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Piracy in the Caribbean

The era of piracy in the Caribbean began in the 1500s and phased out in the 1830s after the navies of the nations of Western Europe and North America with colonies in the Caribbean began combating pirates. The period during which pirates were most successful was from the 1660s to 1730s. Piracy flourished in the Caribbean because of the existence of pirate seaports such as Port Royal in Jamaica,[1] Tortuga in Haiti, and Nassau in the Bahamas.[2] Piracy in the Caribbean was part of a larger historical phenomenon of piracy, as it existed close to major trade and exploration routes in almost all the five oceans.[3][4][5]

Central America and the Caribbean

Causes

 
Main trade routes prey to 16th-century piracy: Spanish treasure fleets linking the Caribbean to Seville, Manila galleons (after 1568) (white) and Portuguese India Armadas (after 1498) (blue)

Pirates were often former sailors experienced in naval warfare. In the 16th century, pirate captains recruited seamen to loot European merchant ships, especially the Spanish treasure fleets sailing from the Caribbean to Europe. The following quote by an 18th-century Welsh captain shows the motivations for piracy:

In an honest Service, there is thin Commons, low Wages, and hard Labour; in this, Plenty and Satiety, Pleasure and Ease, Liberty and Power; and who would not balance Creditor on this Side, when all the Hazard that is run for it, at worst, is only a sower Look or two at choaking. No, a merry Life and a short one shall be my Motto.

—Pirate Captain Bartholomew Roberts

Piracy was sometimes given legal status by the colonial powers, especially France under King Francis I (r.1515–1547), in the hope of weakening Spain and Portugal's mare clausum trade monopolies in the Atlantic and Indian Oceans. This officially sanctioned piracy was known as privateering. From 1520 to 1560, French privateers were alone in their fight against the Crown of Spain and the vast commerce of the Spanish Empire in the New World, but were later joined by the English and Dutch.

The Caribbean had become an important center of European trade and colonization after Columbus' discovery of the New World for Spain in 1492. In the 1494 Treaty of Tordesillas the non-European world had been divided between the Spanish and the Portuguese along a north–south line 370 leagues west of the Cape Verde Islands. This gave Spain control of the Americas, a position the Spaniards later reiterated with an equally unenforceable papal bull (The Inter caetera). On the Spanish Main, the key early settlements were Cartagena in present-day Colombia, Porto Bello and Panama City on the Isthmus of Panama, Santiago on the southeastern coast of Cuba, and Santo Domingo on the island of Hispaniola. In the 16th century, the Spanish were mining extremely large quantities of silver from the mines of Zacatecas in New Spain (Mexico) and Potosí in Bolivia (formerly known as Alto Peru). The huge Spanish silver shipments from the New World to the Old attracted pirates and French privateers like François Leclerc or Jean Fleury, both in the Caribbean and across the Atlantic, all along the route from the Caribbean to Seville.

 
French pirate Jacques de Sores looting and burning Havana in 1555

To combat this constant danger, in the 1560s the Spanish adopted a convoy system. A treasure fleet or flota would sail annually from Seville (and later from Cádiz) in Spain, carrying passengers, troops, and European manufactured goods to the Spanish colonies of the New World. This cargo, though profitable, was really just a form of ballast for the fleet as its true purpose was to transport the year's worth of silver to Europe. The first stage in the journey was the transport of all that silver from the mines in Bolivia and New Spain in a mule convoy called the Silver Train to a major Spanish port, usually on the Isthmus of Panama or Veracruz in New Spain. The flota would meet up with the Silver Train, offload its cargo of manufactured goods to waiting colonial merchants and then load its holds with the precious cargo of gold and silver, in bullion or coin form. This made the returning Spanish treasure fleet a tempting target, although pirates were more likely to shadow the fleet to attack stragglers than to engage the well-armed main vessels. The classic route for the treasure fleet in the Caribbean was through the Lesser Antilles to the ports along the Spanish Main on the coast of Central America and New Spain, then northwards into the Yucatán Channel to catch the westerly winds back to Europe.

By the 1560s, the Dutch United Provinces of the Netherlands and England, both Protestant states, were defiantly opposed to Catholic Spain, the greatest power of Christendom in the 16th century; while the French government was seeking to expand its colonial holdings in the New World now that Spain had proven they could be extremely profitable.[citation needed] It was the French who had established the first non-Spanish settlement in the Caribbean when they had founded Fort Caroline near what is now Jacksonville, Florida in 1564, although the settlement was soon wiped out by a Spanish attack from the larger colony of Saint Augustine. As the Treaty of Tordesillas had proven unenforceable, a new concept of "lines of amity", with the northern bound being the Tropic of Cancer and the eastern bound the Prime Meridian passing through the Canary Islands, is said to have been verbally agreed upon by French and Spanish negotiators of the Peace of Cateau-Cambrésis.[6] South and west of these lines, respectively, no protection could be offered to non-Spanish ships, "no peace beyond the line." English, Dutch and French pirates and settlers moved into this region even in times of nominal peace with the Spanish.

The Spanish, despite being the most powerful state in Christendom at the time, could not afford a sufficient military presence to control such a vast area of ocean or enforce their exclusionary, mercantilist trading laws. These laws allowed only Spanish merchants to trade with the colonists of the Spanish Empire in the Americas. This arrangement provoked constant smuggling against the Spanish trading laws and new attempts at Caribbean colonization in peacetime by England, France and the Netherlands. Whenever a war was declared in Europe between the Great Powers the result was always widespread piracy and privateering throughout the Caribbean.

 
The Iberian Union of Spain and Portugal (1580–1640)

The Anglo-Spanish War in 1585–1604 was partly due to trade disputes in the New World. A focus on extracting mineral and agricultural wealth from the New World rather than building productive, self-sustaining settlements in its colonies; inflation fueled in part by the massive shipments of silver and gold to Western Europe; endless rounds of expensive wars in Europe; an aristocracy that disdained commercial opportunities; and an inefficient system of tolls and tariffs that hampered industry all contributed to Spain's decline during the 17th century. However, very profitable trade continued between Spain's colonies, which continued to expand until the early 19th century.

Meanwhile, in the Caribbean, the arrival of European diseases with Columbus had reduced the local Native American populations; the native population of New Spain fell as much as 90% from its original numbers in the 16th century.[7] This loss of native population led Spain to increasingly rely on African slave labor to run Spanish America's colonies, plantations and mines and the trans-Atlantic slave trade offered new sources of profit for the many English, Dutch and French traders who could violate the Spanish mercantilist laws with impunity. But the relative emptiness of the Caribbean also made it an inviting place for England, France and the Netherlands to set up colonies of their own, especially as gold and silver became less important as commodities to be seized and were replaced by tobacco and sugar as cash crops that could make men very rich.

As Spain's military might in Europe weakened, the Spanish trading laws in the New World were violated with greater frequency by the merchants of other nations. The Spanish port on the island of Trinidad off the northern coast of South America, permanently settled only in 1592, became a major point of contact between all the nations with a presence in the Caribbean.

History

Early seventeenth century, 1600–1660

Changes in demography

In the early 17th century, expensive fortifications and the size of the colonial garrisons at the major Spanish ports increased to deal with the enlarged presence of Spain's competitors in the Caribbean, but the treasure fleet's silver shipments and the number of Spanish-owned merchant ships operating in the region declined. Additional problems came from shortage of food supplies because of the lack of people to work farms. The number of European-born Spaniards in the New World or Spaniards of pure blood who had been born in New Spain, known as peninsulares and creoles, respectively, in the Spanish caste system, totaled no more than 250,000 people in 1600.

At the same time, England and France were powers on the rise in 17th-century Europe as they mastered their own internal religious schisms between Catholic and Protestant and the resulting societal peace allowed their economies to rapidly expand. England especially began to turn its people's maritime skills into the basis of commercial prosperity. English and French kings of the early 17th century—James I (r. 1603–1625) and Henry IV (r. 1598–1610), respectively, each sought more peaceful relations with Habsburg Spain in an attempt to decrease the financial costs of the ongoing wars. Although the onset of peace in 1604 reduced the opportunities for both piracy and privateering against Spain's colonies, neither monarch discouraged his nation from trying to plant new colonies in the New World and break the Spanish monopoly on the Western Hemisphere. The reputed riches, pleasant climate and the general emptiness of the Americas all beckoned to those eager to make their fortunes and a large assortment of Frenchmen and Englishmen began new colonial ventures during the early 17th century, both in North America, which lay basically empty of European settlement north of Mexico, and in the Caribbean, where Spain remained the dominant power until late in the century.

As for the Dutch Netherlands, after decades of rebellion against Spain fueled by both Dutch nationalism and their staunch Protestantism, independence had been gained in all but name (and that too would eventually come with the Treaty of Westphalia in 1648). The Netherlands had become Europe's economic powerhouse. With new, innovative ship designs like the fluyt (a cargo vessel able to be operated with a small crew and enter relatively inaccessible ports) rolling out of the ship yards in Amsterdam and Rotterdam, new capitalist economic arrangements like the joint-stock company taking root and the military reprieve provided by the Twelve Year Truce with the Spanish (1609–1621), Dutch commercial interests were expanding explosively across the globe, but particularly in the New World and East Asia. However, in the early 17th century, the most powerful Dutch companies, like the Dutch East India Company, were most interested in developing operations in the East Indies (Indonesia) and Japan, and left the West Indies to smaller, more independent Dutch operators.

Spanish ports

In the early 17th century, the Spanish colonies of Cartagena, Havana, Santiago de Cuba, San Juan, Porto Bello, Panama City, and Santo Domingo were among the most important settlements of the Spanish West Indies. Each possessed a large population and a self-sustaining economy, and was well-protected by Spanish defenders. These Spanish settlements were generally unwilling to deal with traders from the other European states because of the strict enforcement of Spain's mercantilist laws pursued by the large Spanish garrisons. In these cities European manufactured goods could command premium prices for sale to the colonists, while the trade goods of the New World—tobacco, cocoa and other raw materials, were shipped back to Europe.

By 1600, Porto Bello had replaced Nombre de Dios (where Sir Francis Drake had first attacked a Spanish settlement) as the Isthmus of Panama's Caribbean port for the Spanish Silver Train and the annual treasure fleet. Veracruz, the only port city open to trans-Atlantic trade in New Spain, continued to serve the vast interior of New Spain as its window on the Caribbean. By the 17th century, the majority of the towns along the Spanish Main and in Central America had become self-sustaining. The smaller towns of the Main grew tobacco and also welcomed foreign smugglers who avoided the Spanish mercantilist laws. The underpopulated inland regions of Hispaniola and Venezuela were another area where tobacco smugglers in particular were welcome to ply their trade.

The Spanish-ruled island of Trinidad was already a wide-open port open to the ships and seamen of every nation in the region at the start of the 17th century, and was a particular favorite for smugglers who dealt in tobacco and European manufactured goods. Local Caribbean smugglers sold their tobacco or sugar for decent prices and then bought manufactured goods from the trans-Atlantic traders in large quantities to be dispersed among the colonists of the West Indies and the Spanish Main who were eager for a little touch of home. The Spanish governor of Trinidad, who both lacked strong harbor fortifications and possessed only a laughably small garrison of Spanish troops, could do little but take lucrative bribes from English, French and Dutch smugglers and look the other way—or risk being overthrown and replaced by his own people with a more pliable administrator.

Other ports

The English had established an early colony known as Virginia in 1607 and one on the island of Barbados in the West Indies in 1625, although this small settlement's people faced considerable dangers from the local Carib Indians (believed to be cannibals) for some time after its founding. The two early colonies needed regular imports from England, sometimes of food but primarily of woollen textiles. The main early exports back to England included sugar, tobacco, and tropical food. No large tobacco plantations or even truly organized defenses were established by the English on its Caribbean settlements at first and it would take time for England to realize just how valuable its possessions in the Caribbean could prove to be. Eventually, African slaves would be purchased through the Atlantic slave trade. They would work the colonies and fuel Europe's tobacco, rice and sugar supply; by 1698 England had the largest slave exports with the most efficiency in their labor in relation to any other European imperial power. Barbados, the first truly successful English colony in the West Indies, grew fast as the 17th century wore on and by 1698 Jamaica would be England's biggest colony to employ slave labor.[8] Increasingly, English ships chose to use it as their primary home port in the Caribbean. Like Trinidad, merchants in the trans-Atlantic trade who based themselves on Barbados always paid good money for tobacco and sugar. Both of these commodities remained the key cash crops of this period and fueled the growth of the American Southern Colonies as well as their counterparts in the Caribbean.

After the destruction of Fort Caroline by the Spanish, the French made no further colonization attempts in the Caribbean for several decades as France was convulsed by its own Catholic-Protestant religious divide during the late 16th century Wars of Religion. However, old French privateering anchorages with small "tent camp" towns could be found during the early 17th century in the Bahamas. These settlements provided little more than a place for ships and their crews to take on some fresh water and food and perhaps have a dalliance with the local camp followers, all of which would have been quite expensive.

From 1630 to 1654, Dutch merchants had a port in Brazil known as Recife. It was initially founded by the Portuguese in 1548.[9] The Dutch had decided in 1630 to invade several sugar producing cities in Portuguese-controlled Brazil, including Salvador and Natal. From 1630 to 1654, they took control of Recife and Olinda, making Recife the new capital of the territory of Dutch Brazil, renaming the city Mauritsstad. During this period, Mauritsstad became one of the most cosmopolitan cities of the world. Unlike the Portuguese, the Dutch did not prohibit Judaism. The first Jewish community and the first synagogue in the Americas – Kahal Zur Israel Synagogue – was founded in the city.

The inhabitants fought on their own to expel the Dutch in 1654, being helped by the involvement of the Dutch in the First Anglo-Dutch War. This was known as the Insurreição Pernambucana (Pernambucan Insurrection). Most of the Jews fled to Amsterdam; others fled to North America, starting the first Jewish community of New Amsterdam (now known as New York City). The Dutch spent most of their time trading in smuggled goods with the smaller Spanish colonies. Trinidad was the unofficial home port for Dutch traders and privateers in the New World early in the 17th century before they established their own colonies in the region in the 1620s and 1630s. As usual, Trinidad's ineffective Spanish governor was helpless to stop the Dutch from using his port and instead he usually accepted their lucrative bribes.

European struggle

The first third of the 17th century in the Caribbean was defined by the outbreak of the savage and destructive Thirty Years' War in Europe (1618–1648), which represented both the culmination of the Protestant-Catholic conflict of the Reformation and the final showdown between Habsburg Spain and Bourbon France. The war was mostly fought in Germany, where one-third to one-half of the population would eventually be lost to the strains of the conflict, but it had some effect in the New World as well. The Spanish presence in the Caribbean began to decline at a faster rate, becoming more dependent on African slave labor. The Spanish military presence in the New World also declined as Madrid shifted more of its resources to the Old World in the Habsburgs' apocalyptic fight with almost every Protestant state in Europe. This need for Spanish resources in Europe accelerated the decay of the Spanish Empire in the Americas. The settlements of the Spanish Main and the Spanish West Indies became financially weaker and were garrisoned with a much smaller number of troops as their home countries were more consumed with happenings back in Europe. The Spanish Empire's economy remained stagnant and the Spanish colonies' plantations, ranches and mines became totally dependent upon slave labor imported from West Africa. With Spain no longer able to maintain its military control effectively over the Caribbean, the other Western European states finally began to move in and set up permanent settlements of their own, ending the Spanish monopoly over the control of the New World.

Even as the Dutch Netherlands was forced to renew its struggle against Spain for independence as part of the Thirty Years' War (the entire rebellion against the Spanish Habsburgs was called the Eighty Years War in the Low Countries), the Dutch Republic had become the world's leader in mercantile shipping and commercial capitalism, and Dutch companies finally turned their attention to the West Indies in the 17th century. The renewed war with Spain with the end of the truce offered many opportunities for the successful Dutch joint-stock companies to finance military expeditions against the Spanish Empire. The old English and French privateering anchorages from the 16th century in the Caribbean now swarmed anew with Dutch warships.

In England, a new round of colonial ventures in the New World was fueled by declining economic opportunities at home and growing religious intolerance for more radical Protestants (like the Puritans) who rejected the compromise Protestant theology of the established Church of England. After the demise of the Saint Lucia and Grenada colonies soon after their establishment, and the near-extinction of the English settlement of Jamestown in Virginia, new and stronger colonies were established by the English in the first half of the 17th century, at Plymouth, Boston, Barbados, the West Indian islands of Saint Kitts and Nevis and Providence Island. These colonies would all persevere to become centers of English civilization in the New World.

For France, now ruled by the Bourbon King Louis XIII (r. 1610–1642) and his able minister Cardinal Richelieu, religious civil war had been reignited between French Catholics and Protestants (called Huguenots). Throughout the 1620s, Huguenots fled France and founded colonies in the New World much like their English counterparts. Then, in 1636, to decrease the power of the Habsburg dynasty who ruled Spain and the Holy Roman Empire on France's eastern border, France entered the cataclysm in Germany—on the Protestants' side. The Franco-Spanish War continued until the 1659 Treaty of the Pyrenees.

Colonial disputes
 
Central America and Caribbean sovereignty in 1700

Many of the cities on the Spanish Main in the first third of the 17th century were self-sustaining but few had yet achieved any prosperity. The more backward settlements in Jamaica and Hispaniola were primarily places for ships to take on food and fresh water. Spanish Trinidad remained a popular smuggling port where European goods were plentiful and fairly cheap, and good prices were paid by its European merchants for tobacco.

The English colonies on Saint Kitts and Nevis, founded in 1623, would prove to become wealthy sugar-growing settlements in time. Another new English venture, the Providence Island colony on what is now Providencia Island in the Mosquito Coast of Nicaragua, deep in the heart of the Spanish Empire, had become the premier base for English privateers and other pirates raiding the Spanish Main.

On the shared Anglo-French island of Saint Christophe (called "Saint Kitts" by the English) the French had the upper hand. The French settlers on Saint Christophe were mostly Catholics, while the unsanctioned but growing French colonial presence in northwest Hispaniola (the future nation of Haiti) was largely made up of French Protestants who had settled there without Spain's permission to escape Catholic persecution back home. France cared little what happened to the troublesome Huguenots, but the colonization of western Hispaniola allowed the French to both rid themselves of their religious minority and strike a blow against Spain—an excellent bargain, from the French Crown's point of view. The ambitious Huguenots had also claimed the island of Tortuga off the northwest coast of Hispaniola and had established the settlement of Petit-Goâve on the island itself. Tortuga in particular was to become a pirate and privateer haven and was beloved of smugglers of all nationalities—after all, even the creation of the settlement had been illegal.

Dutch colonies in the Caribbean remained rare until the second third of the 17th century. Along with the traditional privateering anchorages in the Bahamas and Florida, the Dutch West India Company settled a "factory" (commercial town) at New Amsterdam on the North American mainland in 1626 and at Curaçao in 1634, an island positioned right in the center of the Caribbean off the northern coast of Venezuela that was perfectly positioned to become a major maritime crossroads.

Seventeenth century crisis and colonial repercussions

 
The French raid on Cartagena took place on 6 May 1697, as part of the War of the Grand Alliance

The mid-17th century in the Caribbean was again shaped by events in far-off Europe. For the Dutch Netherlands, France, Spain and the Holy Roman Empire, the Thirty Years War being fought in Germany, the last great religious war in Europe, had degenerated into an outbreak of famine, plague and starvation that managed to kill off one-third to one-half of the population of Germany. England, having avoided any entanglement in the European mainland's wars, had fallen victim to its own ruinous civil war that resulted in the short but brutal Puritan military dictatorship (1649–1660) of the Lord Protector Oliver Cromwell and his Roundhead armies. Of all the European Great Powers, Spain was in the worst shape economically and militarily as the Thirty Years War concluded in 1648. Economic conditions had become so poor for the Spanish by the middle of the 17th century that a major rebellion began against the bankrupt and ineffective Habsburg government of King Philip IV (r. 1625–1665) that was eventually put down only with bloody reprisals by the Spanish Crown. This did not make Philip IV more popular.

But disasters in the Old World bred opportunities in the New World. The Spanish Empire's colonies were badly neglected from the middle of the 17th century because of Spain's many woes. Freebooters and privateers, experienced after decades of European warfare, pillaged and plundered the almost defenseless Spanish settlements with ease and with little interference from the European governments back home who were too worried about their own problems to turn much attention to their New World colonies. The non-Spanish colonies were growing and expanding across the Caribbean, fueled by a great increase in immigration as people fled from the chaos and lack of economic opportunity in Europe. While most of these new immigrants settled into the West Indies' expanding plantation economy, others took to the life of the buccaneer. Meanwhile, the Dutch, at last independent of Spain when the 1648 Treaty of Westphalia ended their own Eighty Years War (1568–1648) with the Habsburgs, made a fortune carrying the European trade goods needed by these new colonies. Peaceful trading was not as profitable as privateering, but it was a safer business.

By the later half of the 17th century, Barbados had become the unofficial capital of the English West Indies before this position was claimed by Jamaica later in the century. Barbados was a merchant's dream port in this period. European goods were freely available, the island's sugar crop sold for premium prices, and the island's English governor rarely sought to enforce any type of mercantilist regulations. The English colonies at Saint Kitts and Nevis were economically strong and now well-populated as the demand for sugar in Europe increasingly drove their plantation-based economies. The English had also expanded their dominion in the Caribbean and settled several new islands, including Bermuda in 1612, Antigua and Montserrat in 1632, and Eleuthera in the Bahamas in 1648, though these settlements began like all the others as relatively tiny communities that were not economically self-sufficient.

The French also founded major new colonies on the sugar-growing islands of Guadeloupe in 1634 and Martinique in 1635 in the Lesser Antilles. However, the heart of French activity in the Caribbean in the 17th century remained Tortuga, the fortified island haven off the coast of Hispaniola for privateers, buccaneers and outright pirates. The main French colony on the rest of Hispaniola remained the settlement of Petit-Goâve, which was the French toehold that would develop into the modern state of Haiti. French privateers still used the tent city anchorages in the Florida Keys to plunder the Spaniards' shipping in the Straits of Florida, as well as to raid the shipping that plied the sealanes off the northern coast of Cuba.

For the Dutch in the 17th century, the Caribbean island of Curaçao was the equivalent of England's port at Barbados. This large, rich, well-defended free port, open to the ships of all the European states, offered good prices for tobacco, sugar and cocoa that were re-exported to Europe and also sold large quantities of manufactured goods in return to the colonists of every nation in the New World. A second Dutch-controlled free port had also developed on the island of Sint Eustatius which was settled in 1636. The constant back-and-forth warfare between the Dutch and the English for possession of it in the 1660s later damaged the island's economy and desirability as a port. The Dutch also had set up a settlement on the island of Saint Martin which became another haven for Dutch sugar planters and their African slave labor. In 1648, the Dutch agreed to divide the prosperous island in half with the French.

Golden Age of Piracy, 1660–1726

 
"Haunts of the 'Brethren of the Coast'", a map of the time reproduced in "Buccaneers and Pirates of Our Coasts" (1897)

The late 17th and early 18th centuries (particularly between the years 1706 to 1726) are often considered the "Golden Age of Piracy" in the Caribbean, and pirate ports experienced rapid growth in the areas in and surrounding the Atlantic and Indian Oceans. Furthermore, during this time period there were approximately 2400 men that were currently active pirates.[10] The military power of the Spanish Empire in the New World started to decline when King Philip IV of Spain was succeeded by King Charles II (r. 1665–1700), who in 1665 became the last Habsburg king of Spain at the age of four. While Spanish America in the late 17th century had little military protection as Spain entered a phase of decline as a Great Power, it also suffered less from the Spanish Crown's mercantilist policies with its economy. This lack of interference, combined with a surge in output from the silver mines due to increased availability of slave labor (the demand for sugar increased the number of slaves brought to the Caribbean) began a resurgence in the fortunes of Spanish America.

England, France and the Dutch Netherlands had all become New World colonial powerhouses in their own right by 1660. Worried by the Dutch Republic's intense commercial success since the signing of the Treaty of Westphalia, England launched a trade war with the Dutch. The English Parliament passed the first of its own mercantilist Navigation Acts (1651) and the Staple Act (1663) that required that English colonial goods be carried only in English ships and legislated limits on trade between the English colonies and foreigners. These laws were aimed at ruining the Dutch merchants whose livelihoods depended on free trade. This trade war would lead to three outright Anglo-Dutch Wars over the course of the next twenty-five years. Meanwhile, King Louis XIV of France (r. 1642–1715) had finally assumed his majority with the death of his regent mother Queen Anne of Austria's chief minister, Cardinal Mazarin, in 1661. The "Sun King's" aggressive foreign policy was aimed at expanding France's eastern border with the Holy Roman Empire and led to constant warfare (Franco-Dutch War and Nine Years' War) against shifting alliances that included England, the Dutch Republic, the various German states and Spain. In short, Europe was consumed in the final decades of the 17th century by nearly constant dynastic intrigue and warfare—an opportune time for pirates and privateers to engage in their bloody trade.

 
French pirate François l'Olonnais was nicknamed Flail of the Spaniards and had a reputation for brutality – offering no quarter to Spanish prisoners.

In the Caribbean, this political environment created many new threats for colonial governors. The sugar island of Sint Eustatius changed ownership ten times between 1664 and 1674 as the English and Dutch dueled for supremacy there. Consumed with the various wars in Europe, the mother countries provided few military reinforcements to their colonies, so the governors of the Caribbean increasingly made use of buccaneers as mercenaries and privateers to protect their territories or carry the fight to their country's enemies. Perhaps unsurprisingly, these undisciplined and greedy dogs of war often proved difficult for their sponsors to control.

By the late 17th century, the great Spanish towns of the Caribbean had begun to prosper and Spain also began to make a slow, fitful recovery, but remained poorly defended militarily because of Spain's problems and so were sometimes easy prey for pirates and privateers. The English presence continued to expand in the Caribbean as England itself was rising toward great power status in Europe. Captured from Spain in 1655, the island of Jamaica had been taken over by England and its chief settlement of Port Royal had become a new English buccaneer haven in the midst of the Spanish Empire. Jamaica was slowly transformed, along with Saint Kitts, into the heart of the English presence in the Caribbean. At the same time the French Lesser Antilles colonies of Guadeloupe and Martinique remained the main centers of French power in the Caribbean, as well as among the richest French possessions because of their increasingly profitable sugar plantations. The French also maintained privateering strongholds around western Hispaniola, at their traditional pirate port of Tortuga, and their Hispaniolan capital of Petit-Goâve. The French further expanded their settlements on the western half of Hispaniola and founded Léogâne and Port-de-Paix, even as sugar plantations became the primary industry for the French colonies of the Caribbean.

At the start of the 18th century, Europe remained riven by warfare and constant diplomatic intrigue. France was still the dominant power but now had to contend with a new rival, England (Great Britain after 1707) which emerged as a great power at sea and land during the War of the Spanish Succession. But the depredations of the pirates and buccaneers in the Americas in the latter half of the 17th century and of similar mercenaries in Germany during the Thirty Years War had taught the rulers and military leaders of Europe that those who fought for profit rather than for King and Country could often ruin the local economy of the region they plundered, in this case the entire Caribbean. At the same time, the constant warfare had led the Great Powers to develop larger standing armies and bigger navies to meet the demands of global colonial warfare. By 1700, the European states had enough troops and ships at their disposal to begin better protecting the important colonies in the West Indies and in the Americas without relying on the aid of privateers. This spelled the doom of privateering and the easy (and nicely legal) life it provided for the buccaneer. Although Spain remained a weak power for the rest of the colonial period, pirates in large numbers generally disappeared after 1730, chased from the seas by a new British Royal Navy squadron based at Port Royal, Jamaica and a smaller group of Spanish privateers sailing from the Spanish Main known as the Costa Garda (Coast Guard in English). With regular military forces now on-station in the West Indies, letters of marque were harder and harder to obtain.

Economically, the late 17th century and the early 18th century was a time of growing wealth and trade for all the nations who controlled territory in the Caribbean. Although some piracy would always remain until the mid-18th century, the path to wealth in the Caribbean in the future lay through peaceful trade, the growing of tobacco, rice and sugar and smuggling to avoid the British Navigation Acts and Spanish mercantilist laws. By the 18th century the Bahamas had become the new colonial frontier for the British. The Republic of Pirates at the port of Nassau became one of the last pirate havens. A small British colony had even sprung up in former Spanish territory at Belize in Honduras that had been founded by an English pirate in 1638. The French colonial empire in the Caribbean had not grown substantially by the start of the 18th century. The sugar islands of Guadaloupe and Martinique remained the twin economic capitals of the French Lesser Antilles, and were now equal in population and prosperity to the largest of the English's Caribbean colonies. Tortuga had begun to decline in importance, but France's Hispaniolan settlements were becoming major importers of African slaves as French sugar plantations spread across the western coast of that island, forming the nucleus of the modern nation of Haiti.

End of an era

The decline of piracy in the Caribbean paralleled the decline of the use of mercenaries and the rise of national armies in Europe. Following the end of the Thirty Years' War the direct power of the state in Europe expanded. Armies were systematized and brought under direct state control; the Western European states' navies were expanded and their mission was extended to cover combating piracy. The elimination of piracy from European waters expanded to the Caribbean beginning as early as 1600 with the expansion of standing Royal Naval vessels in the Caribbean, numbering 124 by 1718. Other colonial powers soon followed suit and by the beginning of the nineteenth century, France, Spain, and the United States had all stationed ships in the Caribbean.[11][12]

Several European governments passed measures to attempt to combat piracy; in 1717, the Parliament of Great Britain passed the 1717 Transportation Act, which established a regulated, bonded system to transport criminals to Britain's colonies in North America as indentured servants as a punishment for those convicted or attainted in England and Wales. Section seven of the act specifically concerned the suppression of piracy, affirming capital punishment for being found guilty for the crime of being a pirate. This act was in line with wider European policies regarding the suppression of piracy.[13][14]

Despite the increasing crackdowns against Caribbean pirates, piracy in the region saw a brief resurgence between the end of the War of the Spanish Succession in 1713 and around 1720, as many unemployed seafarers took to piracy as a way to make ends meet when a surplus of sailors after the war led to a decline in wages and working conditions. At the same time, one of the terms of the Treaty of Utrecht that ended the war gave to Great Britain's South Sea Company a thirty-year asiento, or contract, to furnish African slaves to the Spanish colonies, providing British merchants and smugglers potential inroads into the traditionally closed Spanish markets in America and leading to an economic revival for the whole region. This revived Caribbean trade provided rich new pickings for a new wave of piracy. Also contributing to the increase of Caribbean piracy at this time was Spain's breakup of the British logwood settlement at Campeche and the attractions of a freshly sunken Spanish treasure fleet carrying silver off the southern Bahamas in 1715.[citation needed]

This last large resurgence of piracy saw a change in attitude of European colonial powers towards pirates. It had once been seen as a somewhat minor offense, only punishable if suspects and evidence were taken back to Europe for formal proceedings. Now, the British Parliament set the system of courts of Vice-Admiralty, appointing seven commissioners in the colonies to carry out the legal proceedings. These commissioners were chosen from naval and colonial officers who already contained a certain amount of bias towards the local pirates, instead of civilian judges. Pirates were given no representation in the new courts and were, therefore, often sentenced to hang. Between 1716 and 1726 approximately 400 to 600 pirates were executed.[15] Another major attitude change was the policy that if one's ship was attacked by pirates, then one must fight back and attempt to resist to the capture of their ship lest they receive six months imprisonment.[11]

With royal attitudes growing so harsh towards the pirates in the Caribbean, many fled to areas of the world where piracy may still be a profitable trade. Black Bart, Bartholomew Roberts, perhaps the most successful pirate that had sailed in the Caribbean, eventually returned to Africa in 1722.[16] Other, less successful pirates from the golden age in the Caribbean attempted to flee North to the Americas. Stede Bonnet, an accomplice of Blackbeard, supposedly began to plunder ships along the Atlantic Coast, but was captured along the South Carolina coast in 1718.[17]

 
Jean Lafitte, New Orleans' legendary pirate

This early 18th century resurgence of piracy lasted only until the presence of European navies and coast guards in the Caribbean were enlarged to deal with the threat. Also crucial to the end of this era of piracy was the loss of the pirates' last Caribbean safe haven at Nassau. The famous pirates of the early 18th century were a completely illegal remnant of a golden buccaneering age, and their choices were limited to quick retirement or eventual capture. Contrast this with the earlier example of Welshman Henry Morgan, who for his privateering efforts was knighted by the English Crown and appointed the lieutenant-governor of Jamaica.[10]

In the early 19th century, piracy along the East and Gulf Coasts of North America as well as in the Caribbean increased again. Jean Lafitte was a pirate/privateer operating in the Caribbean and in American waters from his havens in Texas and Louisiana during the 1810s. But the records of the US Navy indicate that hundreds of pirate attacks occurred in American and Caribbean waters between the years of 1820 and 1835. The Latin American Wars of Independence led to widespread use of privateers both by Spain and by the revolutionary governments of Mexico, Colombia, and other newly independent Latin American countries. These privateers were rarely scrupulous about adhering to the terms of their letters of marque even during the Wars of Independence, and continued to plague the Caribbean as outright pirates long after those conflicts ended.

About the time of the Mexican–American War in 1846, the United States Navy had grown strong and numerous enough to eliminate the pirate threat in the West Indies. By the 1830s, ships had begun to convert to steam propulsion, so the Age of Sail and the classical idea of pirates in the Caribbean ended. Privateering, similar to piracy, continued as an asset in war for a few more decades and proved to be of some importance during the naval campaigns of the American Civil War.

Privateering would remain a tool of European states, and even of the newborn United States, until the mid-19th century's Declaration of Paris. But letters of marque were given out much more sparingly by governments and were terminated as soon as conflicts ended. The idea of "no peace beyond the Line" was a relic that had no meaning by the more settled late 18th and early 19th centuries.

Rules of piracy

Aboard a pirate vessel things were fairly democratic and there were "codes of conduct" that reflect modern laws. Some of these rules consisted of a dress code, no women,[18] and some ships had no smoking. The rules, the punishment for breaking them, and even the staying arrangements would be decided among everyone going on the ship before departure, which was a very abstract process compared to the strict rules and procedures onboard European warships and merchantmen. In further contrast to European colonial society in the Americas, on board a pirate vessel racial divisions were usually unknown and in some instances pirates of African descent served as ships' Captains.[19] Another activity that had to be engaged in before the ship left the dock was swearing an oath to not betray anyone in the entire crew, and to sign what was known as the ship's Article,[18] which would determine the percentage of profit each crew member would receive.[2]

Furthermore, some of the ways for deciding disagreements among pirate crew members were fighting till first blood or in more serious cases abandoning an individual on an uninhabited island, whipping them 39 times, or even executing them by firearm. Despite popular belief, however, the punishment of "walking the plank" was never used to settle disputes among pirates. There was, however, a division of power on a pirate crew between the captain, the quartermaster, the governing council for the vessel, and the regular crewmen;[2] but in battle the pirate captain always retained all power and ultimate decision-making authority to ensure an orderly chain of command.[19] When it came time to split the captured wealth into shares, profits were normally given to the person in each rank as follows: Captain (5–6 shares), individuals with a senior position like the quartermaster (2 shares), crewmen (1 share), and individuals in a junior position (1/2 a share).[2]

Early and Golden Age pirates

Jean Fleury

Born in Vatteville and financed by shipowner Jean Ango, French privateer Jean Fleury was Spain's nemesis. In 1522, he captured seven Spanish vessels. One year later most of Montezuma's Aztec treasure fell into his hands after he captured two of the three galleons in which Cortez shipped the fabled booty back to Spain. He was captured in 1527 and executed by order of Holy Roman Emperor Charles V. He had a very well equipped ship.

François Le Clerc

François Le Clerc also nicknamed "Jambe de bois" ("Pie de Palo", "wooden leg") was a formidable privateer, ennobled by Henri II in 1551. In 1552, Le Clerc ransacked Porto Santo. One year later, he mustered one thousand men and caused havoc in the Caribbean with his lieutenants Jacques de Sores and Robert Blondel. They pillaged and burned down the seaport of Santo Domingo, and ransacked Las Palmas in the Canary Islands on his way back to France. He led another expedition in 1554 and plundered Santiago de Cuba.

Blackbeard

 
Blackbeard's severed head hanging from Maynard's bow

He was born about 1680 in England as Edward Thatch, Teach, or Drummond, and operated off the east coast of North America, particularly pirating in the Bahamas[1] and had a base in North Carolina[10] in the period of 1714–1718. Noted as much for his outlandish appearance as for his piratical success, in combat Blackbeard placed burning slow-match (a type of slow-burning fuse used to set off cannon) under his hat; with his face wreathed in fire and smoke, his victims claimed he resembled a fiendish apparition from Hell. Blackbeard's ship was the two-hundred-ton, forty-gun frigate he named Queen Anne's Revenge.

Blackbeard met his end at the hands of a British Royal Navy squadron[10] specifically sent out to capture him. After an extremely bloody boarding action, the British commanding officer of the squadron, Lieutenant Robert Maynard, killed him with the help of his crew. According to legend, Blackbeard suffered a total of five bullet wounds and twenty slashes with a cutlass before he finally died off the coast of Ocracoke, North Carolina.[20]

Henry Morgan

Henry Morgan, a Welshman, was one of the most destructive pirate captains of the 17th century. Although Morgan always considered himself a privateer rather than a pirate, several of his attacks had no real legal justification and are considered piracy. Recently found off the coast of what is now known as the nation of Haiti, was one of Captain Morgan's "30-cannon oak ships," which was thought to have aided the buccaneer in his ventures.[21] Another Caribbean area that was known for the headquarters of Captain Morgan was Port Royal, Jamaica.[1] A bold, ruthless and daring man, Morgan fought England's enemies for thirty years, and became a very wealthy man in the course of his adventures. Morgan's most famous exploit came in late 1670 when he led 1700 buccaneers up the pestilential Chagres River and then through the Central American jungle to attack and capture the "impregnable" city of Panama. Morgan's men burnt the city to the ground, and the inhabitants were either killed or forced to flee. Although the burning of Panama City did not mean any great financial gain for Morgan, it was a deep blow to Spanish power and pride in the Caribbean and Morgan became the hero of the hour in England. At the height of his career, Morgan had been made a titled nobleman by the English Crown and lived on an enormous sugar plantation in Jamaica, as lieutenant governor.[10] Morgan died in his bed, rich and respected—something rarely achieved by pirates in his day or any other.

Bartholomew Roberts

Bartholomew Roberts or Black Bart was successful in sinking, or capturing and pillaging some 400 ships.[10] and like most pirate captains of the time he looked fancy doing it.[18] He started his freebooting career in the Gulf of Guinea in February 1719 when Howell Davis' pirates captured his ship and he proceeded to join them. Rising to captain, he quickly came to the Caribbean and plagued the area until 1722. He commanded a number of large, powerfully armed ships, all of which he named Fortune, Good Fortune, or Royal Fortune. Aboard his vessels the political atmosphere was a form of democracy that depended on participation; in which was a rule that everyone aboard his ship had to vote on issues that arose.[2] Efforts by the governors of Barbados and Martinique to capture him only provoked his anger; when he found the governor of Martinique aboard a newly captured vessel, Roberts hanged the man from a yardarm. Roberts returned to Africa in February 1722, where he met his death in a naval battle, whereby his crew was captured.

Amaro Pargo

Amaro Pargo in his role as a privateer, he dominated the route between Cádiz and the Caribbean, on several occasions attacking ships belonging to enemies of the Spanish Crown (mainly England and Holland),[22] earning recognition in his time as a hero and coming to be regarded as "the Spanish equivalent of Francis Drake".[23][24][25] Because of his service to the Spanish Crown and country, he was declared a Caballero hidalgo in 1725 and obtained certification of nobility and royal arms in 1727.[26] Amaro Pargo lived for ten years in the Caribbean, specifically on the island of Cuba where he had descendants. Due to the trade and looting of him he became a very wealthy person in his time.

Stede Bonnet

 
The hanging of Stede Bonnet in Charleston, 1718

Probably the least qualified pirate captain ever to sail the Caribbean, Bonnet was a sugar planter who knew nothing about sailing. He started his piracies in 1717 by buying an armed sloop on Barbados and recruiting a pirate crew for wages, possibly to escape from his wife. He lost his command to Blackbeard and sailed with him as his associate.[10] Although Bonnet briefly regained his captaincy, he was captured in 1718 by a privateering vessel that was employed by South Carolina.[10]

Charles Vane

Charles Vane, like many early 18th-century pirates, operated out of Nassau in the Bahamas. He was the only pirate captain to resist Woodes Rogers when Rogers asserted his governorship over Nassau in 1718, attacking Rogers' squadron with a fire ship and shooting his way out of the harbor rather than accept the new governor's royal pardon. Vane's quartermaster was Calico Jack Rackham, who deposed Vane from the captaincy. Vane started a new pirate crew, but he was captured and hanged in Jamaica in 1721.

Edward Low

Edward – or Ned – Low was notorious as one of the most brutal and vicious pirates. Originally from London, he started as a lieutenant to George Lowther, before striking out on his own. His career as a pirate lasted just three years, during which he captured over 100 ships, and he and his crew murdered, tortured and maimed hundreds of people. After his own crew mutinied in 1724 when Low murdered a sleeping subordinate, he was rescued by a French vessel who hanged him on Martinique island.

Anne Bonny and Mary Read

 
Anne Bonny and Mary Read, convicted of piracy on 28 November 1720

Anne Bonny and Mary Read were infamous female pirates of the 18th century;[27] both spent their brief sea-roving careers under the command of Calico Jack Rackham. They were also known to have been associated with other well known pirates: Blackbeard, William Kidd, Bartholomew Sharp, and Bartholomew Roberts.[2] They are noted chiefly for their sex, highly unusual for pirates, which helped to sensationalize their 1720 October trial in Jamaica. They gained further notoriety for their ruthlessness—they are known to have spoken in favor of murdering witnesses in the crew's counsels—and for fighting the intruders of Rackham's vessel while he and his crew members were drunk and hiding under the deck.[27] The capstone to their legend is that all the crew including Rackham, Anne and Mary were tried in a Spanish town close to Port Royal.[1] Rackham and his crew were hanged, but when the judge sentenced Anne and Mary to death he asked if they had anything to say. "Milord, we plead our bellies", meaning they asserted they were pregnant. The judge immediately postponed their death sentence because no English court had the authority to kill an unborn child. Read died in prison of fever before the birth of the child. There is no record of Anne being executed and it was rumored her wealthy father had paid a ransom and took her home; other accounts of what happened to her include that she returned to piracy or became a nun.[27]

Privateers

 
The Spanish Amaro Pargo performed in the Caribbean and lived in Cuba for ten years.

In the Caribbean the use of privateers was especially popular for what amounted to legal and state-ordered piracy.[10] The cost of maintaining a fleet to defend the colonies was beyond national governments of the 16th and 17th centuries. Private vessels would be commissioned into a de facto 'navy' with a letter of marque, paid with a substantial share of whatever they could capture from enemy ships and settlements, the rest going to the crown.[10] These ships would operate independently or as a fleet, and if they were successful the rewards could be great—when Jean Fleury and his men captured Cortes' vessels in 1523, they found an incredible Aztec treasure that they were allowed to keep. Later, when Francis Drake captured the Spanish Silver Train at Nombre de Dios (Panama's Caribbean port at the time) in 1573 his crews were rich for life. This was repeated by Piet Hein in 1628, who made a profit of 12 million guilders for the Dutch West India Company. This substantial profit made privateering something of a regular line of business; wealthy businessmen or nobles would be quite willing to finance this legitimized piracy in return for a share. The sale of captured goods was a boost to colonial economies as well. The main imperial countries operating at this time and in the region were the French, English, Spanish, Dutch, and Portuguese. Privateers from each country were all ordered to attack the other countries' vessels, especially Spain which was a shared enemy among the other powers.[2]

By the seventeenth century piracy and privateering became less-acceptable behaviour, especially as many privateers turned into full-blown pirates so they would not have to give part of the profit they made back to their country of employment. Corruption led to the removal of many officials over the years, including Governor Nicholas Trott and Governor Benjamin Fletcher. One way that governments found and discouraged active pirates and corrupt privateers was through the use of "pirate hunters" who were bribed with all or at least most of the wealth that they would find aboard pirate vessels, along with a set bounty. The most renowned pirate hunter was Captain William Kidd, who hit the peak of his legal career in 1695 but later saw the benefits of illegal piracy and made that his new vocation.[10]

The most well-known privateer corsairs of the eighteenth century in the Spanish colonies were Miguel Enríquez of Puerto Rico and José Campuzano-Polanco of Santo Domingo. Miguel Enríquez was a Puerto Rican mulatto who abandoned his work as a shoemaker to work as a privateer. Such was the success of Enríquez, that he became one of the wealthiest men in the New World.[28] Also highlights the Spanish Amaro Pargo also stands out, who frequently traded in the Caribbean while looting ships of the enemy powers of the Spanish Crown. Amaro Pargo lived for ten years in the Caribbean, specifically on the island of Cuba where he had descendants.[29]

Buccaneers

Pirates involved specifically in the Caribbean were called buccaneers. Roughly speaking, they arrived in the 1630s and remained until the effective end of piracy in the 1730s. The original buccaneers were settlers that were deprived of their land by "Spanish authorities" and eventually were picked up by white settlers.[2] The word "buccaneer" is actually from the French boucaner, meaning "to smoke meat", from the hunters of wild oxen curing meat over an open fire. They transferred the skills which kept them alive into piracy. They operated with the partial support of the non-Spanish colonies and until the 18th century their activities were legal, or partially legal and there were irregular amnesties from all nations. For the most part buccaneers attacked other vessel and ransacked settlements owned by the Spanish.[10]

Traditionally buccaneers had a number of peculiarities. Their crews operated as a democracy: the captain was elected by the crew and they could vote to replace him. The captain had to be a leader and a fighter—in combat he was expected to be fighting with his men, not directing operations from a distance.

Spoils were evenly divided into shares; when the officers had a greater number of shares, it was because they took greater risks or had special skills. Often the crews would sail without wages—"on account"—and the spoils would be built up over a course of months before being divided. There was a strong esprit de corps among pirates. This allowed them to win sea battles: they typically outmanned trade vessels by a large ratio. There was also for some time a social insurance system, guaranteeing money or gold for battle wounds at a worked-out scale.

The romantic notion of pirates burying treasure on isolated islands[2] and wearing gaudy clothes had some basis in fact. Most pirate wealth was accumulated by selling of chandlery items: ropes, sails, and block and tackle stripped from captured ships.

One undemocratic aspect of the buccaneers was that sometimes they would force specialists like carpenters or surgeons to sail with them for some time, though they were released when no longer needed (if they had not volunteered to join by that time). A typical poor man had few other promising career choices at the time apart from joining the pirates. According to reputation, the pirates' egalitarianism led them to liberate slaves when taking over slave ships. However, there are several accounts of pirates selling slaves captured on slave ships, sometimes after they had helped man the pirates' own vessels.

In combat they were considered ferocious and were reputed to be experts with flintlock weapons (invented in 1615), but these were so unreliable that they were not in widespread military use before the 1670s.

Slave pirates

Many slaves, primarily from places in Africa, were being exported to colonies in the Caribbean for slave labour on plantations. Out of the people that were forced into slavery and shipped off to colonies in the years from 1673 to 1798, approximately 9 to 32 percent were children (this number only considers the exports of British slavers).[30] While on the average 12-week journey to the colonies, the new slaves endured ghastly living conditions that included cramped spaces too small to stand up in, hot temperatures, and poor diets. They were ravaged by disease and death. Many of those taken as slaves were victims or prisoners of civil war.[18] Many aspects of being a slave overall increased the allure of the pirating lifestyle. During the 17th and 18th centuries, piracy was at its height and its symbolic interpretation of freedom was well received. This abstract ideal was very appealing to slaves and victims of imperialism. Even though the main European powers did not want slaves to find out about the freedom that piracy offered, "...30 percent of the 5000 or more pirates who were active between 1715 and 1725 were of African heritage."[31] Along with the opportunity of a new life and freedom, the indigenous people of Africa were greeted with equality when they joined pirating communities. Many slaves turned pirate "secured" a position of leadership or prestige on pirating vessels, like that of Captain.[31] The pirate Black Caesar, who served onboard the Queen Anne's Revenge under Blackbeard, was one of the best known slave pirates during the Golden Age of Piracy, being mentioned in the 1724 work A General History of the Pyrates.[32]

Roberto Cofresí—a 19th-century pirate

Roberto Cofresí, better known as "El Pirata Cofresí", became interested in sailing at a young age. By the time he reached adulthood there were some political and economic difficulties in Puerto Rico, which at the time was a colony of Spain. Influenced by this situation he decided to become a pirate in 1818. Cofresí commanded several assaults against cargo vessels focusing on those that were responsible for exporting gold. During this time he focused his attention on boats from the United States and the local Spanish government ignored several of these actions. In early March 1825, Cofresí engaged the USS Grampus and a flotilla of ships led by Capt. John D. Sloat in battle. He eventually abandoned his ship and tried to escape by land before being captured. After being imprisoned he was sent to San Juan, Puerto Rico, where a brief military trial found him guilty and on 29 March 1825, he and other members of his crew were executed by a firing squad. After his death his life was used as inspiration for several stories and myths, which served as the basis for books and other media.[33]

Boysie Singh—a 20th-century pirate

Boysie Singh, usually known as the Raja (the Hindi word for king), or just Boysie, was born on 5 April 1908 on 17 Luis Street, Woodbrook, Port of Spain, Saint George County, Trinidad and Tobago to Bhagrang Singh (a fugitive who immigrated to Trinidad and Tobago from British India) and his wife.[34]

He had a long and successful career as a gangster and gambler before turning to piracy and murder. For almost ten years, from 1947 until 1956 he and his gang terrorized the waters between Trinidad and Tobago and the United States of Venezuela, later on becoming the Fourth Republic of Venezuela. They were responsible for the deaths of approximately 400 people. They would promise to ferry people from Trinidad to Venezuela but en route he would rob his victims at gunpoint, kill them and dump them into the sea.

Boysie was well known to people in Trinidad and Tobago. He had successfully beaten a charge of breaking and entering which nearly resulted in his deportation before he was finally executed after losing his third case – for the murder of his niece. He was held in awe and dread by most of the population and was frequently seen strolling grandly about Port of Spain in the early 1950s wearing bright, stylish clothes. Mothers, nannies, and ajees would warn their children: "Behave yourself, man, or Boysie goyn getchu, allyuh!"[35] Boysie Singh died in Port of Spain by being hanged on 20 August 1957 for the murder of a dancer, presumably his own niece.[34]

Caribbean piracy in the 21st century

Piracy in the Caribbean is still present today, largely confined to small-scale pirating operations in the waters off of Venezuela, Trinidad, Guyana, and Suriname. These pirates are often fishermen who have resorted to piracy due to economic crisis or turf wars between groups of fishers.

Much of the modern-day piracy in the southern Caribbean is a result of the economic upheaval in Venezuela. Venezuelan fishermen, who previously made a living off of catching tuna, shrimp, crab, and octopus, have lost this means of money due to the economic crisis, and are forced to resort to piracy on fishermen off the coasts of Guyana and Trinidad, robbing them and holding them for ransom.[36][37]

Another major source of modern Caribbean piracy stems from turf wars between rival groups of fishermen from Guyana and Suriname. In April 2018, Guyanese nationals Chris Parsram, Rameshwar Roopnarine, Madre Kishore, David Williams, Ramdeo Persaud, Ray Torres, and Ganesh Beeharry were all arrested in Suriname and sentenced to 35 years in prison, for an attack on 20 Surinamese and Guyanese fishermen in which they were thrown overboard; only four made it to shore, with the rest being thrown into the water and presumed either dead or missing.[38] The attack was believed to be in retaliation for the shooting death of their leader a few weeks prior.

Piracy in popular culture

A lot of fiction involving sea pirates and piracy takes place at the Caribbean Sea.

Films

Games

Popular books

Other

Historical studies

  • Peter Gerhard, Pirates of New Spain, 1575–1742. Dover Books 2003. ISBN 978-0486426112
  • Peter Gerhard, Pirates of the Pacific, 1575–1742. University of Nebraska Press 1990 ISBN 978-0803270305
  • Captain Charles Johnson, A General History of the Pyrates.
  • Kritzler, Edward, Jewish Pirates of the Caribbean. Anchor Books 2009. ISBN 978-0-7679-1952-4
  • Kris Lane, foreword by Hugh O'Shaughnessy Blood and Silver: the history of piracy in the Caribbean and Central America, Oxford, Signal (1967) and (1999)

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c d Campo-Flores/ Arian, "Yar, Mate! Swashbuckler Tours!," Newsweek 180, no. 6 (2002): 58.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i Smith, Simon. "Piracy in early British America." History Today 46, no. 5 (May 1996): 29.
  3. ^ Peter Gerhard, Pirates of New Spain, 1575–1742. Dover Books 2003. ISBN 978-0486426112
  4. ^ Peter Gerhard, Pirates of the Pacific, 1575–1742. University of Nebraska Press 1990 ISBN 978-0803270305
  5. ^ Kris Lane, foreword by Hugh O'Shaughnessy Blood and Silver: the history of piracy in the Caribbean and Central America, Oxford, Signal (1967) and (1999)
  6. ^ "(Page 11 of 18) – Unequal War and the Changing Borders of International Society authored by Colombo, Alessandro".
  7. ^ Bartolome de Las Casas, The Devastation of the Indies: A Brief Account (1542)
  8. ^ Morgan, Kenneth. "Symbiosis: Trade and the British Empire." BBC. Accessed 17 February 2011. http://www.bbc.co.uk/history/british/empire_seapower/trade_empire_01.shtml.
  9. ^ "Recife," Columbia Electronic Encyclopedia, 6Th Edition (2011): 1.
  10. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Boot, Max (2009). "Pirates, Then and Now". Foreign Affairs. 88 (4): 94–107.
  11. ^ a b Boot, Max (1 January 2009). "Pirates, Then and Now: How Piracy Was Defeated in the Past and Can Be Again". Foreign Affairs. 88 (4): 94–107. JSTOR 20699624.
  12. ^ . Archived from the original on 15 February 2015. Retrieved 23 April 2015.
  13. ^ Edith M. Ziegler, Harlots, Hussies, and Poor Unfortunate Women: Crime, Transportation, and the Servitude of Female Convicts. Tuscaloosa, AL: University of Alabama Press, 2014.
  14. ^ Coldham, Peter Wilson (2007). Emigrants in Chains. a Social History of the Forced Emigration to the Americas of Felons, Destitute Children, Political and Religious Non-Conformists. Lanham, Md: Genealogical Publishing. ISBN 978-0806317786.
  15. ^ Boot, Max (2009). "Pirates, Then and Now: How Piracy Was Defeated in the Past and Can Be Again". Foreign Affairs. 88 (4): 94–107. JSTOR 20699624.
  16. ^ Defoe, Daniel. A General History of the Pyrates. Minneapolis: Dover Publications, Incorporated, 1999. Print.
  17. ^ Rediker, Marcus. Villains of All Nations: Atlantic Pirates in the Golden Age. Boston: Beacon, 2004. Print.
  18. ^ a b c d "The real Pirates of the Caribbean." USA Today Magazine 137, no. 2764 (January 2009): 42–47.
  19. ^ a b Leeson/ Peter "Democrats of the Caribbean," Atlantic Monthly (10727825) 300, no. 3 (2007): 39.
  20. ^ Moore, David D. (April 2018). "Captain Edward Thatch: A Brief Analysis of the Primary Source Documents Concerning the Notorious Blackbeard". The North Carolina Historical Review. XCV (2): 147–187.
  21. ^ "Pirate Shipwreck," Maclean's 114, no. 30 (2001): 12.
  22. ^ Frers, Ernesto (September 2008). Más Allá Del Legado Pirata. google.es. ISBN 9788479279639. Retrieved 8 May 2016.
  23. ^ Canarias En Hora . Archived from the original on 18 July 2016. Retrieved 8 May 2016. {{cite web}}: Missing or empty |title= (help)
  24. ^ La Opinión de Tenerife (15 December 2013). "Amaro Pargo cobra fama internacional". laopinion.es. Retrieved 8 May 2016.
  25. ^ "Amaro Pargo, una de piratas... – Discover Tenerife". Discover Tenerife. Archived from the original on 17 March 2016. Retrieved 8 May 2016.
  26. ^ "AMARO PARGO: LA TRADICIÓN HISTÓRICA DE UN CORSARIO LAGUNERO (III). Por Carlos García, Del libro "La Ciudad: Relatos Históricos" 1996". lalagunaahora.com. 26 February 2015. Retrieved 8 May 2016.
  27. ^ a b c Highleyman/ Liz. "Who Were Anne Bonny and Mary Read?," Lesbian News 32, no. 11 (2007): 18.
  28. ^ Bracho Palma, Jairo (2005). La defensa marítima en la Capitanía General de Venezuela, 1783–1813. Instituto Nacional de los Espacios Acuáticos e Insulares. p. 87.
  29. ^ De Paz Sánchez, Manuel; García Pulido, Daniel (2015). El corsario de Dios. Documentos sobre Amaro Rodríguez Felipe (1678-1747). Documentos para la Historia de Canarias. Francisco Javier Macías Martín (ed.). Canarias: Archivo Histórico Provincial de Santa Cruz de Tenerife. ISBN 978-84-7947-637-3. Retrieved 8 June 2016.
  30. ^ Teelucksingh, Jerome. "The ‘invisible child’ in British West Indian slavery." Slavery & Abolition 27, no. 2
  31. ^ a b Farley/ Christopher, "The Black faces beneath black flags," New York Amsterdam News, 7 July 2005.
  32. ^ Konstam, Angus (20 April 2007). Blackbeard: America's Most Notorious Pirate. Wiley. p. 271. ISBN 978-0-470-12821-3. Retrieved 22 February 2022.
  33. ^ Luis R. Negrón Hernández, Jr. "Roberto Cofresí: El pirata caborojeño" (in Spanish). Retrieved 25 May 2007.
  34. ^ a b "Boysie Singh 20th Century Pirate of the Caribbean". 7 August 2005.
  35. ^ Derek Bickerton. The Murders of Boysie Singh: Robber, Arsonist, Pirate, Mass-Murderer, Vice and Gambling King of Trinidad. Arthur Barker Limited, London. (1962).
  36. ^ "Trinidad: Fishermen abducted by Venezuelan pirates return home". St. Lucia News Online. 7 February 2019. Retrieved 1 February 2021.
  37. ^ "Venezuelan pirates – the new scourge of the Caribbean". BBC News. 28 January 2019. Retrieved 1 February 2021.
  38. ^ "Guyanese pirates handed heavy jail sentences in suriname". Kaieteur News. 26 November 2019. Retrieved 1 February 2021.

External links

  • 2004 vs. 2007 global piracy summary, The Economist, published 23 April 2008, accessed 2008-04-28.
  • Pirates of the Caribbean, In Fact and Fiction- from BlindKat Publishers
  • (in English and Spanish) "Method of Securing the Ports and Populations of All the Coasts of the Indies", from 1694, examines the security of the Spanish West Indies in relation to piracy.

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For the franchise including the series of films see Pirates of the Caribbean The era of piracy in the Caribbean began in the 1500s and phased out in the 1830s after the navies of the nations of Western Europe and North America with colonies in the Caribbean began combating pirates The period during which pirates were most successful was from the 1660s to 1730s Piracy flourished in the Caribbean because of the existence of pirate seaports such as Port Royal in Jamaica 1 Tortuga in Haiti and Nassau in the Bahamas 2 Piracy in the Caribbean was part of a larger historical phenomenon of piracy as it existed close to major trade and exploration routes in almost all the five oceans 3 4 5 Central America and the Caribbean detailed pdf map Contents 1 Causes 2 History 2 1 Early seventeenth century 1600 1660 2 1 1 Changes in demography 2 1 1 1 Spanish ports 2 1 1 2 Other ports 2 1 2 European struggle 2 1 2 1 Colonial disputes 2 2 Seventeenth century crisis and colonial repercussions 2 3 Golden Age of Piracy 1660 1726 2 4 End of an era 3 Rules of piracy 4 Early and Golden Age pirates 4 1 Jean Fleury 4 2 Francois Le Clerc 4 3 Blackbeard 4 4 Henry Morgan 4 5 Bartholomew Roberts 4 6 Amaro Pargo 4 7 Stede Bonnet 4 8 Charles Vane 4 9 Edward Low 4 10 Anne Bonny and Mary Read 5 Privateers 6 Buccaneers 7 Slave pirates 8 Roberto Cofresi a 19th century pirate 9 Boysie Singh a 20th century pirate 10 Caribbean piracy in the 21st century 11 Piracy in popular culture 11 1 Films 11 2 Games 11 3 Popular books 11 4 Other 12 Historical studies 13 See also 14 References 15 External linksCauses EditThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed January 2014 Learn how and when to remove this template message Main trade routes prey to 16th century piracy Spanish treasure fleets linking the Caribbean to Seville Manila galleons after 1568 white and Portuguese India Armadas after 1498 blue Pirates were often former sailors experienced in naval warfare In the 16th century pirate captains recruited seamen to loot European merchant ships especially the Spanish treasure fleets sailing from the Caribbean to Europe The following quote by an 18th century Welsh captain shows the motivations for piracy In an honest Service there is thin Commons low Wages and hard Labour in this Plenty and Satiety Pleasure and Ease Liberty and Power and who would not balance Creditor on this Side when all the Hazard that is run for it at worst is only a sower Look or two at choaking No a merry Life and a short one shall be my Motto Pirate Captain Bartholomew RobertsPiracy was sometimes given legal status by the colonial powers especially France under King Francis I r 1515 1547 in the hope of weakening Spain and Portugal s mare clausum trade monopolies in the Atlantic and Indian Oceans This officially sanctioned piracy was known as privateering From 1520 to 1560 French privateers were alone in their fight against the Crown of Spain and the vast commerce of the Spanish Empire in the New World but were later joined by the English and Dutch The Caribbean had become an important center of European trade and colonization after Columbus discovery of the New World for Spain in 1492 In the 1494 Treaty of Tordesillas the non European world had been divided between the Spanish and the Portuguese along a north south line 370 leagues west of the Cape Verde Islands This gave Spain control of the Americas a position the Spaniards later reiterated with an equally unenforceable papal bull The Inter caetera On the Spanish Main the key early settlements were Cartagena in present day Colombia Porto Bello and Panama City on the Isthmus of Panama Santiago on the southeastern coast of Cuba and Santo Domingo on the island of Hispaniola In the 16th century the Spanish were mining extremely large quantities of silver from the mines of Zacatecas in New Spain Mexico and Potosi in Bolivia formerly known as Alto Peru The huge Spanish silver shipments from the New World to the Old attracted pirates and French privateers like Francois Leclerc or Jean Fleury both in the Caribbean and across the Atlantic all along the route from the Caribbean to Seville French pirate Jacques de Sores looting and burning Havana in 1555 To combat this constant danger in the 1560s the Spanish adopted a convoy system A treasure fleet or flota would sail annually from Seville and later from Cadiz in Spain carrying passengers troops and European manufactured goods to the Spanish colonies of the New World This cargo though profitable was really just a form of ballast for the fleet as its true purpose was to transport the year s worth of silver to Europe The first stage in the journey was the transport of all that silver from the mines in Bolivia and New Spain in a mule convoy called the Silver Train to a major Spanish port usually on the Isthmus of Panama or Veracruz in New Spain The flota would meet up with the Silver Train offload its cargo of manufactured goods to waiting colonial merchants and then load its holds with the precious cargo of gold and silver in bullion or coin form This made the returning Spanish treasure fleet a tempting target although pirates were more likely to shadow the fleet to attack stragglers than to engage the well armed main vessels The classic route for the treasure fleet in the Caribbean was through the Lesser Antilles to the ports along the Spanish Main on the coast of Central America and New Spain then northwards into the Yucatan Channel to catch the westerly winds back to Europe By the 1560s the Dutch United Provinces of the Netherlands and England both Protestant states were defiantly opposed to Catholic Spain the greatest power of Christendom in the 16th century while the French government was seeking to expand its colonial holdings in the New World now that Spain had proven they could be extremely profitable citation needed It was the French who had established the first non Spanish settlement in the Caribbean when they had founded Fort Caroline near what is now Jacksonville Florida in 1564 although the settlement was soon wiped out by a Spanish attack from the larger colony of Saint Augustine As the Treaty of Tordesillas had proven unenforceable a new concept of lines of amity with the northern bound being the Tropic of Cancer and the eastern bound the Prime Meridian passing through the Canary Islands is said to have been verbally agreed upon by French and Spanish negotiators of the Peace of Cateau Cambresis 6 South and west of these lines respectively no protection could be offered to non Spanish ships no peace beyond the line English Dutch and French pirates and settlers moved into this region even in times of nominal peace with the Spanish The Spanish despite being the most powerful state in Christendom at the time could not afford a sufficient military presence to control such a vast area of ocean or enforce their exclusionary mercantilist trading laws These laws allowed only Spanish merchants to trade with the colonists of the Spanish Empire in the Americas This arrangement provoked constant smuggling against the Spanish trading laws and new attempts at Caribbean colonization in peacetime by England France and the Netherlands Whenever a war was declared in Europe between the Great Powers the result was always widespread piracy and privateering throughout the Caribbean The Iberian Union of Spain and Portugal 1580 1640 The Anglo Spanish War in 1585 1604 was partly due to trade disputes in the New World A focus on extracting mineral and agricultural wealth from the New World rather than building productive self sustaining settlements in its colonies inflation fueled in part by the massive shipments of silver and gold to Western Europe endless rounds of expensive wars in Europe an aristocracy that disdained commercial opportunities and an inefficient system of tolls and tariffs that hampered industry all contributed to Spain s decline during the 17th century However very profitable trade continued between Spain s colonies which continued to expand until the early 19th century Meanwhile in the Caribbean the arrival of European diseases with Columbus had reduced the local Native American populations the native population of New Spain fell as much as 90 from its original numbers in the 16th century 7 This loss of native population led Spain to increasingly rely on African slave labor to run Spanish America s colonies plantations and mines and the trans Atlantic slave trade offered new sources of profit for the many English Dutch and French traders who could violate the Spanish mercantilist laws with impunity But the relative emptiness of the Caribbean also made it an inviting place for England France and the Netherlands to set up colonies of their own especially as gold and silver became less important as commodities to be seized and were replaced by tobacco and sugar as cash crops that could make men very rich As Spain s military might in Europe weakened the Spanish trading laws in the New World were violated with greater frequency by the merchants of other nations The Spanish port on the island of Trinidad off the northern coast of South America permanently settled only in 1592 became a major point of contact between all the nations with a presence in the Caribbean History EditEarly seventeenth century 1600 1660 Edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed December 2007 Learn how and when to remove this template message Changes in demography Edit In the early 17th century expensive fortifications and the size of the colonial garrisons at the major Spanish ports increased to deal with the enlarged presence of Spain s competitors in the Caribbean but the treasure fleet s silver shipments and the number of Spanish owned merchant ships operating in the region declined Additional problems came from shortage of food supplies because of the lack of people to work farms The number of European born Spaniards in the New World or Spaniards of pure blood who had been born in New Spain known as peninsulares and creoles respectively in the Spanish caste system totaled no more than 250 000 people in 1600 At the same time England and France were powers on the rise in 17th century Europe as they mastered their own internal religious schisms between Catholic and Protestant and the resulting societal peace allowed their economies to rapidly expand England especially began to turn its people s maritime skills into the basis of commercial prosperity English and French kings of the early 17th century James I r 1603 1625 and Henry IV r 1598 1610 respectively each sought more peaceful relations with Habsburg Spain in an attempt to decrease the financial costs of the ongoing wars Although the onset of peace in 1604 reduced the opportunities for both piracy and privateering against Spain s colonies neither monarch discouraged his nation from trying to plant new colonies in the New World and break the Spanish monopoly on the Western Hemisphere The reputed riches pleasant climate and the general emptiness of the Americas all beckoned to those eager to make their fortunes and a large assortment of Frenchmen and Englishmen began new colonial ventures during the early 17th century both in North America which lay basically empty of European settlement north of Mexico and in the Caribbean where Spain remained the dominant power until late in the century As for the Dutch Netherlands after decades of rebellion against Spain fueled by both Dutch nationalism and their staunch Protestantism independence had been gained in all but name and that too would eventually come with the Treaty of Westphalia in 1648 The Netherlands had become Europe s economic powerhouse With new innovative ship designs like the fluyt a cargo vessel able to be operated with a small crew and enter relatively inaccessible ports rolling out of the ship yards in Amsterdam and Rotterdam new capitalist economic arrangements like the joint stock company taking root and the military reprieve provided by the Twelve Year Truce with the Spanish 1609 1621 Dutch commercial interests were expanding explosively across the globe but particularly in the New World and East Asia However in the early 17th century the most powerful Dutch companies like the Dutch East India Company were most interested in developing operations in the East Indies Indonesia and Japan and left the West Indies to smaller more independent Dutch operators Spanish ports Edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed February 2015 Learn how and when to remove this template message In the early 17th century the Spanish colonies of Cartagena Havana Santiago de Cuba San Juan Porto Bello Panama City and Santo Domingo were among the most important settlements of the Spanish West Indies Each possessed a large population and a self sustaining economy and was well protected by Spanish defenders These Spanish settlements were generally unwilling to deal with traders from the other European states because of the strict enforcement of Spain s mercantilist laws pursued by the large Spanish garrisons In these cities European manufactured goods could command premium prices for sale to the colonists while the trade goods of the New World tobacco cocoa and other raw materials were shipped back to Europe By 1600 Porto Bello had replaced Nombre de Dios where Sir Francis Drake had first attacked a Spanish settlement as the Isthmus of Panama s Caribbean port for the Spanish Silver Train and the annual treasure fleet Veracruz the only port city open to trans Atlantic trade in New Spain continued to serve the vast interior of New Spain as its window on the Caribbean By the 17th century the majority of the towns along the Spanish Main and in Central America had become self sustaining The smaller towns of the Main grew tobacco and also welcomed foreign smugglers who avoided the Spanish mercantilist laws The underpopulated inland regions of Hispaniola and Venezuela were another area where tobacco smugglers in particular were welcome to ply their trade The Spanish ruled island of Trinidad was already a wide open port open to the ships and seamen of every nation in the region at the start of the 17th century and was a particular favorite for smugglers who dealt in tobacco and European manufactured goods Local Caribbean smugglers sold their tobacco or sugar for decent prices and then bought manufactured goods from the trans Atlantic traders in large quantities to be dispersed among the colonists of the West Indies and the Spanish Main who were eager for a little touch of home The Spanish governor of Trinidad who both lacked strong harbor fortifications and possessed only a laughably small garrison of Spanish troops could do little but take lucrative bribes from English French and Dutch smugglers and look the other way or risk being overthrown and replaced by his own people with a more pliable administrator Other ports Edit This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed February 2015 Learn how and when to remove this template message The English had established an early colony known as Virginia in 1607 and one on the island of Barbados in the West Indies in 1625 although this small settlement s people faced considerable dangers from the local Carib Indians believed to be cannibals for some time after its founding The two early colonies needed regular imports from England sometimes of food but primarily of woollen textiles The main early exports back to England included sugar tobacco and tropical food No large tobacco plantations or even truly organized defenses were established by the English on its Caribbean settlements at first and it would take time for England to realize just how valuable its possessions in the Caribbean could prove to be Eventually African slaves would be purchased through the Atlantic slave trade They would work the colonies and fuel Europe s tobacco rice and sugar supply by 1698 England had the largest slave exports with the most efficiency in their labor in relation to any other European imperial power Barbados the first truly successful English colony in the West Indies grew fast as the 17th century wore on and by 1698 Jamaica would be England s biggest colony to employ slave labor 8 Increasingly English ships chose to use it as their primary home port in the Caribbean Like Trinidad merchants in the trans Atlantic trade who based themselves on Barbados always paid good money for tobacco and sugar Both of these commodities remained the key cash crops of this period and fueled the growth of the American Southern Colonies as well as their counterparts in the Caribbean After the destruction of Fort Caroline by the Spanish the French made no further colonization attempts in the Caribbean for several decades as France was convulsed by its own Catholic Protestant religious divide during the late 16th century Wars of Religion However old French privateering anchorages with small tent camp towns could be found during the early 17th century in the Bahamas These settlements provided little more than a place for ships and their crews to take on some fresh water and food and perhaps have a dalliance with the local camp followers all of which would have been quite expensive From 1630 to 1654 Dutch merchants had a port in Brazil known as Recife It was initially founded by the Portuguese in 1548 9 The Dutch had decided in 1630 to invade several sugar producing cities in Portuguese controlled Brazil including Salvador and Natal From 1630 to 1654 they took control of Recife and Olinda making Recife the new capital of the territory of Dutch Brazil renaming the city Mauritsstad During this period Mauritsstad became one of the most cosmopolitan cities of the world Unlike the Portuguese the Dutch did not prohibit Judaism The first Jewish community and the first synagogue in the Americas Kahal Zur Israel Synagogue was founded in the city The inhabitants fought on their own to expel the Dutch in 1654 being helped by the involvement of the Dutch in the First Anglo Dutch War This was known as the Insurreicao Pernambucana Pernambucan Insurrection Most of the Jews fled to Amsterdam others fled to North America starting the first Jewish community of New Amsterdam now known as New York City The Dutch spent most of their time trading in smuggled goods with the smaller Spanish colonies Trinidad was the unofficial home port for Dutch traders and privateers in the New World early in the 17th century before they established their own colonies in the region in the 1620s and 1630s As usual Trinidad s ineffective Spanish governor was helpless to stop the Dutch from using his port and instead he usually accepted their lucrative bribes European struggle Edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed February 2015 Learn how and when to remove this template message The first third of the 17th century in the Caribbean was defined by the outbreak of the savage and destructive Thirty Years War in Europe 1618 1648 which represented both the culmination of the Protestant Catholic conflict of the Reformation and the final showdown between Habsburg Spain and Bourbon France The war was mostly fought in Germany where one third to one half of the population would eventually be lost to the strains of the conflict but it had some effect in the New World as well The Spanish presence in the Caribbean began to decline at a faster rate becoming more dependent on African slave labor The Spanish military presence in the New World also declined as Madrid shifted more of its resources to the Old World in the Habsburgs apocalyptic fight with almost every Protestant state in Europe This need for Spanish resources in Europe accelerated the decay of the Spanish Empire in the Americas The settlements of the Spanish Main and the Spanish West Indies became financially weaker and were garrisoned with a much smaller number of troops as their home countries were more consumed with happenings back in Europe The Spanish Empire s economy remained stagnant and the Spanish colonies plantations ranches and mines became totally dependent upon slave labor imported from West Africa With Spain no longer able to maintain its military control effectively over the Caribbean the other Western European states finally began to move in and set up permanent settlements of their own ending the Spanish monopoly over the control of the New World Even as the Dutch Netherlands was forced to renew its struggle against Spain for independence as part of the Thirty Years War the entire rebellion against the Spanish Habsburgs was called the Eighty Years War in the Low Countries the Dutch Republic had become the world s leader in mercantile shipping and commercial capitalism and Dutch companies finally turned their attention to the West Indies in the 17th century The renewed war with Spain with the end of the truce offered many opportunities for the successful Dutch joint stock companies to finance military expeditions against the Spanish Empire The old English and French privateering anchorages from the 16th century in the Caribbean now swarmed anew with Dutch warships In England a new round of colonial ventures in the New World was fueled by declining economic opportunities at home and growing religious intolerance for more radical Protestants like the Puritans who rejected the compromise Protestant theology of the established Church of England After the demise of the Saint Lucia and Grenada colonies soon after their establishment and the near extinction of the English settlement of Jamestown in Virginia new and stronger colonies were established by the English in the first half of the 17th century at Plymouth Boston Barbados the West Indian islands of Saint Kitts and Nevis and Providence Island These colonies would all persevere to become centers of English civilization in the New World For France now ruled by the Bourbon King Louis XIII r 1610 1642 and his able minister Cardinal Richelieu religious civil war had been reignited between French Catholics and Protestants called Huguenots Throughout the 1620s Huguenots fled France and founded colonies in the New World much like their English counterparts Then in 1636 to decrease the power of the Habsburg dynasty who ruled Spain and the Holy Roman Empire on France s eastern border France entered the cataclysm in Germany on the Protestants side The Franco Spanish War continued until the 1659 Treaty of the Pyrenees Colonial disputes Edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed February 2015 Learn how and when to remove this template message Central America and Caribbean sovereignty in 1700 Many of the cities on the Spanish Main in the first third of the 17th century were self sustaining but few had yet achieved any prosperity The more backward settlements in Jamaica and Hispaniola were primarily places for ships to take on food and fresh water Spanish Trinidad remained a popular smuggling port where European goods were plentiful and fairly cheap and good prices were paid by its European merchants for tobacco The English colonies on Saint Kitts and Nevis founded in 1623 would prove to become wealthy sugar growing settlements in time Another new English venture the Providence Island colony on what is now Providencia Island in the Mosquito Coast of Nicaragua deep in the heart of the Spanish Empire had become the premier base for English privateers and other pirates raiding the Spanish Main On the shared Anglo French island of Saint Christophe called Saint Kitts by the English the French had the upper hand The French settlers on Saint Christophe were mostly Catholics while the unsanctioned but growing French colonial presence in northwest Hispaniola the future nation of Haiti was largely made up of French Protestants who had settled there without Spain s permission to escape Catholic persecution back home France cared little what happened to the troublesome Huguenots but the colonization of western Hispaniola allowed the French to both rid themselves of their religious minority and strike a blow against Spain an excellent bargain from the French Crown s point of view The ambitious Huguenots had also claimed the island of Tortuga off the northwest coast of Hispaniola and had established the settlement of Petit Goave on the island itself Tortuga in particular was to become a pirate and privateer haven and was beloved of smugglers of all nationalities after all even the creation of the settlement had been illegal Dutch colonies in the Caribbean remained rare until the second third of the 17th century Along with the traditional privateering anchorages in the Bahamas and Florida the Dutch West India Company settled a factory commercial town at New Amsterdam on the North American mainland in 1626 and at Curacao in 1634 an island positioned right in the center of the Caribbean off the northern coast of Venezuela that was perfectly positioned to become a major maritime crossroads Seventeenth century crisis and colonial repercussions Edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed February 2015 Learn how and when to remove this template message The French raid on Cartagena took place on 6 May 1697 as part of the War of the Grand Alliance The mid 17th century in the Caribbean was again shaped by events in far off Europe For the Dutch Netherlands France Spain and the Holy Roman Empire the Thirty Years War being fought in Germany the last great religious war in Europe had degenerated into an outbreak of famine plague and starvation that managed to kill off one third to one half of the population of Germany England having avoided any entanglement in the European mainland s wars had fallen victim to its own ruinous civil war that resulted in the short but brutal Puritan military dictatorship 1649 1660 of the Lord Protector Oliver Cromwell and his Roundhead armies Of all the European Great Powers Spain was in the worst shape economically and militarily as the Thirty Years War concluded in 1648 Economic conditions had become so poor for the Spanish by the middle of the 17th century that a major rebellion began against the bankrupt and ineffective Habsburg government of King Philip IV r 1625 1665 that was eventually put down only with bloody reprisals by the Spanish Crown This did not make Philip IV more popular But disasters in the Old World bred opportunities in the New World The Spanish Empire s colonies were badly neglected from the middle of the 17th century because of Spain s many woes Freebooters and privateers experienced after decades of European warfare pillaged and plundered the almost defenseless Spanish settlements with ease and with little interference from the European governments back home who were too worried about their own problems to turn much attention to their New World colonies The non Spanish colonies were growing and expanding across the Caribbean fueled by a great increase in immigration as people fled from the chaos and lack of economic opportunity in Europe While most of these new immigrants settled into the West Indies expanding plantation economy others took to the life of the buccaneer Meanwhile the Dutch at last independent of Spain when the 1648 Treaty of Westphalia ended their own Eighty Years War 1568 1648 with the Habsburgs made a fortune carrying the European trade goods needed by these new colonies Peaceful trading was not as profitable as privateering but it was a safer business By the later half of the 17th century Barbados had become the unofficial capital of the English West Indies before this position was claimed by Jamaica later in the century Barbados was a merchant s dream port in this period European goods were freely available the island s sugar crop sold for premium prices and the island s English governor rarely sought to enforce any type of mercantilist regulations The English colonies at Saint Kitts and Nevis were economically strong and now well populated as the demand for sugar in Europe increasingly drove their plantation based economies The English had also expanded their dominion in the Caribbean and settled several new islands including Bermuda in 1612 Antigua and Montserrat in 1632 and Eleuthera in the Bahamas in 1648 though these settlements began like all the others as relatively tiny communities that were not economically self sufficient The French also founded major new colonies on the sugar growing islands of Guadeloupe in 1634 and Martinique in 1635 in the Lesser Antilles However the heart of French activity in the Caribbean in the 17th century remained Tortuga the fortified island haven off the coast of Hispaniola for privateers buccaneers and outright pirates The main French colony on the rest of Hispaniola remained the settlement of Petit Goave which was the French toehold that would develop into the modern state of Haiti French privateers still used the tent city anchorages in the Florida Keys to plunder the Spaniards shipping in the Straits of Florida as well as to raid the shipping that plied the sealanes off the northern coast of Cuba For the Dutch in the 17th century the Caribbean island of Curacao was the equivalent of England s port at Barbados This large rich well defended free port open to the ships of all the European states offered good prices for tobacco sugar and cocoa that were re exported to Europe and also sold large quantities of manufactured goods in return to the colonists of every nation in the New World A second Dutch controlled free port had also developed on the island of Sint Eustatius which was settled in 1636 The constant back and forth warfare between the Dutch and the English for possession of it in the 1660s later damaged the island s economy and desirability as a port The Dutch also had set up a settlement on the island of Saint Martin which became another haven for Dutch sugar planters and their African slave labor In 1648 the Dutch agreed to divide the prosperous island in half with the French Golden Age of Piracy 1660 1726 Edit Haunts of the Brethren of the Coast a map of the time reproduced in Buccaneers and Pirates of Our Coasts 1897 Main article Golden Age of Piracy The late 17th and early 18th centuries particularly between the years 1706 to 1726 are often considered the Golden Age of Piracy in the Caribbean and pirate ports experienced rapid growth in the areas in and surrounding the Atlantic and Indian Oceans Furthermore during this time period there were approximately 2400 men that were currently active pirates 10 The military power of the Spanish Empire in the New World started to decline when King Philip IV of Spain was succeeded by King Charles II r 1665 1700 who in 1665 became the last Habsburg king of Spain at the age of four While Spanish America in the late 17th century had little military protection as Spain entered a phase of decline as a Great Power it also suffered less from the Spanish Crown s mercantilist policies with its economy This lack of interference combined with a surge in output from the silver mines due to increased availability of slave labor the demand for sugar increased the number of slaves brought to the Caribbean began a resurgence in the fortunes of Spanish America England France and the Dutch Netherlands had all become New World colonial powerhouses in their own right by 1660 Worried by the Dutch Republic s intense commercial success since the signing of the Treaty of Westphalia England launched a trade war with the Dutch The English Parliament passed the first of its own mercantilist Navigation Acts 1651 and the Staple Act 1663 that required that English colonial goods be carried only in English ships and legislated limits on trade between the English colonies and foreigners These laws were aimed at ruining the Dutch merchants whose livelihoods depended on free trade This trade war would lead to three outright Anglo Dutch Wars over the course of the next twenty five years Meanwhile King Louis XIV of France r 1642 1715 had finally assumed his majority with the death of his regent mother Queen Anne of Austria s chief minister Cardinal Mazarin in 1661 The Sun King s aggressive foreign policy was aimed at expanding France s eastern border with the Holy Roman Empire and led to constant warfare Franco Dutch War and Nine Years War against shifting alliances that included England the Dutch Republic the various German states and Spain In short Europe was consumed in the final decades of the 17th century by nearly constant dynastic intrigue and warfare an opportune time for pirates and privateers to engage in their bloody trade French pirate Francois l Olonnais was nicknamed Flail of the Spaniards and had a reputation for brutality offering no quarter to Spanish prisoners In the Caribbean this political environment created many new threats for colonial governors The sugar island of Sint Eustatius changed ownership ten times between 1664 and 1674 as the English and Dutch dueled for supremacy there Consumed with the various wars in Europe the mother countries provided few military reinforcements to their colonies so the governors of the Caribbean increasingly made use of buccaneers as mercenaries and privateers to protect their territories or carry the fight to their country s enemies Perhaps unsurprisingly these undisciplined and greedy dogs of war often proved difficult for their sponsors to control By the late 17th century the great Spanish towns of the Caribbean had begun to prosper and Spain also began to make a slow fitful recovery but remained poorly defended militarily because of Spain s problems and so were sometimes easy prey for pirates and privateers The English presence continued to expand in the Caribbean as England itself was rising toward great power status in Europe Captured from Spain in 1655 the island of Jamaica had been taken over by England and its chief settlement of Port Royal had become a new English buccaneer haven in the midst of the Spanish Empire Jamaica was slowly transformed along with Saint Kitts into the heart of the English presence in the Caribbean At the same time the French Lesser Antilles colonies of Guadeloupe and Martinique remained the main centers of French power in the Caribbean as well as among the richest French possessions because of their increasingly profitable sugar plantations The French also maintained privateering strongholds around western Hispaniola at their traditional pirate port of Tortuga and their Hispaniolan capital of Petit Goave The French further expanded their settlements on the western half of Hispaniola and founded Leogane and Port de Paix even as sugar plantations became the primary industry for the French colonies of the Caribbean At the start of the 18th century Europe remained riven by warfare and constant diplomatic intrigue France was still the dominant power but now had to contend with a new rival England Great Britain after 1707 which emerged as a great power at sea and land during the War of the Spanish Succession But the depredations of the pirates and buccaneers in the Americas in the latter half of the 17th century and of similar mercenaries in Germany during the Thirty Years War had taught the rulers and military leaders of Europe that those who fought for profit rather than for King and Country could often ruin the local economy of the region they plundered in this case the entire Caribbean At the same time the constant warfare had led the Great Powers to develop larger standing armies and bigger navies to meet the demands of global colonial warfare By 1700 the European states had enough troops and ships at their disposal to begin better protecting the important colonies in the West Indies and in the Americas without relying on the aid of privateers This spelled the doom of privateering and the easy and nicely legal life it provided for the buccaneer Although Spain remained a weak power for the rest of the colonial period pirates in large numbers generally disappeared after 1730 chased from the seas by a new British Royal Navy squadron based at Port Royal Jamaica and a smaller group of Spanish privateers sailing from the Spanish Main known as the Costa Garda Coast Guard in English With regular military forces now on station in the West Indies letters of marque were harder and harder to obtain Economically the late 17th century and the early 18th century was a time of growing wealth and trade for all the nations who controlled territory in the Caribbean Although some piracy would always remain until the mid 18th century the path to wealth in the Caribbean in the future lay through peaceful trade the growing of tobacco rice and sugar and smuggling to avoid the British Navigation Acts and Spanish mercantilist laws By the 18th century the Bahamas had become the new colonial frontier for the British The Republic of Pirates at the port of Nassau became one of the last pirate havens A small British colony had even sprung up in former Spanish territory at Belize in Honduras that had been founded by an English pirate in 1638 The French colonial empire in the Caribbean had not grown substantially by the start of the 18th century The sugar islands of Guadaloupe and Martinique remained the twin economic capitals of the French Lesser Antilles and were now equal in population and prosperity to the largest of the English s Caribbean colonies Tortuga had begun to decline in importance but France s Hispaniolan settlements were becoming major importers of African slaves as French sugar plantations spread across the western coast of that island forming the nucleus of the modern nation of Haiti End of an era Edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed December 2007 Learn how and when to remove this template message The decline of piracy in the Caribbean paralleled the decline of the use of mercenaries and the rise of national armies in Europe Following the end of the Thirty Years War the direct power of the state in Europe expanded Armies were systematized and brought under direct state control the Western European states navies were expanded and their mission was extended to cover combating piracy The elimination of piracy from European waters expanded to the Caribbean beginning as early as 1600 with the expansion of standing Royal Naval vessels in the Caribbean numbering 124 by 1718 Other colonial powers soon followed suit and by the beginning of the nineteenth century France Spain and the United States had all stationed ships in the Caribbean 11 12 Several European governments passed measures to attempt to combat piracy in 1717 the Parliament of Great Britain passed the 1717 Transportation Act which established a regulated bonded system to transport criminals to Britain s colonies in North America as indentured servants as a punishment for those convicted or attainted in England and Wales Section seven of the act specifically concerned the suppression of piracy affirming capital punishment for being found guilty for the crime of being a pirate This act was in line with wider European policies regarding the suppression of piracy 13 14 Despite the increasing crackdowns against Caribbean pirates piracy in the region saw a brief resurgence between the end of the War of the Spanish Succession in 1713 and around 1720 as many unemployed seafarers took to piracy as a way to make ends meet when a surplus of sailors after the war led to a decline in wages and working conditions At the same time one of the terms of the Treaty of Utrecht that ended the war gave to Great Britain s South Sea Company a thirty year asiento or contract to furnish African slaves to the Spanish colonies providing British merchants and smugglers potential inroads into the traditionally closed Spanish markets in America and leading to an economic revival for the whole region This revived Caribbean trade provided rich new pickings for a new wave of piracy Also contributing to the increase of Caribbean piracy at this time was Spain s breakup of the British logwood settlement at Campeche and the attractions of a freshly sunken Spanish treasure fleet carrying silver off the southern Bahamas in 1715 citation needed This last large resurgence of piracy saw a change in attitude of European colonial powers towards pirates It had once been seen as a somewhat minor offense only punishable if suspects and evidence were taken back to Europe for formal proceedings Now the British Parliament set the system of courts of Vice Admiralty appointing seven commissioners in the colonies to carry out the legal proceedings These commissioners were chosen from naval and colonial officers who already contained a certain amount of bias towards the local pirates instead of civilian judges Pirates were given no representation in the new courts and were therefore often sentenced to hang Between 1716 and 1726 approximately 400 to 600 pirates were executed 15 Another major attitude change was the policy that if one s ship was attacked by pirates then one must fight back and attempt to resist to the capture of their ship lest they receive six months imprisonment 11 With royal attitudes growing so harsh towards the pirates in the Caribbean many fled to areas of the world where piracy may still be a profitable trade Black Bart Bartholomew Roberts perhaps the most successful pirate that had sailed in the Caribbean eventually returned to Africa in 1722 16 Other less successful pirates from the golden age in the Caribbean attempted to flee North to the Americas Stede Bonnet an accomplice of Blackbeard supposedly began to plunder ships along the Atlantic Coast but was captured along the South Carolina coast in 1718 17 Jean Lafitte New Orleans legendary pirate This early 18th century resurgence of piracy lasted only until the presence of European navies and coast guards in the Caribbean were enlarged to deal with the threat Also crucial to the end of this era of piracy was the loss of the pirates last Caribbean safe haven at Nassau The famous pirates of the early 18th century were a completely illegal remnant of a golden buccaneering age and their choices were limited to quick retirement or eventual capture Contrast this with the earlier example of Welshman Henry Morgan who for his privateering efforts was knighted by the English Crown and appointed the lieutenant governor of Jamaica 10 In the early 19th century piracy along the East and Gulf Coasts of North America as well as in the Caribbean increased again Jean Lafitte was a pirate privateer operating in the Caribbean and in American waters from his havens in Texas and Louisiana during the 1810s But the records of the US Navy indicate that hundreds of pirate attacks occurred in American and Caribbean waters between the years of 1820 and 1835 The Latin American Wars of Independence led to widespread use of privateers both by Spain and by the revolutionary governments of Mexico Colombia and other newly independent Latin American countries These privateers were rarely scrupulous about adhering to the terms of their letters of marque even during the Wars of Independence and continued to plague the Caribbean as outright pirates long after those conflicts ended About the time of the Mexican American War in 1846 the United States Navy had grown strong and numerous enough to eliminate the pirate threat in the West Indies By the 1830s ships had begun to convert to steam propulsion so the Age of Sail and the classical idea of pirates in the Caribbean ended Privateering similar to piracy continued as an asset in war for a few more decades and proved to be of some importance during the naval campaigns of the American Civil War Privateering would remain a tool of European states and even of the newborn United States until the mid 19th century s Declaration of Paris But letters of marque were given out much more sparingly by governments and were terminated as soon as conflicts ended The idea of no peace beyond the Line was a relic that had no meaning by the more settled late 18th and early 19th centuries Rules of piracy EditSee also Pirate code and No prey no pay Aboard a pirate vessel things were fairly democratic and there were codes of conduct that reflect modern laws Some of these rules consisted of a dress code no women 18 and some ships had no smoking The rules the punishment for breaking them and even the staying arrangements would be decided among everyone going on the ship before departure which was a very abstract process compared to the strict rules and procedures onboard European warships and merchantmen In further contrast to European colonial society in the Americas on board a pirate vessel racial divisions were usually unknown and in some instances pirates of African descent served as ships Captains 19 Another activity that had to be engaged in before the ship left the dock was swearing an oath to not betray anyone in the entire crew and to sign what was known as the ship s Article 18 which would determine the percentage of profit each crew member would receive 2 Furthermore some of the ways for deciding disagreements among pirate crew members were fighting till first blood or in more serious cases abandoning an individual on an uninhabited island whipping them 39 times or even executing them by firearm Despite popular belief however the punishment of walking the plank was never used to settle disputes among pirates There was however a division of power on a pirate crew between the captain the quartermaster the governing council for the vessel and the regular crewmen 2 but in battle the pirate captain always retained all power and ultimate decision making authority to ensure an orderly chain of command 19 When it came time to split the captured wealth into shares profits were normally given to the person in each rank as follows Captain 5 6 shares individuals with a senior position like the quartermaster 2 shares crewmen 1 share and individuals in a junior position 1 2 a share 2 Early and Golden Age pirates EditJean Fleury Edit Main article Jean Fleury Born in Vatteville and financed by shipowner Jean Ango French privateer Jean Fleury was Spain s nemesis In 1522 he captured seven Spanish vessels One year later most of Montezuma s Aztec treasure fell into his hands after he captured two of the three galleons in which Cortez shipped the fabled booty back to Spain He was captured in 1527 and executed by order of Holy Roman Emperor Charles V He had a very well equipped ship Francois Le Clerc Edit Main article Francois Le Clerc Francois Le Clerc also nicknamed Jambe de bois Pie de Palo wooden leg was a formidable privateer ennobled by Henri II in 1551 In 1552 Le Clerc ransacked Porto Santo One year later he mustered one thousand men and caused havoc in the Caribbean with his lieutenants Jacques de Sores and Robert Blondel They pillaged and burned down the seaport of Santo Domingo and ransacked Las Palmas in the Canary Islands on his way back to France He led another expedition in 1554 and plundered Santiago de Cuba Blackbeard Edit Main article Blackbeard Blackbeard s severed head hanging from Maynard s bow He was born about 1680 in England as Edward Thatch Teach or Drummond and operated off the east coast of North America particularly pirating in the Bahamas 1 and had a base in North Carolina 10 in the period of 1714 1718 Noted as much for his outlandish appearance as for his piratical success in combat Blackbeard placed burning slow match a type of slow burning fuse used to set off cannon under his hat with his face wreathed in fire and smoke his victims claimed he resembled a fiendish apparition from Hell Blackbeard s ship was the two hundred ton forty gun frigate he named Queen Anne s Revenge Blackbeard met his end at the hands of a British Royal Navy squadron 10 specifically sent out to capture him After an extremely bloody boarding action the British commanding officer of the squadron Lieutenant Robert Maynard killed him with the help of his crew According to legend Blackbeard suffered a total of five bullet wounds and twenty slashes with a cutlass before he finally died off the coast of Ocracoke North Carolina 20 Henry Morgan Edit Main article Henry Morgan Henry Morgan a Welshman was one of the most destructive pirate captains of the 17th century Although Morgan always considered himself a privateer rather than a pirate several of his attacks had no real legal justification and are considered piracy Recently found off the coast of what is now known as the nation of Haiti was one of Captain Morgan s 30 cannon oak ships which was thought to have aided the buccaneer in his ventures 21 Another Caribbean area that was known for the headquarters of Captain Morgan was Port Royal Jamaica 1 A bold ruthless and daring man Morgan fought England s enemies for thirty years and became a very wealthy man in the course of his adventures Morgan s most famous exploit came in late 1670 when he led 1700 buccaneers up the pestilential Chagres River and then through the Central American jungle to attack and capture the impregnable city of Panama Morgan s men burnt the city to the ground and the inhabitants were either killed or forced to flee Although the burning of Panama City did not mean any great financial gain for Morgan it was a deep blow to Spanish power and pride in the Caribbean and Morgan became the hero of the hour in England At the height of his career Morgan had been made a titled nobleman by the English Crown and lived on an enormous sugar plantation in Jamaica as lieutenant governor 10 Morgan died in his bed rich and respected something rarely achieved by pirates in his day or any other Bartholomew Roberts Edit Main article Bartholomew Roberts Bartholomew Roberts or Black Bart was successful in sinking or capturing and pillaging some 400 ships 10 and like most pirate captains of the time he looked fancy doing it 18 He started his freebooting career in the Gulf of Guinea in February 1719 when Howell Davis pirates captured his ship and he proceeded to join them Rising to captain he quickly came to the Caribbean and plagued the area until 1722 He commanded a number of large powerfully armed ships all of which he named Fortune Good Fortune or Royal Fortune Aboard his vessels the political atmosphere was a form of democracy that depended on participation in which was a rule that everyone aboard his ship had to vote on issues that arose 2 Efforts by the governors of Barbados and Martinique to capture him only provoked his anger when he found the governor of Martinique aboard a newly captured vessel Roberts hanged the man from a yardarm Roberts returned to Africa in February 1722 where he met his death in a naval battle whereby his crew was captured Amaro Pargo Edit Main article Amaro Pargo Amaro Pargo in his role as a privateer he dominated the route between Cadiz and the Caribbean on several occasions attacking ships belonging to enemies of the Spanish Crown mainly England and Holland 22 earning recognition in his time as a hero and coming to be regarded as the Spanish equivalent of Francis Drake 23 24 25 Because of his service to the Spanish Crown and country he was declared a Caballero hidalgo in 1725 and obtained certification of nobility and royal arms in 1727 26 Amaro Pargo lived for ten years in the Caribbean specifically on the island of Cuba where he had descendants Due to the trade and looting of him he became a very wealthy person in his time Stede Bonnet Edit Main article Stede Bonnet The hanging of Stede Bonnet in Charleston 1718 Probably the least qualified pirate captain ever to sail the Caribbean Bonnet was a sugar planter who knew nothing about sailing He started his piracies in 1717 by buying an armed sloop on Barbados and recruiting a pirate crew for wages possibly to escape from his wife He lost his command to Blackbeard and sailed with him as his associate 10 Although Bonnet briefly regained his captaincy he was captured in 1718 by a privateering vessel that was employed by South Carolina 10 Charles Vane Edit Main article Charles Vane Charles Vane like many early 18th century pirates operated out of Nassau in the Bahamas He was the only pirate captain to resist Woodes Rogers when Rogers asserted his governorship over Nassau in 1718 attacking Rogers squadron with a fire ship and shooting his way out of the harbor rather than accept the new governor s royal pardon Vane s quartermaster was Calico Jack Rackham who deposed Vane from the captaincy Vane started a new pirate crew but he was captured and hanged in Jamaica in 1721 Edward Low Edit Main article Edward Low Edward or Ned Low was notorious as one of the most brutal and vicious pirates Originally from London he started as a lieutenant to George Lowther before striking out on his own His career as a pirate lasted just three years during which he captured over 100 ships and he and his crew murdered tortured and maimed hundreds of people After his own crew mutinied in 1724 when Low murdered a sleeping subordinate he was rescued by a French vessel who hanged him on Martinique island Anne Bonny and Mary Read Edit Main articles Anne Bonny and Mary Read Anne Bonny and Mary Read convicted of piracy on 28 November 1720 Anne Bonny and Mary Read were infamous female pirates of the 18th century 27 both spent their brief sea roving careers under the command of Calico Jack Rackham They were also known to have been associated with other well known pirates Blackbeard William Kidd Bartholomew Sharp and Bartholomew Roberts 2 They are noted chiefly for their sex highly unusual for pirates which helped to sensationalize their 1720 October trial in Jamaica They gained further notoriety for their ruthlessness they are known to have spoken in favor of murdering witnesses in the crew s counsels and for fighting the intruders of Rackham s vessel while he and his crew members were drunk and hiding under the deck 27 The capstone to their legend is that all the crew including Rackham Anne and Mary were tried in a Spanish town close to Port Royal 1 Rackham and his crew were hanged but when the judge sentenced Anne and Mary to death he asked if they had anything to say Milord we plead our bellies meaning they asserted they were pregnant The judge immediately postponed their death sentence because no English court had the authority to kill an unborn child Read died in prison of fever before the birth of the child There is no record of Anne being executed and it was rumored her wealthy father had paid a ransom and took her home other accounts of what happened to her include that she returned to piracy or became a nun 27 Privateers EditMain article Privateer The Spanish Amaro Pargo performed in the Caribbean and lived in Cuba for ten years In the Caribbean the use of privateers was especially popular for what amounted to legal and state ordered piracy 10 The cost of maintaining a fleet to defend the colonies was beyond national governments of the 16th and 17th centuries Private vessels would be commissioned into a de facto navy with a letter of marque paid with a substantial share of whatever they could capture from enemy ships and settlements the rest going to the crown 10 These ships would operate independently or as a fleet and if they were successful the rewards could be great when Jean Fleury and his men captured Cortes vessels in 1523 they found an incredible Aztec treasure that they were allowed to keep Later when Francis Drake captured the Spanish Silver Train at Nombre de Dios Panama s Caribbean port at the time in 1573 his crews were rich for life This was repeated by Piet Hein in 1628 who made a profit of 12 million guilders for the Dutch West India Company This substantial profit made privateering something of a regular line of business wealthy businessmen or nobles would be quite willing to finance this legitimized piracy in return for a share The sale of captured goods was a boost to colonial economies as well The main imperial countries operating at this time and in the region were the French English Spanish Dutch and Portuguese Privateers from each country were all ordered to attack the other countries vessels especially Spain which was a shared enemy among the other powers 2 By the seventeenth century piracy and privateering became less acceptable behaviour especially as many privateers turned into full blown pirates so they would not have to give part of the profit they made back to their country of employment Corruption led to the removal of many officials over the years including Governor Nicholas Trott and Governor Benjamin Fletcher One way that governments found and discouraged active pirates and corrupt privateers was through the use of pirate hunters who were bribed with all or at least most of the wealth that they would find aboard pirate vessels along with a set bounty The most renowned pirate hunter was Captain William Kidd who hit the peak of his legal career in 1695 but later saw the benefits of illegal piracy and made that his new vocation 10 The most well known privateer corsairs of the eighteenth century in the Spanish colonies were Miguel Enriquez of Puerto Rico and Jose Campuzano Polanco of Santo Domingo Miguel Enriquez was a Puerto Rican mulatto who abandoned his work as a shoemaker to work as a privateer Such was the success of Enriquez that he became one of the wealthiest men in the New World 28 Also highlights the Spanish Amaro Pargo also stands out who frequently traded in the Caribbean while looting ships of the enemy powers of the Spanish Crown Amaro Pargo lived for ten years in the Caribbean specifically on the island of Cuba where he had descendants 29 Buccaneers EditMain article Buccaneer Pirates involved specifically in the Caribbean were called buccaneers Roughly speaking they arrived in the 1630s and remained until the effective end of piracy in the 1730s The original buccaneers were settlers that were deprived of their land by Spanish authorities and eventually were picked up by white settlers 2 The word buccaneer is actually from the French boucaner meaning to smoke meat from the hunters of wild oxen curing meat over an open fire They transferred the skills which kept them alive into piracy They operated with the partial support of the non Spanish colonies and until the 18th century their activities were legal or partially legal and there were irregular amnesties from all nations For the most part buccaneers attacked other vessel and ransacked settlements owned by the Spanish 10 Traditionally buccaneers had a number of peculiarities Their crews operated as a democracy the captain was elected by the crew and they could vote to replace him The captain had to be a leader and a fighter in combat he was expected to be fighting with his men not directing operations from a distance Spoils were evenly divided into shares when the officers had a greater number of shares it was because they took greater risks or had special skills Often the crews would sail without wages on account and the spoils would be built up over a course of months before being divided There was a strong esprit de corps among pirates This allowed them to win sea battles they typically outmanned trade vessels by a large ratio There was also for some time a social insurance system guaranteeing money or gold for battle wounds at a worked out scale The romantic notion of pirates burying treasure on isolated islands 2 and wearing gaudy clothes had some basis in fact Most pirate wealth was accumulated by selling of chandlery items ropes sails and block and tackle stripped from captured ships One undemocratic aspect of the buccaneers was that sometimes they would force specialists like carpenters or surgeons to sail with them for some time though they were released when no longer needed if they had not volunteered to join by that time A typical poor man had few other promising career choices at the time apart from joining the pirates According to reputation the pirates egalitarianism led them to liberate slaves when taking over slave ships However there are several accounts of pirates selling slaves captured on slave ships sometimes after they had helped man the pirates own vessels In combat they were considered ferocious and were reputed to be experts with flintlock weapons invented in 1615 but these were so unreliable that they were not in widespread military use before the 1670s Slave pirates EditMany slaves primarily from places in Africa were being exported to colonies in the Caribbean for slave labour on plantations Out of the people that were forced into slavery and shipped off to colonies in the years from 1673 to 1798 approximately 9 to 32 percent were children this number only considers the exports of British slavers 30 While on the average 12 week journey to the colonies the new slaves endured ghastly living conditions that included cramped spaces too small to stand up in hot temperatures and poor diets They were ravaged by disease and death Many of those taken as slaves were victims or prisoners of civil war 18 Many aspects of being a slave overall increased the allure of the pirating lifestyle During the 17th and 18th centuries piracy was at its height and its symbolic interpretation of freedom was well received This abstract ideal was very appealing to slaves and victims of imperialism Even though the main European powers did not want slaves to find out about the freedom that piracy offered 30 percent of the 5000 or more pirates who were active between 1715 and 1725 were of African heritage 31 Along with the opportunity of a new life and freedom the indigenous people of Africa were greeted with equality when they joined pirating communities Many slaves turned pirate secured a position of leadership or prestige on pirating vessels like that of Captain 31 The pirate Black Caesar who served onboard the Queen Anne s Revenge under Blackbeard was one of the best known slave pirates during the Golden Age of Piracy being mentioned in the 1724 work A General History of the Pyrates 32 Roberto Cofresi a 19th century pirate EditMain article Roberto Cofresi Roberto Cofresi better known as El Pirata Cofresi became interested in sailing at a young age By the time he reached adulthood there were some political and economic difficulties in Puerto Rico which at the time was a colony of Spain Influenced by this situation he decided to become a pirate in 1818 Cofresi commanded several assaults against cargo vessels focusing on those that were responsible for exporting gold During this time he focused his attention on boats from the United States and the local Spanish government ignored several of these actions In early March 1825 Cofresi engaged the USS Grampus and a flotilla of ships led by Capt John D Sloat in battle He eventually abandoned his ship and tried to escape by land before being captured After being imprisoned he was sent to San Juan Puerto Rico where a brief military trial found him guilty and on 29 March 1825 he and other members of his crew were executed by a firing squad After his death his life was used as inspiration for several stories and myths which served as the basis for books and other media 33 Boysie Singh a 20th century pirate EditMain article Boysie Singh Boysie Singh usually known as the Raja the Hindi word for king or just Boysie was born on 5 April 1908 on 17 Luis Street Woodbrook Port of Spain Saint George County Trinidad and Tobago to Bhagrang Singh a fugitive who immigrated to Trinidad and Tobago from British India and his wife 34 He had a long and successful career as a gangster and gambler before turning to piracy and murder For almost ten years from 1947 until 1956 he and his gang terrorized the waters between Trinidad and Tobago and the United States of Venezuela later on becoming the Fourth Republic of Venezuela They were responsible for the deaths of approximately 400 people They would promise to ferry people from Trinidad to Venezuela but en route he would rob his victims at gunpoint kill them and dump them into the sea Boysie was well known to people in Trinidad and Tobago He had successfully beaten a charge of breaking and entering which nearly resulted in his deportation before he was finally executed after losing his third case for the murder of his niece He was held in awe and dread by most of the population and was frequently seen strolling grandly about Port of Spain in the early 1950s wearing bright stylish clothes Mothers nannies and ajees would warn their children Behave yourself man or Boysie goyn getchu allyuh 35 Boysie Singh died in Port of Spain by being hanged on 20 August 1957 for the murder of a dancer presumably his own niece 34 Caribbean piracy in the 21st century EditPiracy in the Caribbean is still present today largely confined to small scale pirating operations in the waters off of Venezuela Trinidad Guyana and Suriname These pirates are often fishermen who have resorted to piracy due to economic crisis or turf wars between groups of fishers Much of the modern day piracy in the southern Caribbean is a result of the economic upheaval in Venezuela Venezuelan fishermen who previously made a living off of catching tuna shrimp crab and octopus have lost this means of money due to the economic crisis and are forced to resort to piracy on fishermen off the coasts of Guyana and Trinidad robbing them and holding them for ransom 36 37 Another major source of modern Caribbean piracy stems from turf wars between rival groups of fishermen from Guyana and Suriname In April 2018 Guyanese nationals Chris Parsram Rameshwar Roopnarine Madre Kishore David Williams Ramdeo Persaud Ray Torres and Ganesh Beeharry were all arrested in Suriname and sentenced to 35 years in prison for an attack on 20 Surinamese and Guyanese fishermen in which they were thrown overboard only four made it to shore with the rest being thrown into the water and presumed either dead or missing 38 The attack was believed to be in retaliation for the shooting death of their leader a few weeks prior Piracy in popular culture EditMain article Pirates in the arts and popular culture A lot of fiction involving sea pirates and piracy takes place at the Caribbean Sea Films Edit Main article List of pirate films Many silent films of pirates especially starring Douglas Fairbanks such as The Black Pirate Captain Blood 1935 Treasure Island Return to Treasure Island Swashbuckler 1976 Cutthroat Island Pirates of the Caribbean films Pirates of the Caribbean The Curse of the Black Pearl Pirates of the Caribbean Dead Man s Chest Pirates of the Caribbean At World s End Pirates of the Caribbean On Stranger Tides Pirates of the Caribbean Dead Men Tell No Tales Pirates The Blood Brothers Muppet Treasure Island Nate and Hayes also known as Savage Islands Yellowbeard 1983 The Island 1980 The Pirates In an Adventure with Scientists 2012 Games Edit Monkey Island video game series Sea Dogs a 2000 Russian role playing video game for Windows Sid Meier s Pirates a video game Pirates of the Spanish Main a tabletop game Pirates of the Burning Sea an MMORPG set in the 1720s Merchants and Marauders a 2010 board game by Christian Marcussen Assassin s Creed IV Black Flag a video game part of the Assassin s Creed series Assassin s Creed Pirates a video game part in the mobile series of Assassin s Creed series Port Royal Puzzle Pirates Age of Pirates Caribbean Tales and Age of Pirates 2 City of Abandoned Ships both Age of Pirates games are for PC Both games are no longer supported by their developers support and fixes for these games can be found at piratesahoy net and are created by experienced mod developers Tropico 2 a video game The player is a pirate king and must manage their island to gain money leading their pirates and prisoners and dealing with France Spain England Blackwake Sea of Thieves a video gamePopular books Edit A General History of the Pyrates by Charles Johnson the prime source for the biographies of many well known pirates giving an almost mythical status to the more colorful characters such as the infamous English pirates Blackbeard and Calico Jack and influenced pirate literature that followed Treasure Island by Robert Louis Stevenson a novel with a huge influence on pirates in the public imagination particularly in the character of the quintessential pirate Long John Silver Captain Blood by Rafael Sabatini a novel chronicling the adventures of Peter Blood M D wrongly convicted of aiding Monmouth s Rebellion and turned pirate during the reign of James II The Black Corsair Il Corsaro Nero 1898 by Emilio Salgari and its 4 sequels Pirates by Celia Rees a novel about young Nancy and her half sister Minerva who find themselves hunted by the authorities and are rescued by pirates The Princess Bride by William Goldman On Stranger Tides by Tim Powers pirates voodoo zombies and the Fountain of Youth Empire of Blue Water by Stephan Talty The story of Captain Morgan and the real pirates of the Caribbean Pirate Latitudes a posthumous novel by Michael Crichton In the Time Machine series the fourth book Sail with Pirates had the protagonist searching for a treasure ship that sank in the Caribbean and having to defeat the pirates of the region To Catch a Pirate by Jade Parker The Pyrates by George MacDonald Fraser a comedic novel tracing the adventures of Captain Benjamin Avery RN multiple damsels in distress and the six captains who lead the infamous Coast Brotherhood Calico Jack Rackham Black Bilbo Firebeard Happy Dan Pew Akbar the Terrible and Sheba the She Wolf The Island by Peter Benchly 1979 Daughter of the Pirate King by Tricia Levenseller 2017 Other Edit The theme park attraction Pirates of the Caribbean The television show Black Sails The Japanese manga and anime series One Piece Pirate Parties a type of political party dedicated to online freedom and copyright law The television show Our Flag Means Death Historical studies EditPeter Gerhard Pirates of New Spain 1575 1742 Dover Books 2003 ISBN 978 0486426112 Peter Gerhard Pirates of the Pacific 1575 1742 University of Nebraska Press 1990 ISBN 978 0803270305 Captain Charles Johnson A General History of the Pyrates Kritzler Edward Jewish Pirates of the Caribbean Anchor Books 2009 ISBN 978 0 7679 1952 4 Kris Lane foreword by Hugh O Shaughnessy Blood and Silver the history of piracy in the Caribbean and Central America Oxford Signal 1967 and 1999 See also Edit Caribbean portal Oceans portal Piracy portalPiracy in the British Virgin Islands Jolly Roger the traditional pirate flag Piracy in Somalia Piracy in the Atlantic World List of pirates ThalassocracyReferences Edit a b c d Campo Flores Arian Yar Mate Swashbuckler Tours Newsweek 180 no 6 2002 58 a b c d e f g h i Smith Simon Piracy in early British America History Today 46 no 5 May 1996 29 Peter Gerhard Pirates of New Spain 1575 1742 Dover Books 2003 ISBN 978 0486426112 Peter Gerhard Pirates of the Pacific 1575 1742 University of Nebraska Press 1990 ISBN 978 0803270305 Kris Lane foreword by Hugh O Shaughnessy Blood and Silver the history of piracy in the Caribbean and Central America Oxford Signal 1967 and 1999 Page 11 of 18 Unequal War and the Changing Borders of International Society authored by Colombo Alessandro Bartolome de Las Casas The Devastation of the Indies A Brief Account 1542 Morgan Kenneth Symbiosis Trade and the British Empire BBC Accessed 17 February 2011 http www bbc co uk history british empire seapower trade empire 01 shtml Recife Columbia Electronic Encyclopedia 6Th Edition 2011 1 a b c d e f g h i j k l Boot Max 2009 Pirates Then and Now Foreign Affairs 88 4 94 107 a b Boot Max 1 January 2009 Pirates Then and Now How Piracy Was Defeated in the Past and Can Be Again Foreign Affairs 88 4 94 107 JSTOR 20699624 A Brief History of Piracy Online Information Bank Research Collections Royal Naval Museum at Portsmouth Historic Dockyard Archived from the original on 15 February 2015 Retrieved 23 April 2015 Edith M Ziegler Harlots Hussies and Poor Unfortunate Women Crime Transportation and the Servitude of Female Convicts Tuscaloosa AL University of Alabama Press 2014 Coldham Peter Wilson 2007 Emigrants in Chains a Social History of the Forced Emigration to the Americas of Felons Destitute Children Political and Religious Non Conformists Lanham Md Genealogical Publishing ISBN 978 0806317786 Boot Max 2009 Pirates Then and Now How Piracy Was Defeated in the Past and Can Be Again Foreign Affairs 88 4 94 107 JSTOR 20699624 Defoe Daniel A General History of the Pyrates Minneapolis Dover Publications Incorporated 1999 Print Rediker Marcus Villains of All Nations Atlantic Pirates in the Golden Age Boston Beacon 2004 Print a b c d The real Pirates of the Caribbean USA Today Magazine 137 no 2764 January 2009 42 47 a b Leeson Peter Democrats of the Caribbean Atlantic Monthly 10727825 300 no 3 2007 39 Moore David D April 2018 Captain Edward Thatch A Brief Analysis of the Primary Source Documents Concerning the Notorious Blackbeard The North Carolina Historical Review XCV 2 147 187 Pirate Shipwreck Maclean s 114 no 30 2001 12 Frers Ernesto September 2008 Mas Alla Del Legado Pirata google es ISBN 9788479279639 Retrieved 8 May 2016 Canarias En Hora https web archive org web 20160718232523 http canariasenhora com amaro pargo el pirata bueno Archived from the original on 18 July 2016 Retrieved 8 May 2016 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a Missing or empty title help La Opinion de Tenerife 15 December 2013 Amaro Pargo cobra fama internacional laopinion es Retrieved 8 May 2016 Amaro Pargo una de piratas Discover Tenerife Discover Tenerife Archived from the original on 17 March 2016 Retrieved 8 May 2016 AMARO PARGO LA TRADICIoN HISToRICA DE UN CORSARIO LAGUNERO III Por Carlos Garcia Del libro La Ciudad Relatos Historicos 1996 lalagunaahora com 26 February 2015 Retrieved 8 May 2016 a b c Highleyman Liz Who Were Anne Bonny and Mary Read Lesbian News 32 no 11 2007 18 Bracho Palma Jairo 2005 La defensa maritima en la Capitania General de Venezuela 1783 1813 Instituto Nacional de los Espacios Acuaticos e Insulares p 87 De Paz Sanchez Manuel Garcia Pulido Daniel 2015 El corsario de Dios Documentos sobre Amaro Rodriguez Felipe 1678 1747 Documentos para la Historia de Canarias Francisco Javier Macias Martin ed Canarias Archivo Historico Provincial de Santa Cruz de Tenerife ISBN 978 84 7947 637 3 Retrieved 8 June 2016 Teelucksingh Jerome The invisible child in British West Indian slavery Slavery amp Abolition 27 no 2 a b Farley Christopher The Black faces beneath black flags New York Amsterdam News 7 July 2005 Konstam Angus 20 April 2007 Blackbeard America s Most Notorious Pirate Wiley p 271 ISBN 978 0 470 12821 3 Retrieved 22 February 2022 Luis R Negron Hernandez Jr Roberto Cofresi El pirata caborojeno in Spanish Retrieved 25 May 2007 a b Boysie Singh 20th Century Pirate of the Caribbean 7 August 2005 Derek Bickerton The Murders of Boysie Singh Robber Arsonist Pirate Mass Murderer Vice and Gambling King of Trinidad Arthur Barker Limited London 1962 Trinidad Fishermen abducted by Venezuelan pirates return home St Lucia News Online 7 February 2019 Retrieved 1 February 2021 Venezuelan pirates the new scourge of the Caribbean BBC News 28 January 2019 Retrieved 1 February 2021 Guyanese pirates handed heavy jail sentences in suriname Kaieteur News 26 November 2019 Retrieved 1 February 2021 External links Edit2004 vs 2007 global piracy summary The Economist published 23 April 2008 accessed 2008 04 28 Pirates of the Caribbean In Fact and Fiction from BlindKat Publishers in English and Spanish Method of Securing the Ports and Populations of All the Coasts of the Indies from 1694 examines the security of the Spanish West Indies in relation to piracy Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Piracy in the Caribbean amp oldid 1133258764, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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