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Tunisian ambassador Soliman Melimeni, arrived at Norfolk in the
Tunisian ambassador Soliman Melimeni arrived at Washington in the
From Soliman Melimeni
Melimeni brought four Arabian horses with him as gifts for Jefferson (Brown,
Filed with this letter is a 14 Jan. 1806 list (2 pp.; one page in Arabic; one in English, in Richard O’Brien’s hand; docketed by Wagner) of Melimeni’s household, which comprised two lieutenants, a secretary, a cook, a barber, a steward, three servants, and a translator, totaling eleven people including the ambassador. Although the copy in Arabic lists the translator as George,...
For the horses brought from Tunis by Soliman Melimeni, see
, Tunis, vol. 3; 12 pp.; in a clerk’s hand, signed in Arabic by Melimeni, with appended note by James Leander Cathcart stating that he had written the letter at Melimeni’s behest and that when he read an Italian translation to Melimeni and his translator, both had declared it a perfect translation of the instructions Melimeni had received from the bey), Melimeni stated that in April 1805 a...
§ From Soliman Melimeni. to Melimeni, 5 Feb. 1806
§ From Soliman Melimeni. 2 pp.; signed in Arabic; docketed by Wagner. Below Melimeni’s signature is a 10 Feb. 1806 note by James Leander Cathcart: “The letter to which this certificate is annext was compiled by the subscriber from the verbal communications of Siddi Suliman Mella Menni by request of the...
To Soliman Melimeni
to Soliman Melimeni, 4 Mar. 1806
in James Leander Cathcart’s hand; docketed by Wagner. Written beneath Melimeni’s signature is Cathcart’s note: “The letter to which this certificate is annext was compiled by the subscriber from the oral communications of Sidi Suliman Mella Menni at the request of The Honble. the Secretary of State....
To Soliman Melimeni
From Soliman Melimeni
To Soliman Melimeni
signed in Arabic; docketed by Wagner. Written beneath Melimeni’s signature is Cathcart’s note: “Compiled from the verbal communications of Siddi Suliman Mella Menni By J L Cathcart.”
, 2:34). For the enclosures, see Melimeni to to Melimeni,
and Soliman Melimeni about Tunisian demands, see to Melimeni, Mar. 1806, and Melimeni to
...meant the ships would be coming home. Smith told Jefferson that he was holding a merchant vessel he had chartered to carry supplies to the Mediterranean while he awaited Jefferson’s decision about the 12 Oct. order and that Melimeni might return home in a small Navy Department brig that could be transferred to the State Department and then given to the Bey in lieu of the captured xebeque (
...5 June 1806 Secretary of the Navy Robert Smith sent Cathcart a second copy of these instructions. He stated that the vessel that Thomas Jefferson had ordered to be prepared for the Tunisian ambassador, Soliman Melimeni, was “a copper bottomed well found Brig, built principally of live oak” mounting ten guns. It would be staffed by officers of the U.S. Navy and would take no passengers other...
From Soliman Melimeni
Cathcart’s 20 July 1806 letter to Wagner reported that Thomas Triplett and Carlo the interpreter had come to Boston, leaving several of Melimeni’s staff members in New York, ...debts. Melimeni wanted to abandon them in the United States, but Cathcart foresaw constant trouble for the government if this were allowed to happen. He sent Carlo back to New York and wrote to mayor Dewitt Clinton,...
For the original list of Melimeni’s household, see his
Cathcart enclosed a 26 July 1806 letter from Soliman Melimeni to Thomas Jefferson (1 p.; in Cathcart’s hand, signed in Arabic; filed following ), which stated that Melimeni recognized the ...that Melimeni would likely be killed if he returned to Tunis in it. He therefore requested that Jefferson either allow him to stay in the United States until he received answers to the letters he...
, enclosing Soliman Melimeni to Jefferson, 26 July 1806.
, as requesting a passport for Soliman Melimeni.
the enclosed passport he requested in his letter of the fifth of the present month, for Soliman Melimeni; hopes it is in the form
issued a passport dated 5 Aug. 1806 for “the American Brigantine Two Brothers,” John Chandler master, to carry Soliman Melimeni to Tunis with his suite and merchandise (
Wagner enclosed copies of 1) John Stricker to Robert Smith, 13 Aug. 1806 (2 pp.), stating that several Baltimore merchants had agreed to hold debentures totaling $3,817.82 on goods purchased from them by Soliman Melimeni, that the debentures would be forfeited if the goods were transshipped as a result of Melimeni’s refusal to sail in the ...1806 (1 p.), ordering Wederstrandt to retain Melimeni...
, n. 1), and stated that Cathcart had informed Soliman Melimeni of the situation with the debentures, whereupon Melimeni’s “phrenzy lead him to every species of insolent observation,” including declarations that he was not subject to U.S. revenue laws and would impose the same requirements on U.S. citizens in Tunis after his return.... ...3,500 in freight charges for which Melimeni would become...