AcknowledgmentsA Note on TransliterationChronologyList of RulersPart IIntroduction1. Popular Sources: Accounts of Muslim Captivity in Christendom2. Elite Sources: Muslim Ambassadors in ChristendomConclusion: Encountering the Dunya of the ChristiansPart II. Translations1. 1578: Letters of Radwan al- Janawy on Muslim Captives2. After 1588: Description of the Defeat of the Armada3. ca. 1589-1591: A Journey from Morocco to Istanbul and Back4. After June 1596: Description of the En glish Attack on Cadiz5. 1613-1618: Description of Pisa and Florence6. 1623: Expulsion of the Moriscos and the Miraculous Ransoming of Muslim Captives7. 1633-1635: Letters from Tunis by Osman/Thomas d'Arcos, a Convert to Islam8. 1635: Letter About Muslim Captives Converted to Christianity9. 1635: Expulsion of the Moriscos10. 1642: Description of the World11a. Before 1688: Christian Attack on Jarbah (Tunisia) in 151011b. 1685: Bombardment of Tripoli, Libya, by the French Fleet,12. 1681-1691: Battle Accounts13. 1590-1654: Euro-Tunisian Piracy14. Before September 2, 1706: Letter of Mulay Isma'il to the English Parliament15. November 1, 1707: Letter from a Captive in France16a. 1713: Letters of Bentura de Zari, Moroccan Ambassador Under House Arrest in London16b. January 12, 1717: Letter of Mulay Isma'il to Philip V17. 1726-1727: On Quinine18. Mid-eighteenth century: Captivity in Malta19. 1782: Muhammad ibn 'Uthman al- Miknasi. Falling in Love in Naples20. 1798: Letter from a Female Captive in MaltaNotesBibliographyIndex
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