can't take these things for granted.

    • @EresirThe1st
      @EresirThe1st Před 2 lety +652

      It wasn't justification for anything. They just took what they wanted, it's that simple.

    • @wasimkhan-cd1gg
      @wasimkhan-cd1gg Před 2 lety +272

      @@user-ms7gt2km5f Those who are evil will look for any excuse to act on it. Humans can't do something so evil with a clear intent, they need to justify it with an excuse so that they will be able to live with themselves the next morning. In all likelyhood it was probably their greed that motivated them for such an atrocity rather then anger or hatred.

    • @boracay12
      @boracay12 Před 2 lety +192

      Karma ? The Vikings raided every where killed took slaves and plunder. Now it's thier turn to be raided ,killed and enslaved . On the island of Cebu Philippines there are watch towers lining the coast . Each one in site of the next to warn of muslims coming to raid for slaves .
      The island i am on now off the north tip of Cebu main island is named batayan which means "lookout" and there is still an old fort on the north end of this island and a remaining Wall of one in the south end .

    • @FLIP1E
      @FLIP1E Před 2 lety +55

      I went to the faroe islands once. Beautiful place!

  • @alanlee2574
    @alanlee2574 Před rokem +165

    Not a lot of people know this but Dublin (Ireland) was the biggest city in Europe juring the 10th century as far as slave trading went. The Nordic people raided Scotland and it's islands, England and Ireland taking whole villages old and young. It was only when William the Conqueror arrived in England that it was outlawed.

    • @AlmaGumundsdottir-gz1ik
      @AlmaGumundsdottir-gz1ik Před 9 měsíci +28

      Quite right. The vikings stole a lot of people for slavery. I'm from Iceland and the nation is 40% Celtic. The Icelandic sagas are full of informations of Irish and Scottish slaves here. But the year 1000 with christinaty slavery was forbidden. In stead there were working people. Sold in auctions to farmers and had almost no right.

    • @tommywozza4626
      @tommywozza4626 Před 8 měsíci +10

      And the normans were north men aka vikings

    • @ClaudiusAD43
      @ClaudiusAD43 Před 8 měsíci +5

      ​​@@AlmaGumundsdottir-gz1ikthe Irish were also in Iceland before the nordic people 😉

    • @rhysthomas14
      @rhysthomas14 Před 8 měsíci +8

      The fortress of Alt Clut (modern Dumbarton Rock) was the capital of the brythonic Kingdom of Strathclyde.
      Ivar the boneless laid siege to the fortress for four months and starved the population. When the city fell every man woman and child, including the King were sold into slavery.

    • @BarbaryCorsair
      @BarbaryCorsair Před 7 měsíci

      The Algiers Inn pub in Ireland

  • @nastyHarry
    @nastyHarry Před rokem +9

    Wow your voice is so perfect for material like this! It captures the emotions of fear and dread that those involved must have felt

  • @BT_Spanky
    @BT_Spanky Před 2 lety +3976

    I’ve never been much of a history buff when it comes to learning about the various slave trades throughout the ages. Me being American of African descent of course I learned about the Atlantic slave trade of the predominantly sub Saharan Africans in school but I was actually an adult when I first heard about the enslavement of the Irish. Decided to do some research on it and I was very surprised by how much I didn’t know when it came to the slave trade of Europeans. I also found out during that research that the Arab slave trade of both black Africans and Europeans was around approximately 2,000 years before Europeans and black Africans themselves would greatly participate in various slave trades as well.

    • @Erik-op2hy
      @Erik-op2hy Před 2 lety

      Media makes it look as if slavery was only between white and black people, but slavery was all over the world and almost every country had slaves.
      This should be educated more, not just a part of the history, but to show slavery was everywhere. Till today in some arabic countries.. we should learn from it and never let it happen again

    • @newmoltof7172
      @newmoltof7172 Před 2 lety

      "2000 years before Europeans & Africans": come on ! what about Roman Empire then ? well in the antiquity and before, slavery was somehow a universal thing. the ones that could did enslave others and sold them for profit. this is human history. Europeans did it too: Roman Empire did take slaves, using and solding them. be carreful to not fall in the narrative that yes European Transatlantic slavery was horrible but look Arabs did worse etc... you should verify first with historic sources then make your opinion. Wikipêdia is not a historic source btw, even if it can help to start for most basic knowledge.

    • @kennethmoore625
      @kennethmoore625 Před 2 lety +440

      Most of human history has been about groups enslaved, and enslaving others. Most the time, the slaves were the defeated group and their families after a battle. Even the Aztec and Mayan cultures had slaves from defeated neighboring tribes, though they never had contact with the other continents that practiced slavery. Hard labor is intensive work, and if a person can defeat another, and make them do it for only the cost of water and food to keep them alive, it saves the first person the pain of doing the work. All they had to do was break the will of the other person.

    • @noirsake8057
      @noirsake8057 Před 2 lety +76

      Can you point me to any sources on Irish enslavement in America? And to clarify you're talking about enslavement, not indentured servitude, correct?

    • @belltley
      @belltley Před 2 lety

      When Arabs came to North Africa during the 8th century, in just few years they enslaved more than 1 million North African Berbers (white people, mostly christians since the 1st century, North Africa was the homeland of San Donatio, San Cyprian, San Augustin, Santa Monica, Popes Gelasius 1 and 2 and Milthyade...), they took especially young boys, girls and women to be sold in the slave markets of Damascus and Alexandria. It has been a demographic catastrophy. Arabs have been known for a long time to have practiced the slavery of Blacks peoples, because originally the Arabian peninsula was populated by Blacks, whom the Arabs then Semitic peoples coming from present-day Jordan, colonized the peninsula and dominated the native black populations. With their conquest of Africa, from Egypt, they amplified their practice until they had "fashions" relatively to the morphotypes of Blacks to be possessed according to social castes such as, for example, to possess an East African, thiner, was a sign of his master's wealth employing him as home-servant, etc. This History must be told everywhere, the European slave trade exckusively of Blacks is an Arab heritage! As for slavery without distinction of race or sex, it goes back to the highest antiquity. However, the Vikings who left Scandinavia captured too a large number of slaves, from the banks of the Volga to the western Mediterranean rim via the Atlantic coasts.

  • @ionidhunedoara1491
    @ionidhunedoara1491 Před 2 lety +758

    The US marine anthem mentions "shores of Tripoli" where they dealt with the Barbary pirates in 1803.

    • @leonrussell262
      @leonrussell262 Před 2 lety +147

      "From the halls of Montezuma to the shores of Tripoli!!!" Yes the US NAVY war formed specifically to deal with the Barbary Pirates. They signed a treaty with the US and a few Years later Britain finished them off for good.

    • @readmedottext
      @readmedottext Před 2 lety +65

      There should be a modern movie about it. Stephen Decatur was a real hero with a tragic end. Many places are named after him in America but no one even remembers who he was.

    • @buckwheat1070
      @buckwheat1070 Před 2 lety +59

      @@leonrussell262 I’ve seen the original Mameluke sword in the Commandant’s office. Incredible piece of history. Yes Jefferson sent them in because They were enslaving US vessel crew members. For years.

    • @88amona
      @88amona Před 2 lety +47

      Had an Uncle in the USMC point that out to me. Told me Jefferson deployed the U.S. Navy there because they were sacking U.S. vessels and enslaving crew members.

    • @PedroOrtega1993
      @PedroOrtega1993 Před 2 lety +9

      @@readmedottext _Pirates of the Mediterranean: To the Shores of Tripoli_

  • @hannahstenstrom4028
    @hannahstenstrom4028 Před 2 měsíci +7

    Thank you for sharing this. I really wish more people took the time to learn world history & not just isolate to one region, country or time period. It's so important to understand as many of our ancestors stories, cultures, struggles, triumphs, loses, tragedies & issues. Well done with the reading, tone is spot on.

  • @kristoffersevillena7657
    @kristoffersevillena7657 Před 9 měsíci +264

    Hearing this diary makes me appreciate what an immense undertaking it was and how much balls it took for a young United States of America to declare war on the Barbary States and send US Marines to Tripoli. I feel like it would have been a very different world if it weren't for the first and second Barbary Wars.

    • @Chuck8541
      @Chuck8541 Před 8 měsíci +30

      Absolutely. This is not known about enough. Which is shown by how few upvotes your comment has.

    • @TS-1267
      @TS-1267 Před 8 měsíci +4

      ... " If"s and But's MMmmmm 🤔

    • @kristoffersevillena7657
      @kristoffersevillena7657 Před 8 měsíci +8

      @@TS-1267 I don't understand your comment. Please expand.

    • @ifrazali3052
      @ifrazali3052 Před 8 měsíci

      Meanwhile Slaves in US were treated like animals

    • @sherlockgnomes8971
      @sherlockgnomes8971 Před 8 měsíci

      Oh jog on, USA ruined countries with no shame ( Iraq/Afghanistan/Libya ). They were the main players in the African slave trade along with the British.
      Don’t forget the millions of indigenous people killed during the creation of the “ United States “

  • @mrsuperger5429
    @mrsuperger5429 Před 2 lety +684

    The entire village of Baltimore in Ireland, men, women and children, were taken away and enslaved by Barbary pirates on the 20th June 1631.

    • @miracleyang3048
      @miracleyang3048 Před 2 lety +19

      It was an English settlement,

    • @onezerooneo
      @onezerooneo Před 2 lety +49

      @@miracleyang3048 it wasn’t the only time pirates came to Ireland. Also Baltimore was the seat of one of Ireland’s most ancient dynasties well before an English colony was imposed on it. English history books would have people believe there were only savages living on Ireland before the English came instead of the vast kingdoms and Brehon Law that operated there.

    • @cracksmoker1506
      @cracksmoker1506 Před 2 lety +15

      They were taken by pirates from my country 🇩🇿, history is gruesome

    • @comradekenobi6908
      @comradekenobi6908 Před 2 lety +5

      @donald trumpp a taste of their own medicine lol

    • @snakedog9694
      @snakedog9694 Před 2 lety +3

      @@comradekenobi6908 people like you would probably have resorted to slavery back then.

  • @hlmoore8042
    @hlmoore8042 Před 2 lety +517

    I wonder how much longer they lived. As for his wife being returned to her husband - to me - is a miracle in and of itself.

    • @ricky-sanchez
      @ricky-sanchez Před 2 lety +17

      I wonder what she did in turkish possession for ten years...😱

    • @hlmoore8042
      @hlmoore8042 Před 2 lety +78

      @@ricky-sanchez I am sure it was not pretty.

    • @ci6516
      @ci6516 Před 2 lety +6

      Terrible

    • @AndrewTheMandrew531
      @AndrewTheMandrew531 Před 2 lety +2

      @Skydaddy Myth-Busters Gee, with a name like that I wonder how hopeless you feel.

    • @racecar15
      @racecar15 Před 2 lety +54

      Stay away from 👉🕋 save humanity...

  • @knowwheretogo3974
    @knowwheretogo3974 Před rokem +45

    It's even more terrifying to know that there are more slaves in the world today, than back then (est. 30-40 million at least). How do such people live with themselves?

    • @TwoBassholesandaKaren7107
      @TwoBassholesandaKaren7107 Před 8 měsíci

      Where are these slaves you mention?

    • @RyanBetts
      @RyanBetts Před 8 měsíci +6

      @@TwoBassholesandaKaren7107 en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Slavery_in_the_21st_century#Statistics

    • @K.w897
      @K.w897 Před 6 měsíci

      @@apollionsacrezleonardmauritanians are not arab

    • @Sandlin22
      @Sandlin22 Před 3 měsíci

      They get money for the slave labor when you buy the products

    • @miapdx503
      @miapdx503 Před 27 dny +1

      Here the US slavery is illegal...except in our prison system. Some of the same families that gained their wealth in the southern states days of slave labor today are enriched by slave labor in our penitentiaries.

  • @davidt3563
    @davidt3563 Před 10 měsíci +59

    These stories are read back so well it's like I'm actually reading these as well as being there in the moment. These poor unfortunate people.

  • @chrisf247
    @chrisf247 Před 2 lety +606

    The Barbary Pirates are so rarely thought of now that it seems like just a trivia answer or something you memorize for a test, but really terrorized the region at the time.

    • @jacksevert3099
      @jacksevert3099 Před 2 lety +23

      I don't know about that! Here in America the Anthem of the US Marines mentions "to the shores of tripoli"! So it was so talked about they even put it in a song! But that's just America

    • @tomjeff1743
      @tomjeff1743 Před 2 lety +8

      For 100s of years. Millions were taken

    • @endokrin7897
      @endokrin7897 Před 2 lety +44

      I'll tell you what Americans know about the Barbary Pirates: absolutely nothing.
      I'm a product of the public schools in the USA. If I even heard "The Barbary Pirates" mentioned during my time in school, it was portrayed as the same thing as the Pirates we all think of (as in the Pirates of the Caribbean or the 'West Indies')
      I NEVER heard about any pirates other than Caucasians who used to be military/sailors and went rogue.
      The same goes for the Atlantic slave trade and what we were taught. We were taught one thing and no other points of view.
      A bit of insight, especially for those of you from other parts of the world.
      👍

    • @jacksevert3099
      @jacksevert3099 Před 2 lety +20

      @@endokrin7897 the US Marines Hymn literally says "to the shores of Tripoli" referencing the Marines takeover of the Barbary Coast. If you really are American then please show some respect for the Troops and learn their History. It's literally right there don't be an ignorant American, WAKE UP!

    • @adearthical
      @adearthical Před 2 lety +19

      @@endokrin7897 I'd say it's more just your own personal ignorance. The American naval forces were incepted to deal with Muslim aggression.

  • @tedblackburn8679
    @tedblackburn8679 Před 2 lety +1708

    The saddest thing about this poor man's experience is that nothing has changed. There's still slavery in that part of the world and its not even hidden or shunned.

    • @alextaylor8776
      @alextaylor8776 Před 2 lety +178

      Saudi Arabia outlawed slavery just around 1975 I believe. Lots of slavery still happening sadly in the world.

    • @dmekkkkkwkkkkkk
      @dmekkkkkwkkkkkk Před 2 lety +343

      yeah we just call it human trafficking now, doesn’t really roll off the tung the same way

    • @baileyharrison1030
      @baileyharrison1030 Před 2 lety +84

      @@alextaylor8776 lol 1975

    • @sjewitt22
      @sjewitt22 Před 2 lety +185

      SAdly since the west overthrow Gaddafi slavery has come back to that part of Africa.

    • @shattershills1456
      @shattershills1456 Před 2 lety +9

      You mean the Jewish elitists

  • @m.a.8335
    @m.a.8335 Před rokem +51

    Erschütternd! Völlig unbekannter Teil der Geschichte. Wir sollten mehr davon hören, um ein realistischeres Bild der Geschichte zu kriegen. Unsere Geschichtsbücher kann man ohnehin in die Tonne werfen... Danke für diesen Beitrag.

    • @Blacksaintknowpercapita
      @Blacksaintknowpercapita Před rokem

      Great comment

    • @berserkeroflove6304
      @berserkeroflove6304 Před 2 měsíci

      @@Blacksaintknowpercapita Ich würde sie auf keinen Fall in die Tonne werfen, denn was sie lehren ist wichtig. Natürlich lässt sich sagen, dass so maches wichtiges fehlt, aber dadurch verlieren sie nicht ihren Wert. Man sollte einfach von sich aus mehr lernen und offen für neues Wissen sein.

  • @TBoneGamez
    @TBoneGamez Před 10 měsíci +47

    If it’s not already been said some PLEASE make this into a movie. What a story

    • @fakeprofile9502
      @fakeprofile9502 Před 9 měsíci

      There's no way. Black people can only be portrayed as victims or heros. White people can only be portrayed as villains right now.

    • @jonathanwells223
      @jonathanwells223 Před 8 měsíci

      They will never do that because it goes against the narrative

    • @YouT00ber
      @YouT00ber Před 8 měsíci

      The diversity of the pirates would make it acceptable to the Hollywood woketards!

    • @user-zy9yg2eu5t
      @user-zy9yg2eu5t Před 8 měsíci

      That would require admitting that White people have also been victims of great evil, and they aren't ready to let the world understand that yet

    • @jonatan1927
      @jonatan1927 Před 7 měsíci +1

      Mel Gibson should do it, would be 10/10

  • @simonyip5978
    @simonyip5978 Před 2 lety +507

    The description of Englishmen helping the Ottomans capturing Icelandic people reminds me of Africans helping Europeans capturing other Africans as slaves.

    • @Relax-ge2uf
      @Relax-ge2uf Před 2 lety +66

      Well the Vikings and English had a long history of fighting and they got raided by the Vikings very often maybe that's why the English helped captured them and put them into slavery

    • @absolmute
      @absolmute Před 2 lety +73

      @@Relax-ge2uf same goes for different african factions

    • @BigBodyBiggolo
      @BigBodyBiggolo Před 2 lety +14

      If im not mistaken, a lot of the African slaves were a specific part of the moors from the recently fallen spanish caliphate who ran south and were sold by the empires they ran into.
      The last of the caliphate had falled in 1492 the exact year columbus discovered America.
      Maybe im rambling nonsense but i felt like saying this

    • @BertPreast
      @BertPreast Před 2 lety +23

      Seems odd that the Englishmen knew the island, its landing points and its defences better than the locals did... Were they actually renegade Icelanders?

    • @simonyip5978
      @simonyip5978 Před 2 lety +8

      @@BertPreast I think that the original author (the Icelandic man) would have known the difference between Icelandic people and English people, but still an interesting theory, I know that North East England was called the Danelaw, but I think that the Danelaw existed several centuries before this particular episode took place.
      Edit, I mentioned the Danelaw because that was a strong link between Danish vikings in both England and in Danish Icelandic settlements, which is possibly a reason to believe that the Danish were aware of the differences between English people and how they knew who was helping the Pirates land ashore safely.

  • @colonelturmeric558
    @colonelturmeric558 Před 2 lety +166

    Barbary slave trade is also where the ‘britain shall never ever ever be slaves’ line comes from in the national anthem, as whole coastal towns would disappear over night, especially in cornwall

    • @guywiththesly3321
      @guywiththesly3321 Před rokem +4

      Lol

    • @commieking1443
      @commieking1443 Před rokem

      British shall never ever be slaves because they pay the taxes to Barbary coasts states

    • @Sectarian.
      @Sectarian. Před 10 měsíci +26

      Surely the Brits would've known how horrible slavery is after experiencing this, they would not go around to enslave millions afterwards.

    • @sutapasbhattacharya9471
      @sutapasbhattacharya9471 Před 10 měsíci

      @@Sectarian. LOL- Piracy of Spanish colonial plunders ships led to African slave-trading. This and slave-produced sugar were Britain's largest revenue sources which built Liverpool and Bristol. Then the wealth of Britain came from looting India:
      India actually had the world's largest economy (over 25% of global GDP) in the early 18th Century prior to British occupation, deindustrialization and looting of India's resources. Research published by Columbia UP in 2018 showed that the British stole about US45 Trillion from India from 1757-1938 (see Prof. Jason Hickel's article online about how modern Britain was built with loot from India). Britain's Industrial Revolution and much Western development was financed by 'loot' (Hindi for plunder) from India. India's world leading textile industry was systematically eliminated by the Brits so that Britain's new industrial cotton industry [copying Indian techniques and styles - e.g. 'Paisley'] could develop as 19th Century historians H.H. Wilson and Friedrich List both noted. This included tariff barriers, making India a monopolized Captive Market for British goods and breaking weavers fingers and even cutting off thumbs of the famed Dhaka Muslin weavers. Governor General Bentinck wrote that the plains of India are bleached with the bones of her weavers. India had produced the best steel in the world (Wootz) as recognized by English experts in the 1790s - and Sheffield copied its methods. French and British colonial observers noted that 18th Century India made cannon and muskets as good as any in Europe but arms production was eliminated. The oldest seaworthy ship in the Royal Navy HMS Trincomalee was built by an Indian Co. in 1817 but British competitors stopped shipbuilding in India. When 19th Century Indian engineers showed that they could design and build locomotives, this was of course suppressed. It was not until the 1914-18 Great War in Europe that India was allowed to develop some industrial capacity - then only due to Britain's emergency needs.
      They also killed tens of millions of the poorest in about 3 dozen famines created by Britain stealing India's foodgrains for British profit and Food Security. See also Sullvan and Hickel’s (2022) online AJ English article ‘How British Colonialism Killed 100 million Indians in 40 Years’. Robert Clive returned from Bengal with his 'loot' as the richest non-monarch in Europe and his East India Co. mafia became the super-rich new elite known as 'nobs' (from 'nabobs') whilst up to 1/3 of the population of Bengal, Bihar and Orissa (up to 10 million) died in the 1770 Great Bengal Famine created by their rapacity - as predicted by Richard Becher (a relative of novelist William Thackeray). This led to Europe's first Credit Crunch in 1772 when dozens of banks collapsed in days as Indian loot financing Western development dried up for a while. The EIC started peddling Indian opium to China from 1770 (kidnapping children to work on opium plantations etc.) which brought Britain 1/7 of its export revenues for 140 years.
      In 1877 Cornelius Walford showed that there were 30 famines in British-occupied India in just 120 years compared to 17 famines in all of India in the previous 2,000 years. This was because native Hindu and Indianized Muslim rulers acted to prevent and alleviate famines. The British created them with their profiteering, hoarding and exporting for Britain's profit and Food Security [it was Industrial Britain that did not grow enough food to feed itself - until after 1945 - India as a whole always did]. The Disraeli regime even set up Death Camps for victims of the 1877 manmade famine in Madras Province - giving famine victims less starvation rations for hard labour than given in Buchenwald - killing 94% of inmates. 5-7 million died whilst record amounts of Indian grain exports lowered prices in Britain and the West. Famine survivors were coerced into the new slavery of indentured labour in the Caribbean etc. Disraeli organized the biggest feast in human history, the 1877 Delhi Durbar, to celebrate Vicky being named Empress of India whilst 100,000 a week died in South India. In 1901 The Lancet estimated conservatively from the census that 19 million had died of starvation in Western India during the 1890s due to British policies. In 1936 George Orwell wrote in Road to Wigan Pier that 100 million Indians must be forced to the edge of starvation so that the British can live in comfort. As late as 1942-3, Hindu-hating White Supremacist Winston Churchill was responsible for killing millions in Bengal due to Nazi-like Collective Punishment of Bengal and - after British cover-ups were blown by the press in 1943, preventing Food Aid from other countries reaching Bengal, diverting US, Canadian and Australian grain to the UK. As ever, there were surplus food stocks in India as a whole but the Brits ensured they didn't get to Bengal. Even the Nazis allowed Red Cross Food Aid to Greek Famine victims in 1941.

    • @sutapasbhattacharya9471
      @sutapasbhattacharya9471 Před 10 měsíci

      @@Sectarian. When the Brits 'abolished' slavery they paid huge compensation to the slave-owners for their property but no compensation to the slaves. The biggest beneficiaries were the Gladstone family which produced Liberal PM William Gladstone. Supposed Liberal hero Charles Dickens [who supposedly cared for poor Britons] opposed the Abolition of Slavery and after the 1857 Indian Revolt wrote that he would like to go to India to Exterminate the Indian Race!
      Of course the British maintained subtle forms of slave-labour even after Abolition primarily with Indentured labour. The survivors of the 1877 Madras Famine (with its Death Camps) were coerced into indentured labour in the Caribbean. Tribal peoples in the North East of India were tricked into the barbaric indentures on Assam Tea Plantations. The so-called 'Slave Laws' in Assam lasting into the 20th Century meant these tea-pickers were worse off than slaves in the Deep South USA as the latter had been valued as property by owners. If they tried to leave plantations before the 5 years were up to complain about brutality, the owners had the right to hunt them down for breaking the contract!
      The British after Abolition supposedly liberated African slaves such as the slaves traded by the Arabs from Zanzibar. But, rather than return them to their homes the British forced them onto islands such as Mauritius to serve as cheap labour forces for the British plantation owners! In the 1870s Brits in Queensland kidnapped natives from New Guinea to work as forced labour. In South Africa the British forced the native Africans off 87% of the fertile land with high taxes in order to force them to work as cheap labour in the gold and diamond mines. This later led to the Apartheid Bantustans where the natives were forced to live and try to farm on the 13% of the worst barren land whilst the whites had stolen all the good farmland.

  • @robertotrevino9737
    @robertotrevino9737 Před rokem +3

    May god forever bless this channel 🙏🏻🙏🏻

  • @KansasCowpoke
    @KansasCowpoke Před rokem +17

    What a powerful story that should not be forgotten and whose morals of good faith should he praised

    • @PAC-MANN
      @PAC-MANN Před 3 měsíci

      They were French, English, German, Dane pirates working under the Ottomons.

  • @davidnunez8561
    @davidnunez8561 Před 2 lety +1932

    It's insane how hard life was like before 1900 (for the most part) any complaints of the modern world are made almost insignificant

    • @moshunit96
      @moshunit96 Před 2 lety +256

      We live more comfortably and in better condition than any other time in human history.

    • @kingofdubb2133
      @kingofdubb2133 Před 2 lety +53

      @@moshunit96 That is not known, the history of the Americas, Asia and Africa before they were invaded by the Europeans, and the history of Europe beyond 2 to 3000years ago is largely unknown, and mostly speculation

    • @davidnunez8561
      @davidnunez8561 Před 2 lety +168

      @@kingofdubb2133 even then, there was constant tribal warfare, kidnapping, rape, enslaving, sacrificing etc.

    • @VFXORDIE
      @VFXORDIE Před 2 lety +49

      @@moshunit96 In the east, yes slavery is still prevalent. In Asia and Africa stories of entire villages being exterminated is not uncommon. These days it's just in the name of extremism or capitalism.

    • @kingofdubb2133
      @kingofdubb2133 Před 2 lety

      @@davidnunez8561 Don't agree, history just focuses on the bad things - war, murder, rape etc, same as the news today - when do you ever switch the news on and get something positive? eg there have been relatively recent discoveries of cities in the Indus valley 5000 years old, but no trace of weapons were found

  • @weaponscommanderroringusan5625

    You and History Debunked are almost the only CZcams channels who even mention this aspect of slavery. Thank you!!

    • @12vscience
      @12vscience Před 2 lety +38

      You should check out Stefan Molyneux's presentation.

    • @12vscience
      @12vscience Před 2 lety +16

      Right here: czcams.com/video/PFSqz4kvW-U/video.html

    • @weaponscommanderroringusan5625
      @weaponscommanderroringusan5625 Před 2 lety +53

      @@12vscience I thought CZcams purged him?! Miss being able to hear actual scholarly discussion of a subject on CZcams...

    • @sayuas4293
      @sayuas4293 Před 2 lety +245

      Its not PC to talk about Muslim slavers, only white slavers. That is why almost nobody knows about the fact that its still going on today in Africa and the middle east.

    • @vysharra
      @vysharra Před 2 lety +43

      Just because you have to have history fed to you through a popular CZcams channel doesn’t mean the info isn’t out there

  • @begusmegus6628
    @begusmegus6628 Před 3 měsíci +2

    My favorite is the illustrations, I am Icelandic and the imagery is so evocative and well done, I especially liked how when he talked of people being kind and generous to him there was an illustration of a man entering a main hall that has the host reading aloud by candlelight, since candles and lamps were at the time considered almost a luxury and were carefully rationed by households and such a welcome would have been a token of great affection.

  • @pomegranate6221
    @pomegranate6221 Před 3 měsíci +5

    7 minutes in and I just can't.. unbelievable, shocking history of how cruel humans can be towards other humans..💔

  • @zimnizzle
    @zimnizzle Před rokem +816

    On the island where my grandmother was born in Greece, there is a fortress at the top of it. It’s still there. Everyone on the island had a little living stall where they had supplies ready to go in case of invading pirates (they could spot them coming, in which case they would immediately take to the fortress and barricade themselves in). This was a daily threat.

    • @anthonytsi8686
      @anthonytsi8686 Před rokem +39

      Was your grandmother from the island of chios? Because I am from chios and I have heard the same stories of this fortress.

    • @cloneeja
      @cloneeja Před rokem +12

      Maniots

    • @fiore7939
      @fiore7939 Před rokem

      Italy is full of those too.

    • @nigelsheppard625
      @nigelsheppard625 Před rokem +17

      It was the same in Malta and Gozo.

    • @KISTOVI
      @KISTOVI Před rokem +21

      Same in Croatian islands to..Mljet

  • @sreekarpradyumna
    @sreekarpradyumna Před rokem +93

    Sometimes, I'm just glad I wasn't born into a time like this. I can't fathom the pain these people went through.

    • @dmytrolysak1366
      @dmytrolysak1366 Před rokem +9

      Some people here in Ukraine had it much worse literally within last couple of months, so I am not sure it's about "time"

    • @sreekarpradyumna
      @sreekarpradyumna Před rokem

      @@dmytrolysak1366 That's true.

    • @lba6859
      @lba6859 Před rokem

      Armenians have had for centuries...attacks , rapes, abductions...eventually the genocide

    • @leaveme3559
      @leaveme3559 Před 8 měsíci +10

      ​@@dmytrolysak1366can't say it worse than being a slave

    • @dmytrolysak1366
      @dmytrolysak1366 Před 8 měsíci

      @@leaveme3559 I agree, we only fight because we think becoming slaves is much worse.

  • @lyingcat9022
    @lyingcat9022 Před 8 měsíci +4

    He must have suffered major survivors guilt :( He lost his entire family never to know their fates.
    I know they are all long dead but I still wish them God Speed. I hope they all found some peace in life before resting in peace ever since.

  • @madyjules
    @madyjules Před rokem +26

    there truly is nothing as terrible
    on this planet as humanity’s inhumanity 😔

    • @ahronthegreat
      @ahronthegreat Před rokem

      Yes there is sensationalist 😂

    • @miapdx503
      @miapdx503 Před 27 dny

      Man is wicked. We kill ourselves and each other, all day long. 😞 It won't be a flood this time...

  • @johnfisk811
    @johnfisk811 Před 2 lety +313

    The church in my father’s village in Suffolk had a collecting box at the entrance for the ransom of locals taken by North African pirates when at sea.

    • @dbag57
      @dbag57 Před 2 lety +8

      which village if you don't mind me asking?

    • @epicellen7299
      @epicellen7299 Před 2 lety +20

      Soham, St Andrew's church in Norfolk depicts a freed black slave who helped abolish slavery.

    • @burnettis1
      @burnettis1 Před 2 lety +2

      And..... Did the religious pay the ransoms or, put the money in their pocket?
      🤑

    • @warrenfeatherstone3588
      @warrenfeatherstone3588 Před 2 lety +19

      @@burnettis1 The Order of Trinitarian frirs was founded for the ransoming of Christian slaves and did so for centuries! Adelaide. South Australia.

    • @junehitchcock170
      @junehitchcock170 Před 2 lety +3

      Where is this village in Suffolk?

  • @absentiambient
    @absentiambient Před 2 lety +782

    this was so well done, and so well written by the poor man. I cried at the end when her wife was able to return after 10 years of absense. Imagine their feelings upon reuniting. How tragic, horrifying, hopeful and beautiful this story was. Thank you

    • @absentiambient
      @absentiambient Před 2 lety +30

      @Andrew Pope It is as text in this point of video 18:15

    • @adamroodog1718
      @adamroodog1718 Před 2 lety +5

      what would you tell your new wife?

    • @redplanet7163
      @redplanet7163 Před 2 lety +40

      I too was relieved at learning that he had been reunited with his wife but was left pining for the loss of his children whom he presumably never saw again. Overall it was a very well written but extremely sad account of his travails.

    • @absentiambient
      @absentiambient Před 2 lety +8

      @@redplanet7163 Yes i framed my comment badly, i mean't i cried out of that partial relief that they we're able to unite again. Offcourse it's still a deeply sad story anyway cause the loss of their children

    • @rickneilson1041
      @rickneilson1041 Před 2 lety +1

      Spoilers

  • @Mprator
    @Mprator Před rokem

    Amazing to hear of history you heard of before.

  • @gregw322
    @gregw322 Před rokem +49

    Rest easy, Olafur. You definitely are stronger than me. 💪🏿

    • @csypoygshovssutcgj9501
      @csypoygshovssutcgj9501 Před rokem +4

      💪🏼💪🏻*

    • @gregw322
      @gregw322 Před rokem +21

      @@csypoygshovssutcgj9501 I’m not representing his skin color but my own. So I’ll correct your mistake with: *💪🏿

    • @Ilivedbih
      @Ilivedbih Před měsícem

      ​@@gregw322 Oh lol I misunderstood your comment too 😆 I'm dumb

  • @Faze-2
    @Faze-2 Před 2 lety +1519

    I'm surprised CZcams hasn't demonetized this for teaching this history

    • @Peter-bx7ip
      @Peter-bx7ip Před 2 lety +31

      @FIGHTFANNERD10 Anti-European?

    • @GrigRP
      @GrigRP Před 2 lety +140

      Your perceived victimhood never ends, does it?

    • @occles
      @occles Před 2 lety +192

      @@GrigRP That’s funny. I was going to say the same about your group who always loves their victim hood too! What a coincidence!

    • @GrigRP
      @GrigRP Před 2 lety

      @@occles Haha sure. You're on a video with a million views in a week, yet still crying about "this isn't talked about enough 😢". You're a big victim of this very evil anti European world!

    • @easyguy625
      @easyguy625 Před 2 lety +55

      Because Islam is linked to the Arabs, and hence, yes, it is Islamaphobia

  • @andersliljevall2613
    @andersliljevall2613 Před rokem +237

    A very interesting story. There is also a Swedish book about captivity in the Barbaresk countries ,,(Morocco) written by a sailor. He was there in captivity at least 10 years

    • @uptheblues1875
      @uptheblues1875 Před rokem +4

      Could you tell me what it's called?

    • @feaww5085
      @feaww5085 Před rokem +1

      Whats the title?

    • @abdulamaret3212
      @abdulamaret3212 Před rokem +15

      @@uptheblues1875 "White Gold: The Extraordinary Story of Thomas Pellow and North Africa's One Million European Slaves" excellent book

    • @TraphouseTCG
      @TraphouseTCG Před rokem

      @@abdulamaret3212 oh lord

    • @higherbeingX
      @higherbeingX Před rokem

      You could fill a library if Africans started writing books on slavery

  • @lastnewsnetwork6299
    @lastnewsnetwork6299 Před 3 měsíci +2

    Wonderful story and visuals

  • @dawne6419
    @dawne6419 Před rokem +21

    I knew about Barbary pirates and the slaving raids--at least that they existed. Didn't know they had gone as far as Iceland, though. What did surprise me was the fact some of them were ransomed; I didn't think that was done.

    • @Scriptorsilentum
      @Scriptorsilentum Před 22 dny

      moslem slavers raided the greenlandic settlements. the bishop of greenland was subordinate to the bishop in oslo. the church records are still extant.

  • @mwcinci
    @mwcinci Před 2 lety +168

    Makes you think. Even 400 years ago, it was a small world. Amazing he got his wife back. This could easily be a feature film

    • @solamano7239
      @solamano7239 Před rokem +4

      He didn't. She was ill and he just got to exchange some words with her and then he returned to Iceland.

    • @jimgoff1170
      @jimgoff1170 Před rokem +17

      @@solamano7239 did you read that he got her back ten years later after paying her ransom? Watch the end of the video.

    • @solamano7239
      @solamano7239 Před rokem +2

      @@jimgoff1170 - No, I didn't. I missed that. Will watch the end again. Thank you.

    • @michaelalbertson7457
      @michaelalbertson7457 Před rokem +5

      @@solamano7239 It was written on the right upper corner of my screen, but not spoken.
      I had missed it, too.

    • @michaelalbertson7457
      @michaelalbertson7457 Před rokem

      @@jimgoff1170 Thank you.

  • @victorbukowsky7496
    @victorbukowsky7496 Před 2 lety +1819

    Russians suffered from this as well. From about 1550's until about 1680s( Peter the Great days) these raids were a menace. Russians protected their southern border with Zaseka lines( just defensive lines, in depth) with Cossacks and reconnaissance units being in the vanguard. It was quite effective. Russia suffered something like 1-2 million sold into slavery, over that period. But it gradually decreased to zero, after southern border of the Muscovite Rus was pushed south. Grim page in our history, full of grim pages. But entire Europe suffered from this as well, a lot more, in many cases. We had a massive Russian Steppe, as a barrier. And many Zaseka lines. And even a special tax - to buy slaves back. Etc. This topic needs to be discussed more, I can't believe this is being ignored. We OWE IT to these poor people, to remember them, to tell their stories. And to remember who was responsible for all this.

    • @M-J-qn8td
      @M-J-qn8td Před 2 lety +38

      Totally agree.

    • @stephenmitchell4393
      @stephenmitchell4393 Před 2 lety +8

      @@julijansidneypicej4701
      You wouldn't happen to know a buddy of mine?
      Name is Tomaz Milosevic.
      He lives in a town along the Slovenia Austrian boarder . Worked in Canada.

    • @herrero4270
      @herrero4270 Před 2 lety

      Well...the Russians invaded and oppressed half of Central Asia, Siberia, Poland and Ucraine. So, there is no reason to talk about other's wrongdoings, because this is hypocrite.

    • @ClaimClam
      @ClaimClam Před 2 lety +8

      @@julijansidneypicej4701 I know a girl from Slovenia who was studying economics named Ana, do you know her too?

    • @davida9137
      @davida9137 Před 2 lety +30

      That explains the word “SLAVery” lmao

  • @VietTran-IAMV
    @VietTran-IAMV Před 3 měsíci +5

    After Rome and ER-Byzantine fell, can't believe how dangerous is the mediterranean 😢
    God damn i still miss her

    • @Lman110
      @Lman110 Před 12 dny

      Fr the Mediterranean was so peaceful during the peak of those empires

  • @edbrown7919
    @edbrown7919 Před rokem +4

    This should be made into a movie such a detailed account

  • @lazyismore
    @lazyismore Před 2 lety +771

    Coastline of Italy is dotted with towers named “saracene” (one of the name for Muslim pirates) that were built to spot and, in same case, defend the local population

    • @mirandapillsbury7885
      @mirandapillsbury7885 Před 2 lety +42

      Saracene meant Arab not necessarily just Muslim Arabs. Even Christian Arabs were titled Saracene

    • @mytester6208
      @mytester6208 Před 2 lety +35

      @@mirandapillsbury7885 people find anything to misinform others due to their hatred! Turkic people are not Arabs, Turkic descend Ottomans occupied Arabic lands as well as Europe and minor Asian parts, but never were Arabs! Dont know why people say Turks in the same sentences as Arabs. Even in the story, it is confused, saying Turkish (Turkish is a citizen of Turkey, set up after fall of Ottoman empire) These people in the story are also not likely Arab, they were north african people confused as Arabs due to skin color similarities.
      There were actual other pirates from Albania that were problematic for both europeans and ottomans. there were also the british supported european pirates to stop new found american country tradesmen too.
      There were more notorious pirates from morrocan/algiers lands (barbary pirates, barbaries) most of which were to stop european advances and invasions! these were usually erroneously used as ottoman pirates.... they were protecting their own lands and sometimes advancing forward! however there were european pirates too!

    • @cynthiacook1646
      @cynthiacook1646 Před 2 lety +24

      @@mirandapillsbury7885 Historical fact, they raided from Russia and Eastern Europe along the European southern cost, up the Atlantic coast, England, Ireland and as this shows, all the way up to Iceland. Many villages in these areas moved inland due to the constant raids.

    • @cynthiacook1646
      @cynthiacook1646 Před 2 lety +60

      @@mytester6208 They were all Muslim's.

    • @mytester6208
      @mytester6208 Před 2 lety

      @@cynthiacook1646 why do u need to emphasize the religion? are they not human?are there no corrupt human beings in christian/jewish/hindu etc religions? i didnt say anything about religion at all. I mentioned there were pirates from all around not one part! also they were labelled turkish in the video arabs in the comments which was far from the truth! They were most likely rogue local people from Ottoman occupied lands! There is big difference, many people purposely providing misleading info to frame the Ottomans as the source of these alleged atrocities... and you are stuck with "Muslims", like many uninformed/trolling people looping the same lies! pity really...

  • @enriquecsmccourt
    @enriquecsmccourt Před 2 lety +880

    Here in Spain the cities facing the Mediterranean such as Valencia, Cartagena, Barcelona, etc. were until the 20th century facing away from the sea with the coast permanently fortified by the constant assaults of Berber pirates. Hence the capture of strategic points on the North African coast to fight them, of which the cities of Ceuta and Melilla are still in Spanish hands today.

    • @enriquecsmccourt
      @enriquecsmccourt Před 2 lety +24

      @John Rock It ended up in Spanish hands precisely because they were outmatched in the face of the new Ottoman and Moroccan powers.

    • @javjav3853
      @javjav3853 Před 2 lety +48

      A lot of these pirates from North Africa were descendants of Moors whose ancestors were forced to flee their homelands in Spain.

    • @miliba
      @miliba Před 2 lety +7

      Ive always wondered why Barca was facing away from the sea, a reason of concern for the Olympics 1992. Now I know

    • @joaocosta3374
      @joaocosta3374 Před 2 lety +150

      @@javjav3853 Moors who in their turn were descendants of the people who betrayed their allies and invaded the Iberian Peninsula. See I can play the blame game too.

    • @joaocosta3374
      @joaocosta3374 Před 2 lety +26

      @@enriquecsmccourt no it ended up in Spanish hands because it's inhabitants chose that way after Portugal regained independent government. Their trade relations were already done with Spain so Portugal respected their wishes.

  • @raffam3559
    @raffam3559 Před 3 měsíci +4

    In my country Italy and specifically along the Tyrrhenian coast of South Tuscany there are a series of watch towers on top of hills overlooking the sea, they stand every few miles with sentinels that used to alert the population of incoming Barbary pirates attacks. The folks would run into the mainland but most of the time they were taken by surprise and taken away as slaves, or ransomed or killed.

    • @whocares83
      @whocares83 Před 6 dny

      I saw a tower like that at naxos at Sicily..

  • @Slingl3lizzad3
    @Slingl3lizzad3 Před rokem +24

    This would make a great movie. A intense story of absolute hardship and what an amazing good ending!

    • @gyrostat5211
      @gyrostat5211 Před rokem +5

      couldn't be made in modern-day-Hollywood though

    • @vanessasworder8375
      @vanessasworder8375 Před rokem +4

      Why has no one ever made a movie of this ?? … … oh that’s right ..

    • @Martin-tn5lm
      @Martin-tn5lm Před 2 měsíci

      The movie should be silent and in black and white.

  • @Artur_M.
    @Artur_M. Před 2 lety +1574

    Very interesting account. On the other side of the Ottoman Empire Tatar raids to capture people for slave markets from the lands of Muscovy/Russia, Poland-Lithuania - chiefly modern *Ukraine* and the Caucasus region were a nearly constant fact of life. I don't actually know if there are any primary sources about this topic available in English but I can recommend a good study:
    _Slave hunting and slave redemption as a business enterprise: The northern Black Sea region in the sixteenth to seventeenth centuries_ by Dariusz Kołodziejczyk.

    • @Jumpoable
      @Jumpoable Před 2 lety +48

      So it's really not just white people enslaving black or brown people. Brown people in power totally enslaved white people, & of course Africans enslaved each other.

    • @iihamed711
      @iihamed711 Před 2 lety +40

      @@Jumpoable of course someone has to turn it into a racial issue🤦🏻‍♂️

    • @mrJety89
      @mrJety89 Před 2 lety +111

      Hungarian children were kidnapped by the turkish, then brought up as soldiers, called janicsár, who would have to fight against their fellow hungarians.

    • @Kretek
      @Kretek Před 2 lety +97

      @SaiyanTroll No, they were not white you muppet. Ottomans were not white, nor they were brown. Ottoman Empire was multi ethnic and trying to describe it as some one specific ethnicity is just stupid.

    • @KnowledgeNorth
      @KnowledgeNorth Před 2 lety +2

      Excellent video. Very moving indeed. Here's one from me on the above-commented Ukraine/Caucasus issue.
      czcams.com/video/LPdOiBT-DzY/video.html

  • @tehgankerer
    @tehgankerer Před 2 lety +629

    (Not so) fun fact: Miguel de Cervantes, the author of Don Quixote (the "first modern novel") was captured by Berber pirates (under Ottoman dominion) on his way back to Spain following the naval campaign of the battle of Lepanto. He was held as a slave for ransom for 5 years until a company of trinitarian friars paid his ransom moments before he was shipped off in a galley to Constantinople.

    • @wiseonwords
      @wiseonwords Před 2 lety +61

      Yes, it's a fascinating story. Miguel de Cervantes was one tough bugger as well as a great writer!

    • @empresshedo9350
      @empresshedo9350 Před 2 lety +1

      its istanbul L

    • @david9783
      @david9783 Před 2 lety +68

      @@wiseonwords Tough? Yes, indeed he was tough. He was stabbed three times at the Battle of Lepanto, and lost the use of his left arm as a result of his wounds. The wonder to me is that he didn't die of infection, like so many others.

    • @AXEL-fg5gi
      @AXEL-fg5gi Před 2 lety +25

      I was born in a place called Cervantes in Algiers, he lived there I think for sometime. There is a cave in his name too.

    • @joxepojoxepin2752
      @joxepojoxepin2752 Před 2 lety +17

      @@AXEL-fg5gi cool fact, didn't know there was a town called Cervantes in Algiers.

  • @lenap5776
    @lenap5776 Před rokem

    Heartbreaking but beautifully told.

  • @korisnisaveti1093
    @korisnisaveti1093 Před 2 lety +742

    the history of serbia is full of such stories, the most famous being about the two Andjelkovic brothers,descendants of the Byzantine family of Angels .Both reached high positions in the both empire.One was abducted to the janissaries and the other reached a high position in the court of the Serbian despotate.When Brankovic sent his commissioner to the Turkish camp to negotiate with the Turks on the other side was none other than his brother .And how this man was a poet, he described the event .On that man under the moonlight I saw my mother's eyes.

    • @mclovin7375
      @mclovin7375 Před 2 lety +76

      This story has to be told here in youtube. There is so much that the world doest know about.

    • @alexae1367
      @alexae1367 Před 2 lety +10

      @@mclovin7375 😭 yes it should!

    • @valarie22
      @valarie22 Před 2 lety +15

      oh thank you for sharing this, it made me cry!😭😭😭😭

    • @angr3819
      @angr3819 Před 2 lety +10

      Angels, y syyc sons, ju tes and their nor(th)man cousins. The 'saxons' as they took to calling themselves were known to be the most savage of all invaders. That IS saying something considering how cruel the others were.

    • @huldrrrr9486
      @huldrrrr9486 Před 2 lety +1

      Anyone know the mans name?

  • @lindsayborodin9647
    @lindsayborodin9647 Před 2 lety +104

    Wow what man has endured in this place called Earth.

    • @alfa9162
      @alfa9162 Před 2 lety +9

      At the hands of man.

  • @starfox300
    @starfox300 Před 9 měsíci +7

    Events like this happened frequently in the entirety of human history. Strange men from foreign lands appearing and taking everything they can.
    The truth is that if your tribe/village did not have strong warriors who were willing to fight to the death then your whole bloodline would eventually either be wiped out or enslaved where they were mixed with the captors.
    It is, in a bizarre way, some form of natural selection

    • @tiahnarodriguez3809
      @tiahnarodriguez3809 Před 5 měsíci

      This isn’t completely true. There are cases of races selling their own people. That’s how Europeans and the Middle East ended up with black slaves. African slave sellers would even tie slaves to the holding area of a ship to be sent around the world. Slavery truly was a “everyone played a part” type of thing. It’s awful what happened in the past, and what we still do to each other.

    • @starfox300
      @starfox300 Před 5 měsíci

      @@tiahnarodriguez3809 One thing has nothing to do with the other. A society being entirely enslaved and slaughtered and a society selling slaves while still having power and authority are different things.

    • @zteaxon7787
      @zteaxon7787 Před 4 měsíci

      When it's Black slaves somehow Europeans are collectively evil, responsible and Blacks are victims.
      When its European slaves somehow race is irrelevant and "humanity" is the problem.
      See how vile and hypocritical that is?
      In both cases real responsible are Juws as well.

  • @TheGeneralGrievous19
    @TheGeneralGrievous19 Před 8 měsíci +5

    It's interesing how you can find such stories of muslim raids and people being taken as slaves from different parts of Europe. In central and eastern Europe we did not have to deal with Barbary pirates but especially with the Tatars. Tatar raids were a big thing in i.e. eastern lands of Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth and many people were taken into slavery in the Ottoman Empire. It goes all the way back to the three major mongol raids in 13th century. "Father of Polish Language" Jan Kochanowski wrote a poem about devastation of Podolia and people taken into captivity to encourege the state to act in 1575. In 1644 great hetman Koniecpolski defeated a major Tatar invasion at Ochmatów. In 1672 hetman and future king John Sobieski set out against the Tatar raiders and freed around 44 thousand people. We even have our own world for Tatar/Turkish slavery - jasyr. The last Tatar raids happened just before the sigining of Treaty of Karlowitz in 1699.

  • @Underleaf76
    @Underleaf76 Před 2 lety +540

    I find it interesting that he took so much time out of this tragic story to describe a Dwarf couple he just happened to pass upon, and found it worthy of mention.

    • @floydiandreamscapes5145
      @floydiandreamscapes5145 Před 2 lety +119

      Maybe because that's something you just don't see everyday. He also talked about the height of many of the people's he came across.

    • @suzk1804
      @suzk1804 Před 2 lety +33

      @@nellie7027 The latest dumb "woke" buzzword.

    • @travisclark7286
      @travisclark7286 Před 2 lety +17

      @@suzk1804 these people dont realise how much they are hated lol

    • @SA-rb5xq
      @SA-rb5xq Před 2 lety +6

      @@travisclark7286 or it's a joke?

    • @TMeyer-cc9cw
      @TMeyer-cc9cw Před 2 lety +1

      @@travisclark7286 only hated by lonely diseased boomer and incels who waste their lives on forums

  • @garethjudd5840
    @garethjudd5840 Před 2 lety +519

    Barbary pirates from North African enslaved millions from coastal towns and villages in Europe and England. The song Rule Britannia was written in 1734 to celebrate British navy temporary stopping the pirates. "Rule Britannia, Britannia rules the waves. Britons never never never shall be slaves".

    • @cosmonautilus1181
      @cosmonautilus1181 Před 2 lety +75

      The irony...

    • @Maidaseu
      @Maidaseu Před 2 lety

      Meanwhile the British slaved their neighbours in Ireland....

    • @alexanderespada8871
      @alexanderespada8871 Před 2 lety

      And for years now they've been slaves to elitest globalist trash pedos.

    • @samy7013
      @samy7013 Před 2 lety +63

      “Enslaved millions?” Uhm, yeah, okay buddy. Good luck trying to show that the North African corsairs had anything approaching the kind of shipping capacity aboard their light and agile war galleys and even lighter galliots, that could carry off “millions” of people from coastal Europe. I bet you never paused to consider that, did you? Even in a good year, the corsairs were lucky if they could snatch a few hundred captives, and that’s even before we factor in those who were ransomed or returned in prisoner exchanges. Even the most ambitious-but fact-based-estimate of European captives taken by the North African corsairs over the entire period of their existence doesn’t exceed 50,000. And while we’re at it, let’s not forget the untold numbers of North Africans enslaved by Europeans (including, among others, the pirates of the so-called Knights of Malta), going back to Roman times. The Barbary Corsairs’ counter forays into Europe are small peanuts in comparison.

    • @jamesburke2094
      @jamesburke2094 Před 2 lety +19

      @@samy7013
      Add on top of your 50000, all the internal African killing and slave trading, similar to the vile modern bigotry and savagery witnessed in Rwanda, and by south Africans towards migrants such as Nigerians

  • @Super_Tee
    @Super_Tee Před 7 měsíci

    Well, that was proper humbling..

  • @thomasaquinas157
    @thomasaquinas157 Před 8 měsíci +17

    Those poor souls...
    Imagine if we were taught history like this instead of the dessicated version we were given in US government schools.

    • @ventsyv
      @ventsyv Před 8 měsíci +2

      You think African slaves were treated any better?

    • @ybench5871
      @ybench5871 Před 7 měsíci

      US gvernment schools teach us history. It is not going to teach every country history with slavery

    • @narukouzumaki2484
      @narukouzumaki2484 Před 7 měsíci +2

      @@Dave-lm4lpbecause American schools focus on American history. This is covered in high school and college world history classes

  • @johngibson2884
    @johngibson2884 Před 2 lety +932

    Thank you for showing us that all people of the world, regardless of skin color or nationality, suffered from the scourge of slavery.

    • @rhetoric5173
      @rhetoric5173 Před 2 lety +76

      Europeans weren’t considered sub human, which is what their chattel slavery is predicated on. In fact the one who even led the slave raid was a native dutch turned pirate. In addition, Europeans regularly enslaved Arabs, davinci’s mother was one. This isn't even a primary source, but one that was heard from someone that claims to have witnsessed that attack, what's most damning however is the fact that the man that led the slave raid was Jan Jansen van Haarlem, aka Morat Rais. The account writer states that he knew that the captain and his second-mate were Turkish from their headgear - in fact, both men were Dutch - Jan and Mathias were both born in the Netherlands. This entire account is a fabrication by a Lutheran priest written during the Ottoman-European wars.

    • @mariemunzar6474
      @mariemunzar6474 Před 2 lety +288

      @@rhetoric5173 europeans are not the cause of all of the world's problems. I can't believe you would turn this around like that and make it seem as though the europeans were the aggressors here when they were obviously the victims, this was a sad and terrible thing

    • @Helmholtzwatson1984
      @Helmholtzwatson1984 Před 2 lety +229

      @@rhetoric5173 You should change your name to "anti white" rhetoric.

    • @michaeldunn3476
      @michaeldunn3476 Před 2 lety +4

      @@rhetoric5173 lol gotta love the mental gymnastics NPC's have to do for their mental conditioning to justify why every race and religion of people at some point were in the slave trade. The logic apologists make is that yes arabs had the largest slave trade in the world and continue it even to today in somalia but its ok because they like their slaves more!

    • @lilyeti985
      @lilyeti985 Před 2 lety +1

      White leaders and the whites working for their domination of the world do be the cause of all our problems tho (past and present)

  • @Jordan-ws6jy
    @Jordan-ws6jy Před rokem +94

    So grateful for this story but so sad for his experience. Most of us are so fortunate to be far from such grief.

    • @lba6859
      @lba6859 Před rokem +4

      It's just Armenians, Greeks and Assyrians are that unfortunate...

    • @Youd876
      @Youd876 Před rokem

      @@lba6859Turkish men were sold to Christian slaver owner

  • @ColonelMarcellus
    @ColonelMarcellus Před rokem +4

    They could put this on television and, adding copious amounts of commercials, stretch it into a one-hour presentation.

  • @manuscripter8880
    @manuscripter8880 Před 2 lety +29

    Wow, what a unique story that shows cruelty isn't associated to any given empire or people. But is in fact inherent to almost all cultures.

  • @csx3180
    @csx3180 Před 2 lety +150

    Ottoman, Arab, and berber (trans-saharan) slave trades, all correlated and lasted 13 centuries I believe, yet it was so neglected and ignored by governments that now in Morocco for example citizens don't even know slavery was only abolished in 1925.

    • @nastred1289
      @nastred1289 Před 2 lety

      We know about the slavery but we just don't fucking care

    • @danieldrouin2926
      @danieldrouin2926 Před 2 lety +23

      And Abolish in Saudi Arabia in 1962

    • @affan3095
      @affan3095 Před 2 lety

      @Niro Pattar funny it comes from an Europeans mouth

    • @ahmadfrhan5265
      @ahmadfrhan5265 Před 2 lety

      @Niro Pattar you are slave by definition

    • @ahmadfrhan5265
      @ahmadfrhan5265 Před 2 lety

      slavery is well preserved honey and not abolished....... The UN is highly western based and most of world countries from Asia to Africa to eastern Europe to south America refuse LGBTQ refuse feminism refuses the banking system refuses the modern slavery ( salve wage ) refuses western subjective vales ,but yet they push it on all of us. using utilitarianism then the west shouldn't be pushing their values on the majority and the majority can take down the west. that's why in political science there's a famous quote " the liberal global order is neither liberal nor global " ( meaning only western based and other countries don't anticipate on it or they will be sanctioned and fought by the west ). also, this is by definition slavery because they tell us what to do and if we refuse, they punish us , starve us or kill us and we have to follow them when they are the minority. so utilitarianism doesn't work and they are enslaving us.
      what am trying to say is this system is belt on hypocrisy and when Objective moral people start to realize than they will take action and subjectisim will have no answer when the objective moral people start action and they can't say it's " good or bad ".
      even if objective moral people did wrong the subjective people can't prove it's wrong since it's all subjective.
      even so atheist can't prove what's good or bad in all topics other than morality. for example, an atheist says to someone you are Bac-kward and that someone says is being Back- ward good or bad ? here they can't really answer. they can't prove being whatever is good or bad. and so on and so on.
      what am literally saying now will change the world perception and the moral people will take action. it's inevitable.
      one thing else if they don't have the concept of good or bad of any subject other than morality that means it has no value ( worthless ).
      for example, asking an atheist is science good or bad ? if he/she did reply with good and bad they can't prove it therefore, it's subjective and has no value at all since they don't have the concept of Good and bad.
      therefore, all their " facts" ( which are hypothesis not facts ) are worthless if it has no value ( good and bad ).
      they can't detect which is fact and not if they don't hold on any value and even if they did they can't prove it since it's subjective.
      We live in a world that ran by subjective people who can't prove their value or the value of anything and can't prove even their subjectivsim and it's value! Yet they have the audacity to tell us what's good or bad and what's valuable and not and what's true and not.
      also brain is nothing but an organ according to their world view which means they cannot base anything on it and it's all chemical reactions which delude itself on having meaning when there's non which means all their claims as their existence worthless meaningless and untrue. which means they argue for nothing.....

  • @Azulakayes
    @Azulakayes Před 2 měsíci +1

    I firmly believe that the past was horrible. I watch historical documentaries and read history just to appreciate the fact that I am glad to be alive at this moment in time.

  • @noondayaxeman4668
    @noondayaxeman4668 Před rokem +38

    This man's faith is inspiring

    • @zteaxon7787
      @zteaxon7787 Před 4 měsíci

      He praises a cult forced onto his people by, worshipping the same Juws selling, slaughtering his family like cattle.

  • @zsedcftglkjh
    @zsedcftglkjh Před 2 lety +114

    As horrific as this account is, the female accounts describe something out of hell. I can't get through them they make me so angry.

    • @Dmitrisnikioff
      @Dmitrisnikioff Před 2 lety +15

      Yeah, the most famous one is probably Tyrkja-Gudda, who when freed married the national poet Hallgrímur Pétursson

    • @herrero4270
      @herrero4270 Před 2 lety

      The Europeans did the same during their wars and with their female slaves.

    • @jackjackson39
      @jackjackson39 Před 2 lety +2

      Can you give me a link?

    • @danteslemagnifique1901
      @danteslemagnifique1901 Před 2 lety +4

      it hurts when it done to your own people, well millions of black women had to endure that by white europeans

    • @eveliinatistelgren172
      @eveliinatistelgren172 Před 2 lety

      Why? Do you think men and boys aren't r4p3d? Most r4p3s to this day are done to men. Such is the case of US prisons. But m4triarchy looks down on them for being men and sees them as outside of society. I'm sorry but you should look at fleece johnson. hes been released by the way, this is evidence as he confessed it all on camera.

  • @starstrudel8417
    @starstrudel8417 Před 2 lety +118

    Such an incredibly compelling account. This channel is one of the greatest of my CZcams finds. The tales of our forebears help to put our present in its rich context.

    • @rhetoric5173
      @rhetoric5173 Před 2 lety +6

      this isn't even a primary source, but one that was heard from someone that claims to have witnsessed that attack, what's most damning however is the fact that the man that led the slave raid was Jan Jansen van Haarlem, aka Morat Rais. The account writer states that he knew the captain and his second-mate were Turkish from their headgear - in fact, both men were Dutch - Jan and Mathias were both born in the Netherlands. This entire account is a fabrication by a Lutheran priest written during the Ottoman-European wars.

    • @bvbxiong5791
      @bvbxiong5791 Před 2 lety

      if it makes you feel any better, people are still being kidnapped and forced in slavery today!

    • @Gobrech
      @Gobrech Před 3 měsíci

      @@rhetoric5173 "This entire account is a fabrication by a Lutheran priest written during the Ottoman-European wars."
      Thanks for citing your sources.

  • @KingofgraceSARA
    @KingofgraceSARA Před rokem +4

    I always wondered how I came to be.
    I'm genetically Nigerian, Central African, Finnish, Scandinavian, Welsh, Italian, West Asian, & MesoAmerican/ Andean.
    Now, I see how it is possible.
    The footprint of my people ran the entirety of the earth.

  • @SMidberg
    @SMidberg Před 9 měsíci +1

    Astonishing the pirates were so far upp in the north.

  • @albertoprieto2824
    @albertoprieto2824 Před 2 lety +620

    In Spain we have a proverb: "no hay moros en la costa", which means "there are no moors on the coast". It is said when somebody notices that there is no danger in a situation that a risk could happen.
    In the past, XVI and XVII centuries especially, pirates atacks from north Africa against the mediterranean spanish coast were not rare.

    • @adriennefloreen
      @adriennefloreen Před 2 lety +16

      Thank you, I will remember that one. I did not encounter that in all of my years of studying Spanish and even old Spanish literature in college, I am writing that down now.

    • @adriennefloreen
      @adriennefloreen Před 2 lety +10

      By the way in a Grateful Dead song they say "when life looks like easy street there is danger at the door" so that's like the same phrase paraphrased, it's in Uncle John's Band, now you know a cool fact too, you know about a great song, and you could translate it into Spanish and say no hay moros en la costa too that would be nice!

    • @richardfreeman724
      @richardfreeman724 Před 2 lety +64

      Lol we say that in mexico too without knowing what "Moros" even means. Crazy

    • @emreduygun
      @emreduygun Před 2 lety

      that's because you killed all of them, women, children, civilians and burned down their villages, duuh

    • @hansvonmannschaft9062
      @hansvonmannschaft9062 Před 2 lety +15

      @@richardfreeman724 Indeed, I learnt that phrase when I was a kid and watched the Mexican show: "El Chavo del 8" 😀

  • @AmazingPhilippines1
    @AmazingPhilippines1 Před 2 lety +88

    I truly love this "Voices of the Past" channel and the insights it provides.

  • @osuclassof88
    @osuclassof88 Před 8 měsíci

    As late as 1985, a group of 15-25 pirates rushed by speed boat to Lahad Datu coastal town, shooting M16, favorite of this region, attacking the town and rob the bank. They killed 21 people, injured 11, and took $200K.

  • @mikekavanagh8952
    @mikekavanagh8952 Před rokem

    Good Presentation,

  • @jakhaughton1800
    @jakhaughton1800 Před 2 lety +441

    When people talk of slavery it’s assumed that the traffic was from Africa. The North African corsairs who raided Britain took many thousands with 600 taken in one raid on Looe in Cornwall. The Arabs were by far the worst slave traders. The last major slave market was located in Mecca and was closed after JFK got involved in 1962.

    • @leonrussell262
      @leonrussell262 Před 2 lety +115

      Don't get it twisted, there are still slave markets in Africa. Just Google it.

    • @Hello-ig1px
      @Hello-ig1px Před 2 lety +44

      yeah i am not going to dispute anything you say, but your comment can lead to great confusion.
      1. this video is about Ottoman/ Turkish slavers, not Arab slavers.
      2. this one is more important. the form of slavery practised by Arabs and Ottomans is far more reminiscent of the type of slavery that the Roman Republic conducted.
      the slaves had far more rights, they had laws protecting them, and they had the opportunity to buy their own freedom, also others could buy their freedom.
      although yes their slavery was horrible, lets not group this form slavery with the slavery practised by the Americans and Europeans.
      The Americans and Europeans practiced far more barbaric forms of slavery. Even in America, slaves had no rights and you could literally kill your slaves and the law wouldn't care.
      Contrast this with Ottoman and Arab slaves, you can't kill your slaves, you can't beat the s*** out of them, you have to give them reasonable housing and you have to feed them well.
      Whereas with American slavery, you can do whatever you want with your slaves as they are treated less than animals.

    • @winterwar5583
      @winterwar5583 Před 2 lety +122

      @@Hello-ig1px slavery apologists I see…

    • @snuscaboose1942
      @snuscaboose1942 Před 2 lety +157

      @@Hello-ig1px Ottoman and Arab slavers were just as barbaric as any other slavers. Most male slaves captured by the Ottoman/Barbary pirates were made into galley slaves, with a very short life expectancy, females were sold as sex slaves to be raped by their master and his friends, or put to work as prostitutes. Most slaves in Ottoman or Arab capture had no chance to purchase freedom, that was a rare event completely dependent on the owner's whims. Slaves were chattel that could be raped, abused, worked to death, sent into battle, inherited, sold and if the owner is powerful enough, killed at whim.
      Many Europeans (Balkans) ended up in the ranks of slave armies. The Arabic slavers castrated their male slaves before taking them to market. The Omanis plundered the East coast of Africa for more than a thousand years, yet there is no substantial African communities in Oman, Saudi Arabia, Yemen or the Gulf States which all consumed millions of sub-Saharan African slaves.

    • @Revitalization4241
      @Revitalization4241 Před 2 lety +11

      @@Hello-ig1px A fact what is mostly ignored by youtube channels, is that the Barbary trade and piracy was divided under two different periods.
      The Hafsid period under the Berbers and the Turkish period under the Ottoman empire. CZcams channels always overlook the Hafsid period while it has intresting stories like the Barbary crusade

  • @adsteel
    @adsteel Před 2 lety +19

    These are fantastic. I would love to listen to them as podcasts, it seems like the audio stands on its own.

  • @user-cz7kc1qs1w
    @user-cz7kc1qs1w Před měsícem

    Before my visit to Iceland last year I bought and read sally magnus’s book about the raids and kidnappings back then ,it was a bit flaky reading but I did learn something ! The general public don’t know about this history!!

  • @LuyandzaBavukileDlamini
    @LuyandzaBavukileDlamini Před 5 měsíci

    Wow I was completely unaware of this part of history

  • @FinnGriffin
    @FinnGriffin Před 2 lety +18

    This has to be one of the best video you all have posted. What a story and it should give us all pause to reflect.
    We have much to be thankful for.

  • @awkwardsean5141
    @awkwardsean5141 Před 2 lety +176

    I like how he just randomly describes the dwarfs he encountered.

    • @patriciusvunkempen102
      @patriciusvunkempen102 Před 2 lety +7

      he may have seen maybe pygmes? or people with actual dawrfism.

    • @Dulc3B00kbyBrant0n
      @Dulc3B00kbyBrant0n Před 2 lety +4

      I know im laughing so hard right now

    • @CoffeePaladin
      @CoffeePaladin Před 2 lety +9

      @@patriciusvunkempen102 He meant dwarfism, makes sense it'd be more common in a big city like that. Believe it or not, in the capital Konstantinniye, they had 'court dwarves'. As I'm writing this, I see a bunch of other European courts had them as well. They seem to have done the same service as court jesters, unfortunately, being targets of amusement for their condition. They also would stand by rulers to make the rulers seem more imposing. Weird times.

    • @shelbyseelbach9568
      @shelbyseelbach9568 Před 2 lety +2

      @Chris Walker Dwarfs aren't something you see every day today. LMFAO!

    • @entelis0975
      @entelis0975 Před 2 lety

      @@zonkerharris1144 Can no one be amused? Must it conform to your liking to be permitted? All you do is leave unproductive and mean comments. Get a life.

  • @mamurshed1
    @mamurshed1 Před 9 měsíci +5

    That’s why France and Spain concord North Africa

  • @peturabbykarlsson5325
    @peturabbykarlsson5325 Před rokem +62

    as an Icelander I'm glad one of the first foreign conflicts of the USA was wrecking the barbary states. Eventual payback

    • @ScorpionZam
      @ScorpionZam Před rokem +7

      From the Halls of Montezuma To the Shores of Tripoli

    • @yourgrandmotherspimp1280
      @yourgrandmotherspimp1280 Před rokem +2

      As an Icelander do you feel like people should wreck your country because of what the vikings did?

    • @subutaynoyan5372
      @subutaynoyan5372 Před rokem +13

      As a Turk, I am glad that a bunch of Ottoman privateers managed to wreck Iceland to avenge all the things Vikings had done

    • @ScorpionZam
      @ScorpionZam Před rokem +9

      @@subutaynoyan5372 I suppose you're saying "What goes around, comes around"? I'd say that's fitting considering your people are suffering because of an earthquake currently.

    • @the_kimchi_kommandant2603
      @the_kimchi_kommandant2603 Před rokem

      @@subutaynoyan5372
      "Historian Uğur Ümit Üngör noted that during the Russian invasion of Ottoman lands, "many atrocities were carried out against the local Turks and Kurds by the Russian army and Armenian volunteers. General Liakhov gave the order to kill any Turk on sight and destroy any mosque."
      "A large part of the local Muslim Turks and Kurds fled west after the Russian invasion of 1914-1918, in Talaat Pasha's Notebook the given number is 702,905 Turks. J. Rummel estimates that 128,000-600,000 Muslim Turks and Kurds were killed by Russian troops and Armenian irregulars; at least 128,000 of them between 1914-1915 according to Turkish statistician Ahmet Emin Yalman."
      "After the Greek landing and the following occupation of Western Anatolia during the Greco-Turkish War (1919-1922), the Turkish resistance activity was answered with terror against the local Muslims. Killings, rapes, and village burnings took place as the Greek Army advanced."
      "During the Greek occupation, Greek troops and local Greeks, Armenian, and Circassian groups committed the Yalova Peninsula Massacres in early 1921 against the local Muslim population. These resulted, according to some sources, in the deaths of c. 300 of the local Muslim populace, as well c. 27 villages. Another source estimates that barely 1,500 Muslims out of 7,000 survived in the environment of Yalova."
      "The Greeks advanced all the way to Central Anatolia. After the Turkish attack in 1922 the Greeks retreated and Norman M. Naimark notes that "the Greek retreat was even more devastating for the local population than the occupation". During the retreat, towns and villages were burned as part of a scorched earth policy, accompanied with massacres and rapes. During this war, a part of Western Anatolia was destroyed, large towns such as Manisa, Salihli together with many villages being burned. 3000 houses in Alaşehir. The Inter-Allied commission, consisting of British, French, American and Italian officers found that "there is a systematic plan of destruction of Turkish villages and extinction of the Muslim population." According to Marjorie Housepian, 4000 Muslims were executed in Izmir under Greek occupation."
      "After the war, peace talks between Greece and Turkey started with the Lausanne Conference of 1922-1923. At the Conference, the chief negotiator of the Turkish delegation, Ismet Pasha, gave an estimate of 1.5 million Anatolian Turks that had been exiled or died in the area of Greek occupation. Of these, McCarthy estimates that 860,000 fled and 640,000 died; with many, if not most of those who died, being refugees as well. The comparison of census figures shows that 1,246,068 Anatolian Muslims had become refugees or had died. Furthermore, Ismet Pasha shared statistics showing the destruction of 141,874 buildings, and the slaughter or theft of 3,291,335 farm animals in the area of Greek occupation."
      💪💪💪💪💪💪💪💪💪💪💪💪💪💪💪💪💪💪💪💪💪💪💪💪💪💪💪💪💪💪💪💪💪😎😎😎😎😎😎😎😎😎😎😎😎😎😎😎😎😎😎😎😎😎😎😎😎😎😎😎😎😎😎☝☝☝☝☝☝☝☝☝☝☝☝☝☝☝☝☝☝☝☝☝☝☝☝☝☝☝☝☝☝☝☝🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥💪💪💪💪💪💪💪💪💪💪💪💪💪💪💪💪💪💪💪💪💪💪💪💪💪💪💪💪💪💪💪💪💪😎😎😎😎😎😎😎😎😎😎😎😎😎😎😎😎😎😎😎😎😎😎😎😎😎😎😎😎😎😎☝☝☝☝☝☝☝☝☝☝☝☝☝☝☝☝☝☝☝☝☝☝☝☝☝☝☝☝☝☝☝☝🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥

  • @MichaTicho
    @MichaTicho Před 2 lety +73

    A few times, I had heard about this episode of Icelandic history - which I've read about extensively - but never this personal account. It brings the events alives. Many thanks.

    • @fleotusleotus8642
      @fleotusleotus8642 Před 2 lety +4

      I know, pretty intense.

    • @justinwillingale2086
      @justinwillingale2086 Před rokem

      And do you leave at the fact that the Barbary states followed Islam and they were abducting people from non Muslim countries. For many years and we wonder why we had a crusades

    • @YaBoiBaxter2024
      @YaBoiBaxter2024 Před rokem

      ​@@justinwillingale2086 Despite the fact that piracy and slavery were default across most of the world.

  • @gumundurdaiarnorsson9980
    @gumundurdaiarnorsson9980 Před 2 lety +13

    Hey! I suggested this topic a few months ago on one of your videos. Really glad you made it. Stellar work as per usual.

  • @BlauLion
    @BlauLion Před 6 měsíci

    From above.. always ❤

  • @nlocnil3602
    @nlocnil3602 Před 10 měsíci +1

    This was truly a sad sad story

  • @huldrrrr9486
    @huldrrrr9486 Před 2 lety +176

    How horrible it was that he could never see or find out what became of his children, I can't imagine the horror and grief he and his wife had to live with...
    Also his son sounds like such a great kid, so brave and steadfast despite just being 11 and torn away from his family to life of slavery in a foreign world. I wonder what became of him. This is probably the saddest video I've seen from this channel, but thank you so much for posting and educating us Voices of the Past

    • @fmerritt2001
      @fmerritt2001 Před 2 lety +3

      This happens in divorce courts every day in America as Fathers are separated from their children and never reunited as the kids become brainwashed by the Mother and the school system.

    • @ricky-sanchez
      @ricky-sanchez Před 2 lety +2

      I wonder if there is any proof to this story? The ending seems to be convenient with him getting his wife back, and documents can be faked...

    • @dmekkkkkwkkkkkk
      @dmekkkkkwkkkkkk Před 2 lety

      @SirSnufflelots whats that

    • @curtisthomas2670
      @curtisthomas2670 Před 2 lety +15

      @@dmekkkkkwkkkkkk janissary was an elite soldier in the Turkish and Ottoman armies, trained from childhood to adulthood and very loyal to the ruler, they were mostly used similarly to modern day special forces or "Republican Guards" or Secret Service, bodyguards to the rulers. They formed the first modern professional standing armies in Europe.
      They were manned by non muslims and non jews captured in slave raids and sold or from boys given as tribute or tax, then rigorously trained into highly disciplined and fiercely loyal crack troops. Despite being slaves they were paid salaries and received pensions after retirement.

    • @AndrewTheMandrew531
      @AndrewTheMandrew531 Před 2 lety

      @@ricky-sanchez Okay, Mr. Ricky Sanchez. I wonder what nihilistic tv garbage YOU watch.