Offered here is a reproduction in oils on canvas of the painting 'Action Between the Dutch Fleet and Barbary Pirates' by the artist Lieve Pietersz, Verschuier painted c. 1670 and now part of the collection at the National Maritime Museum in Greenwich. It is a one-off measuring 90cm (H) x 120cm (W) and will be supplied as a rolled canvas, NOT stretched on a frame 

A large fleet of Dutch merchantmen is shown in action with some of the Moslem corsairs who operated from the Barbary coast of North Africa. A Barbary galley is shown in port-broadside view in the foreground, with the motif of the crescent prominently featured in gold on the stern. Figures in the bow and stern, bearing quivers of arrows on their backs, aim their bows at the ship towering immediately behind. This flies the Dutch flag and pennant at her maintop and has her sails full of shot holes. Other men wearing turbans can be seen pulling on the galley's oars, above which its mainmast has partly fallen. Some corsairs on the far right can be seen leaping off the bow of a sinking vessel while others hold on to a rope and are being pulled towards the galley. A pair of white swans carved as a figurehead are still visible on the sinking ship. The stern of the galley's main antagonist is ornately carved and shows a lion in the centre flanked by two figures blowing trumpets. On either side of them are a pair of female figures draped in white, and the ensign staff bears a red flag with the motif of an outstretched arm holding a sword. To the right is another Dutch ship which has been captured by the corsairs. They can be seen in the rigging with their bows and with flaming torches to set the ship alight. They have placed their flag on the stern, which is painted with an Old Testament scene showing a prophet praying in front of an altar.

Despite the apparent superiority of the Dutch fleet in terms of size and number the painting indicates that the struggle is a fierce one. Several of the Dutch ships in the distance have also been captured by the attackers and set on fire. The struggle to protect merchantmen trading to the Levant was continued until the Barbary corsairs were finally crushed in the early nineteenth century.

The artist is believed to have been a pupil of Jan Porcellis and Simon de Vlieger. He is also recorded as a sculptor and portrait painter.

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