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Britain and the Regency of Tripoli: Consuls and Empire-Building in Nineteenth-Century North Africa
By (Author) Sara M. ElGaddari
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
I.B. Tauris
25th July 2024
United Kingdom
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
African history
Middle Eastern history
961.2024
Paperback
216
Width 156mm, Height 234mm
By the early 1820s, British policy in the Eastern Mediterranean was at a crossroads. Historically shaped by the rivalry with France, the course of Britain's future role in the region was increasingly affected by concern about the future of the Ottoman Empire and fears over Russia's ambitions in the Balkans and the Middle East. The Regency of Tripoli was at this time establishing a new era in foreign and commercial relations with Europe and the United States. Among the most important of these relationships was that with Britain. Using the National Archive records of correspondence of the British consuls and diplomats from 1795 to 1832, and within the context of the wider Eastern Question, this book reconstructs the the Anglo-Tripolitanian relationship and argues that the Regency played a vital role in Britains imperial strategy during and after the Napoleonic Wars. Including the perspective of Tripolitanian notables and British diplomats, it contends that the activities of British consuls in Tripoli, and the networks they fostered around themselves, reshaped the nature and extent of British imperial activity in the region.
Sara M. ElGaddari holds a PhD from the University of Hull, UK. She is the editor of The Letters and Reports of British Consular and Diplomatic Agents in Tripoli, 17931832 (2020)