Τρίτη 17 Νοεμβρίου 2009
Pirates Pursued Democracy
Posted by Under The Black Flag on 4:08 μ.μ.
Pirates pursued democracy, helped American colonies survive  Jason Acosta, who studied pirates for his history thesis at the University of  Florida, shows his pirate paraphernalia, including a replica of a 17th century  pirate flintlock gun and sword, on May 10, 2006. Pirates deserve more credit  than the Hollywood stereotype of bloodthirsty one-eyed peg-legged men who bury  treasure and force people to walk the plank, Acosta said. They helped European  nations explore the Americas and practiced the same egalitarian principles as  our Founding Fathers, he said. Acosta is a descendant of a pirate who fought in  the Battle of New Orleans. (University of Florida/Kristen Bartlett) Blackbeard  and Ben Franklin deserve equal billing for founding democracy in the United  States and New World, a new University of Florida study Pirates practiced the  same egalitarian principles as the Founding Fathers and displayed pioneering  spirit in exploring new territory and meeting the native peoples, said Jason  Acosta, who did the research for his thesis in history at the University of  Florida. “Hollywood really has given pirates a bum rap with its image of  bloodthirsty, one-eyed, peg-legged men who bury treasure and force people to  walk the plank,” he said. “We owe them a little more respect.” Acosta, a  descendant of a pirate who fought for the United States in the Battle of New  Orleans, studied travel narratives, court hearings, sermons delivered at pirate  hangings and firsthand accounts of passengers held captive by pirates. Comparing  pirate charters with the Declaration of Independence and the U.S. Constitution,  he said he was amazed by the similarities. Like the American revolutionaries,  pirates developed three branches of government with checks and balances. 
The  ship captain was elected, just as the U.S. president; the pirate assembly was  comparable to Congress; and the quartermaster resembled a judge in settling  shipmate disputes and preventing the captain from overstepping his authority, he  said. Colonists and pirates also were alike in emphasizing written laws,  democratic representation and due process, Acosta said. All crew members were  allowed to vote, ship charters had to be signed by every man on board, and  anyone who lost an eye or a leg was compensated financially, he said. These  ideals grew out of both groups’ frustration at being mistreated by their  leaders; the British forced the colonists to quarter troops and pay taxes, and  captains on merchant ships beat their shipmen, starved them and paid less than  promised, Acosta said. “It’s no wonder that many sailors seized the opportunity  to jump ship and search for a better way of life, namely piracy, which offered  better food, shorter work shifts and the power of the crew in decision-making,”  he said. A golden age of pirating emerged in the 17th and 18th centuries as  these Brethren of the Sea sailed the world’s waterways, plundering hundreds of  millions of dollars worth of gold, silver and other merchandise, shaping the  modern world in the process, Acosta said. Pirates mapped new territory, expanded  trade routes, discovered good ports and opened doors with the native peoples,  Acosta said. “They really helped European nations explore the Americas before  Europeans could afford to explore them on their own,” he said. By selling stolen  silks, satins, spices and other merchandise in ports and spending their booty in  the colonies, pirates created an economic boom, helping struggling settlements  and making Port Royale in Jamaica and Charleston, S.C., huge mercantile centers,  Acosta said. “They didn’t bury their treasure, they spent it, helping colonies  survive that couldn’t get the money and supplies they needed from Europe,” he  said. Without the infusion of money into the New World from piracy, it is  possible that Britain and France may not have been able to catch up with Spain,  Acosta said. “Had it not been for pirates, Britain might have had trouble  holding onto the American colonies,” he said. “Pirates decimated the Spanish so  badly that Spain finally had to give up some of its American empire just to get  pirating to stop.” Native Americans and black slaves oppressed by the Spanish in  the Caribbean gave pirates inside information on where to dock ships and find  supplies, Acosta said. Slaves fleeing plantations were welcomed on pirate ships,  where they shared an equal voice with white sailors, he said. Acosta said he  believes pirates would be given a place in the history books if they had been  able to write their stories and leave diaries like the more literate American  colonists. A Gainesville middle school teacher, Acosta occasionally brings up  pirates in his classroom, where he has a captive audience, thanks to the  popularity of the movie “Pirates of the Caribbean,” which has a sequel opening  July 7. “I had one group of students in my class who just went around the  playground all the time saying, ‘Aaar, we’re the pirates,’” he said. Richard  Burg, an Arizona State University professor and expert on pirates, said Acosta  is performing a great service by emphasizing pirates’ democratic and egalitarian  ways. “The men who sailed under the skull and crossbones were ordinary folk,  like America’s revolutionaries, standing firm against oppressive governments and  economic systems,” he said. “Mr. Acosta is one of the few scholars who  understand this.” Source: by Cathy Keen, University of Florida 




 
 
 
 
 
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