The present state of Algeir being a faithful and true account of the most considerable occurences that happened in that place during the lying of the French fleet before it / in a letter from a gentleman in Algier to his friend in London. Gentleman in Algier. 1682 Approx. 10 KB of XML-encoded text transcribed from 2 1-bit group-IV TIFF page images. Text Creation Partnership, Ann Arbor, MI ; Oxford (UK) : 2004-03 (EEBO-TCP Phase 1). A55709 Wing P3256 ESTC R9107 13742189 ocm 13742189 101667 This keyboarded and encoded edition of the work described above is co-owned by the institutions providing financial support to the Early English Books Online Text Creation Partnership. This Phase I text is available for reuse, according to the terms of Creative Commons 0 1.0 Universal . The text can be copied, modified, distributed and performed, even for commercial purposes, all without asking permission. Early English books online. (EEBO-TCP ; phase 1, no. A55709) Transcribed from: (Early English Books Online ; image set 101667) Images scanned from microfilm: (Early English books, 1641-1700 ; 847:49) The present state of Algeir being a faithful and true account of the most considerable occurences that happened in that place during the lying of the French fleet before it / in a letter from a gentleman in Algier to his friend in London. Gentleman in Algier. 1 sheet ([2] p.) Printed by George Larkin, London : 1682. Caption title. Imprint from colophon. Reproduction of original in Huntington Library. Created by converting TCP files to TEI P5 using tcp2tei.xsl, TEI @ Oxford. Re-processed by University of Nebraska-Lincoln and Northwestern, with changes to facilitate morpho-syntactic tagging. Gap elements of known extent have been transformed into placeholder characters or elements to simplify the filling in of gaps by user contributors. 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Copies of the texts have been issued variously as SGML (TCP schema; ASCII text with mnemonic sdata character entities); displayable XML (TCP schema; characters represented either as UTF-8 Unicode or text strings within braces); or lossless XML (TEI P5, characters represented either as UTF-8 Unicode or TEI g elements). Keying and markup guidelines are available at the Text Creation Partnership web site . eng Pirates -- Algeria -- Early works to 1800. Algeria -- History -- 1516-1830. Broadsides -- London -- England -- 17th century 2003-08 TCP Assigned for keying and markup 2003-09 Aptara Keyed and coded from ProQuest page images 2003-12 Daniel Haig Sampled and proofread 2003-12 Daniel Haig Text and markup reviewed and edited 2004-02 pfs Batch review (QC) and XML conversion The Present State OF ALGEIR : BEING A Faithful and True Account Of the most Considerable OCCURRENCES That happened in that Place , during the lying of the FRENCH FLEET before it . In a Letter from a Gentleman in Algier , to his Friend in London . Worthy Sir , I Hope mine of the 6th , 11th , and 13th of Iuly are safe Arrived to your hands ; in Answer of your several then Received , to which please to refer your self , since none of yours appear ; Having some extraordinary Advice of News to impart to you , is the Occasion of this Trouble , which I shall be glad may prove grateful unto you . On the 2d . past Arrived the Bristol and Saphire Friggots , from Leghorn , ( at the same time lying here about 50 Sayl of French Frigats , Gallies and Attendants ) one of our Boats being sent ashore , was not Admitted , but a Boat from hence sent to tell them that they should not come ashore because the French Fleet lay before the Port , and withall , Orders given that the Consul should not be Admitted to go out of the Gates ; but before the Order Arriv'd the Mould-gate , he hapned to Run down , and coming to the head of the Mould beckned to the Boat which was then Rowing off again , but knowing him , Return'd , and when was within call he told them they should be gon and stand upon their Guard , for he was a Prisoner ; the Lieutenant of one of the Ships being in one of the Boats , asked him whether he had any thing more to say , he Answered , No ; whereupon he went a board , and the Ships stood off to Sea , the next day stood in again and sent both their boats in , but the Governour prevented their coming a shore by ordering three Guns to be fired at them , which was accordingly done , though at a distance , upon which they Return'd aboard and the Ships went to Sea. The boat being the first day Refused coming a shore , the Consul , went to the Kings House Requesting that if they would not suffer him to go a board alone , that they would send two or three Renegadoes with him , that could understand what he said , to avoid the suspicion of his giving any Advice to the French , but was denied ; and after being demanded the Reason of his calling so to the Boat , he , answered them briskly , and being threatned what damage hapned thereon should fall on his head , told them he would rather die then one poor English man should be brought in a Slave here , through his holding his Peace . The Reason of the above Disturbance ( we know ) was occasioned by our Governour Rabba Hassan his coming out of the Camp disgusted that the Peace with the English should have been made in his absence , and that he had not the Honour of doing it himself ; though his pretence to the People was onely that if he had been here he would have done it much more to their Advantage , adding withal , that the Doors of the Kings house were shut , and that it was done without the Advice and Consent of the Souldiery , the meanest whereof ought to have had his Vote in the doing of it , insinuating himself thereby into their Favour ( which is his Safeguard ) and at once under the Pretence of propogating and promoting the Publick Interest , and maintaining their Priviledges , brings his designs about , by such indirect means promoting many times his own private Intrest , and at the same time establishing himself in the Favour , and good Opinion of the People . On the 3d. past the French Gallies rowed the Ships in towards the Mould , the Admiral having two Gallies a head we were in great Expectation of some Action , but came all in the Evening to an Anchor again . On the 5th . the Gallies went away ; on the 7th the Ships made all Sayl , some within shot of the Mould , were Saluted by these People with a great many Shot . On the 11th Ditto a Ketch played some Bombs upon the Mould , all of them falling short . On the 20th about nine a Clock at Night , the Ketches came near into the Mould , and continued firing Bombs till it was almost day , these People Returning Guns without ceasing , which I suppose were near 1000. The Bombs the French fir'd were above 100. which broke down 44 houses , and kill'd many People : Please by the way to Note , that the French have five Ketches with Bombs . On the 24th Ditto about eight a Clock at night appeared a blazing Star in the N. W. Ditto , a little after the French began to play with their Bombs upon the Town , when these People sent out a Gally to take one of the Ketches , but was Shamefully beaten off and forced to return with the loss of some Christians and Turks . This night were beaten down about six houses , and killed about 35 or 40 Persons ; These People extreamly cast down , seem to be inclin'd to a Mutiny against their Governour , whereupon he ordered Padre Vacher to go aboard the Admiral ( with a Dutch man of Wars Boat , who now lies here to clear some of their Captives and is imployed as an Embassador between the Turk and Devil ) to know their demands , though they pretended only to send the Admiral Word that if he fired one Gun more against the place he would send their cheif Cavallero's , ( that are Captives here ) a board out of the Muzzles of their Guns . Multitudes of People dayly Flocking out to the Gardens , for fear of the Bombs crying out with a General Voice , that the World must needs be now at an end , that never such things as these were seen , that they certainly were not of mans Invention , but sent by the Devil from Hell , and that Algiers is now Ruined with many such like Exclamations . Padre Vacher Returning a shore and to the Kings House , gave them the Admirals Answer , that if they would send a boat off to morrow with a Flag of Truce he would treat with them , and that he was sent hither about his Masters Business and would Prosecute it to the Destruction of the place : Padre Vacher also begs of the Admiral that he would not fire any Bombs that night for his sake , for fear they should take fantasie against him , impute the ill Consequence to his Advice , and so take Occasion to cut him off ; to which the Admiral would not consent , saying , he would Willingly do any thing that lay in his Power for him , but that he could not promise . These People as formerly , are ready to mutiny , to see their houses broken down , and Friends and Relations killed before their eyes : impute all to the bad Government . The Governour to avoid the ill effects of these surmises , and secure His Person , was willing to do any thing to satisfie them , which I suppose was the occasion of sending Padre Vacher ; alias the French Consul aboard , which the Captains of the Ships and Chief Turks extreamly blame him for , and are inwardly exceedingly incenst and inraged against him , saying , it was a thing contrary to all reason , giving the French the greatest encouragement against them , which had it been done before they had acted any thing , might have been the more excusable , but now they had fir'd their Bombs , shewed abundance of weakness and timerousness in them , and animated the Enemy to prosecute his designs with the greatest Severity , unless complied with on dishonourable and disadvantagious Terms . The 25th at Night , the French having fir'd a great many Bombs , but not with that success as formerly , aiming chiefly at the Mould , which occasion'd most of them to fall into the water : One took place in a Tuniscan loaden with Wooll , and sent her to the bottom ; another fell into one of their Ships , broke through both her Decks , and burst in the Hold , shaking her severely , and two or three Houses broke down it the Town . It is most certain , these People never met with such a Chastisement as this , nothing they dread more . But what I thought almost impossible is ▪ That after their high Looks ▪ and seeming to slight the French so much , they should with so small a force be brought to send a Boat aboard the Admiral , which argues their desire to comply almost on any terms , which if the French prosecute as they have begun , I am apt to believe they will obtain . I am also credibly informed , that the Admiral sent word by Padre Vacher , That having receiv'd Advice of a Son born to the Dauphine of France , if the Governour would fire Three Guns in honour thereof , he would esteem it ; and that the Governour next day ordered the said Guns to be fired , but the Order was immediately recalled by his Father-in-law , who is really the Governour , but that his Son takes it upon him by reason of his Fathers Age , and Incapacity of Ruling so Rebellious and Head-strong a People , who are no longer satisfi'd with their Governours , than things go before the Wind , and succeed well , or that he serve for their turn ; but upon the least adversity of Affairs , cut him off , as they have done others , not past one of fourteen having onely died his natural Death . The first instant the Ketches which used to divertise us with their Fire-works , sailed with two Rere-Admirals , and several other Ships , so that I believe the French are breaking up their Rendezvouz in this Place , and that they do think the Winter too near at hand to continue longer here ; of which more by the next , God willing . I am in all things , SIR , Your Faithful Humble Servant . London , Printed by George Larkin . 1682.