Scholars have usually treated all pirates as the same, regardless of class and education. Gentleman privateers and merchants from Jamaica, Bermuda, and other English cities of the West Indies, however, varied in cultivation, education, land-ownership, and wealth with respect to common, poor pirates in the Bahamas, the quintessential "pirate nest." A close study of the cultural landscape in early America reveals the basis for those differences. Early depositions of the events at the beginning of the Golden Age of Piracy (1715-1726) provide pertinent case studies illustrating that difference
A life of piracy offered marginal men a profession with a degree of autonomy, despite the brand of ...
Surprisingly, pirates weren’t simply a band of outlaws who sailed together and kept pillaging until ...
This geographical study of piracy in Spanish America spans from 1536, the beginning date of sustaine...
Scholars have usually treated all pirates as the same, regardless of class and education. Gentleman ...
Trial records pertaining to the pirate captain Thomas Green contain the following statements: A pir...
The story of piracy in Spanish America begins with Treaty of Tordesillas. But its origins laid in th...
This thesis examines the legal and political environment that allowed piracy to expand during the pe...
This article uses world-systems analysis to examine the role that pirates and privateers played in t...
Soutien et partenariat de : Institut des Amériques, Institut Universitaire de France, Ambassade des ...
Student research for Spring, 2007 MLAS 270-23, Contemporary Caribbean, Professor William Frank Robin...
The buccaneers of the Caribbean were pirates based at colonial English Jamaica from 1659 to 1671. ...
Pirates of the Golden Age (1650-1726) have become the stuff of legend. The way they looked and acted...
All major combatants of the American Revolutionary War (1776-1783) deployed privateers to disrupt sh...
The modern view of pirates is shaped by their media representations, from Pirates of the Caribbean t...
The impact of the natural world on an infamous era of maritime history, the Golden Age of Piracy, is...
A life of piracy offered marginal men a profession with a degree of autonomy, despite the brand of ...
Surprisingly, pirates weren’t simply a band of outlaws who sailed together and kept pillaging until ...
This geographical study of piracy in Spanish America spans from 1536, the beginning date of sustaine...
Scholars have usually treated all pirates as the same, regardless of class and education. Gentleman ...
Trial records pertaining to the pirate captain Thomas Green contain the following statements: A pir...
The story of piracy in Spanish America begins with Treaty of Tordesillas. But its origins laid in th...
This thesis examines the legal and political environment that allowed piracy to expand during the pe...
This article uses world-systems analysis to examine the role that pirates and privateers played in t...
Soutien et partenariat de : Institut des Amériques, Institut Universitaire de France, Ambassade des ...
Student research for Spring, 2007 MLAS 270-23, Contemporary Caribbean, Professor William Frank Robin...
The buccaneers of the Caribbean were pirates based at colonial English Jamaica from 1659 to 1671. ...
Pirates of the Golden Age (1650-1726) have become the stuff of legend. The way they looked and acted...
All major combatants of the American Revolutionary War (1776-1783) deployed privateers to disrupt sh...
The modern view of pirates is shaped by their media representations, from Pirates of the Caribbean t...
The impact of the natural world on an infamous era of maritime history, the Golden Age of Piracy, is...
A life of piracy offered marginal men a profession with a degree of autonomy, despite the brand of ...
Surprisingly, pirates weren’t simply a band of outlaws who sailed together and kept pillaging until ...
This geographical study of piracy in Spanish America spans from 1536, the beginning date of sustaine...