The attack was led by an expatriate Dutch captain, Murad Reis the Younger (formerly
Jan Janszoon van Haarlem), who had been enslaved by Algerians but released when he renounced his faith and converted to Islam. Murad's force was led to the village by a man called Hackett — the captain of a fishing boat that was captured earlier — in exchange for his freedom. Hackett was subsequently hanged from the clifftop outside the village for conspiracy.[3][4]
Attack
Murad's crew, made up of European
renegades and
Algerians,[a] launched their covert attack on the remote village of Baltimore on 20 June 1631.[5][2] They captured 107 villagers,[6] mostly English settlers along with some local Irish people (some reports put the number as high as 237).[7] The attack was focused on the area of the village known to this day as the Cove.[5] The villagers were put in irons and taken to a life of
slavery in Algiers.[8]
Aftermath
Some prisoners were destined to live out their days as
galley slaves, rowing for decades without ever setting foot on shore[9][10] while others would spend long years in a
harem or as labourers. At most three of them ever returned to Ireland.[11][10] One was ransomed almost at once[citation needed] and two others in 1646.[12]
In the aftermath of the raid, the remaining villagers moved to
Skibbereen, and Baltimore was virtually deserted for generations.[13]
Conspiracy speculation
In his book The Stolen Village, Des Ekin raises the possibility that
Sir Walter Coppinger, a prominent Catholic lawyer of
Hiberno-Norse descent and member of the leading
Cork family — who had become the main landowner in the area after the death of
Sir Thomas Crooke, 1st Baronet, the founder of the English colony — secretly hired the Barbary pirates to attack the village in possible collaboration with the family of deceased local
Irish clan chief,
Sir Fineen O'Driscoll.[14] It was the
ClanO'Driscoll that rented Baltimore and its lucrative
pilchard fishing grounds to the English
Puritan settlers on 20 June 1610. The lease for the land was for twenty-one years at the end of which the title for the land was set because of a loan agreement to transfer to Walter Coppinger on 20 June 1631.[15]
Coppinger before the time was over on the lease tried by an assortment of means to evict the settlers from Baltimore and gain the valuable fishing rights of the area early.[16] After a long period of legal wrangling and harassment, it was decided in 1630 by the courts that the settlers could not be evicted because of the large amount they had invested in the development of the town. Coppinger was required to rent the land to the settlers for perpetuity.[17] Ekin proposes that Coppinger, in order to guarantee that the land would revert to him on 20 June 1631, as originally agreed with the English settlers, hired Murad Reis to raid Baltimore. Ekin acknowledges that there is no concrete proof that Coppinger had any involvement with the raid, however, he does note the uncanny coincidence of the raid happening on 20 June 1631 the exact same date the lease was supposed to end.[14]
On the other hand, Murad may just as easily have planned the raid without any help. For example, it is well-documented that the authorities had advanced intelligence that Murad planned to make an attack against a port town along the
County Cork coast, although
Kinsale was incorrectly thought to be the target rather than Baltimore.[18]
In literature and the arts
The fictionalized capture and enslavement of Sir
Fineen O'Driscoll's daughter Máire during the raid inspired
Thomas Davis's poem, "The Sack of Baltimore".[19] The poem has the line: "And when to die a death of fire that noble maid they bore, She only smiled, O'Driscoll's child; she thought of Baltimore."[20]
A detailed account of the sack of Baltimore can be found in the book The Stolen Village: Baltimore and the Barbary Pirates by Des Ekin.[21]
In 1999, the raid on Baltimore was portrayed in a screenplay titled Roaring Water, The Sack of Baltimore, by Irish screenwriter Sean Boyle.
In 2014, Chris Bolister set the saga to music in "The Ballad (Sack) of Baltimore," written from the perspective of the captured James Rooney.[22]
In 2015, the raid inspired the song "Roaring Waters" from the album Last of Our Kind by British hard rock band
The Darkness. The band were inspired to write the song after hearing of the incident while on
Valentia Island, approximately 50 miles from
Baltimore.[23]
In 2018, singer/songwriter Tim O'Riordan commemorated the raid in the song Sail Away To Barbary on the album Taibhse.[24]
A historic drama in three acts about the events leading up to and following the infamous raid in June 1631 set in 'The Cove', Baltimore, and at Lismore Castle. We Who Are Blameless by Rupert Stutchbury.[25][26]
A historical fiction novel regarding the Sack of Baltimore in three books: Baltimore, Baltimore Book 2, and Baltimore Book 3 by Tony Bryan.[27]
A musical soundtrack demonstration of a working historical fiction musical inspired by 'The Sack of Baltimore 1631,' called The Sack 1631, Music, Book, and Lyrics by Donnie Chauncey.
The Sack 1631 – New Musical – Donnie Chauncey