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Women in piracy

Although the majority of pirates in history have been men,[1] there are around a hundred known examples of female pirates,[2][a] about forty of whom were active in the Golden Age of Piracy.[4] Some women have been pirate captains and some have commanded entire pirate fleets. Among the most powerful pirate women were figures such as Zheng Yi Sao (1775–1844) and Huang Bamei (1906–1982), both of whom led tens of thousands of pirates.[5][6]

Zheng Yi Sao (1775–1844; right) as depicted in 1836

In addition to the few that were pirates themselves, women have also historically been more heavily involved in piracy through secondary roles, interacting with pirates through being smugglers, lenders of money, purchasers of stolen goods, tavern keepers and prostitutes, and through having been family members of both pirates and victims.[1][7] Some women also married pirates and turned their homes or establishments into piratical safe havens.[8] Through women in these secondary roles, pirates were strongly supported by the agency of women.[9] Some influential women, including monarchs such as Elizabeth I of England (r. 1558–1603), have also acted as powerful patrons of pirates.[1] Although they have received little academic attention, women still occupy these important secondary roles in contemporary piracy. Piracy off the coast of Somalia is for instance supported to a large extent by on-shore women who participate in transportation, housing and recruitment.[10]

Seafaring in general has historically been a highly masculine-gendered activity.[11] Women who became pirates at times disguised themselves as men in order to do so since they were otherwise rarely allowed on pirate ships. On many ships in the Golden Age of Piracy, women were prohibited by the ship's contract (required to be signed by all crew members) due to being seen as bad luck and due to fears that the male crew members would fight over the women. Many famous female pirates, such as Anne Bonny (1697–?) and Mary Read (1685–1721), accordingly dressed and acted as men.[12] Since the gender of many pirate women was only exposed after they were caught, it is possible that there were more women in piracy than is otherwise indicated by surviving sources.[13]

In addition to historical female pirates, women in piracy have also frequently appeared in legends and folklore. The earliest legendary female pirate is perhaps Atalanta of Greek mythology, who according to legend joined the Argonauts in the years before the Trojan War.[14] Scandinavian folklore and mythology, though the tales themselves are unverified, includes numerous female warriors (shield-maidens) who command ships and fleets.[15] Female pirates have had varying roles in modern fiction, often reflecting cultural norms and traditions. Beginning in the 20th century, fictional pirate women have sometimes been romanticized as symbols of female liberty.[16]

List of named female pirates edit

  Disputed historicity or legendary figure

Ancient pirates edit

Name Lifespan Active Culture Notes
Dido
a.k.a. Elissa
~800 BC Phoenician The legendary founder of Carthage.[17] Sometimes considered a pirate since her legend involves her leading a sea expedition,[17][18] raids,[17] and the kidnapping of a large group of women.[18]
Tchiao Kuo-fu-ja[2]
a.k.a. Ch’iao K’uo Fü Jên
~600 BC Chinese Legendary Chinese pirate who appears in a legend wherein she and her crew liberates a captive young woman named P’ao.[19]
Queen Artemisia I of Caria 480 BC Greek Queen of the city-state of Halicarnassus. The earliest historical female pirate, Artemisia captained a fighting ship[20] and led the most famous pirate fleet in the Mediterranean.[21] She participated in the second Persian invasion of Greece (480–479 BC), fighting alongside Xerxes I of the Achaemenid Empire.[20]
Queen Teuta of the Ardiaei 231–228 BC Illyrian Queen regent of the Ardiaei tribe, active in the Adriatic Sea. Sanctioned a number of pirate attacks against the Roman Republic and fought against the Romans in the First Illyrian War (229–228 BC).[22][23]

Vendel and Viking Age edit

Name Lifespan Active Culture Notes
Princess Sela c. 420[24] Norwegian Appears in the Gesta Danorum.[25][b] Sister of the Norwegian king Koller, with whom she quarreled, and led her own raids both in sea and land. Killed by the Jutish king-turned-pirate Aurvandill after she attempted to avenge her brother.[24]
Alf and Alfhild
a.k.a. Alvid; Altilda; Atwilda; Alvilda
c. 550[30] Geatish Appears in the Gesta Danorum.[b] Her story is akin to a fairy tale and she consequently appears to be a mythical figure.[30][31] Daughter of the Geatish king Synardus. Turned to piracy to escape an enforced marriage and led an all-female pirate crew. Eventually tracked down and defeated by her intended spouse, whereafter she married him on account of his prowess in battle.[30]
Groe c. 550[30] Geatish Appears in the Gesta Danorum.[b] One of the women accompanying Afhild.[32]
Stikla 8th century? Norwegian Appears in the Gesta Danorum.[25][b] Shield-maiden and pirate[31] who alongside her sister Rusila fought against the Norwegian ruler Olov for control of his kingdom.[25][33] Defeated and killed by Olov's forces who were aided by the Danish king Harald Wartooth.[33]
Rusila 8th century? Norwegian Appears in the Gesta Danorum.[b] Sister of Stikla, fought with her against Olov and Harald.[25][33]
Veborg c. 770[15] Danish Briefly mentioned in the Gesta Danorum.[b] Longship captain who was killed in battle.[25] Participated in the legendary Battle of Brávellir.[34]
Hetha c. 770[15] Danish Briefly mentioned in the Gesta Danorum.[b] Longship captain who became the ruler of Zealand.[25] Participated in the legendary Battle of Brávellir.[34]
Wisna c. 770[15] Danish Briefly mentioned in the Gesta Danorum.[b] Longship captain who became a standard-bearer and lost her right hand in battle.[25] Participated in the legendary Battle of Brávellir.[34]
Rusla, "Red Daughter" 8th/9th century? Norwegian Appears in the Gesta Danorum.[b] Sometimes conflated with Rusila but appears to be a distinct figure.[25] Sister of the Norwegian ruler Tesondus, who had been deposed by the Danish king Omundus. Angered at the Danish conquest and her brother being content with it, she fought against both but was ultimately defeated.[25]
Lagertha 9th century Norwegian Appears in the Gesta Danorum.[b] Viking shield-maiden who accompanied and later married the legendary hero and king Ragnar Lodbrok.[25]

Medieval and Renaissance pirates edit

Name Lifespan Active Culture Notes
Æthelflæd, Lady of the Mercians c. 870–918 911 Anglo-Saxon Ruler of Mercia. Became a military leader after her husband's death in battle against the Danes in 911. Took command of the fleets to rid the seas of the Viking raiders. Sometimes referred to as a pirate.[4]
Joanna of Flanders, "the Flame"
a.k.a. Joanna of Montfort
c. 1295–1374 1341–1347 French / Breton Duchess of Brittany by marriage to John of Montfort. Famous and admired in Brittany for her skills as a warrior and military leader. Fought alongside her troops against the French in the War of the Breton Succession (1341–1365), at points commanding great fleets in naval battles. Sometimes referred to as a pirate.[35]
Jeanne de Clisson, "Lioness of Brittany"
a.k.a. Jeanne de Belleville
1300–1359 1343–1350s French / Breton French/Breton noblewoman. Turned to piracy to avenge her husband Olivier IV de Clisson. who was executed as a traitor during the War of the Breton Succession. Purchased three ships, which she commanded, and attacked French ships off the coast of Normandy. Ended her pirate career after she remarried to the English knight Walter Bentley in the 1350s.[36]
Elise Eskilsdotter d. 1483 1455–1470s Norwegian Norwegian noblewoman who turned to piracy to avenge her husband Olav Nilsson. Attacked ships in the seas near Bergen.[4]
Grace O'Malley
a.k.a. Gráinne Ní Mháille, Granuaile
c. 1530–1603 16th century Irish Daughter of a local chieftain in Connacht. Her family ran both a legitimate shipping business and a piracy business. Inherited her father's lands (Umhaill), becoming a powerful Irish ruler. With her three ships and two hundred men, O'Malley plundered ships both from England and from other parts of Ireland. She became so prolific that Queen Elizabeth I put a reward on her head and considered sending the royal fleet against her. Captured by the English in 1577 but released in a hostage exchange and continued to engage in piracy. Entered into English service as a privateer in 1593.[37]
Sayyida al Hurra 1485–1561 1515–1542 Moroccan Ruler of the western coasts of Morocco for over thirty years and a powerful Barbary corsair, operating out of Tétouan. Allied with the Ottoman corsair Oruç Reis, who operated out of Algiers. Raided Christian ships from Spain, regaining wealth her family had lost during the expulsions of Muslims from Spain. Much of the wealth was used to revive Tétouan. Earnt the title al-Hurra (a woman who exercises power) and later married Ahmed el Outassi, Sultan of Morocco. Wishing to retain her political influence, she forced Outassi to travel to Tétouan for the wedding, the only time in Moroccan history a royal wedding was not held in the capital.[38]
Mary Wolverston, Lady Killigrew
a.k.a. Elizabeth Killigrew; Old Lady Killigrew
fl. 1525–1587 16th century English Daughter of the pirate Philip Wolverston, who educated her in piracy in her youth.[39] Married into the Cornish Killigrew family, owners of Arwenack. Among other businesses, the Killigrews ran a criminal enterprise of seizing ships and hiding stolen goods and bribed officials to look the other way.[40][41] Wolverston was actively involved in the family's piracy. In 1582, she led pirate crews on her own pirate attacks against a Spanish[39][40][42] and then a German ship.[40] Wolverston was thereafter imprisoned and sentenced to death by Queen Elizabeth I but was ultimately pardoned.[40][42][43]
Dorothy Monk, Lady Killigrew 16th century English Daughter-in-law of Mary Wolverston. Also charged with having engaged in piracy.[44][45]
Elizabetha Patrickson fl. 1634 17th century English Raided English ships alongside her husband William. Indicted on piracy, robbery, and murder charges on 10 March 1634 in an English court. She was tortured into a confession and later hanged.[46]

Golden Age of Piracy edit

Name Lifespan Active Culture Notes
Charlotte de Berry 1636–? 17th century English Reportedly kidnapped and forced to go to sea, whereafter she organized a mutiny, took control of the ship and began a pirate career of her own.[47] She is likely fictional since her earliest known mention in a literary work dates to 1836.[48]
Jacquotte Delahaye fl. 1656 Mid-17th century Haitian or Spanish Legendary pirate whose story differs between accounts, sometimes said to have been motivated by revenge and other times said to have wished to earn wealth to support her family. Supposedly rose to command a hundred pirates. Depending on the account said to have either continuously dressed as a man or to have taken a male alias after faking her death. Likely fictional as she first appears only in accounts written significantly later than her purported lifespan.[48]
Christina Anna Skytte 1643–1677 1657–1668 Swedish A baroness who is said to in 1657 have joined her brother Gustav Skytte, who secretly owned a pirate ship. Together they assaulted ships in the Baltic Sea. Fled the country to escape the authorities in 1663 but returned and retired from piracy in 1668. Her role in the piracy is somewhat disputed since the relevant court documents (which confirm the piracy of her brother and fiancé) do not explicitly mention her.[49]
Neel Cuyper
a.k.a. Cornelia; Nellie Cowper; Santa Rubia
c. 1655–1695 Late 17th century Dutch Served on Dutch merchant ships masquerading as a man. Captured by pirates who recruited her on account of her experience. After some time with the pirates, Cuyper was discovered to be a woman, whereafter she was disembarked together with her share of the loot at Tortuga. Later founded a resort for pirates at Labadee in Haiti, eventually becoming known as the "Queen of Labadee Bay". Killed by British and Spanish forces during a raid in 1695.[50]
Mrs. Beare fl. 1684–1689 Late 17th century English or Jamaican Full name unknown. Wife of the pirate John Phillip Beare, Mrs. Beare, originally from Jamaica. She joined him on pirate voyages, frequently donning men's clothing. She is described as a woman with a promiscuous reputation. [51]
Anne Dieu-le-Veut 1661–1710 Late 17th century French According to legends the wife of the Dutch pirate Laurens de Graaf, whom she is said to have accompanied on pirate raids. Her legend conflicts with known historical information on Laurens de Graaf's life;[48] although documentary evidence confirms her as a real person, she only married de Graaf after he is believed to have left his pirate life behind him.[52]
Ingela Gathenhielm 1692–1729 1711–1721 Swedish Married the shipowner and privateer Lars Gathenhielm, who also operated a pirate business. Ingela was deeply involved in her husband's business and took charge of it after Lars died in 1718.[53]
Maria Lindsey 1740s–1760s English Prostitute who married the pirate Eric Cobham.[54] Thought to have been insane, she joined Cobham and they assembled a pirate crew together. They conducted pirate attacks together in New England and Newfoundland; Cobham's memoirs portray Lindsey as ruthless in how she dealt with captives.[55]
Anne Bonny
a.k.a. Anne Bonney; Ann Fulford
1697–? 1719–1720 Irish Primarily known through Captain Charles Johnson's 1724 book A General History of the Pyrates;[56] though much of her story is of uncertain veracity, contemporary records confirm her existence and that she was convicted for piracy.[57] According to Johnson's story, she married the pirate/privateer James Bonny and had an affair with pirate John "Calico Jack" Rackham,[56] whose pirate crew she joined in 1719.[58] Also part of Rackham's crew was another female pirate, Mary Read. Captured and convicted in late 1720 but escaped execution through pointing out that she was pregnant, whereafter her further fate is unknown.[59]
Mary Read 1685–1721 ?–1720 English Primarily known through Captain Charles Johnson's 1724 book A General History of the Pyrates;[57][60] though much of her story is of uncertain veracity, contemporary records confirm her existence and that she was convicted for piracy.[57] Turned to piracy after a ship she was on was captured by pirates. Joined the crew of John "Calico Jack" Rackham in 1719,[61] which Anne Bonny was also part of.[59] Captured and convicted in late 1720 but escaped execution through pointing out that she was pregnant. Died of a fever in prison in 1721, perhaps related to childbirth complications.[60]
Martha Farley
a.k.a. Mary Farley; Mary Harvey; Mary Farlee
fl. 1726 Early 18th century English? Tried for piracy in Virginia alongside three men in 1726; whereas all men were executed, Farley was spared by the court.[13] Though Farley does not appear to have taken an active militant role alongside the men, she was present during at least one capture of a ship and is thought to have aided in eavesdropping on the conversations of the prisoners.[62]
Mary Critchett
a.k.a. Mary Crickett; Mary Crichett
d. 1729 Early 18th century English Tried for piracy in Virginia alongside a crew of five men in 1729 and executed.[13] Critchett and the others had been felons who escaped and stole a ship in the Rappahannock River before making their way into the Chesapeake Bay, where they captured another ship.[63]
Martha Herring fl. 1714–1735 1714–1715 English? Daughter of a captain killed in 1714 a mutiny by her lover Sandy Gordon, who turned to piracy. Herring continued to follow Gordon aboard the Flying Scot. Gordon was killed in 1715 and Herring then stayed behind on the island on which the two were married.[64]
Flora Burn fl. 1741 18th century American She served as one of the 35 sailors aboard the American privateer ship, HMS Revenge, during the year 1741. The ship was operating on the eastern coast of North America. She held a one-and-three-quarter share of the bounty within the crew.[65][66]

18th–19th centuries edit

Name Lifespan Active Culture Notes
Sarah Bishop 1778–1780 American Bishop was captured onto a British privateer ship during a raiding party in 1778 and became a crew member. Her duties included standing watch, handled the ship's wheel, and performed sexual services. She became the captain's wife, and after two years in captivity, she managed to escape by going overboard. Later, she became a hermit in Ridgefield, Connecticut.[64] [67]
Rachel Wall c. 1760–1789 1781–1782/1789 American One of the most notorious American pirates and perhaps the earliest female pirate to be born in America itself.[68] Partook in the capture and plunder of several ships in 1781–1782 through luring them with false distress. Sole survivor after her ship came under attack and thereafter ostensibly retired from piracy. Alleged to have continued to rob ships during the night. Imprisoned and then hanged in 1789 after she assaulted a woman and stole her bonnet.[69]
Zheng Yi Sao
a.k.a. Ching Shih; Cheng I Sao
1775–1844 1801–1810 Chinese Wife of the pirate Zheng Yi.[5] Participated in his piracy from the time of their marriage in 1801 onwards.[70] After her husband's death in 1807, she took command of his powerful Red Flag Fleet and dominated the South China Sea both militarily and politically. Enforced various pirate codes, including making the rape of female captives punishable by death.[71] At the height of her power in 1805 she commanded 400 junks and between 40,000 and 60,000 pirates.[72] After facing significant opposition from government authorities as well as major powers such as the East India Company and the Portuguese Empire she surrendered in 1810 and was allowed to retire in peace.[73]
Jossabee fl. 1804 Early 19th century Algerian Mentioned by the French author H. Mesnik in his book Les femmes pirates (1804), wherein he claimed to have lived with her for a time.[74]
Margaret Jordan
a.k.a. Margaret Croke
fl. 1809 Early 19th century Irish Wife of the pirate Edward Jordan. Tried for piracy and murder following a violent dispute with investors over the schooner The Three Sisters. Found innocent and released by the court so that she could care for her children.[75] Despite this it is almost certain that she assisted her husband in his piracy, and that she thus was a pirate herself.[76]
Lucia Allen
a.k.a. Lucie; Lucille; Señora del Norte
fl. 1821 Early 19th century American Friend and perhaps mistress of the pirate captain Pierre Lafitte. Recorded to have accompanied Lafitte on a pirate voyage and raid in the summer of 1821. Might have died in childbirth in November that year.[77]
Johanna Hård
a.k.a. Johanna Jungberg
1789–1851 1823 Swedish In popular remembrance considered the last Swedish pirate. Lived on Vrångö Island and was the widow of a bookkeeper.[78] Lived off of smuggling and running speakeasy. Accused of piracy in 1823, Hård was found not guilty and the veracity of the accusation remains unknown.[79]
Ng Akew
a.k.a. Aku
fl. 1849 19th century Chinese Part of the crew of an American gunpowder and opium-trader on the ship Ruparell,[80] having been purchased as a slave by its captain James Bridges Endicott.[81] Known for a series of events in 1849 when she personally smuggled opium[81] and acted as the representative of a pirate fleet to negotiate with Captain Lockyer of the British navy ship HMS Medea.[80]
Eliza Welsh 1806–after 1871 Middle 19th century Spanish Lived with a Captain Graham aboard HMS Devonshire who became a pirate. Welsh accompanied him and partook in his piracies. Captured by the British navy, whereafter Graham was hanged in London and Welsh was placed in a prison camp in Tasmania, where she spent twenty years.[82]
Sadie Farrell, "Sadie the Goat" fl. 1869[83] 1850s–1869s Irish American[84] River pirate who led the Charlton Street Gang in the rivers surrounding New York City, raiding ships, villages and small towns and flying a Jolly Roger flag.[85] She earnt her nickname before becoming a pirate; it derived from her strategy to headbutt people in the stomach, whereafter one of her male companions would rob the now grounded victim.[86][87]

20th century edit

Name Lifespan Active Culture Notes
Lo Hon-cho
a.k.a. Lo Honcho
1921–1922 Chinese Took charge of a pirate fleet after her husband’s death in 1921,[88] probably in her mid-20s. Earnt a ruthless reputation through her attacks in the region surrounding Beihai. Commanded 64 junks at the height of her power. Captured by the Chinese military in October 1922.[89]
Lai Choi San
a.k.a. Lai Sho Sz’en
fl. 1931–1939 1920s–1930s Chinese Active in the South China Sea and the East China Sea, commanded 12 junks. Her historicity, or at least the historicity of her exploits, are disputed since she is mainly known from the report I Sailed with Pirates (1931) by Aleko Lilius, a journalist of dubious repute. She appears to have been a real figure since she is also mentioned in a later report by a war journalist during the Sino-Japanese War.[90]
Tan Chin Chiao, "Golden Grace"
a.k.a. T'ang Ch'ên Ch'iao
fl. 1935 Early 20th century Chinese Also called the "Queen of the Pirates". Commanded several pirate ships, arrested in Daya Bay in 1935.[30] Recorded to have proclaimed herself the "mortal enemy of the West".[6]
P’en Ch’ih Ch’iko fl. 1936 Early 20th century Chinese Commanded over a hundred pirates in 1936.[6]
Ki Ming
a.k.a. King Mi; Ching Mi
Early 20th century Chinese Attacked and tried to seize the RMS Empress of Canada in Manila, aided by a gang of her crewmembers hidden among the steerage passengers.[91]
Huang Bamei, "Two Guns"
a.k.a. Huang P’ei-mei; Huang P'emei
1906–1982 1931–1951 Chinese Active along the coasts of the Zhejiang and Jiangsu provinces in the 1930s. Her gang, among other local criminal gangs, was recruited by the National Revolutionary Army of the Republic of China at the outbreak of the Second Sino-Japanese War in 1937, although she was of dubious allegiance.[92] Huang's fleet grew considerably during the war; at her height she commanded 50,000 pirates and 70 ships.[6][93] After the war she returned to piracy, raiding around Lake Tai. Recruited by the military again in 1949 to fight in the Chinese Civil War. Largely retired from maritime activities in 1951.[92]
Sister Ping 1949–2014 1970s–1990s Chinese Operated out of Guangzhou as an owner and financer of pirate ships in the South China Sea. Also known for smuggling Chinese immigrants into the United States and Europe. Was convicted in the United States and sentenced to 35 years in prison.[5]
Linda 20th century Filipino Full name unknown. Pirate responsible for several raids along the Philippine coasts,[54][94] encountered by the French sailor Frances Guillain.[94]
Susan Frani 1990s Filipino Member of the pirate crew of Emilio Changco, whom she had an intimate relationship with. Perhaps the sole female member of the crew.[95][96] The Changco crew operated in the 1980s and 1990s and hijacked numerous ships in Philippine waters.[97]

Pirate women in fiction edit

 
Jean Peters as the fictional pirate Anne Providence in Anne of the Indies (1951)

Historical fictional depictions of pirate women have often reflected stereotypes of their times concerning not only women but also women in power.[98] Depictions of female pirates in A General History of the Pyrates (1724) for instance showcase a degree of unease.[98] Illustrations in a Dutch 1725 edition of the book depict female pirates as unpleasant and bare-chested, trampling on figures representing justice and commerce.[98] Pirate fiction grew increasingly popular in the mid-18th century and among the many tales written were novels starring female pirates.[99] Several such narratives with women pirates and warriors were often highly formulaic, with the women going to sea or war in order to either win or regain the affection of a man.[100] Some tales saw female pirates exceeding their male counterparts in courage, skill and virtue.[99] Some works, such as Fanny Campbell, the Female Pirate Captain (1844), included great adventures but also ended with the central woman finding a man and settling down, perhaps an attempt to not conflict too much with traditional notions of femininty.[101]

In the 20th century, fictional pirate women sometimes became symbols of feminism and female liberty; whereas male pirates were often used to tell stories of escape from wage slavery, female pirates illustrated escape from gender subordination.[16] Such romanticization of pirates, whether male or female, is not grounded in history since pirates were typically violent criminals, thieves and murderers.[102] An early work in this tradition is F. Tennyson Jesse's Moonraker (1927), wherein the pirate captain Lovel is revealed to be a woman with strong ideals on female liberty.[16] Still, there also continued to be stories wherein women were seduced by pirates, such as the 1944 film Frenchman's Creek, and films wherein female pirates seduced men, such as Anne of the Indies (1951).[16] Anne Providence, the main character of Anne of the Indies, was the first famous female pirate in film.[103]

The female pirate is sometimes cast as a feminist, or even an anarchist, icon.[16] Ulrike Ottinger's 1978 film Madame X: An Absolute Ruler is about several women from different career backgrounds joining the pirate crew of "Madame X" above the Chinese ship Orlando[104] and was inspired by the Chinese pirate women of the early 20th century.[105] Among the various messages of the film were a critique of patriarchal and hierarchical power structures.[104] The Pirates of the Caribbean film series includes several female pirates,[106] most notably Elizabeth Swann. Although Swann is included in some stereotypical scenes and begins as a damsel in distress, she is turned into a courageous pirate and heroine over the course of the film series.[107] Both Swann and the other female pirate Anamaria are depicted in Pirates of the Caribbean as cross-dressing, recalling real historical pirate women who did the same.[103]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ The exact number differs depending on whether legendary figures are included and on how "pirate" is defined. Some scholars for instance include mythological figures such as Atalanta and privateers such as Louise Antonini (1771–1861) and Julienne David (1773–1843).[2] Some figures once viewed as pirates, such as Charlotte Badger (1778–after 1843) have also been demonstrated to have been victims of highly fictionalized sensationalism.[3]
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Although there were Viking warrior women,[25][26][27] attested both by military equipment found in the graves of women and texts describing women as among the Viking invaders,[15] the women named in the Gesta Danorum are considered legendary and unverified on account of the unreliability of the work itself. The Gesta Danorum was written in the 12th/13th century partially as a work of royal propaganda[28] and is not considered a reliable historical account for the centuries before its own time, though portions of it may be distorted retellings of earlier sources.[29]

References edit

  1. ^ a b c Powell 2015, Chapter 6.
  2. ^ a b c Zuidhoek 2022, p. 3.
  3. ^ Hardie 2019, p. 84.
  4. ^ a b c Hollick 2017, Were Women There in the Golden Age of Piracy?.
  5. ^ a b c Zuidhoek 2022, p. 163.
  6. ^ a b c d Klausmann, Meinzerin & Kuhn 1997, pp. 54–55.
  7. ^ Pennell 2001, p. 284.
  8. ^ Pennell 2001, pp. 289–290.
  9. ^ Gilmer 2019, p. 372.
  10. ^ Gilmer 2019, pp. 371–372, 383.
  11. ^ Appleby 2013, p. 191.
  12. ^ Pennell 2001, pp. 285, 303.
  13. ^ a b c Rediker 2011, p. 112.
  14. ^ Zuidhoek 2022, p. 48.
  15. ^ a b c d e Mueller-Vollmer & Wolf 2022, p. 216.
  16. ^ a b c d e Parker 2013, Pirate Utopianism.
  17. ^ a b c Klausmann, Meinzerin & Kuhn 1997, p. 69.
  18. ^ a b Zuidhoek 2022, p. 273.
  19. ^ Klausmann, Meinzerin & Kuhn 1997, p. 31.
  20. ^ a b Zuidhoek 2022, p. 43.
  21. ^ Klausmann, Meinzerin & Kuhn 1997, p. 81.
  22. ^ Zuidhoek 2022, pp. 768–769.
  23. ^ Stanley et al. 1995, p. 74.
  24. ^ a b Zuidhoek 2022, p. 707.
  25. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Duncombe 2017, Gatekeepers of Valhalla.
  26. ^ Hedenstierna-Jonson et al. 2017, p. 853.
  27. ^ Price et al. 2019, pp. 189–192.
  28. ^ Hermanson 2013, p. 110.
  29. ^ Sawyer 2003, p. 17.
  30. ^ a b c d e Zuidhoek 2022, pp. 27–28.
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  32. ^ Zuidhoek 2022, p. 352.
  33. ^ a b c Harrison Lindbergh 2017, p. 262.
  34. ^ a b c Mondschein 2017, p. 151.
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  36. ^ Zuidhoek 2022, p. 79.
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  42. ^ a b Zuidhoek 2022, p. 782.
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  49. ^ Zuidhoek 2022, p. 725.
  50. ^ Zuidhoek 2022, p. 212.
  51. ^ Zuidhoek 2022, p. 75.
  52. ^ Little 2016.
  53. ^ Streifert Eikeland 2014, p. 371.
  54. ^ a b Zuidhoek 2022, p. 493.
  55. ^ Edwards 2012, pp. 54–55.
  56. ^ a b Zuidhoek 2022, p. 98.
  57. ^ a b c Stefoff 2014, p. 19.
  58. ^ Stefoff 2014, p. 21.
  59. ^ a b Zuidhoek 2022, pp. 98–99.
  60. ^ a b Zuidhoek 2022, p. 657.
  61. ^ Stefoff 2014, p. 20.
  62. ^ Theophilus 2013, p. 225.
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  65. ^ Jameson, J. F. (Ed.). (1923). Privateering and Piracy in the Colonial Period: Illustrative Documents. New York: The Macmillan Company. (pp. 395-378).
  66. ^ Stanley, J. (1996). Bold in Her Breeches: Women Pirates Across the Ages (p. 143). London; San Francisco: Pandora.
  67. ^ De Pauw, Linda Grant. (1982). Seafaring Women. Boston: Houghton Mifflin, pp. 60-61.
  68. ^ Duncombe 2017, Veterans of the American Wars.
  69. ^ Allison 2012, pp. 631–633.
  70. ^ Murray 1987, p. 71.
  71. ^ Zuidhoek 2022, pp. 163–164.
  72. ^ Murray 2001, p. 258.
  73. ^ Zuidhoek 2022, p. 164.
  74. ^ Zuidhoek 2022, p. 446.
  75. ^ Zuidhoek 2022, p. 445.
  76. ^ Greenwood & Boissery 2000, p. 73.
  77. ^ Zuidhoek 2022, p. 26.
  78. ^ Wolke 2015, 1700- och 1800-talen.
  79. ^ Tingdal 2020.
  80. ^ a b Zuidhoek 2022, p. 21.
  81. ^ a b Lim 2011, p. 283.
  82. ^ Zuidhoek 2022, p. 830.
  83. ^ Zuidhoek 2022, p. 85.
  84. ^ Arsovska & Allum 2014, p. 4.
  85. ^ Owen 2021, p. 19.
  86. ^ Macintyre 2011, p. 20.
  87. ^ Batterberry & Batterberry 1998, p. 105.
  88. ^ Gosse 2012, p. 281.
  89. ^ Stanley et al. 1995, pp. 243–244.
  90. ^ Duncombe 2017, Evil Incarnate and the Dragon Lady.
  91. ^ Zuidhoek 2022, p. 465.
  92. ^ a b Guo 2019, p. 6–31.
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  94. ^ a b Stanley et al. 1995, p. 268.
  95. ^ Zuidhoek 2022, p. 37.
  96. ^ Stanley et al. 1995, pp. 264, 270.
  97. ^ Fontana 2012, The Philippines.
  98. ^ a b c Lincoln 2015, 'Stand and Deliver': The Pirate Inheritance.
  99. ^ a b Williams & Edwards 2001, p. 357.
  100. ^ Mann 2018.
  101. ^ Ganser 2020, pp. 116–117.
  102. ^ Sharp 2002, p. 12.
  103. ^ a b Steinhoff 2011, p. 80.
  104. ^ a b Langford 2012, p. 182.
  105. ^ Rickels 2008, p. 116.
  106. ^ Holston & Winchester 2018, p. 228.
  107. ^ Zhanial 2019, p. 270.

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women, piracy, although, majority, pirates, history, have, been, there, around, hundred, known, examples, female, pirates, about, forty, whom, were, active, golden, piracy, some, women, have, been, pirate, captains, some, have, commanded, entire, pirate, fleet. Although the majority of pirates in history have been men 1 there are around a hundred known examples of female pirates 2 a about forty of whom were active in the Golden Age of Piracy 4 Some women have been pirate captains and some have commanded entire pirate fleets Among the most powerful pirate women were figures such as Zheng Yi Sao 1775 1844 and Huang Bamei 1906 1982 both of whom led tens of thousands of pirates 5 6 Zheng Yi Sao 1775 1844 right as depicted in 1836In addition to the few that were pirates themselves women have also historically been more heavily involved in piracy through secondary roles interacting with pirates through being smugglers lenders of money purchasers of stolen goods tavern keepers and prostitutes and through having been family members of both pirates and victims 1 7 Some women also married pirates and turned their homes or establishments into piratical safe havens 8 Through women in these secondary roles pirates were strongly supported by the agency of women 9 Some influential women including monarchs such as Elizabeth I of England r 1558 1603 have also acted as powerful patrons of pirates 1 Although they have received little academic attention women still occupy these important secondary roles in contemporary piracy Piracy off the coast of Somalia is for instance supported to a large extent by on shore women who participate in transportation housing and recruitment 10 Seafaring in general has historically been a highly masculine gendered activity 11 Women who became pirates at times disguised themselves as men in order to do so since they were otherwise rarely allowed on pirate ships On many ships in the Golden Age of Piracy women were prohibited by the ship s contract required to be signed by all crew members due to being seen as bad luck and due to fears that the male crew members would fight over the women Many famous female pirates such as Anne Bonny 1697 and Mary Read 1685 1721 accordingly dressed and acted as men 12 Since the gender of many pirate women was only exposed after they were caught it is possible that there were more women in piracy than is otherwise indicated by surviving sources 13 In addition to historical female pirates women in piracy have also frequently appeared in legends and folklore The earliest legendary female pirate is perhaps Atalanta of Greek mythology who according to legend joined the Argonauts in the years before the Trojan War 14 Scandinavian folklore and mythology though the tales themselves are unverified includes numerous female warriors shield maidens who command ships and fleets 15 Female pirates have had varying roles in modern fiction often reflecting cultural norms and traditions Beginning in the 20th century fictional pirate women have sometimes been romanticized as symbols of female liberty 16 Contents 1 List of named female pirates 1 1 Ancient pirates 1 2 Vendel and Viking Age 1 3 Medieval and Renaissance pirates 1 4 Golden Age of Piracy 1 5 18th 19th centuries 1 6 20th century 2 Pirate women in fiction 3 See also 4 Notes 5 References 5 1 BibliographyList of named female pirates edit Disputed historicity or legendary figure Ancient pirates edit See also Ancient Mediterranean piracy Name Lifespan Active Culture NotesDidoa k a Elissa 800 BC Phoenician The legendary founder of Carthage 17 Sometimes considered a pirate since her legend involves her leading a sea expedition 17 18 raids 17 and the kidnapping of a large group of women 18 Tchiao Kuo fu ja 2 a k a Ch iao K uo Fu Jen 600 BC Chinese Legendary Chinese pirate who appears in a legend wherein she and her crew liberates a captive young woman named P ao 19 Queen Artemisia I of Caria 480 BC Greek Queen of the city state of Halicarnassus The earliest historical female pirate Artemisia captained a fighting ship 20 and led the most famous pirate fleet in the Mediterranean 21 She participated in the second Persian invasion of Greece 480 479 BC fighting alongside Xerxes I of the Achaemenid Empire 20 Queen Teuta of the Ardiaei 231 228 BC Illyrian Queen regent of the Ardiaei tribe active in the Adriatic Sea Sanctioned a number of pirate attacks against the Roman Republic and fought against the Romans in the First Illyrian War 229 228 BC 22 23 Vendel and Viking Age edit See also Shield maiden Vendel Period and Viking Age Name Lifespan Active Culture NotesPrincess Sela c 420 24 Norwegian Appears in the Gesta Danorum 25 b Sister of the Norwegian king Koller with whom she quarreled and led her own raids both in sea and land Killed by the Jutish king turned pirate Aurvandill after she attempted to avenge her brother 24 Alf and Alfhilda k a Alvid Altilda Atwilda Alvilda c 550 30 Geatish Appears in the Gesta Danorum b Her story is akin to a fairy tale and she consequently appears to be a mythical figure 30 31 Daughter of the Geatish king Synardus Turned to piracy to escape an enforced marriage and led an all female pirate crew Eventually tracked down and defeated by her intended spouse whereafter she married him on account of his prowess in battle 30 Groe c 550 30 Geatish Appears in the Gesta Danorum b One of the women accompanying Afhild 32 Stikla 8th century Norwegian Appears in the Gesta Danorum 25 b Shield maiden and pirate 31 who alongside her sister Rusila fought against the Norwegian ruler Olov for control of his kingdom 25 33 Defeated and killed by Olov s forces who were aided by the Danish king Harald Wartooth 33 Rusila 8th century Norwegian Appears in the Gesta Danorum b Sister of Stikla fought with her against Olov and Harald 25 33 Veborg c 770 15 Danish Briefly mentioned in the Gesta Danorum b Longship captain who was killed in battle 25 Participated in the legendary Battle of Bravellir 34 Hetha c 770 15 Danish Briefly mentioned in the Gesta Danorum b Longship captain who became the ruler of Zealand 25 Participated in the legendary Battle of Bravellir 34 Wisna c 770 15 Danish Briefly mentioned in the Gesta Danorum b Longship captain who became a standard bearer and lost her right hand in battle 25 Participated in the legendary Battle of Bravellir 34 Rusla Red Daughter 8th 9th century Norwegian Appears in the Gesta Danorum b Sometimes conflated with Rusila but appears to be a distinct figure 25 Sister of the Norwegian ruler Tesondus who had been deposed by the Danish king Omundus Angered at the Danish conquest and her brother being content with it she fought against both but was ultimately defeated 25 Lagertha 9th century Norwegian Appears in the Gesta Danorum b Viking shield maiden who accompanied and later married the legendary hero and king Ragnar Lodbrok 25 Medieval and Renaissance pirates edit Name Lifespan Active Culture NotesAEthelflaed Lady of the Mercians c 870 918 911 Anglo Saxon Ruler of Mercia Became a military leader after her husband s death in battle against the Danes in 911 Took command of the fleets to rid the seas of the Viking raiders Sometimes referred to as a pirate 4 Joanna of Flanders the Flame a k a Joanna of Montfort c 1295 1374 1341 1347 French Breton Duchess of Brittany by marriage to John of Montfort Famous and admired in Brittany for her skills as a warrior and military leader Fought alongside her troops against the French in the War of the Breton Succession 1341 1365 at points commanding great fleets in naval battles Sometimes referred to as a pirate 35 Jeanne de Clisson Lioness of Brittany a k a Jeanne de Belleville 1300 1359 1343 1350s French Breton French Breton noblewoman Turned to piracy to avenge her husband Olivier IV de Clisson who was executed as a traitor during the War of the Breton Succession Purchased three ships which she commanded and attacked French ships off the coast of Normandy Ended her pirate career after she remarried to the English knight Walter Bentley in the 1350s 36 Elise Eskilsdotter d 1483 1455 1470s Norwegian Norwegian noblewoman who turned to piracy to avenge her husband Olav Nilsson Attacked ships in the seas near Bergen 4 Grace O Malleya k a Grainne Ni Mhaille Granuaile c 1530 1603 16th century Irish Daughter of a local chieftain in Connacht Her family ran both a legitimate shipping business and a piracy business Inherited her father s lands Umhaill becoming a powerful Irish ruler With her three ships and two hundred men O Malley plundered ships both from England and from other parts of Ireland She became so prolific that Queen Elizabeth I put a reward on her head and considered sending the royal fleet against her Captured by the English in 1577 but released in a hostage exchange and continued to engage in piracy Entered into English service as a privateer in 1593 37 Sayyida al Hurra 1485 1561 1515 1542 Moroccan Ruler of the western coasts of Morocco for over thirty years and a powerful Barbary corsair operating out of Tetouan Allied with the Ottoman corsair Oruc Reis who operated out of Algiers Raided Christian ships from Spain regaining wealth her family had lost during the expulsions of Muslims from Spain Much of the wealth was used to revive Tetouan Earnt the title al Hurra a woman who exercises power and later married Ahmed el Outassi Sultan of Morocco Wishing to retain her political influence she forced Outassi to travel to Tetouan for the wedding the only time in Moroccan history a royal wedding was not held in the capital 38 Mary Wolverston Lady Killigrewa k a Elizabeth Killigrew Old Lady Killigrew fl 1525 1587 16th century English Daughter of the pirate Philip Wolverston who educated her in piracy in her youth 39 Married into the Cornish Killigrew family owners of Arwenack Among other businesses the Killigrews ran a criminal enterprise of seizing ships and hiding stolen goods and bribed officials to look the other way 40 41 Wolverston was actively involved in the family s piracy In 1582 she led pirate crews on her own pirate attacks against a Spanish 39 40 42 and then a German ship 40 Wolverston was thereafter imprisoned and sentenced to death by Queen Elizabeth I but was ultimately pardoned 40 42 43 Dorothy Monk Lady Killigrew 16th century English Daughter in law of Mary Wolverston Also charged with having engaged in piracy 44 45 Elizabetha Patrickson fl 1634 17th century English Raided English ships alongside her husband William Indicted on piracy robbery and murder charges on 10 March 1634 in an English court She was tortured into a confession and later hanged 46 Golden Age of Piracy edit See also Golden Age of Piracy Name Lifespan Active Culture NotesCharlotte de Berry 1636 17th century English Reportedly kidnapped and forced to go to sea whereafter she organized a mutiny took control of the ship and began a pirate career of her own 47 She is likely fictional since her earliest known mention in a literary work dates to 1836 48 Jacquotte Delahaye fl 1656 Mid 17th century Haitian or Spanish Legendary pirate whose story differs between accounts sometimes said to have been motivated by revenge and other times said to have wished to earn wealth to support her family Supposedly rose to command a hundred pirates Depending on the account said to have either continuously dressed as a man or to have taken a male alias after faking her death Likely fictional as she first appears only in accounts written significantly later than her purported lifespan 48 Christina Anna Skytte 1643 1677 1657 1668 Swedish A baroness who is said to in 1657 have joined her brother Gustav Skytte who secretly owned a pirate ship Together they assaulted ships in the Baltic Sea Fled the country to escape the authorities in 1663 but returned and retired from piracy in 1668 Her role in the piracy is somewhat disputed since the relevant court documents which confirm the piracy of her brother and fiance do not explicitly mention her 49 Neel Cuypera k a Cornelia Nellie Cowper Santa Rubia c 1655 1695 Late 17th century Dutch Served on Dutch merchant ships masquerading as a man Captured by pirates who recruited her on account of her experience After some time with the pirates Cuyper was discovered to be a woman whereafter she was disembarked together with her share of the loot at Tortuga Later founded a resort for pirates at Labadee in Haiti eventually becoming known as the Queen of Labadee Bay Killed by British and Spanish forces during a raid in 1695 50 Mrs Beare fl 1684 1689 Late 17th century English or Jamaican Full name unknown Wife of the pirate John Phillip Beare Mrs Beare originally from Jamaica She joined him on pirate voyages frequently donning men s clothing She is described as a woman with a promiscuous reputation 51 Anne Dieu le Veut 1661 1710 Late 17th century French According to legends the wife of the Dutch pirate Laurens de Graaf whom she is said to have accompanied on pirate raids Her legend conflicts with known historical information on Laurens de Graaf s life 48 although documentary evidence confirms her as a real person she only married de Graaf after he is believed to have left his pirate life behind him 52 Ingela Gathenhielm 1692 1729 1711 1721 Swedish Married the shipowner and privateer Lars Gathenhielm who also operated a pirate business Ingela was deeply involved in her husband s business and took charge of it after Lars died in 1718 53 Maria Lindsey 1740s 1760s English Prostitute who married the pirate Eric Cobham 54 Thought to have been insane she joined Cobham and they assembled a pirate crew together They conducted pirate attacks together in New England and Newfoundland Cobham s memoirs portray Lindsey as ruthless in how she dealt with captives 55 Anne Bonnya k a Anne Bonney Ann Fulford 1697 1719 1720 Irish Primarily known through Captain Charles Johnson s 1724 book A General History of the Pyrates 56 though much of her story is of uncertain veracity contemporary records confirm her existence and that she was convicted for piracy 57 According to Johnson s story she married the pirate privateer James Bonny and had an affair with pirate John Calico Jack Rackham 56 whose pirate crew she joined in 1719 58 Also part of Rackham s crew was another female pirate Mary Read Captured and convicted in late 1720 but escaped execution through pointing out that she was pregnant whereafter her further fate is unknown 59 Mary Read 1685 1721 1720 English Primarily known through Captain Charles Johnson s 1724 book A General History of the Pyrates 57 60 though much of her story is of uncertain veracity contemporary records confirm her existence and that she was convicted for piracy 57 Turned to piracy after a ship she was on was captured by pirates Joined the crew of John Calico Jack Rackham in 1719 61 which Anne Bonny was also part of 59 Captured and convicted in late 1720 but escaped execution through pointing out that she was pregnant Died of a fever in prison in 1721 perhaps related to childbirth complications 60 Martha Farleya k a Mary Farley Mary Harvey Mary Farlee fl 1726 Early 18th century English Tried for piracy in Virginia alongside three men in 1726 whereas all men were executed Farley was spared by the court 13 Though Farley does not appear to have taken an active militant role alongside the men she was present during at least one capture of a ship and is thought to have aided in eavesdropping on the conversations of the prisoners 62 Mary Critchetta k a Mary Crickett Mary Crichett d 1729 Early 18th century English Tried for piracy in Virginia alongside a crew of five men in 1729 and executed 13 Critchett and the others had been felons who escaped and stole a ship in the Rappahannock River before making their way into the Chesapeake Bay where they captured another ship 63 Martha Herring fl 1714 1735 1714 1715 English Daughter of a captain killed in 1714 a mutiny by her lover Sandy Gordon who turned to piracy Herring continued to follow Gordon aboard the Flying Scot Gordon was killed in 1715 and Herring then stayed behind on the island on which the two were married 64 Flora Burn fl 1741 18th century American She served as one of the 35 sailors aboard the American privateer ship HMS Revenge during the year 1741 The ship was operating on the eastern coast of North America She held a one and three quarter share of the bounty within the crew 65 66 18th 19th centuries edit Name Lifespan Active Culture NotesSarah Bishop 1778 1780 American Bishop was captured onto a British privateer ship during a raiding party in 1778 and became a crew member Her duties included standing watch handled the ship s wheel and performed sexual services She became the captain s wife and after two years in captivity she managed to escape by going overboard Later she became a hermit in Ridgefield Connecticut 64 67 Rachel Wall c 1760 1789 1781 1782 1789 American One of the most notorious American pirates and perhaps the earliest female pirate to be born in America itself 68 Partook in the capture and plunder of several ships in 1781 1782 through luring them with false distress Sole survivor after her ship came under attack and thereafter ostensibly retired from piracy Alleged to have continued to rob ships during the night Imprisoned and then hanged in 1789 after she assaulted a woman and stole her bonnet 69 Zheng Yi Saoa k a Ching Shih Cheng I Sao 1775 1844 1801 1810 Chinese Wife of the pirate Zheng Yi 5 Participated in his piracy from the time of their marriage in 1801 onwards 70 After her husband s death in 1807 she took command of his powerful Red Flag Fleet and dominated the South China Sea both militarily and politically Enforced various pirate codes including making the rape of female captives punishable by death 71 At the height of her power in 1805 she commanded 400 junks and between 40 000 and 60 000 pirates 72 After facing significant opposition from government authorities as well as major powers such as the East India Company and the Portuguese Empire she surrendered in 1810 and was allowed to retire in peace 73 Jossabee fl 1804 Early 19th century Algerian Mentioned by the French author H Mesnik in his book Les femmes pirates 1804 wherein he claimed to have lived with her for a time 74 Margaret Jordana k a Margaret Croke fl 1809 Early 19th century Irish Wife of the pirate Edward Jordan Tried for piracy and murder following a violent dispute with investors over the schooner The Three Sisters Found innocent and released by the court so that she could care for her children 75 Despite this it is almost certain that she assisted her husband in his piracy and that she thus was a pirate herself 76 Lucia Allena k a Lucie Lucille Senora del Norte fl 1821 Early 19th century American Friend and perhaps mistress of the pirate captain Pierre Lafitte Recorded to have accompanied Lafitte on a pirate voyage and raid in the summer of 1821 Might have died in childbirth in November that year 77 Johanna Harda k a Johanna Jungberg 1789 1851 1823 Swedish In popular remembrance considered the last Swedish pirate Lived on Vrango Island and was the widow of a bookkeeper 78 Lived off of smuggling and running speakeasy Accused of piracy in 1823 Hard was found not guilty and the veracity of the accusation remains unknown 79 Ng Akewa k a Aku fl 1849 19th century Chinese Part of the crew of an American gunpowder and opium trader on the ship Ruparell 80 having been purchased as a slave by its captain James Bridges Endicott 81 Known for a series of events in 1849 when she personally smuggled opium 81 and acted as the representative of a pirate fleet to negotiate with Captain Lockyer of the British navy ship HMS Medea 80 Eliza Welsh 1806 after 1871 Middle 19th century Spanish Lived with a Captain Graham aboard HMS Devonshire who became a pirate Welsh accompanied him and partook in his piracies Captured by the British navy whereafter Graham was hanged in London and Welsh was placed in a prison camp in Tasmania where she spent twenty years 82 Sadie Farrell Sadie the Goat fl 1869 83 1850s 1869s Irish American 84 River pirate who led the Charlton Street Gang in the rivers surrounding New York City raiding ships villages and small towns and flying a Jolly Roger flag 85 She earnt her nickname before becoming a pirate it derived from her strategy to headbutt people in the stomach whereafter one of her male companions would rob the now grounded victim 86 87 20th century edit Name Lifespan Active Culture NotesLo Hon choa k a Lo Honcho 1921 1922 Chinese Took charge of a pirate fleet after her husband s death in 1921 88 probably in her mid 20s Earnt a ruthless reputation through her attacks in the region surrounding Beihai Commanded 64 junks at the height of her power Captured by the Chinese military in October 1922 89 Lai Choi Sana k a Lai Sho Sz en fl 1931 1939 1920s 1930s Chinese Active in the South China Sea and the East China Sea commanded 12 junks Her historicity or at least the historicity of her exploits are disputed since she is mainly known from the report I Sailed with Pirates 1931 by Aleko Lilius a journalist of dubious repute She appears to have been a real figure since she is also mentioned in a later report by a war journalist during the Sino Japanese War 90 Tan Chin Chiao Golden Grace a k a T ang Ch en Ch iao fl 1935 Early 20th century Chinese Also called the Queen of the Pirates Commanded several pirate ships arrested in Daya Bay in 1935 30 Recorded to have proclaimed herself the mortal enemy of the West 6 P en Ch ih Ch iko fl 1936 Early 20th century Chinese Commanded over a hundred pirates in 1936 6 Ki Minga k a King Mi Ching Mi Early 20th century Chinese Attacked and tried to seize the RMS Empress of Canada in Manila aided by a gang of her crewmembers hidden among the steerage passengers 91 Huang Bamei Two Guns a k a Huang P ei mei Huang P emei 1906 1982 1931 1951 Chinese Active along the coasts of the Zhejiang and Jiangsu provinces in the 1930s Her gang among other local criminal gangs was recruited by the National Revolutionary Army of the Republic of China at the outbreak of the Second Sino Japanese War in 1937 although she was of dubious allegiance 92 Huang s fleet grew considerably during the war at her height she commanded 50 000 pirates and 70 ships 6 93 After the war she returned to piracy raiding around Lake Tai Recruited by the military again in 1949 to fight in the Chinese Civil War Largely retired from maritime activities in 1951 92 Sister Ping 1949 2014 1970s 1990s Chinese Operated out of Guangzhou as an owner and financer of pirate ships in the South China Sea Also known for smuggling Chinese immigrants into the United States and Europe Was convicted in the United States and sentenced to 35 years in prison 5 Linda 20th century Filipino Full name unknown Pirate responsible for several raids along the Philippine coasts 54 94 encountered by the French sailor Frances Guillain 94 Susan Frani 1990s Filipino Member of the pirate crew of Emilio Changco whom she had an intimate relationship with Perhaps the sole female member of the crew 95 96 The Changco crew operated in the 1980s and 1990s and hijacked numerous ships in Philippine waters 97 Pirate women in fiction editSee also List of fictional pirates nbsp Jean Peters as the fictional pirate Anne Providence in Anne of the Indies 1951 Historical fictional depictions of pirate women have often reflected stereotypes of their times concerning not only women but also women in power 98 Depictions of female pirates in A General History of the Pyrates 1724 for instance showcase a degree of unease 98 Illustrations in a Dutch 1725 edition of the book depict female pirates as unpleasant and bare chested trampling on figures representing justice and commerce 98 Pirate fiction grew increasingly popular in the mid 18th century and among the many tales written were novels starring female pirates 99 Several such narratives with women pirates and warriors were often highly formulaic with the women going to sea or war in order to either win or regain the affection of a man 100 Some tales saw female pirates exceeding their male counterparts in courage skill and virtue 99 Some works such as Fanny Campbell the Female Pirate Captain 1844 included great adventures but also ended with the central woman finding a man and settling down perhaps an attempt to not conflict too much with traditional notions of femininty 101 In the 20th century fictional pirate women sometimes became symbols of feminism and female liberty whereas male pirates were often used to tell stories of escape from wage slavery female pirates illustrated escape from gender subordination 16 Such romanticization of pirates whether male or female is not grounded in history since pirates were typically violent criminals thieves and murderers 102 An early work in this tradition is F Tennyson Jesse s Moonraker 1927 wherein the pirate captain Lovel is revealed to be a woman with strong ideals on female liberty 16 Still there also continued to be stories wherein women were seduced by pirates such as the 1944 film Frenchman s Creek and films wherein female pirates seduced men such as Anne of the Indies 1951 16 Anne Providence the main character of Anne of the Indies was the first famous female pirate in film 103 The female pirate is sometimes cast as a feminist or even an anarchist icon 16 Ulrike Ottinger s 1978 film Madame X An Absolute Ruler is about several women from different career backgrounds joining the pirate crew of Madame X above the Chinese ship Orlando 104 and was inspired by the Chinese pirate women of the early 20th century 105 Among the various messages of the film were a critique of patriarchal and hierarchical power structures 104 The Pirates of the Caribbean film series includes several female pirates 106 most notably Elizabeth Swann Although Swann is included in some stereotypical scenes and begins as a damsel in distress she is turned into a courageous pirate and heroine over the course of the film series 107 Both Swann and the other female pirate Anamaria are depicted in Pirates of the Caribbean as cross dressing recalling real historical pirate women who did the same 103 See also edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Female pirates Piracy Pirate code List of pirates Gender and crime Feminist school of criminologyNotes edit The exact number differs depending on whether legendary figures are included and on how pirate is defined Some scholars for instance include mythological figures such as Atalanta and privateers such as Louise Antonini 1771 1861 and Julienne David 1773 1843 2 Some figures once viewed as pirates such as Charlotte Badger 1778 after 1843 have also been demonstrated to have been victims of highly fictionalized sensationalism 3 a b c d e f g h i j Although there were Viking warrior women 25 26 27 attested both by military equipment found in the graves of women and texts describing women as among the Viking invaders 15 the women named in the Gesta Danorum are considered legendary and unverified on account of the unreliability of the work itself The Gesta Danorum was written in the 12th 13th century partially as a work of royal propaganda 28 and is not considered a reliable historical account for the centuries before its own time though portions of it may be distorted retellings of earlier sources 29 References edit a b c Powell 2015 Chapter 6 a b c Zuidhoek 2022 p 3 Hardie 2019 p 84 a b c Hollick 2017 Were Women There in the Golden Age of Piracy a b c Zuidhoek 2022 p 163 a b c d Klausmann Meinzerin amp Kuhn 1997 pp 54 55 Pennell 2001 p 284 Pennell 2001 pp 289 290 Gilmer 2019 p 372 Gilmer 2019 pp 371 372 383 Appleby 2013 p 191 Pennell 2001 pp 285 303 a b c Rediker 2011 p 112 Zuidhoek 2022 p 48 a b c d e Mueller Vollmer amp Wolf 2022 p 216 a b c d e Parker 2013 Pirate Utopianism a b c Klausmann Meinzerin amp Kuhn 1997 p 69 a b Zuidhoek 2022 p 273 Klausmann Meinzerin amp Kuhn 1997 p 31 a b Zuidhoek 2022 p 43 Klausmann Meinzerin amp Kuhn 1997 p 81 Zuidhoek 2022 pp 768 769 Stanley et al 1995 p 74 a b Zuidhoek 2022 p 707 a b c d e f g h i j k Duncombe 2017 Gatekeepers of Valhalla Hedenstierna Jonson et al 2017 p 853 Price et al 2019 pp 189 192 Hermanson 2013 p 110 Sawyer 2003 p 17 a b c d e Zuidhoek 2022 pp 27 28 a b Sharp 2002 p 22 Zuidhoek 2022 p 352 a b c Harrison Lindbergh 2017 p 262 a b c Mondschein 2017 p 151 Klausmann Meinzerin amp Kuhn 1997 pp 117 120 Zuidhoek 2022 p 79 Sharp 2002 pp 31 37 Klausmann Meinzerin amp Kuhn 1997 pp 97 99 a b Klausmann Meinzerin amp Kuhn 1997 p 149 a b c d Sharp 2002 pp 42 47 Klausmann Meinzerin amp Kuhn 1997 p 146 a b Zuidhoek 2022 p 782 Klausmann Meinzerin amp Kuhn 1997 p 151 Zuidhoek 2022 p 549 Probasco 2017 p 223 Druett 2001 pp 52 53 Compton 2013 p 48 a b c Duncombe 2017 The Golden Age Zuidhoek 2022 p 725 Zuidhoek 2022 p 212 Zuidhoek 2022 p 75 Little 2016 Streifert Eikeland 2014 p 371 a b Zuidhoek 2022 p 493 Edwards 2012 pp 54 55 a b Zuidhoek 2022 p 98 a b c Stefoff 2014 p 19 Stefoff 2014 p 21 a b Zuidhoek 2022 pp 98 99 a b Zuidhoek 2022 p 657 Stefoff 2014 p 20 Theophilus 2013 p 225 Theophilus 2013 pp 225 226 a b Zuidhoek 2022 p 87 Jameson J F Ed 1923 Privateering and Piracy in the Colonial Period Illustrative Documents New York The Macmillan Company pp 395 378 Stanley J 1996 Bold in Her Breeches Women Pirates Across the Ages p 143 London San Francisco Pandora De Pauw Linda Grant 1982 Seafaring Women Boston Houghton Mifflin pp 60 61 Duncombe 2017 Veterans of the American Wars Allison 2012 pp 631 633 Murray 1987 p 71 Zuidhoek 2022 pp 163 164 Murray 2001 p 258 Zuidhoek 2022 p 164 Zuidhoek 2022 p 446 Zuidhoek 2022 p 445 Greenwood amp Boissery 2000 p 73 Zuidhoek 2022 p 26 Wolke 2015 1700 och 1800 talen Tingdal 2020 a b Zuidhoek 2022 p 21 a b Lim 2011 p 283 Zuidhoek 2022 p 830 Zuidhoek 2022 p 85 Arsovska amp Allum 2014 p 4 Owen 2021 p 19 Macintyre 2011 p 20 Batterberry amp Batterberry 1998 p 105 Gosse 2012 p 281 Stanley et al 1995 pp 243 244 Duncombe 2017 Evil Incarnate and the Dragon Lady Zuidhoek 2022 p 465 a b Guo 2019 p 6 31 Zuidhoek 2022 p 407 a b Stanley et al 1995 p 268 Zuidhoek 2022 p 37 Stanley et al 1995 pp 264 270 Fontana 2012 The Philippines a b c Lincoln 2015 Stand and Deliver The Pirate Inheritance a b Williams amp Edwards 2001 p 357 Mann 2018 Ganser 2020 pp 116 117 Sharp 2002 p 12 a b Steinhoff 2011 p 80 a b Langford 2012 p 182 Rickels 2008 p 116 Holston amp Winchester 2018 p 228 Zhanial 2019 p 270 Bibliography edit Allison Ariel E 2012 Rachel Wall Women Criminals An Encyclopedia of People and Issues ABC CLIO ISBN 978 0 313 33713 0 Appleby John C 2013 Women and English Piracy 1540 1720 Partners and Victims of Crime Boydell amp Brewer Ltd ISBN 978 1 84383 869 2 Arsovska Jana Allum Felia 2014 Introduction women and transnational organized crime Trends in Organized Crime 17 1 1 15 doi 10 1007 s12117 014 9223 y ISSN 1936 4830 S2CID 39503388 Batterberry Michael Batterberry Ariane 1998 On the Town in New York The Landmark History of Eating Drinking and Entertainments from the American Revolution to the Food Revolution Routledge ISBN 978 1 136 76805 7 Compton Nic 2013 Why Sailors Can t Swim and Other Marvellous Maritime Curiosities A amp C Black ISBN 978 1 4081 9263 4 Druett Joan 2001 She Captains Heroines and Hellions of the Sea Simon and Schuster ISBN 978 0 7432 1437 7 Duncombe Laura Sook 2017 Pirate Women The Princesses Prostitutes and Privateers Who Ruled the Seven Seas Chicago Review Press ISBN 978 1 61373 604 3 Edwards Peter 2012 The Encyclopedia of Canadian Organized Crime From Captain Kidd to Mom Boucher McClelland amp Stewart ISBN 978 1 55199 688 2 Fontana Nicolo 2012 Piracy maritime security and Japan s initiatives Laurea thesis Ca Foscari University of Venice Ganser Alexandra 2020 Crisis and Legitimacy in Atlantic American Narratives of Piracy 1678 1865 Springer Nature ISBN 978 3 030 43623 0 Gilmer Brittany 2019 Invisible Pirates Women and the Gendered Roles of Somali Piracy Feminist Criminology 14 3 371 388 doi 10 1177 1557085117741361 ISSN 1557 0851 S2CID 149020829 Gosse Philip 2012 The History of Piracy Courier Corporation ISBN 978 0 486 14146 6 Greenwood F Murray Boissery Beverley 2000 Uncertain Justice Canadian Women and Capital Punishment 1754 1953 Dundurn ISBN 978 1 4597 1781 7 Guo Weiting 2019 The Portraits of a Heroine Huang Bamei and the Politics of Wartime History in China and Taiwan 1930 1960 Cross Currents East Asian History and Culture Review 33 6 31 Hardie Elsbeth 2019 Was Charlotte Badger a Colonial Renegade The Journal of New Zealand Studies NS28 doi 10 26686 jnzs v0iNS28 5422 ISSN 2324 3740 S2CID 197843873 Harrison Lindbergh Katarina 2017 Nordisk mytologi fran A till O in Swedish Historiska Media ISBN 978 91 7789 868 9 Hedenstierna Jonson Charlotte Kjellstrom Anna Zachrisson Torun Krzewinska Maja Sobrado Veronica Price Neil Gunther Torsten Jakobsson Mattias Gotherstrom Anders Stora Jan 2017 A female Viking warrior confirmed by genomics American Journal of Physical Anthropology 164 4 853 860 doi 10 1002 ajpa 23308 ISSN 0002 9483 PMC 5724682 PMID 28884802 Hermanson Lars 2013 How to Legitimate Rebellion and Condemn Usurpation of the Crown Discourses of Fidelity and Treason in the Gesta Danorum of Saxo Grammaticus Disputing Strategies in Medieval Scandinavia BRILL ISBN 978 90 04 22159 8 Hollick Helen 2017 Pirates Truth and Tales Amberley Publishing Limited ISBN 978 1 4456 5216 0 Holston Kim R Winchester Tom 2018 Science Fiction Fantasy and Horror Film Sequels Series and Remakes An Illustrated Filmography Volume II 1996 2016 McFarland ISBN 978 1 4766 2985 8 Klausmann Ulrike Meinzerin Marion Kuhn Gabriel 1997 Women Pirates and the Politics of the Jolly Roger Black Rose Books ISBN 978 1 55164 059 4 Langford Michelle 2012 Directory of World Cinema Germany Intellect Books ISBN 978 1 84150 465 0 Lim Patricia 2011 Forgotten Souls A Social History of the Hong Kong Cemetery Hong Kong University Press ISBN 978 962 209 990 6 Lincoln Margarette 2015 British Pirates and Society 1680 1730 Routledge ISBN 978 1 317 17166 9 Little Benerson 2016 The Golden Age of Piracy The Truth Behind Pirate Myths New York Skyhorse Publishing Inc ISBN 9781510713048 Macintyre Ben 2011 The Napoleon of Crime The Life and Times of Adam Worth Master Thief Crown ISBN 978 0 307 88647 7 Mann Abigail 2018 Gale Researcher Guide for Transgender Literature and the New Nation Gale Cengage Learning ISBN 978 1 5358 4761 2 Mondschein Ken 2017 Game of Thrones and the Medieval Art of War McFarland ISBN 978 0 7864 9970 0 Mueller Vollmer Tristan Wolf Kirsten 2022 Vikings An Encyclopedia of Conflict Invasions and Raids ABC CLIO ISBN 978 1 4408 7730 8 Murray Dian H 1987 Pirates of the South China Coast 1790 1810 Stanford California Stanford University Press ISBN 9780804713764 Murray Dian H 2001 Cheng I Sao in Fact and Fiction In Pennell C R ed Bandits at Sea A Pirates Reader New York New York University Press pp 253 282 ISBN 9780814766781 Owen Erika 2021 Lawbreaking Ladies 50 Tales of Daring Defiant and Dangerous Women from History Simon and Schuster ISBN 978 1 9821 4709 9 Parker Martin 2013 Alternative Business Outlaws Crime and Culture Routledge ISBN 978 1 136 61745 4 Pennell C R 2001 Bandits at Sea A Pirates Reader New York University Press ISBN 978 0 8147 6678 1 Powell M 2015 British Pirates in Print and Performance Springer ISBN 978 1 137 33992 8 Price Neil Hedenstierna Jonson Charlotte Zachrisson Torun Kjellstrom Anna Stora Jan Krzewinska Maja Gunther Torsten Sobrado Veronica Jakobsson Mattias Gotherstrom Anders 2019 Viking warrior women Reassessing Birka chamber grave Bj 581 Antiquity 93 367 181 198 doi 10 15184 aqy 2018 258 ISSN 0003 598X S2CID 167018260 Probasco Nathan 2017 Dorothy Monk Killigrew ca 1570 ca 1633 A Biographical Encyclopedia of Early Modern Englishwomen Exemplary Lives and Memorable Acts 1500 1650 Routledge ISBN 978 0 7546 6900 5 Rediker Marcus 2011 Villains of All Nations Atlantic Pirates in the Golden Age Beacon Press ISBN 978 0 8070 9538 6 Rickels Laurence A 2008 Ulrike Ottinger The Autobiography of Art Cinema University of Minnesota Press ISBN 978 0 8166 5330 0 Sawyer P H 2003 1982 Kings and Vikings Scandinavia and Europe AD 700 1100 Routledge ISBN 0 415 04590 8 Sharp Anne Wallace 2002 Daring Pirate Women Twenty First Century Books ISBN 978 0 8225 0031 5 Stanley Jo Chambers Anne Murray Dian H Wheelwright Julie 1995 Bold in Her Breeches Women Pirates Across the Ages Pandora ISBN 978 0 04 440892 5 Stefoff Rebecca 2014 Mary Read and Anne Bonny Cavendish Square Publishing LLC ISBN 978 1 5026 0201 5 Steinhoff Heike 2011 Queer Buccaneers de constructing Boundaries in the Pirates of the Caribbean Film Series LIT Verlag Munster ISBN 978 3 643 11100 5 Streifert Eikeland Katarina 2014 Kvinnan och havet Med hjarta och hjarna En vanbok till professor Elisabeth Arwill Nordbladh in Swedish University of Gothenburg ISSN 1403 8293 Theophilus Fox Edward 2013 Piratical Schemes and Contracts Pirate Articles and Their Society 1660 1730 Exeter University of Exeter a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Tingdal Birgitta 2020 Johanna Hard Biographical Dictionary of Swedish Women in Swedish Retrieved 3 October 2022 Williams Daniel E Edwards Mary K Bercaw 2001 Pirate Literature Encyclopedia of American Literature of the Sea and Great Lakes Greenwood Publishing Group ISBN 978 0 313 30148 3 Wolke Lars Ericson 2015 Kapare och pirater i Nordeuropa under 800 ar in Swedish Svenska Historiska Media Forlag AB ISBN 978 91 7545 178 7 Zhanial Susanne 2019 Postmodern Pirates Tracing the Development of the Pirate Motif with Disney s Pirates of the Caribbean BRILL ISBN 978 90 04 41609 3 Zuidhoek Arne 2022 The Pirate Encyclopedia The Pirate s Way BRILL ISBN 978 90 04 51567 3 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Women in piracy amp oldid 1194657321, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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