Piracy
This article is about sea pirates. For other uses see Pirate (disambiguation)
Corsair is also the name of a private French airline. For more information, see Corsair (airline).
A pirate is a robber attacking from a ship or boat. Pirates usually attack other vessels, usually with the intention of looting their cargo, but may also attack targets on shore. They were termed buccaneers if they operated in the West Indies.The Englishmen called themselves "Freebooters", the Frenchmen called them "flibustier", and the English then called the French, "Filibuster". Originally, the term, Buccaneer and Filibuster were two different things, each meaning something different. Eventually, both terms had the same meaning, they were either English or French pirates. See also piracy in the Caribbean.
Piracy is significant in international law because it marks one of the first cases where the doctrine of universal jurisdiction was invoked.
Pirates are associated with a stereotypical manner of speaking. September 19 is International Talk Like a Pirate Day [1] .
Modern Piracy
Piracy in recent times has increased in areas such as South and Southeast Asia (the South China Sea), parts of South America, and the south of the Red Sea, with pirates now favouring small boats and taking advantage of the small crew numbers on modern cargo vessels. Modern pirates prey on cargo ships who must slow their speed in order to navigate narrow straits, making them vulnerable to be overtaken and boarded by small motorboats. In most cases, modern pirates are not interested in the cargo and are mainly interested in taking the personal belongings of the crew and the contents of the ship's safe, which may contain large amounts of cash needed to pay payroll and port fees. In some cases, the pirates will force the crew off the ship and sail the ship to a port where it is repainted and given a new identity through false papers. Pirate attacks have tripled beween 1993 and 2003. The first half of 2003 was the worst 6 month period on record with 234 pirate attacks and 16 deaths and 52 injured worldwide. There were also 193 crew members held hostage during this period.
Privateering
A privateer or corsair was similar in method, but had a commission or a letter of marque from a government or king to capture merchant ships belonging to an enemy nation. The famous Barbary Corsairs of the Mediterranean were privateers as were the Maltese Corsairs, who were authorized by the Knights of St. John. The letter of marque was recognized by international law and meant that a privateer could not be charged with piracy, although this was often not enough to save them. The letter of marque was banned under international law in 1854.
Notable pirates
- Black Bart (Bartholomew Roberts)
- Black Bellamy (Samuel Bellamy)
- Edward Teach or Thatch, known as Blackbeard
- Calico Jack (Jack Rackham)
- Anne Bonney
- Piet Hein
- Captain William Kidd
- Jean Lafitte
- Henry Morgan
- Grace O'Malley, Irish female pirate
- Mary Read
- Woodes Rogers
- Ching Shih
- Pirata Cofresi (Roberto Cofresí Ramirez de Arellano)
Notable privateers
- William Dampier
- Sir Francis Drake, also British admiral
- Jean Bart
- Surcouf
Fictional Pirates
- Captain Blood - The title character of novel by Rafael Sabatini who is an English doctor turned slave, then pirate. It was also adapted into a film starring Errol Flynn
- Peter Pan, by J. M. Barrie, features a famous band of pirates led by Captain Hook.
- Treasure Island, by Robert Louis Stevenson, weaves together many pirate myths and motifs, map of hidden treasure, villany among pirates, marooning, parrots, missing limbs, eye patches.
- The Pirates of Penzance, by Gilbert and Sullivan
- Terry and the Pirates, by Milton Caniff -- adventure comic strip frequently set among pirates of China and South Asia, led by notorious Dragon Lady.
- In The Princess Bride, by William Goldman, the notorious Dread Pirate Roberts was in fact a long series of different pirates operating under the same name, each inheriting the title from the last and capitalizing on its reputation.
- Pirates of the Caribbean Captain Jack Sparrow: The Curse of the Black Pearl was a 2003 movie vaguely based on the Disneyland ride.
External Links
See also
this article could benefit from a list of pirate movies