 Elizabeth Shirland was born around 1577 in Devonshire,       England. Elizabeth and some of her family joined a group of settlers to       live on a colony founded by Sir Walter Raleigh in 1585. Elizabeth was       known as a very beautiful yet vigorous and energetic girl, and maybe that       is the reason for her career after the mysterious happenings on Roanoke       Island. Some chapters of Elizabeth Shirland's life are suspected to be       fictional, especially when it comes to the mystery of her lost booty.       Hidden treasures always inspired the fantasies of story tellers who passed       on the legends of secret wealths.
      Elizabeth Shirland was born around 1577 in Devonshire,       England. Elizabeth and some of her family joined a group of settlers to       live on a colony founded by Sir Walter Raleigh in 1585. Elizabeth was       known as a very beautiful yet vigorous and energetic girl, and maybe that       is the reason for her career after the mysterious happenings on Roanoke       Island. Some chapters of Elizabeth Shirland's life are suspected to be       fictional, especially when it comes to the mystery of her lost booty.       Hidden treasures always inspired the fantasies of story tellers who passed       on the legends of secret wealths.
                  Historical background:
      Although John Cabot (ca. 1450-1499) established an English claim to the       North American continent as early as 1497-1498, more than half a century       elapsed before Englishmen turned their attention to the new lands. The       most well-known early colony was founded by Sir Walter Raleigh (ca.       1554-1618) on Roanoke Island, off the coast of present-day North Carolina.       In 1585, Raleigh's men settled on the small island. Raleigh sent groups of       settlers for three years, beginning in 1584. (Raleigh's initiative was       successfully imitated by a group of London investors who founded Virginia       in 1607.)
      Relations with the Native American inhabitants were peaceful at first, but       as the colonists' supplies dwindled, amity dwindled too. The colonists       left in 1586 after beheading the local Indian chief, Wingina.
                  Raleigh arranged for Governor John White and a group of       families to return to live in peace with the natives in 1587. Violence,       however, is not easily forgotten. Within one month, hostilities resumed,       and White was forced to return to England to ask Raleigh for       reinforcements. Time was not on White's side. When the war with Spain       erupted, White could not return to the colony for three years. When he set       foot on Roanoke Island in August 1590, he searched frantically for the       settlers, including his daughter and granddaughter, the first English New       World baby, named Virginia Dare.
                  All that could be found was the remains of a village and a       mysterious word, "CROATOAN," engraved on a tree. White concluded there       must be a connection between the word and a nearby Indian tribe, but       before he could investigate, a violent storm forced him out to sea and       back to England.
                  Left for three years, the 117 men, women, and children had       disappeared mysteriously. This lost colony remains one of the greatest       mysteries of the colonial period. Although Raleigh sent an expedition to       search for them, the colonists are never found and their fate remains       unknown.
                  However, it is known that Elizabeth Shirland was amongst       those settlers. It is rumored that after being left behind the colonists       built a wall around their homes for protection from the Indians. This was       the wall that John White found on his return to Roanoke Island in 1590.       The men would leave the fort to hunt and fish as the colonist's food       supply eventually ran out. The Indians ambushed and killed each man as       they left the fort. In time all the men were killed and the Indians       captured the women and children. The Indians took the hostages to their       villages to live and work as slaves.
                  Elizabeth was raised by Indians and left the island 1589 on       board of a Spanish ship after she was picked up by Spanish soldiers. It is       said that she was held captive and raped several times by the soldiers       before she killed her sentinel with his own knife during the turmoil of a       pirate attack a few weeks later.
                  Disguised as a young man she had served under the command of      Sir Francis Drake, before she returned to England       and got married in 1595. However, she could not stand the life of a       housewife and soon left her husband and went to sea again. Little is       known about her life and destiny from that point forward. She returned to       York, England again once or twice, where she gave birth to a little son.       Soon afterwards she left her family for good.
                  Elizabeth had prepared her own career as a woman pirate. It is       safe to assume that she was  inspired by the criminal career of the famous woman pirate Grace O'Malley.       When she was captain on her own ship, she disclosed her sex to her crew       and she commanded and ruled them with her iron will and her strong ability       to assert herself. She used men from the crew for her sexual pleasure, and       some of them left the ship with a cut throat. Due to that fact and her       ability to master the blade she was also known as the Cutlass Liz.
                  Cutlass Liz was not too successful as a pirate captain, and       hardly anything is known about her operations. The only successful strike       reported was the capturing of a Spanish merchant in 1604, where Cutlass       Liz looted silk and gold before burning the captured ship. A few weeks       afterwards she was betrayed to the Spanish by two members of her crew and       was arrested while making love to one of her traitors. As the Spaniards       dragged the naked woman pirate from the bed, she was suddenly aware of the       treason and managed to stab her lover with the dagger she had hidden       beneath her pillows. She was instantly killed by the soldiers, what spared       her from public humiliation and the painful death of hanging.
                  However, her only mentionable booty - gold and goods worth       at least £ 30,000 - was not on board of her ship anymore and could never       be retrieved.
Κυριακή 3 Ιανουαρίου 2010
Elizabeth Shirland
Posted by Under The Black Flag on 10:03 μ.μ.



 
 
 
 
 
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