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PIRAAT: fact 368 Pirates in the 17th and 18th century rejected the strict hierarchy, the harsh slavery work and unquestionable obedience they were subjected to on the military and merchant ships. They lived the life of Liberty, Fraternity and Equality about 100 years earlier than the French Revolution, when these three words became the kernel idea behind that revolution. Drinking a Piraat ale is celebrating my unalienable right to freedom! Cheers. |

PIRAAT FACT 295
June - July 1543: Flemish PIRAAT raids two Columbian cities. |
PIRAAT: fact 324
Where did the ‘PIRAAT’ Francis Drake land in California? Historians agree that Sir Francis Drake, a pirate in the eyes of the Spaniards, but a hero in the eyes of the British, landed on the American West Coast on a cold June day in 1579. Just where, is the question. 1579 is about 16 years before the English made their first unsuccessful attempt to colonize America in Roanoke NC. Drake stayed for several weeks to fix up his ship, and established friendly relations with the natives. He called the area where he landed, and built a fortification, Nova Albion. Once back in the UK, the sailors were ordered not to disclose the exact landing place, which explains why the accounts are sparse and contradictory. Several sites from Southern California to Canada have been named as the landing spot, but historians have not yet come to a conclusion. |
PIRAAT: fact 561
After years of piracy in the North Sea, the German Pirate Klein Henszlein was captured in 1573. |
PIRAAT: fact 129
1568: PIRAAT Sir Francis Drake escapes Death in Mexico. Hawkins’ 10 English vessels, heavily damaged by a hurricane, enter San Juan de Ulua, port of Veracruz in Mexico under false colors, and capture the town. Three days later the Spanish Armada arrives and, |
Piraat: fact 244
1562: Hawkins is first English PIRAAT to hurt the Spaniards in the Caribbean. Leaving England with three ships for Guinea in West Africa to buy black slaves from the Arabs, Hawkins then sets sail to Santa Domingo in the Caribean where he trades the slaves for treasures. Such a trade being illegal in the Spanish eyes, Hawkins had to bribe the local Spanish commander. The profits of this one voyage were so big, that Hawkins was the richest man in Plymouth on his return. In March 1566, with the help of his Queen, he was able to launch a larger fleet and do the same successful trades again. Athough this time, instead of bribing, he had to use force to convince his Spanish customers. It was then that the Spanish crown declared war on all English ships venturing into the Caribbean waters. |
Piraat: fact 243 Eight days after voting for war against England, the US Congress enacted legislation encouraging and regulating Pirating. Ship owners and merchants had anticipated such action against English ships, and on July 1, 1812, less than a week after passage of the legislation, the people of the Eastern States were laboring almost night and day to fit out ships. On July 15, Niles Weekly Register, a Baltimore publication, predicted that in sixty days after signing the declaration of war “there will be afloat from the Unites States not less than one hundred and fifty pirate ships. Sixty five are already at sea today.” During the beginning of the war, virtually any vessel large enough to carry a single canon and a crew of fifty armed men could hope to capture an English merchant ship, which sailed unarmed since the Royal Navy had swept the French from the sea. This was the time following the French Revolution and the Napoleonic wars. |
Piraat: fact 325 A huge success at today’s movies, pirates and pirating was actually legal on our East coast in the early 1700’s. Our Pirate beers are considered best in the world. As pirates used to say: “Surrender the booty”. |