ID | 114444 |
Title Proper | Libya's Arab Spring - 2011 |
Language | ENG |
Author | Pereira, Vikram |
Publication | 2012. |
Summary / Abstract (Note) | In the 15th and the 16th centuries, the Barbary coast, a strip of North Africa, known because of the Berbers, came under the scanner of the two principal players in the Mediterranean at that time: namely, Spain in the west and Turkey in the east. This rivalry lasted for much of the 16 th century but was subtly won in a fairly unorthodox manner by the Turks who allowed Turkish pirates or corsairs to establish themselves along the coast; the territories seized by the corsairs were then given a formal status as protectorates of the Ottoman Empire. The first such pirate established himself on the coast of modern-day Algeria in 1512, followed by others (in what is today's Libya) in 1551; Khair-ed-Din (popularly known as Barbarossa took over Tunisia, very briefly in 1534, but the territories were recovered for Spain in 1535 and finally brought under Ottoman control in 1574. P |
`In' analytical Note | Defence and Diplomacy Vol. 1, No.2; Jan-Mar 2012: p.39-48 |
Journal Source | Defence and Diplomacy Vol. 1, No.2; Jan-Mar 2012: p.39-48 |
Key Words | Libya ; Arab Spring - 2011 ; North Africa ; Piracy ; Fascism ; World War II |