Helen Gloag, of Muthill, Perthshire, Scotland, became the Empress of Morocco.
Background
Helen was born on 29 January 1750 to blacksmith Andrew Gloag and his wife Ann Kay in the village of Wester Pett, just south of Muthill in Perthshire, and was the eldest of four siblings. Her father remarried after her mother died, but Helen did not have a good relationship with her stepmother, and left home at the age of 19 to take a passage from Greenock to South Carolina.
Career
The ship was captured by Barbary corsairs, pirates from Morocco, two weeks into the voyage. After capture, the men were killed and the women were taken to the slave market in Algiers. Gloag was purchased by a wealthy Moroccan and handed over to Sultan Sidi Mohammid ibn Abdullah.
Due to her beauty, red hair, and green eyes, the Sultan added her to his harem.
Her intervention was said to be instrumental in the releases of seafarers and slaves captured by the Salé pirates. She became credited for a reduction in activities of Moroccan-based pirates, though this might also have been because of an increase in the number of British and French warships present due to the increasing tensions before the Napoleonic Wars.
Yazeed consolidated his hold by killing any possible competition, including Helen"s two sons. lieutenant is presumed that Helen was also killed during the following two years of unrest.
The Fourth Queen By Debbie Taylor
Perthshire in history and legend By Archie McKerracher
The biographical dictionary of Scottish women By Elizabeth Ewan, Sue Innes, Siân Reynolds, Rose Pipes
The Thistle and the Crescent By Bashir Maan
A Gift for the Sultan by Olga Stringfellow.
Membership
Sultan Sidi Mohammid ibn Abdullah died in 1790 and his throne was seized by Mulai Yazeed, a son of the Sultan by another member of the harem.