Muslim pirates stole an entire Irish village into slavery. By Proudofus.uk.
A hundred and seven men, women and children. Taken from their beds. Sold in North Africa. Only two ever came home.
It was 1631. And it was normal.
For thousands of years, the sea belonged to pirates. Barbary corsairs [Muslim privateers and pirates who operated from the North African coast] enslaved over a million Europeans. They raided as far as Iceland.
No nation on Earth could stop them.
So Britain built the largest navy in history. And went hunting.
They smashed the slave ports of North Africa. Three thousand people walked free in a single day. They chased pirates across the South China Sea.
Ocean by ocean, the hunting grounds went silent.
Britain built 46 bases to keep them that way. Every shipping lane on Earth. Protected.
Today, 80% of everything you own arrives by sea.
Britain didn’t just rule the waves. She freed them.
The Barbary Pirates operated primarily from ports in Algiers, Tunis, Tripoli, Salé, and Rabat. The line “To the shores of Tripoli” in the U.S. Marine Corps Hymn refers to the First Barbary War (1801–1805), specifically the Battle of Derna in 1805. This was the first time U.S. Marines fought on foreign soil.
The (1801–1805) was a conflict between the United States and the Barbary State of Tripoli, sparked by the refusal of U.S. President Thomas Jefferson to pay increased tribute demands. The war arose from longstanding practices in which North African states — Tripoli, Algiers, Tunis, and Morocco — captured American merchant ships, held crews for ransom, and demanded payments to prevent attacks. The war ended with the release of American captives without further tribute, though piracy continued under other Barbary rulers until the Second Barbary War.
The Barbary pirates captured hundreds of thousands of Europeans between the 16th and 19th centuries, primarily through naval raids on ships and coastal villages across the Mediterranean, the English Channel, and as far north as Iceland and Ireland.
Primary targets: Sailors, fishermen, and coastal villagers, with Italians, Spaniards, and British being the most commonly captured.
Major raids: Included the 1551 enslavement of the entire population of Gozo (5,000–6,000 people), the 1631 Sack of Baltimore in Ireland (100 villagers taken), and repeated attacks on Cornwall and the Canary Islands.
Purpose: Captives were sold into slavery in North African markets in Algiers, Tunis, and Tripoli, used as laborers, galley slaves, or concubines.
Scale: Historian Robert C. Davis estimates 1 to 1.25 million Europeans were enslaved during this period, though some scholars question the exact number.
The slave trade declined after the First and Second Barbary Wars (1801–1805, 1815–1816) and the French conquest of Algeria (1830–1847), effectively ending the Barbary corsairs’ dominance by the 1830s.