Dictionary Definition
blackguardly adj : lacking principles or
scruples; "the rascally rabble"; "the tyranny of a scoundrelly
aristocracy" - W.M. Thackaray; "the captain was set adrift by his
roguish crew" [syn: rascally, roguish, scoundrelly]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Adverb
- Like, or in the way of, a blackguard.
Extensive Definition
- "Blackguard" or "Antipaladin" can also refer to a particular Dungeons & Dragons prestige class.
The Black Guard (in Arabic, Abid, from a root
meaning "slave") were the corps of black-African slave-soldiers
assembled by the Alaouite sultan of
Morocco, Moulay
Ismail (reigned 1672-1727). The Black Guard descended from
black captives brought to Morocco from sub-Saharan
Africa, who were settled in a special colony and given wives;
their male offspring would be pressed into military careers at the
age of sixteen. Considered more reliable than Arab or Berber
warriors because of their lack of tribal loyalties, Ismail's black
soldiers formed the bulk of his standing army and numbered 150,000
at their peak.
The Black Guard were charged with fighting
Ismail's campaigns against the European-controlled fortress
enclaves dotting his empire's coast (such as Tangier, captured
from the English in 1684) and with patrolling Morocco's unstable
countryside: They crushed rebellions against Ismail's rule not only
by Moroccan Berber clans but also by Ismail's seditious sons, who
defected from service as his provincial governors to insurrection
as would-be usurpers of his throne.
Moulay Ismail always went about his court
surrounded by a bodyguard of eighty black slave-soldiers, with
muskets and scimitars at the ready in case of any attempt on the
sultan's life. At his throne, Ismail was attended by a slave
charged with twirling a parasol above the sultan at all times (on
at least one occasion, Ismail pulled out his sword and murdered an
attendant who had allowed the sun to briefly fall upon his sacred
skin). Two more slaves fanned the flies away from his face, while a
third held a napkin beneath his chin to collect his sacred
spittle.
Though the Black Guard were fiercely loyal, they
remained just as vulnerable to their commander's fits of rage as
his European slaves and Moorish subjects. When the French
ambassador Pidou de Saint-Olon was granted an audience with Moulay
Ismail, the latter arrived at this meeting with his sleeves
drenched in blood up to the elbows, after having slit the throats
of two of his favorite black attendants on a whim. When Ismail's
Barbary
pirates brought in a Portuguese ship they had just captured,
Ismail was presented a beautiful handcrafted hatchet found on
board: the sultan immediately struck and killed a Black Guard for
no other reason than to test the blade.
Despite endless civil wars and civil slaughter,
the Black Guard remained brutally loyal and disciplined through the
turmoil of Ismail's reign. More than any other factor did they
enable the sultan to remain on Morocco's throne for half a
century.
See also
Further reading
- Wilfrid Blunt, Black Sunrise: The Life and Times of Mulai Ismail, Emperor of Morocco 1646-1727
- Giles Milton, White Gold: The Extraordinary Story of Thomas Pellow and North Africa's One Million White Slaves
blackguardly in Italian: Guardia nera (Dungeons
& Dragons)