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A Trio of Pirates


© Cindy Vallar

Through guile and daring, Murat Rais became one of the most feared of the Barbary corsairs. From his base of operations on the North African coast, he attacked Spanish and Italian ships and raided Christian settlements along the Mediterranean. His journey into piracy began as a young boy when Kari Ali Rais captured him in 1546. He joined the corsairs, adopting the Muslim name "Murat" ("rais" means "captain"). Although he wrecked his first ship, he didn't return empty-handed. He and his crew appropriated a passing vessel and used it to seize three more. His victims often miscalculated his strength because his smaller galiots lowered their masts and concealed themselves behind larger galleys. In 1578 he captured the Spanish viceroy, incurring Philip II's wrath and shocking the Christian world. Two years later the papal flagship fell into Murat's hands. In 1581 he snared more than a million ducats in gold and silver. He was the first corsair to venture outside their traditional haunts when he sacked Lanzarote in the Canary Islands. The Sultan of Algiers named Murat "Captain of the Sea" in 1574, but the emperor of the Ottoman Empire withheld his approval for twenty years. In 1595 Murat captured three Sicilian warships and repulsed an attack by the Maltese corsairs whose galleys outnumbered his. For the last thirty-one years of his life, he helped to crush piracy in the Aegean Sea while raiding Christian cities in the Adriatic. His reign as the greatest corsair ended when he was killed in 1638 during the siege of Vlorë.

When Kanhoji (also Conajee) Angria died in 1729, he left his sons an impregnable pirate kingdom on the western coast of the Indian Ocean. He preyed on the British East India Company and with his sons terrorized their main port of Bombay for over thirty years. His reign began in 1710 when he captured two islands near Bombay and fortified them to use as his base. He was the first pirate who dared to extort money from Indian and British shipping. In 1712 he seized the armed yacht of the East India Company's governor and held it for a sizeable ransom. Several years later he repelled the British at Gheriah and Deoghur using specially built gunships. His success drew pirates from India and Europe and by the 1720's his captains commanded hundreds of well-armed vessels. By 1722 his repeated humiliations of the Company led to their cessation of attempts to destroy Kanhoji. On his death, the majority of his power passed to his son, Sumbhaji Angria. When he died in 1743, his half-brother Toolaji Angria took control, but within thirteen years Kanhoji's empire crumbled. The British stormed the main fortress, imprisoned Toolaji, and shipped the treasure to Bombay.

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