In The Captive Sea,
Daniel Hershenzon explores the entangled histories of Muslim and Christian
captives—and, by extension, of the Spanish Empire, Ottoman Algiers, and
Morocco—in the seventeenth century to argue that piracy, captivity, and
redemption helped shape the Mediterranean as an integrated region at the
social, political, and economic levels. Despite their confessional differences,
the lives of captives and captors alike were connected in a political economy
of ransom and communication networks shaped by Spanish, Ottoman, and Moroccan
rulers; ecclesiastic institutions; Jewish, Muslim, and Christian
intermediaries; and the captives themselves, as well as their kin. Hershenzon offers both a comprehensive analysis of competing projects
for maritime dominance and a granular investigation of how individual lives
were tragically upended by these agendas. He takes a close look at the tightly
connected and ultimately failed attempts to ransom an Algerian Muslim girl sold
into slavery in Livorno in 1608; the son of a Spanish marquis enslaved by
pirates in Algiers and brought to Istanbul, where he converted to Islam; three
Spanish Trinitarian friars detained in Algiers on the brink of their departure
for Spain in the company of Christians they had redeemed; and a high-ranking
Ottoman official from Alexandria, captured in 1613 by the Sicilian squadron of
Spain. Examining the circulation of
bodies, currency, and information in the contested Mediterranean, Hershenzon
concludes that the practice of ransoming captives, a procedure meant to
separate Christians from Muslims, had the unintended consequence of tightly
binding Iberia to the Maghrib.