Dictionary Definition
lascar
Noun
1 an East Indian sailor
2 a volcano in the Andes in Chile
User Contributed Dictionary
Noun
- A sailor, army servant or artilleryman from India or SE Asia.
Extensive Definition
Lascar, though rarely used now, was once the name
used to describe a sailor
from India or
other countries East of the Cape of
Good Hope, employed on European ships from
the 16th century until the beginning of the twentieth century. The
word comes from the Persian
Lashkar,
meaning military camp, and al-askar, the
Omani word for
a guard or soldier. The Portuguese
adapted this term to lascarim, meaning an Asian
militiaman or seaman. Lascars served on British
ships under 'lascar' agreements. These agreements allowed
shipowners more control than was the case in ordinary articles of
agreement. The sailors could be transferred from one ship to
another and retained in service for up to three years at one time.
The name lascar was also used to refer to Indian servants,
typically engaged by British military officers.
Indian seamen had been employed on European ships
since the first European made the sea voyage to India. Vasco da
Gama, the first European to reach India by sea (in 1498), hired an Indian
pilot at Malindi (a coastal
settlement in what is now Kenya) to steer the
Portuguese ship across the Indian Ocean
to the Malabar
coast.
The number of Indian seamen employed on British
ships was so great that the British tried to restrict this by the
Navigation
Acts in force from 1660 , which required
that 75 percent of the crew of a British-registered ship importing
goods from Asia had to be British. Initially, the need arose
because of the high sickness and death rates of European sailors on
India-bound ships, and their frequent desertions in India, which
left ships short of crew for the return voyage. Another reason was
war when conscription of British sailors by the Royal Navy was
particularly heavy from Company ships in India.
In 1786, the
Committee for the Relief of the Black Poor was originally set
up thanks to concern over Lascars left in London. However in a
report made after one month of the Committees existence, it was
found that only 35 of the 250 recipeints of aid were Lascars, being
heavily outnumbered by Africans and former
slaves from the
Americas.
The
British East India Company recruited seamen from Yemen, Gujarat, Assam and Bengal. They were
known by the British as
‘Lascars’, and a number of these created small settlements in port
towns and cities in Britain. By 1842 three thousand
Lascars were visiting the UK. Lascars were also used by ships
plying other routes. For example, the New South
Wales government record of the ship Massilia en route from
London to
Sydney in
1891 lists
more than half of its crew as being either Lascar or Indian.
The term Lascar is also used in Mauritius,
Réunion and
the Seychelles to
describe Muslims, by both Muslims and Non-Muslims.
lascar in French: Lascar