Tangiers, January 12th, 1806.
I have long felt very desirous to
visit a country, which, notwithstanding the many revolutions
it has undergone, and the enlightened characters of
its conquerors, is regarded as still immersed in a
degree of barbarism almost unparalleled. It appeared
to me next to impossible that a nation so contiguous
to Europe, with which it has for centuries maintained
a constant intercourse, could have remained in a state
of such profound ignorance.
Impressed with these ideas, I readily
embraced the offer of a friend to accompany him from
Gibraltar to this place, intending to travel further
up the country, should I meet with sufficient inducement
from the result of my observations here. We landed
on the first of this month, and the intermediate time
I have employed in obtaining information relative
to the town of Tangiers from the earliest tradition
to the present time. As the particulars I have
collected do not appear devoid of Interest, I flatter
myself, you will be gratified that I should have made
them the subject of a letter.
This town, which by the ancients was
called Tingis, or Tingir, and appears to have
been the metropolis of the Western Mauritania,
or Tingitania, as it was named, to distinguish it
from Mauritania Caesariensis; according to
Pliny and others, was first founded ed fay Antaeus
(about a thousand years before Christ), the same who
was afterwards conquered and slain by Hercules.
The giant is supposed to have been buried here:
and the report of Plutarch, that his tomb was opened
by Sertorius, and a corpse sixty cubits or more in
length, taken out of it, confirms the idea. But
according to others, Tingis, or the present
Tangiers, lays claim to a more ancient founder
than Antaeus. Procopius mentions, that
in his time were standing two pillars of white stone,
upon which were inscribed in the Phoenician characters
the following words: "We are the Canaanites
who fed from Joshua, the son of Nun."
A colony of Carthaginians settled
here, and it is most probable that a flourishing trade
was carried on by them, as the situation of Tangiers
is extremely well adapted for that purpose. Indeed
the name Tingis, in the language of the Phoenicians
and Carthaginians, signifies an emporium.
When the Mauritaniae became subject to the Romans,
in the reign of Julius Cæsar, Bocchus, the son-in-law
of Jugurtha, having defeated Bogud, the king of Mauritania
Tingitania, he became possessed of that country,
and Augustus, or, as some say, Octavius, confirmed
this acquisition to him; and the inhabitants of Tingis
were allowed the privileges of Roman citizens.
I cannot discover any thing further
remarkable of Tangiers from the time it became a Roman
colony, and during the period it was possessed by
the Saracens, till the latter end of the fourteenth
century, when it was taken by the Portuguese, who
erected fortifications and other public works.
It continued in their possession for nearly two centuries;
and was at length given to our King, Charles the Second,
as part of the dowry of his consort Catharine, We
did not keep it long; for, owing to the little harmony
that subsisted between that Monarch and his Parliament,
it was ceded to the Moors in 1684, after we had blown
up all the fortifications, and utterly destroyed the
harbour. Since that event, it seems to have been
gradually dwindling into its present insignificance.
I have before observed, that the situation
of Tangiers is well adapted to the purposes of commerce,
being about two miles within the Straits of Gibraltar
(or Hercules); but the ruins of the fortifications
and harbour have rendered the anchorage in the bay
of Tangiers very unsafe. This is a great obstacle
to trade; very little is carried on there at present,
and that little is by a few Jews, and lately, by a
Spanish merchant of the name of Don Pedro.
The town being built on the declivity
of that high tract of land called Cape Spartel (the
Cape Cottes or Ampelusian of the ancients),
it is seen at a great distance; but on entering the
bay, it appears to the best advantage. It is
defended by two martello towers, a castle, and a large
battery; but I am confident that it could not withstand
the attack of a few English frigates, and that such
a force from the bay might destroy the town in the
space of a few hours. Notwithstanding the vicissitudes
to which this place has been exposed, it still possesses
a superiority over the other towns in the empire of
Morocco; it is the capital of the kingdom, and the
residence of the Consuls General of the powers in
amity with his Imperial Majesty. The houses of
these foreign residents are constructed with great
taste in the European style; the habitations of the
Moors are neat; the air is pure and salubrious; the
supply of excellent water, abundant; and the market
cheap and plentiful. This combination of advantages
renders Tangiers, in many points of view, an eligible
residence. The European society, which consists
almost solely of the families of the foreign consuls,
is pleasant and agréable, The adjacent country
is beautifully romantic; and the opposite coast and
bay present a most delightful prospect. The Moorish
inhabitants are all soldiers, very poor, and entirely
subject to the arbitrary will of the Emperor.
It is capable of furnishing, at a moment’s warning,
three thousand cavalry, and two thousand infantry and
artillery-men; but these troops are badly trained,
and without order or discipline: I attended their
evening parade yesterday, and was truly diverted with
the sorry appearance of their best militia-men, who
were to mount guard for the night. These Moorish
soldiers are remarkably addicted to cheating.
It is probably owing to their excessive indolence,
which prevents them from making the usual exertions
for obtaining a livelihood, and induces them to adopt
the more expeditious mode of extorting from strangers
the means of subsistence; but as they are not often
presented with an object of prey, they continually
labour against the pressure of extreme poverty.
Tangiers is under the government of Sidy Ash-Ash;
who resides at Tetuan. He is by no means partial
to the English, but devoted to France; influenced by
French principles, and French interest. Excepting
a few small armed vessels, fitted out for piracy,
there is no shipping in the harbour. I have observed
none for the purpose of commerce; all their goods are
exported in foreign bottoms; and when they bring in
a prize, the vessel remains unsold for a considerable
length of time, and it is always disposed of to a
foreign merchant.
Several remains of the European fortifications
are yet visible; the Moors have repaired some, among
which the western bastions still form a principal
part of the strength of the place. The castle,
which appears to have been built before the time of
the Portuguese, stands in a commanding position upon
one of the most prominent rocks of this coast.
By an order of the Emperor, all the civil and military
officers of this town are obliged to reside in it.
From this castle is a subterraneous
passage containing many curious remnants of antiquity.
On each side of the passage are ruinous apartments,
which we may readily suppose to have been designed
as places for the concealment of treasures, or receptacles
for the dead. From the fragments of some urns
I have collected, upon which are to be traced parts
of inscriptions in the Punic character, I imagine
this subterraneous place to have been built by the
Carthaginians, for one or both of those purposes.
It extends from the castle to several miles without
the gates of the town; whence we may likewise infer,
that it served as a means of escape in case of a sudden
insurrection, or siege. Here are several superb
mosques and commodious public baths.
The Socco, or market, is held
twice a week (on Sunday and Wednesday), in a spacious
sandy square, outside of the western gate, whereto
the peasants bring all kinds of provisions, and other
necessaries, which are sold at very low rates.
Fish and every sort of wild fowl are brought in daily,
and sold very cheap. Among the Consuls’
villas, some of which are built near the spot where
the Socco is held, that of the Swedish Consul
is the most worthy of notice. The pleasure-ground
is laid out with great taste in orange groves; the
gardens abound in fruit-trees, and the Consul has made
a curious botanical collection.
I have just been interrupted by Mr.
Matra, our Consul. He called to request me to
go up to Larache, to attend the Governor, who is dangerously
ill, and has sent here for an English physician.
I intended to have continued a brief account of this
empire, from the time it became a Roman province to
the introduction of Mahometanism; also by what means
the Moors became mixed with Arabs: but I must
reserve this for the next opportunity.