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History of Piracy

The end of the 17th century saw the greatest outburst of piracy in the history of seafaring. Ironically called 'the Golden Age of Piracy', the era lasted for around 30 years, from around 1700-1730. Although the most troubled area was the Caribbean, piracy was also rife off the Eastern seaboard of America, in the Indian Ocean and off the West Coast of Africa (where the 'Pirate Round' followed the trade routes from India to America via Africa). The piracy boom was the result of circumstances: the end of the War of the Spanish Succession (between France and an Alliance of England, Holland and the German States) meant that ports were full of unemployed sailors and there was a general lack of legal employment. The majority of the pirates who have gripped the popular imagination operated during this period.

Daniel Defoe, once believed (under a pen-name) to be the author of A General History of the Robberies and Murders of the Most Notorious Pyrates (1724).

Legends in their own time, pirates such as Blackbeard and Bartholomew Roberts now seem larger than life. What we really know of them is surprisingly little, and is drawn from the recollections of ex-pirates, former victims, naval officers who encountered them, or the records of courtrooms and confessions. One other source is the book A General History of the Robberies and Murders of the Most Notorious Pyrates (1724). The author, alleged to be a Captain Charles Johnson, had an extensive firsthand knowledge of piracy, and literary critics have suggested that Johnson was the nom-de-plume for Daniel Defoe, the author of Robinson Crusoe. However, the theory that Defoe had written it was put forth by John Robert Moore in 1932 and generally accepted for over 50 years until two NYU scholars (P.N. Furbank and W.R. Owens) examined Moore's study in detail and pointed out that he came to that conclusion because he wanted to, not through any real evidence. (Thanks to Aurora on one of the PotC fiction lists for pointing out the latter)

The book concentrates on pirates operating in the 30 years before its publication. Characters such as Edward Teach ('Blackbeard'), Edward Low and Henry Every were portrayed as Ogres, and their actual deeds embellished with bloodcurdling fictional anecdotes. One of the problems is that the line between fact and fiction is extremely blurred. While many elements of his portrayals were based on fact, it is vital to sift through his descriptions, comparing his version with the pirates mentioned in other contemporary accounts.

Lack of strong government in the majority of the American Colonies made the seaboard a pirate hunting ground. The benefits of illicit trade between pirates and townspeople were balanced against the disruption of shipping and rising insurance prices. One by one the Colonial Governors clamped down on piracy in their waters, and judicial pressure was backed by naval force to end the outbreak. By 1730 the era of rampant piracy was all but over. Although later outbreaks of piracy occurred, this short era would remain lodged in popular and romantic culture as the 'Golden Age of Piracy'. The romantic sounding name belied the cruelty, harshness and misery created by pirates, and unlike other 'Golden Ages' it was rarely regarded with any form of nostalgia. The phrase itself was never actually used by those who lived through it.

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