Sack of Naples

1544 Algerian capture of Bay of Naples
Sack of Naples

Map of the Bay of Naples
Date1544
Location
Naples, Italy
Result

Algerian victory

  • Capture of the Bay of Naples
  • 7,000-50,000 enslaved[1][2][3]
Belligerents
Kingdom of Naples Regency of Algiers
Strength
Unknown Unknown
Casualties and losses
7,000 enslaved Unknown
  • v
  • t
  • e
Ottoman–Habsburg wars
Hungary and the Balkans
  • Mohács (1526)
  • Hungarian campaign (1527–28)
  • Hundred Years' Croatian-Ottoman War (1527-1593)
  • Hungary (1529)
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  • Little Wars in Hungary 
  • (1529–1533) (1540–1547) (1551–1562) (1565–1568)
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  • Austro-Turkish War (1716–1718)
  • Russo-Turkish War (1735–1739)
  • Austro-Turkish War (1788–91)

Mediterranean

  • Cephalonia (1500)
  • Balearics (1501)
  • 1st Algiers (1516)
  • Tlemcen (1518)
  • 2nd Algiers (1519)
  • 3rd Algiers (1529)
  • Formentera (1529)
  • Cherchell (1531)
  • Coron (1532-1534)
  • 1st Tunis (1534)
  • 2nd Tunis (1535)
  • Mahón (1535)
  • Preveza (1538)
  • Castelnuovo (1539)
  • Girolata (1540)
  • Alborán (1540)
  • 4th Algiers (1541)
  • Nice (1543)
  • 1st Mostaganem (1543)
  • Ischia (1544)
  • Naples (1544)
  • 2st Mostaganem (1547)
  • Cullera (1550)
  • Mahdia (1550)
  • 1st Gozo (1551)
  • Tripoli (1551)
  • Ponza (1552)
  • Corsica (1553-1559)
  • Béjaïa (1555)
  • Oran (1556)
  • Balearics (1558)
  • 3rd Mostaganem (1558)
  • Djerba (1560)
  • Orán and Mers-el-Kébir (1563)
  • Granada (1563)
  • Malta (1565)
  • 3rd Tunis (1569)
  • 2nd Gozo (1570)
  • Lepanto (1571)
  • Navarino (1572)
  • 4th Tunis (1574)
  • Sori (1584)
  • Canary Islands (1585)
  • Chios (1599)
  • Hammamet (1605)
  • Cape Corvo (1613)
  • Malta (1614)
  • Cape Celidonia (1616)

The sack of Naples occurred in 1544 when Algerians captured the Bay of Naples and enslaved 7,000 Italians.

In 1544 Algerian corsairs sailed into the Bay of Naples and captured it. They then took an astounding amount of 7,000 Italian slaves.[1][3]

The number of slaves taken by the Algerians drove the price of slaves so low that it was said “you could swap a Christian for an onion”.[4][2][1] Moreover, it was said to be “raining Christians in Algiers”.[2]

References

  1. ^ a b c The Barnes Review, Volume 12 TBR Company,
  2. ^ a b c Holy War and Human Bondage: Tales of Christian-Muslim Slavery in the Early-Modern Mediterranean: Tales of Christian-Muslim Slavery in the Early-Modern Mediterranean Robert C. Davis ABC-CLIO,
  3. ^ a b Imperial Ambition in the Early Modern Mediterranean: Genoese Merchants and the Spanish Crown Céline Dauverd Cambridge University Press,
  4. ^ Tragedy and Postcolonial Literature Ato Quayson Cambridge University Press,