Pirates and Privateers
The History of Maritime
Piracy
Cindy Vallar, Editor
& Reviewer
P.O. Box 425,
Keller, TX 76244-0425
Books for
Adults ~ History: Piracy
Law: Crime, Punishment, & Pirate Hunting
British Piracy in the Golden
Age: History and Interpretation, 1660-1730
edited by Joel H. Baer
Routledge, 2007, ISBN 978-1-85196-845-9, US $595.00 / UK
£350.00
This
four-volume set of primary documents and early
publications deals with maritime piracy in the
17th and 18th century. These republications
include both rare and popular books, pamphlets,
and documents from the time period in which they
were first written. Baer uses the wider time frame
of the golden age, encompassing both buccaneers
and the more infamous pirates familiar to the
layman, because how piracy is viewed politically
and criminally changes during these years.
The series opens with a
general survey on outbreaks of British piracy from
the Middle Ages through 1730. Baer examines how
pirates range farther from their native shores as
time progresses; how they join together to achieve
certain goals, then separate; how they govern
themselves aboard their ships; what steps nations
take to curb piracy; and what trials and the
ritual convicted pirates participate in at their
hangings are like. These are the subject areas
that are then explored in greater depth in each
book.
The first volume, which
contains general accounts of piracy, demonstrates
how pirates coalesce into what we know as the
marauders of the golden age as well as their
decline. Each selection concerns a distinct, but
different, threat to commerce and life, whether it
appears as a story, in a government document or
mariner’s journal, or in newspapers. Volumes two
and three deal with the legal aspect of piracy:
trials, histories, applications, and commentaries.
They contain reports of thirteen pirate trials,
perhaps the largest collection of such in one
place. The introduction to this subject is one of
the most concise and easy-to-understand
explanations of maritime law (as it pertains to
pirates) that I’ve read. The last volume primarily
contains sermons and spiritual advice given by
preachers to sailors and pirates, but it also
contains dying speeches from and ballads about
pirates.
Not only does Baer
provide an introduction to the set, he also
introduces each volume and each selection. He sets
the historical stage, interprets who’s who, and
explains why the work is important or what sets it
apart from other similar publications. Each
introduction includes endnotes with complete
citations of the source material consulted.
Editorial notes at the conclusion of each book
explain how some words and phrases are used in the
particular time period, as well as identifying
people and clarifying specific aspects found in
the document. Volume four also includes an
appendix listing all cited manuscripts and a
detailed index to the set.
If there are any
drawbacks to British Piracy in the Golden Age,
one is the price and the other is some of the
print. This set of books is primarily for
libraries and maritime history collections,
although avid pirate historians may well pinch
pennies to acquire this treasure. As for the
second drawback, these documents are facsimiles of
the original – as opposed to being retyped for
this edition – so at times the typeface the
original printer chose is small or difficult to
read. Also, writers of this age tended to spell
less rigidly than we do and some letters, like
"f," may actually represent something else. This,
however, is the hazard any researcher who explores
primary documents finds while researching his
topic, and with the aid of a magnifying glass and
a bit of patience, any reader will be able to
decipher those included here that fall into this
category.
British Piracy in
the Golden Age is as valuable a find as the
gold, silver, and jewels that Henry Every uncovers
when he captures the Ganj-i-sawai, or that
all pirates dream of as they search for the
Spanish treasure ships laden with the riches of
the New World and bound for King Philip’s coffers.
Nowhere else will you find such a diverse
collection of documents that cover all aspects of
piracy in one set of books. Each document and each
volume is one to be studied and savored, much as a
connoisseur appreciates the finest wines and
delicacies.
Annotated
List of Documents in this Collection
Volume 1
- Newes from Sea,
of Two Notorious Pyrates (1609) – a pamphlet
that examines the threat of Barbary pirates to
trade in the Atlantic. Two particular
renegados, John Ward and Simon Simonson (aka
Danseker), are discussed.
- ‘Sir Henry
Morgan’s Voyage to Panama, 1670,’ in The
Present State of Jamaica (1683) – nine
documents from government archives that
undermine charges of piracy against Morgan.
- The Voyages
and Adventures of Capt. Bartholomew Sharp
(1684) – six manuscripts concerning Caribbean
and South Sea piracy.
- Periodicals from
August 1696 through July 1729 – excerpts from
English and colonial newspapers that provide
anecdotes on pirates and where they hunted.
Volume 2
- The Lives,
Apprehensions Arraignments, and Executions,
of the 19 Late Pyrates (1609) – first
printed piracy trial.
- The Grand
Pyrate: or, The Life and Death of Capt.
George Cusack (1676) – a pamphlet that
was the second account of piracy published.
- An Account of
the Tryals of Captain J. Golden [et al.]
(1694) – a broadside that reports on the
trials of privateers, sailing under
commissions from the exiled King James II, who
were indicted as pirates and traitors while
King William III ruled England.
- The Tryals of
Joseph Dawson [et al.] (1696) – trials
of four men who participated in the mutiny
Henry Every led.
- The
Arraignment, Tryal, and Condemnation of
Captain William Kidd (1701) – most
extensive primary document on Kidd’s career
published in the 18th century.
- A Full Account
of the Proceedings in Relation to Capt. Kidd
(1701) – first detailed account of the
political scandal surrounding Kidd’s
expedition and arrest.
- The
Arraignment, Tryal, and Condemnation, of
Capt. John Quelch (1704) – first printed
report under the piracy act passed in 1700.
- The Trials of
Eight Persons Indited for Piracy (1718)
– trials of the remaining members of Samuel
Bellamy’s crew after the Whydah was
wrecked off Cape Cod.
- The Tryals of
Major Stede Bonnet, and other Pirates
(1719) – the ten trials held for the only
pirate who purchased his ship and hired his
crew, and his men.
Volume 3
- The Tryals of
Captain John Rackham, and other Pirates
(1721) – the only source of facts regarding
Anne Bonny and Mary Read.
- A Full and
Exact Account, of the Tryal of all the
Pyrates, Lately Taken by Captain Ogle
(1723) – contains more miscellaneous
information on pirate society than any other
primary source of the golden age.
- Tryals of
Thirty-six Persons for Piracy (1723) –
five trials of Edward Low’s men.
- The Trials of
Five Persons for Piracy, Felony and Robbery
(1726) – trial of French and Mikmaq Indians.
- The Tryals of
Sixteen Persons for Piracy (1726) – six
trials to convict or clear William Fly and his
comrades.
- A Discourse of
the Laws Relating to Pirates and Piracies
(1726) – how to keep sailors from straying
into piracy.
- A General
Treatise of the Dominion of the Sea
(1710) – key provisions of maritime law,
including three aspects dealing with piracy.
- Piracy
Destroy’d (1701) – why men turn to
piracy and how to stop this crime.
- Reasons for
Reducing the Pyrates at Madagascar
(1707) – proposal to repatriate British
pirates that sought sanctuary on this island.
- Introductions to
3 Popular Books on Pirates: Alexander
Exquemelin’s The History of the Bucaniers
of America (1699); Alexander Smith’s The
Compleat History of the Lives, Robberies,
Piracies, and Murders Committed by the Most
Notorious Rogues (1720); and Charles
Johnson’s A General History of the Lives
and Adventures of the Most Famous
Highwaymen, Murderers, Street-Robbers,
&c. (1734) – defensive essays for
publishing accounts about criminals.
Volume 4
- Foure
Sea-Sermons by Henry Valentine (1635) –
illustrates how preachers saw life at sea and
prepared sailors for such rigorous lives.
- An Account of
the Behaviour, Dying Speeches, and Execution
of Mr. John Murphy, for High Treason; and
William May [et al.], for Robbery, Piracy
and Felony (1696) – only account of what
pirates, some who followed Henry Every, said
prior to their hangings.
- An Account of
the Behaviour and Last Dying Speeches of the
Six Pirates (1704) – Cotton Mather’s
account of the executions and dying speeches
of John Quelch and his men.
- Paul Lorrain,
The Ordinary of Newgate: His Account of the
Behaviour, Confession, and Last Speech of
Capt Alexander Dolzell (1715) – the
dying speech of a recalcitrant pirate as seen
through the eyes of the preacher who tended
the prisoners of Newgate.
- The Mariners
Divine Mate: or, Spiritual Navigation
Improved (1715) – a sermon for mariners
that examines their fears, strengths, and
sins, including piracy.
- Instructions
to the Living, from the Condition of the
Dead (1717) – Cotton Mather’s sermon
published after the execution of six of the
nine survivors of Samuel Bellamy’s crew.
- Useful
Remarks. An Essay upon Remarkables in the
Way of Wicked Men (1723) – Cotton
Mather’s take on the trial of 36 of Edward
Low’s pirates at Newport, Rhode Island, and
the executions of 19 of them.
- The Seaman’s
Monitor: or, Advice to Sea-Faring Men by
Josiah Woodward (1723) – emphasis on a
mariner’s moral duties.
- It is a
Fearful Thing to Fall into the Hands of the
Living God by Benjamin Colman (1726) –
Presbyterian sermon delivered at the request
of two condemned pirates.
- The Famous
Adventures of Captain John Avery, of
Plymouth (1809) – collection of scenes
that first appeared a century earlier.
- Popular Ballads:
‘Bold Captain Avery’ (c. 1770) and ‘Captain
Ivory, the Bold English Pirate’ (c. 1818-1835)
– broadsides dealing with the legendary pirate
and the mutiny he led.
Review Copyright ©2008 Cindy Vallar
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