Dey

Chambers's Encyclopaedia, Volume 3: Catarrh to Dion, p. 783–784

Dey (Turkish düi, 'a maternal uncle'), a name applied to the governor of Algiers before its conquest by the French. The name was formerly given to elderly people, especially among the Janizaries; hence came to be commonly applied at Algiers to the commanding-officer of that corps, who frequently became afterwards pasha or regent of that province. See BEG.

Source scan(s): p. 0796, p. 0797