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History of Pirates
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lovethemtigers
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History of Pirates

I've decided that the Curse of the Black Pearl and Dead Man's chest has awakened an interest in me to discover the history of pirates...and perhaps get some clues as to what will happen in POTC 3..and I have discovered some very interesting things...

Old Post Aug 27th, 2006 12:03 AM
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lovethemtigers
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here is something I read about the Conduct Code for Pirates...refered to so much during POTC 1 COTBP:

Code of Conduct

1. No women were allowed on board.
2. Captured women were not to be molested.
3. The share of each pirates booty was agreed on.
4. Death was the penalty for killing or stealing from another pirate.
5. A trial was given before punishment was given. The pirate crew was the jury.
6. A pirate could be marooned on a deserted island if he broke too many rules.
7. No lighted lamps or cigarettes were allowed below decks.


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Old Post Aug 27th, 2006 12:05 AM
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sailorleo
Mrs. Admiral Norrington

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and they didn't set sail on fridays b/c it's bad luck....interesting tid bit for those writier out there


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Old Post Aug 27th, 2006 12:06 AM
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lovethemtigers
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some more interesting history of Pirates:

The most successful buccaneer was Sir Henry Morgan. He came to the West Indies when he was very young and plundered the Spanish settlements of Puerto del Principe, Puerto Bello, and Maracaibo. In 1671 Morgan completely destroyed the city of Panama and then took all of their valuable goods.
In 1701 the war of Spanish Succession began and the buccaneers stopped capturing ships and went to war with France and Britain against their enemy, the Spanish. When the War of Spanish Succession was over the buccaneers had no jobs, so they became pirates again. They began to attack Spanish fleets of treasure ships that brought supplies from Europe and treasure back home. In 1714 the buccaneers were chasing a treasure fleet called The Plate Fleet off of the tip of Florida when a hurricane hit. Most of the Plate Fleet's treasure was saved and taken to shore, but a pirate named Henry Jennings heard about the treasure and sailed there and took it.
The buccaneers became so strong that the merchant ship captains insisted that their countries put a stop to the pirates. They did not offer much help, but did offer what is called amnesty to all pirates if they would stop being pirates. That means that they would be forgive of their crimes without being punished. Most pirates just laughed and dared the countries to come stop them. In 1717 British Captain Woodes Rogers was sent to defeat the pirates. He played a trick on the buccaneers by trapping them in their harbor at New Providence. New Providence is in the Bahamas. Over one thousand pirates were trapped there and a big battle began. In the end Captain Woodes Rogers defeated the pirates.
Jean Lafitte who lived off of the coast of Louisiana in a sheltered Bay named Barataria Bay. He was often called a gentleman pirate and walked around New Orleans without being afraid of capture. He also had a pirate base on the Island of Padre Island off of the coast of Texas.
In the early eighteen hundreds the Golden Age of Piracy was over.


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Old Post Aug 27th, 2006 12:08 AM
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lovethemtigers
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This is funny...Poor old Jack was a victim to one of these and almost victim to the other...

Pirate Punishment

Pirates were punished in different ways depending on which rule was broken. Sometimes they were tied to the mast of a ship and whipped. Other times they were hung by either the quartermaster or when they were captured by the Spanish or other enemy. One really gruesome way of punishing a pirate was to maroon them on a deserted island without food or water and be left to die a slow death.


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Old Post Aug 27th, 2006 12:10 AM
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diddly
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pirates still are around today,.. but instead of fighting the way we get rid of them is by an ultrosonic sound wave that messes there hearing!


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Old Post Aug 27th, 2006 12:10 AM
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lovethemtigers
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here is some history on Port Royal:


Port Royal was the centre of shipping commerce in Jamaica in the 17th century. During this time, it gained a reputation as both the "richest and wickedest city in the world". It was notorious for its gaudy displays of wealth and loose morals, and was a popular place for pirates to bring and spend their treasure. During the 17th century the British actively encouraged and even paid buccaneers based at Port Royal to attack Spanish and French shipping.

An earthquake on June 7, 1692 largely destroyed Port Royal, causing two thirds of the city to sink into the Caribbean Sea. After this disaster, its commercial role was taken over by the city of Kingston


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Old Post Aug 27th, 2006 12:13 AM
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diddly
DIVING

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Ouch!


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Old Post Aug 27th, 2006 12:17 AM
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willofthewisp
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This is so cool. I had no idea Port Royal was a real place.

If anyone has visited Galveston Island in TX, they have a bunch of Jean Lafitte stuff, and they recovered a ship called The Elissa, which they believed to be one of his. You can go on it and tour it. It's pretty cool except how sailors had to eat.
There was one stove in the middle of the upper deck and the cook was usually someone with no prior skill, in other words, not a professional cook. They left maggots and other bugs in their food and usually ate stuff after it molded or went stale. I think there was also something called scurvy they got a lot because of the poor nutrition.


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Old Post Aug 27th, 2006 03:16 AM
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katelovespirate
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I LOVE THIS THREAD!!!! smile good work guys. i love history.

we definately need to work the history of port royal into our fake 4. lol.

yeah scurvy is a disease you get when you dont eat enough fresh vegetables. it makes your teeth/bones rot, your skin turn yellow, and then you die eventually.

Old Post Aug 27th, 2006 04:23 AM
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surfchikpir8fan
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eik groos wat a horrible way 2 die ive got a bit more history 2 -

The pirate code of the Brethren is a loose code of conduct common with Piracy in the Caribbean during the classic age of piracy set down by the pirates Henry Morgan and Bartholomew Roberts. There were many different pirate's codes but they tended to follow a few universal themes, like the right to parley and rules for the division of booty.

Though there was a loose confederation of pirates, centered around Tortuga, who were known as the Brethren of the Coast — and they did have a code governing certain aspects of buccaneer life — this particular, seemingly omnipotent, version of the code actually jointly created by Henry and Bartholemew has never been proven.

Bartholomew Roberts's code

Perhaps the most famous pirate's code is the code of conduct set down by the famous Caribbean pirate Bartholomew Roberts in 1721.

I. Every man has a vote in affairs of moment; has equal title to the fresh provisions, or strong liquors, at any time seized, and may use them at pleasure, unless a scarcity (not an uncommon thing among them) makes it necessary, for the good of all, to vote a retrenchment.

II. Every man to be called fairly in turn, by list, on board of prizes because, (over and above their proper share) they were on these occasions allowed a shift of clothes: but if they defrauded the company to the value of a dollar in plate, jewels, or money, marooning was their punishment. If the robbery was only betwixt one another, they contented themeselves with slitting the ears and nose of him that was guilty, and set him on shore, not in an uninhabited place, but somewhere, where he was sure to encounter hardships.

III. No person to game at cards or dice for money.

IV. The lights and candles to be put out at eight o'clock at night: if any of the crew, after that hour still remained inclined for drinking, they were to do it on the open deck

V. To keep their piece, pistols, and cutlass clean and fit for service.

VI. No boy or woman to be allowed amongst them. If any man were to be found seducing any of the latter sex, and carried her to sea, disguised, he was to suffer death; [so that when any fell into their hands, as it chanced in the Onslow, they put a sentinel immediately over her to prevent ill consequences from so dangerous an instrument of division and quarrel; but then here lies the roguery; they contend who shall be sentinel, which happens generally to one of the greatest bullies, who, to secure the lady's virtue, will let none lie with her but himself.]

VII. To desert the ship or their quarters in battle, was punished with death or marooning.

VIII. No striking one another on board, but every man's quarrels to be ended on shore, at sword and pistol. [The quarter-master of the ship, when the parties will not come to any reconciliation, accompanies them on shore with what assistance he thinks proper, and turns the disputant back to back, at so many paces distance; at the word of command, they turn and fire immediately, (or else the piece is knocked out of their hands). If both miss, they come to their cutlasses, and then he is declaired the victor who draws the first blood.]

IX. No man to talk of breaking up their way of living, till each had shared one thousand pounds. If in order to this, any man should lose a limb, or become a cripple in their service, he was to have eight hundred dollars, out of the public stock, and for lesser hurts, proportionately.

X. The captain and quartermaster to receive two shares of a prize: the master, boatswain, and gunner, one share and a half, and other officers one and quarter.

XI. The musicians to have rest on the Sabbath Day, but the other six days and nights, none without special favour.

Captain John Phillips's code

Captain John Phillips (Pirate) was the captain of the Revenge who also set a code for his men in 1724;

I. Every Man Shall obey civil Command; the Captain shall have one full Share and a half of all Prizes; the Master, Carpenter, Boatswain and Gunner shall have one Share and quarter.

II. If any Man shall offer to run away, or keep any Secret from the Company, he shall be marroon’d with one Bottle of Powder, one Bottle of Water, one small Arm, and Shot.

III. If any Man shall steal any Thing in the Company, or game, to the Value of a Piece of Eight, he shall be marroon’d or shot.

IV. If any time we shall meet another Marroner that Man shall sign his Articles without the Consent of our Company, shall suffer such Punishment as the Captain and Company shall think fit.

V. That Man that shall strike another whilst these Articles are in force, shall receive Moses’s Law (that is, 40 Stripes lacking one) on the bare Back.

VI. That Man that shall snap his Arms, or smoak Tobacco in the Hold, without a Cap to his Pipe, or carry a Candle lighted without a Lanthorn, shall suffer the same Punishment as in the former Article.

VII. That Man shall not keep his Arms clean, fit for an Engagement, or neglect his Business, shall be cut off from his Share, and suffer such other Punishment as the Captain and the Company shall think fit.

VIII. If any Man shall lose a Joint in time of an Engagement, shall have 400 Pieces of Eight ; if a Limb, 800.

IX. If at any time you meet with a prudent Woman, that Man that offers to meddle with her, without her Consent, shall suffer present Death.
[edit]

Edward Low's code

Pirate Captain Edward Low created a code also;

I. The Captain is to have two full Shares; the [quarter] Master is to have one Share and one Half; The Doctor, Mate, Gunner and Boatswain, one Share and one Quarter.

II. He that shall be found guilty of taking up any Unlawfull Weapon on Board the Privateer or any other prize by us taken, so as to Strike or Abuse one another in any regard, shall suffer what Punishment the Captain and the Majoirty of the Company shall see fit.

III. He that shall be found Guilty of Cowardice in the time of Ingagements, shall suffer what Punishment the Captain and the Majority of the Company shall think fit.

IV. If any Gold, Jewels, Silver, &c. be found on Board of any Prize or Prizes to the value of a Piece of Eight, & the finder do not deliver it to the Quarter Master in the space of 24 hours he shall suffer what Punishment the Captain and the Majority of the Company shall think fit.

V. He that is found Guilty of Gaming, or Defrauding one another to the value of a Ryal of Plate, shall suffer what Punishment the Captain and the Majority of the Company shall think fit.

VI. He that shall have the Misfortune to loose a Limb in time of Engagement, shall have the Sum of Six hundred pieces of Eight, and remain aboard as long as he shall think fit.

VII. Good Quarters to be given when Craved.

VIII. He that sees a Sail first, shall have the best Pistol or Small Arm aboard of her.

IX. He that shall be guilty of Drunkenness in time of Engagement shall suffer what Punishment the Captain and Majority of the Company shall think fit.

X. No Snaping of Guns in the Hould.
[edit]

Pirate code in popular culture

The Pirate Code was spoken of many times during the Film Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl, which used parley as a running joke through the film.
[edit]

See also

* Piracy in the Caribbean
* Parley

[edit]

References

* Really Bad Eggs: Pirates of the Caribbean
* Pirate Articles of Capt. John Phillips 1724

Retrieved from "http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pirate_code_of_the_Brethren"

Categories: Code of conduct | Piracy

Old Post Aug 27th, 2006 06:28 AM
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surfchikpir8fan
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kk maybe a bit more than a "BIT" of history i got this all off wikipedia

Old Post Aug 27th, 2006 06:29 AM
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diddly
DIVING

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sheesh,.. go by what you know about pirates,.. I wanna see how much you guys know.


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Old Post Aug 27th, 2006 07:39 AM
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surfchikpir8fan
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quote: (post)
Originally posted by diddly-dum
sheesh,.. go by what you know about pirates,.. I wanna see how much you guys know.


i don understand wat ya mean complement or sarcasm

Old Post Aug 27th, 2006 08:03 AM
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diddly
DIVING

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I mean I want to see what you know MEMORY wise,... not books or internet.


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Old Post Aug 27th, 2006 08:05 AM
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surfchikpir8fan
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okay then ummmmmmmmmmmmmm i remember that starboard side of a ship is da right side n port is left side lol off da top off my head thats all i can think right now nah just this may of been in what i posted but some of da punishments i can remember were really gruesome 1 was the crew would cut off a pirates nose or ear as punishment then half cook da piece of body then make them eat their ear, nose ect yuck n scary i also remember reading somewhere that walking da plank waz only ever recorded 2 be done once otherwise pirates didn't also tortuga means turtle or turtle island something like that n wiff da pirate flag the crew only let fly at the last moment before going into battle this wy they could disguise themselves n trick da enemy also wen they were murooned they were given a flask of water, a gun n think thats it i mean i reakon it would of been fun 2 be a real pirate bak in da 1700s but it wouldve been a very hard n dangerous lifestyle nothing like our dear potc movies r id rather live like da charcters in them do more adventure n magic i believe

Old Post Aug 27th, 2006 08:29 AM
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