Sir Francis Drake was a protuberant figure that can be found
in the history books. These books and accounts reflect on his naval ability and
coated him to be an honorable commander that was loyal to his home nation
serving the queen unquestioningly. But, on the flip side of things there is
another side of the story that hasn’t been told yet. Under the Black Flag makes
Sir Francis Drake out to be a fabled privateer who preyed on the Spanish near
the treasure port of Nombre de Dios and returning all of his plunders faithfully
back to queen Elizabeth in England. It defines the bounty as being worth over
68 million dollars in today's day and age. It continues to say that he dumped 5
tons of silver into the Royal English courts even though he really kept 21 tons
for himself. This raised a question, "Was Sir Francis Drake really that
noble?" It is a very difficult question to answer because of the absolute difference
in facts about Drake but in my opinion based on the fact that he kept the vast
majority of the silver that he was supposed to claim for his queen and country
prove to me that he is more of a pirate that a nobleman.
The World of Black Sails
Monday, May 1, 2017
Blog Post 10
This semester I learned so much about pirate that it shocked me. I learned about what different flag colors meant and their significance. I was able to learn about how pirates were able to navigate through the ocean and how they had impaired vision navigating. I also learned about some of the pirate weaponry that was used during the pirate era. During my presentation I learned so much about black Piracy and how black people influenced the pirate world as a whole and the roles that they played to help make it what it was. Black Beards branding was another thing that I learned about I learned that he intentionally did things so that his name could get out there as a fierce pirate that he is. I also learned about some of the food that pirates would partake in like for example the crackers that they had to keep dry in order for them to last the long voyages across the sea. All in all this semester taught me so much about the pirate lifestyle and everything that it compassed from the different punishments that the crew members would receive upon breaking a pirate code to the rewards that they would get for successful raids, this semester taught me more about pirates than i've ever known.
Blog Post #4 Fact vs Fiction
The two books Under the Black Flag and Buccaneers and Pirates have information that contradict each other. In under the black flag when it highlights the voyage of captain Henry Morgan it gives a totally different account to how the event happened than in Buccaneers and Pirates Some of the things we saw was that in Under the Black Flag were some of Sir Henry Morgan's accomplishments like the raid on Panama and the successful robbery of 250,000 pesos. And the fact that he was never punished for any of his crimes in fact he was even rewarded and made a Lord but in Buccaneers and Pirates this is very different.
Monday, April 24, 2017
Blog Post 9
My research project was about black pirates and their influence on the pirate world past and present. I tried to make a comparison between Black pirates that operated in the Caribbean back in the 17th century and the black pirates that operate of the east and west coasts of Africa in the 21st century. In my research project I was able to highlight the important Black Pirate figure heads past and present. In my research project I highlighted some pirates like Black Caesar, Henri Caesar, Abduwali Muse and Tom Polo as some of the main pirates past and present that were highlighted. Because today piracy was still one of main global issues that the world was facing. Major businesses and corporations have had people and assets held to ransom and destroyed by these individual pirate groups and organizations. They've also collected large ransoms from these corporations to have their assets and people freed and unharmed. In my research I also looked at the reasons Black People got into slavery. During this era slavery was a very big business and Slaves were very expensive but many of these slaves often escaped slavery either by secret or by force and they would usually end up becoming pirates. The motive of most black pirates today is poverty being so poor that they have to rob in order to survive.
Monday, February 27, 2017
Edward Teach aka Blackbeard
Blackbeard was one of the worlds most notorious Pirates. Little is known about his early life. He is reported to have served as a privateer during Queen Anne's War (1701 - 1714), and turned to piracy sometime after the war's conclusion. His ship was called the Queen Anne's Revenge some artifacts from his ship are still around till this day. Sometime in 1716, Teach moved the source of his operations from Jamaica to New Providence in the Bahamas. He served an apprenticeship under Captain Benjamin Hornigold, who was the fiercest and ablest of all pirates regularly operating out of the island of New Providence. Jointly they captured and looted a number of large merchant vessels. Having amassed a sizeable fortune and recognizing that the profitable days of piracy were nearing an end, Hornigold in early 1718 retired from piracy and took up the honest life of a planter on New Providence. He took full advantage of the king's pardon when Woodes Rogers came to Nassau on 27 July 1718 as the newly appointed governor of the Bahamas Islands.
Blog Post 6
Some of the many punishments that pirates had to face were some of the most cruel and extreme. These punishments were often carried out to those Pirates that disobeyed the Pirate codes. Some of the main pirate punishments included Keelhauling, Marooning , Dunking, Flogging , tied to the mast, and Slavery. When a pirate was Marooned he was left to die without water and food on uninhabitable islands. Pirates were given, however, means to commit suicide, being left with a knife or pistol to put an end to the torture of marooning. Keelhauling was when A rope was tied beneath the belly of the ship and the offending pirate would be tied to the rope and hauled underwater, dragging underneath the pirate ship. The ship’s hull, covered in sharp barnacles, would cut like razors making for a very slow and painful death. Dunking was when A pirate was attached to a wooden beam and dunked into the water repeatedly. When performed during a ceremony, this was seen as an honor, when performed as a punishment, you would be sure that the dunking was a lot harder and deeper. And then flogging was when was perhaps the most common form of punishment for mild indiscretions upon ships, although it was less common on pirate ships because it was associated with the discipline enforced onboard naval vessels.
Blog Post 5
When I went back in time to hang out with Anne Bonny and Mary Read it was a very interesting experience. They were both ferocious females and very tough. They didn't tolerate any nonsense from anybody. Female pirates came from a tough background they were from a society that didn't view women as much of humans. They had to dress up as men just to survive on a Pirate ship some of the women would often get raped and prostituted out to the crew members by the captain if caught. Even crew members would be punished for bringing women on ships. But some of the most notorious female Pirates included Ching Shih, Sadie the Goat , and Jeanne de Clisson.
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