|
Date: |
|
Description: | Watercolour on paper. One of the earliest painted views of a Legation building in the Government Art Collection, this watercolour of c.1800 shows an 18th-century villa on a hillside in Algiers. Initially built for the ruling Karamanli family, it continued to be used as the British Consul building until the 1940s. The watercolour shows the building at the time when Consul-General John Falcon was in occupancy. Falcon was appointed Consul-General to Algiers in August 1799 and reached the city by June 1800. However, according to a note published in ‘The Times’ just two years later, it was ‘well known that Mr. Falcon has been long obnoxious to the Dey [of Algiers].’
This uneasy situation came to a head when some local women were discovered in Falcon’s residence, in the company of his servants. The act of receiving Moorish women at a Christian house was viewed as offensive in Algeria and Falcon was ordered to leave the country. When he refused, the Dey reacted angrily and had the British Consul forcibly removed, before ordering all British vessels at the nearby port of Arza to be seized. Prime Minister Lord Palmerston and naval officer Lord Nelson eventually interceded to negotiate a resolution. | Subjects: | hill flag topography tree landscape C19th country house/mansion road | Temporal: | c1800; 1790/1810 | Source: | Government Art Collection | Creator: | unknown, British 19th century | Identifier: | http://www.gac.culture.gov.uk/work.aspx?... | Go to resource |
|
|