The Expansion of Europe eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 245 pages of information about The Expansion of Europe.

The Expansion of Europe eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 245 pages of information about The Expansion of Europe.

The place of honour, as always in any great story of European civilisation, belongs to France.  Undeterred by the loss of her earlier empire, and unexhausted by the strain of the great ordeal through which she had just passed, France began in these years the creation of her second colonial empire, which was to be in many ways more splendid than the first.  Within fifteen years of the fall of Napoleon, the French flag was flying in Algiers.

The northern coast of Africa, from the Gulf of Syrtis to the Atlantic, which has been in modern times divided into the three districts of Tunis, Algeria, and Morocco, forms essentially a single region, whose character is determined by the numerous chains of the Atlas Mountains.  This region, shut off from the rest of Africa not only by the Atlas but by the most impassable of all geographical barriers, the great Sahara desert, really belongs to Europe rather than to the continent of which it forms a part.  Its fertile valleys were once the homes of brilliant civilisations:  they were the seat of the Carthaginian Empire, and at a later date they constituted one of the richest and most civilised provinces of the Roman Empire.  Their civilisation was wrecked by that barbarous German tribe, the Vandals, in the fifth century.  It received only a partial and temporary revival after the Mahomedan conquest at the end of the seventh century, and since that date this once happy region has gradually lapsed into barbarism.  During the modern age it was chiefly known as the home of ruthless and destructive pirates, whose chief headquarters were at Algiers, and who owned a merely nominal allegiance to the Sultan of Turkey.  Ever since the time of Khair-ed-din Barbarossa, in the early sixteenth century, the powers of Europe have striven in vain to keep the Barbary corsairs in check.  Charles V., Philip II., Louis XIV. attacked them with only temporary success:  they continued to terrorise the trade of the Mediterranean, to seize trading-ships, to pillage the shores of Spain and Italy, and to carry off thousands of Christians into a cruel slavery; Robinson Crusoe, it may be recalled, was one of their victims.  The powers at Vienna endeavoured to concert action against them in 1815.  They were attacked by a British fleet in 1816, and by a combined British and French fleet in 1819.  But all such temporary measures were insufficient.  The only cure for the ill was that the headquarters of the pirate chiefs should be conquered, and brought under civilised government.

This task France was rather reluctantly drawn into undertaking, as the result of a series of insults offered by the pirates to the French flag between 1827 and 1830.  At first the aim of the conquerors was merely to occupy and administer the few ports which formed the chief centres of piracy.  But experience showed that this was futile, since it involved endless wars with the unruly clansmen of the interior.  Gradually, therefore, the whole of Algeria was systematically

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
The Expansion of Europe from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.