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Swedish reciprocal ransoms and multinational solutions to insecurity in the Mediterranean, c. 1720–1740

Östlund, Joachim LU (2021) In Journal of the British Academy 9(s4). p.151-167
Abstract
This article compares the Swedish government’s legal practices to secure protection for its trade and shipping with the legal strategies for protection which circulated among sailors and consuls along the Swedish trade route to the Mediterranean in the late 17th and early 18th centuries. One major threat to Swedish commercial interests at the time were the ‘Barbary corsairs’, and the challenges when they captured ships and seized crews, whether Swedish sailors (many of them from Sweden’s Baltic and German provinces) on foreign-flagged ships or foreign sailors on Swedish ships. Consuls and traders knew of the problems caused when sailors crossed legal borders and challenged the rules of state protection. To counter this a more international... (More)
This article compares the Swedish government’s legal practices to secure protection for its trade and shipping with the legal strategies for protection which circulated among sailors and consuls along the Swedish trade route to the Mediterranean in the late 17th and early 18th centuries. One major threat to Swedish commercial interests at the time were the ‘Barbary corsairs’, and the challenges when they captured ships and seized crews, whether Swedish sailors (many of them from Sweden’s Baltic and German provinces) on foreign-flagged ships or foreign sailors on Swedish ships. Consuls and traders knew of the problems caused when sailors crossed legal borders and challenged the rules of state protection. To counter this a more international model of maritime security was tested by attempting to strengthen the presence of the state in ransoms affairs in northern Africa. This model was developed when the Swedish Levant Company was founded. The main idea was shared responsibility between nations to ransom sailors serving under foreign flags, culminating in ‘reciprocal ransom agreements’ in 1742. Even though reciprocal ransom agreements were short-lived, it shows two different modes to counter insecurity in the Mediterranean, one based on local customs and regional elite networks and the other on multinational agreements and the discourse of international law. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
keywords
Swedish Levant Company, Barbary captivity, ransoming, diplomatic consul, international law
in
Journal of the British Academy
volume
9
issue
s4
pages
17 pages
publisher
The British Academy
external identifiers
  • scopus:85166358032
ISSN
2052-7217
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
da47bdf1-a6f1-4c03-8d65-1c37b0992d48
alternative location
https://www.thebritishacademy.ac.uk/publishing/journal-british-academy/9s4/swedish-reciprocal-ransoms-and-multinational-solutions-to-insecurity-in-the-mediterranean/
date added to LUP
2021-08-27 14:10:18
date last changed
2023-08-23 04:01:52
@article{da47bdf1-a6f1-4c03-8d65-1c37b0992d48,
  abstract     = {{This article compares the Swedish government’s legal practices to secure protection for its trade and shipping with the legal strategies for protection which circulated among sailors and consuls along the Swedish trade route to the Mediterranean in the late 17th and early 18th centuries. One major threat to Swedish commercial interests at the time were the ‘Barbary corsairs’, and the challenges when they captured ships and seized crews, whether Swedish sailors (many of them from Sweden’s Baltic and German provinces) on foreign-flagged ships or foreign sailors on Swedish ships. Consuls and traders knew of the problems caused when sailors crossed legal borders and challenged the rules of state protection. To counter this a more international model of maritime security was tested by attempting to strengthen the presence of the state in ransoms affairs in northern Africa. This model was developed when the Swedish Levant Company was founded. The main idea was shared responsibility between nations to ransom sailors serving under foreign flags, culminating in ‘reciprocal ransom agreements’ in 1742. Even though reciprocal ransom agreements were short-lived, it shows two different modes to counter insecurity in the Mediterranean, one based on local customs and regional elite networks and the other on multinational agreements and the discourse of international law.}},
  author       = {{Östlund, Joachim}},
  issn         = {{2052-7217}},
  keywords     = {{Swedish Levant Company; Barbary captivity; ransoming; diplomatic consul; international law}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  number       = {{s4}},
  pages        = {{151--167}},
  publisher    = {{The British Academy}},
  series       = {{Journal of the British Academy}},
  title        = {{Swedish reciprocal ransoms and multinational solutions to insecurity in the Mediterranean, c. 1720–1740}},
  url          = {{https://www.thebritishacademy.ac.uk/publishing/journal-british-academy/9s4/swedish-reciprocal-ransoms-and-multinational-solutions-to-insecurity-in-the-mediterranean/}},
  volume       = {{9}},
  year         = {{2021}},
}