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Τρίτη 31 Αυγούστου 2010

Toei Plans CG Captain Harlock



Japan's Toei Animation  is planning to theatrically release computer-graphics (CG) works in Western countries and other locales in 2012. Another anime studio, Production I.G, is also planning to release Titan Rain, a joint production with Singaporea's Storm Lion Pictures (Yona Yona Penguin), in Asia. According to the Nikkei news source, the companies are aiming for theatrical releases overseas in part because the number of anime programs on television has declined, and anime DVD shipments have also dropped.

Toei Animation is making two CG anime works, with 3D animation techniques, in 2011. One of the titles is Space Pirate Captain Harlock, and the other is Daikuu Maryuu Gaiking . Each will have a production budget of several billion yen (about several tens of millions of U.S. dollars), which Toei plans to raise by soliciting capital from multiple companies. Toei Animation is planning to release these works theatrically in Europe, North America, Asia, and elsewhere in 2012 or later.

Δευτέρα 30 Αυγούστου 2010

Captain Abraham Blauvelt

Abraham Blauvelt  was a Dutch privateer and explorer mapping much of Central America in the 1630s, after whom both the Bluefield River and the neighboring town of Bluefields, Nicaragua were named.

One of the last of the Dutch corsairs of the mid 17th century, Abraham Blauvelt was first recorded exploring the coasts of present day Honduras and Nicaragua in service of the Dutch West India Company. He later traveled to England in an effort to gain support to establish a colony in Nicaragua near the city where Bluefields, Nicaragua presently stands. Around 1640 Blauvelt became a privateer serving the Swedish East India Company and in 1644 he commanded his own ship successfully raiding Spanish shipping from a base in southwest Jamaica, today known as Blewfields Bay, and selling the cargo and prizes to the Dutch colony of New Amsterdam (New York). After peace between Spain and the Netherlands was reached with the signing of the Peace of Westphalia in 1648, Blauvelt, unable to stay in New Amsterdam, instead sailed to Newport, Rhode Island in early 1649 to sell his remaining cargo. 

However the colonial governor seized one of Blauvelt's prizes and with his crew arguing over their shares, the local colonists, fearing that Rhode Island acquire a reputation of trading with pirates, forced Blauvelt to leave the colony. For the next several years Blauvelt commanded a French ship called La Garse, later living among the natives of Cape Gracias a Dios near the border of Honduras and Nicaragua, until the early 1660s when he was recruited for Christopher Myngs' raid on the Spanish colony of Campeche Bay in 1663. However, nothing more is known about his activities after this time.

Περιστατικά μανιάτικης πειρατείας

H πειρατεία στις ελληνικές θάλασσες εμφάνισε έξαρ­ση κατά τους δύο τελευταίους αι­ώνες της Τουρκοκρατίας. Σε αυτό συνέβαλε και ο ανταγωνισμός των Δυτικών δυνάμεων με την Ανατο­λή για τον έλεγχο των θαλάσσιων δρόμων που περνούσαν από το Αιγαίο. Η Βενετία, κατά τη διάρ­κεια της πολιορκίας του Χάνδακα από τους Τούρκους, είχε στρατο­λογήσει πειρατές για να αμυνθεί. Οι Ρώσοι, όταν κατέβηκαν στο Αι­γαίο (18ος αιώνας), επάνδρωσαν τα πλοία τους με πειρατές από τη Μάνη, την Πρέβεζα και άλλες περιοχές. Ευρωπαίοι διπλωμάτες συναλλάσσονταν φανερά με τους πειρατές. Ο καθολικός κλήρος, οι Ιησουίτες και οι Καπουτσίνοι μοναχοί εμπλέκονταν συχνά στο κούρσος και λάμβαναν την πειρα­τική λεία ως προσφορά στην εκ­κλησία τους· ενταφίαζαν μάλιστα τους ομόθρησκους πειρατές στον περίβολο των ναών. Το ίδιο συνέ­βαινε και με τον ορθόδοξο κλήρο. Στη Μάνη η Θεία Λειτουργία διε­ξαγόταν με αντικείμενα που προ­έρχονταν από την πειρατεία – ιερά σκεύη, δισκοπότηρα κ.τ.λ. – ενώ οι ορθόδοξοι παπάδες συμμετεί­χαν μόνιμα στις διαδικασίες αρ­παγής και διανομής του πειρατι­κού πλούτου.
Εκείνη την εποχή η εκποίηση της πειρατικής λείας απέφερε τεράστια κέρδη και διατηρούσε σε υψηλά επίπεδα τις πειρατικές επιδρομές, εφόσον υπήρχαν α­κόμα αγοραστές. Η Κίμωλος και η Μήλος ήταν νησιά όπου πραγμα­τοποιούνταν τέτοιου είδους συναλλαγές· το ίδιο όμως συνέβαινε και αλλού. Το Αλγέρι τον 16οαιώ-να είχε πληθυσμό εκατό χιλιάδες, που ζούσαν αποκλειστικά από την πειρατεία. Εκεί ήταν εγκατε­στημένοι ακόμα και οι Ευρωπαίοι έμποροι που συναλλάσσονταν με τους ντόπιους πειρατές. Και οι Μανιάτες όμως είχαν ιδρύσει δική τους παροικία στο Αλγέρι, όπου ανέπτυξαν σημαντικές δραστηρι­ότητες.
Τα περιστατικά της μανιάτι­κης πειρατείας είναι πολυάριθμα και, φυσικά, δεν μπορούν παρά να αναφερθούν μόνο ορισμένα ενδεικτικά. Άλλωστε, η πειρα­τεία διεξαγόταν στο περιθώριο της κοινωνικής ζωής και σε συν­θήκες παρανομίας. Οι πειρατές ήταν άνθρωποι της δράσης και δεν άφηναν πίσω τους γραπτά μνημεία. Ό,τι στοιχείο υπάρχει γι’ αυτούς, διασώθηκε από τις γραπτές καταγγελίες ιδιωτών για πειρατικές πράξεις ή προέρχεται από την αλληλογραφία των τοπικών αρχών προς την Υψηλή Πύλη και τη Δύση, όπου καταγγέλλο­νταν περιπτώσεις πειρατείας. Τα ιστοριογραφικά κενά καλύπτονται συχνά από τη λαϊκή παράδοση, τα δημοτικά τραγούδια, τα μοιρολό­για, τα ποιήματα που εξυμνούν κατορθώματα πειρατών αλλά και τις συμφορές που υπέστησαν οι κάτοικοι του Αιγαίου από τις επι­δρομές τους. Θα αναφερθούμε σε ορισμένα από αυτά.
Σύμφωνα με έρευνα του Γ.Β. Νικολάου στον ΙΖ’ τόμο των «Λα­κωνικών σπουδών», τον Ιούνιο του 1776 έγινε πειρατεία στο στενό μεταξύ των Κυθήρων και της ανα­τολικής πλευράς της μανιάτικης χερσονήσου. Οι πειρατές είχαν επικεφαλής τον Κωνσταντή Κο­λοκοτρώνη, πατέρα του πρωτερ­γάτη της Επανάστασης του 1821 Θεόδωρο Κολοκοτρώνη. Το πλοίο τους ήταν γαλιότα με πλήρωμα ο­γδόντα Μανιάτες και Σφακιανούς και κατέλαβαν δύο βενετσιάνικα πλοία και το γαλλικό «Jean Baptiste», με φορτίο καπνού. Τα τρία πλοία οδηγήθηκαν στην Καρδαμύλη, που ήταν τότε έδρα του η­γεμόνα καπετάνιου Μιχαήλ Τρουπάκη. Ο πλοίαρχος και δύο ναύτες του γαλλικού πλοίου εστάλησαν στον πρόξενο της Γαλλίας, για να διαπραγματευτούν την καταβολή σαράντα χιλιάδων πιάστρων ως λύτρα για την απελευθέρωση των υπόλοιπων μελών του πληρώμα­τος και την επιστροφή του πλοίου και του φορτίου του. Σύμφωνα με έγγραφο που έστειλαν οι οθωμα­νικές αρχές από την Κορώνη στην Κωνσταντινούπολη, συνένοχος στην πειρατεία θεωρήθηκε και ο ηγεμόνας της περιοχής Μιχαήλ Τρουπάκης, καθώς ήταν ιδιοκτή­της της πειρατικής γαλιότας και την είχε πουλήσει εικονικά στον Κολοκοτρώνη, ο οποίος ασκούσε τότε πειρατεία. Το αντάλλαγμα γι’ αυτή τη διευκόλυνση ήταν βέβαια το ήμισυ των λύτρων που θα εισέ­πρατταν οι πειρατές από τους Γάλ­λους. Μετά την αδυναμία της οθω­μανικής διοίκησης να διευθετήσει το όλο θέμα, οι Γάλλοι έστειλαν το
πλοίο «Atalantis» να επιτεθεί στην Καρδαμύλη και στον πύργο του Τρουπάκη. Στόχος τους ήταν να εκφοβίσουν τους κατοίκους, ώστε οι τελευταίοι να τους παραδώσουν την πειρατική γαλιότα. Όμως, οι ε­τοιμοπόλεμοι Μανιάτες τους αντι­μετώπισαν σθεναρά, και μετά τον τραυματισμό του κυβερνήτη και δύο ναυτών οι Γάλλοι αποχώρησαν άπραγοι.
Σύμφωνα με άλλο υπόμνημα του Γάλλου εμπόρου Σοβέ, το 1817 ο Παναγιώτης Τρουπάκης, ο επο­νομαζόμενος Μούρτζινος, διοι­κούσε την καπετανία της Ανδρούβιστας με πρωτεύουσα την Καρδαμύλη. Ο πατέρας του τού είχε διαθέσει μια γαλιότα, με την οποία ασκούσε πειρατεία. Ο Μούρτζινος είχε καταλάβει κοντά στα Κύθηρα δύο εμπορικά πλοία, ένα γαλλικό και ένα βενετσιάνικο, τα οποία ε­ξαγόρασε ο Σοβέ μαζί με τα πλη­ρώματα καταβάλλοντας οκτώμισι χιλιάδες γρόσια. Ο πατέρας του Μούρτζινου, Μιχαήλ Τρουπάκης, είχε εκλεγεί παλαιότερα μπέης της Μάνης. Επειδή όμως ασκούσε πειρατεία αλλά και παρείχε άσυλο στους κλεφτοκαπεταναίους, οι οποίοι απ’ την Καρδαμύλη λεηλα­τούσαν τους Τούρκους της Μεσ­σηνίας, συνελήφθη και κρεμάστη­κε από το κατάρτι της ναυαρχίδας του Τούρκου αρχιναύαρχου στη Μυτιλήνη.
Σύμφωνα με την Αλεξάνδρα Κραντονέλλη, το 1801 οι προεστοί της Ύδρας μήνυσαν στον διερμη­νέα του οθωμανικού στόλου ότι δύο μανιάτικες τράτες κούρσευαν έξω από την Ύδρα. Στις 4 Φεβρου­αρίου 1803, ο Γεώργιος Βούλ­γαρης ανήγγειλε από την Ύδρα στους προεστούς των νησιών του αρχιπελάγους ότι έλαβε διαταγή από τον Τούρκο αρχιναύαρχο να καταδιώξει τον πειρατή Λωβό και άλλους Μανιάτες πειρατές. Γι’ αυ­τόν τον σκοπό, έστειλε τον μπας ρεΐζη των Υδραίων καπετάν Γιάννη Καραντάνη με μια τράτα αρματω­μένη με δύο κανόνια και είκοσι παλικάρια για να συλλάβουν τους Μανιάτες. Ο ίδιος ο Βούλγαρης αναχώρησε από την Ύδρα με μια γαλιότα, με στόχο να αιχμαλωτίσει τους κλέφτες και να τακτοποιήσει την κατάσταση στη Μάνη. Δηλα­δή, να διχάσει τους Μανιάτες και να συλλάβει τον μπέη Παναγιώτη Κουμουνδουράκη, ο οποίος υπέθαλπτε την πειρατεία, παρείχε άσυλο στους πειρατές και διατη­ρούσε οργανωμένο δίκτυο πληρο­φοριών και κλεπταποδόχων.
Σε άλλο περιστατικό, μερικοί Μανιάτες σε επιδρομή στη Σχοινούσσα αιχμαλώτισαν μια βάρκα με το πλήρωμά της και την οικο­γένεια του Γεωργάκη Μπαρδάκα, σούδιτου Ρώσου, ενώ ετοιμαζόταν να αναχωρήσει για τη Νάξο. Οι πει­ρατές ξεγύμνωσαν τον Μπαρδάκα και τη συντροφιά του, που κατέ­φυγαν στις προξενικές αρχές της Νάξου και κατήγγειλαν τα εξής:
«Ναξία 1816, Απρίλιος 2 Ε.Ν. ημέ­ρα Τρίτη επαρουσιάσθηκαν εις την Καντζελλαρίαν του Κονσολάρου του Αυτοκρατορικού των πασών Ρουσιών εις Ναξία οι κάτωθεν υ­πογεγραμμένοι Λάμπρος Ρεΐζης, Νεονής, Ιωβάνης, Ρώσος και Κωνσταντής Μεσμελής οι οποίοι με το να εφέρθησαν με την βάρκαν τους εις το νησάκι ονομαζόμενον Σκοινούσαν, από κάτω από την Ναξίαν διά να πάρουσι και να φέρουσι εδώ εις το πόρτο τον σινιόρ Γεωργάκη Μπαρδάκα, σούδιτον Ρούσσον με την μητέρα του και σύζυγόν του, εκεί είδανε εις τας ένδεκα του Φλεβάρη απερασμένους και επλάκωσαν εις εκείνο το νησί ένα καΐκι κλέπτικο καραβοκυρεμένο από έ­να Κρανιδιώτη ονόματι Σανόπουλο του Σταμάτη Λέκα και οι λοιποί ό­λοι σύντροφοί του ήτονε Μανιάτες και εξεγύμωσαν τον άνωθεν σινιόρ Γεοργάκη Μπαρδάκα με την συντροφία του εις τρόπον οπού τον άφησαν με τον μοναχό πουκάμισο επειδή και ευρίσκονταν εις την στεριάν εκεί που αράξανε το καράβι ό­που ήταν μπαρκάδο του Καπετάν Ιακουμάκη Λάμπρο Σαντορινιός και αφού τους εξεγύμνωσαν τους έβαλαν εις το καΐκι των άνωθεν γεμιτζήδων με τα μοναχά τους κορμιά και ήλθανε εις την Χώραν της Ναξίας. Ταύτα μαρτυρούσι εκ συνειδότος ως είναι γνωστά και εις όλο το νησί της Ναξίας βεβαιωμέ­νο ιδιοχείρως τως.
Λάμπρος Ρεήζης Νεονής μαρτυρώ
Γιάκοβος Ρώσος μαρτυρώ
Γιοβάνης Ρώσος μαρτυρώ
Ιωάννης Χατζής μαρτυρώ
Αργύρης Ταμηράλης μαρτυρώ
Κωνσταντής Μεσμελής μάρτυς
Φραντζέσκος Γεράρδης
υποπρόξενος
σφραγίς δικέφαλος αετός
επιγραφή
Conoslato di Naxia et Paros»
Όμως, και η λαϊκή παράδοση κατέγραψε πειρατικές επιθέσεις των Μανιατών. Όπως αφηγείται ο Γεώργιος Ι. Τζαννετής, εκπαι­δευτικός από τον Καλόξυλο Νά­ξου, «κάποτε, ένας πειρατής από τη Μάνη βγήκε στη Σχοινούσσα για πειρατεία. Διάλεξε λοιπόν να ληστέψει την εκκλησία Παναγία η Ακαθή. Την ώρα της ληστείας όμως ο κουρσάρος βλέποντας την εικόνα της Παναγίας να τον κοιτάζει συνεχώς, νόμισε πως τον παρακολουθούσε. Νευρίασε λοι­πόν, έβγαλε την κουμπούρα του και πυροβόλησε την εικόνα καταστρέφοντάς την. Μετά πήρε τη λεία του και κατέβηκε για να φύ­γει. Αλλά στον δρόμο γλίστρησε, γκρεμίστηκε πλάι σε μια σπηλιά και σκοτώθηκε. Από τότε, η σπη­λιά αυτή πήρε τ’ όνομα “Η σπηλιά του Μανιάτη”».
Περίφημο υπήρξε το περιστα­τικό με πρωταγωνιστή τον λόρδο Βύρωνα: κατά τη διάρκεια μιας εκδρομής στο Σούνιο, εντόπισε στις σπηλιές κάτω από τον Ναό του Ποσειδώνα είκοσι Μανιάτες πειρατές που είχαν αιχμαλωτίσει μερικούς Έλληνες. Όταν οι πειρα­τές συνειδητοποίησαν ότι ένας λόρδος βρισκόταν στον λόφο, ετοιμάστηκαν να επιτεθούν για να τον αρπάξουν, με σκοπό να ζη­τήσουν λύτρα. Τελικά όμως η πά­νοπλη συνοδεία του ποιητή τούς αποθάρρυνε.
Τέλος, πάλι από την Αλεξάνδρα Κραντονέλλη πληροφορούμαστε ότι στις 7 Ιουνίου 1810 ο ιερομό­ναχος Σταυριανός Λεβούμης έ­πεσε θύμα Μανιατών πειρατών έξω από τον Κάβο Μαλιά. Στις 16 Ιουλίου του ίδιου έτους μερικοί Υδραίοι εξόπλισαν και επάνδρω­σαν μια τράτα για να καταδιώξουν τους Μανιάτες πειρατές που λε­ηλατούσαν πλοία στα νερά του Ευβοϊκού Κόλπου, της Τζιας, της Άνδρου, του Τρικερίου και της Σάμου. Το βιβλίο της Αλεξάνδρας Κραντονέλλη «Ελληνική πειρατεία και κούρσος» περιέχει μεγάλο α­ριθμό ανάλογων γεγονότων.
Αν όμως αυτή ήταν η αρπακτική όψη της μανιάτικης πειρατείας, υ­πήρχε πάντα και η άλλη πλευρά. Ο Κωνσταντίνος Ράδιος στο διήγημά του «Κακαβούλια» αναφέρεται σε ένα περιστατικό που έλαβε χώρα στο Πόρτο Κάγιο. Όπως γράφει, οι κάτοικοι της Μέσα Μάνης υπέφε­ραν από λοιμό που είχε προκληθεί από την ανομβρία και την έλλειψη γονιμότητας της γης. Οι γέροι και τα παιδιά είχαν αρχίσει να πεθαί­νουν από την πείνα· οι κάτοικοι εί­χαν φτάσει στα όρια της απόγνω­σης. Η μόνη τους ελπίδα ήταν να εμφανιστεί ένα καράβι στα νερά της Μάνης για να το κουρσέψουν. Πράγματι, κάποια στιγμή ένα ξέ­νο πλοίο παρουσιάστηκε και οι Μανιάτες πανηγύρισαν. Χωρίς να χάσουν καιρό, το κατέλαβαν με γιουρούσι – μέσα όμως βρή­καν ανθρώπους πολύ πιο εξαθλι­ωμένους από τους ίδιους. Ήταν πρόσφυγες από έναν πόλεμο της δυτικής Ευρώπης. Λαβωμένοι, άρρωστοι, ταλαιπωρημένοι απ’ τις κακουχίες και την πείνα, είχαν αρχίσει να αργοπεθαίνουν. Οι Μα­νιάτες αποφάσισαν να τους περι­θάλψουν. Ρυμούλκησαν το πλοίο τους στη στεριά και τους πρόσφε­ραν άσυλο και τροφή, παρόλη την πείνα και τη φτώχεια τους.

http://www.topontiki.gr/Articles/view/8989


Πηγή: Κατερίνα Καριζώνη,
Λεωνίδας Γουργουρίνης,
Χάρης Γιαννόπουλος
Πειρατεία στη Μάνη και στη Μεσόγειο
Εκδόσεις: Αδούλωτη Μάνη,
Γ. Λ. Δημακογιαννης
Σελ.: 158

Κυριακή 29 Αυγούστου 2010

George Booth the Gunner

George Booth (died 1700) was an English pirate who was one of the earliest active in the Indian Ocean and the Red Sea during the late 17th century. Among his fleet included prominent captains such as Nathaniel North, Thomas Howard and Booth's eventual successor, John Bowen.

Although his early life is largely unknown, he is first recorded in his career as a gunner aboard the Pelican around 1696, and later the Dolphin, both of which operated in the Indian Ocean.

While Booth was still a gunner aboard the Dolphin, she was trapped at Sainte-Marie Island by a British fleet in September 1699. The crew of the Dolphin were offered a pardon by the British commodore. Although some of the pirates surrendered, Booth was among those who escaped to nearby Madagascar after burning the Dolphin. Booth would later participate in the capture of a French merchant ship on the pretence of buying supplies carrying liquor and other goods in exchange for slaves and, elected by the crew as captain, they continued onward to Madagascar.

Booth later encountered fellow British pirate John Bowen and, choosing to join forces, they later captured the Speaker, a 450 ton slaver carrying 50 guns, near Majunga in April, 1699. As captain of the newly captured prize, Booth eventually sailed towards Zanzibar and arrived towards the end of 1700. While going ashore for provisions, Booth and Bowen were attacked by Arab troops and Booth was killed in the fighting. After the death of Booth, Bowen was voted by the crew to replace Booth as captain of the small fleet.

Σάββατο 28 Αυγούστου 2010

Captain John Halsey


John Halsey (died 1708) was a colonial American privateer and a later pirate who was active in the Atlantic and Indian Oceans during the early 18th century. Although much of his life and career is unknown, he is recorded in A General History of the Pyrates which states "He was brave in his Person, courteous to all his Prisoners, lived beloved, and died regretted by his own People. His Grave was made in a garden of watermelons, and fenced in with Palisades to prevent his being rooted up by wild Hogs."

Born in Boston, Halsey became a privateer in the service of Great Britain commanding the 10-gun brigantine Charles during the War of the Spanish Succession, or Queen Anne's War as it was known in the American colonies, and raided French fishing fleets in the Newfoundland and later sailed to Fayal in the Azores and the to the Canary Islands where he attacked Spanish ships en route to Barcelona during 1704. During the voyage, several of his men deserted as he put his lieutenant ashore at Cape Verde. However they were subsequently returned to Halsey by the Portuguese governor who recognized the validity of his privateer's commission.

However, as his letter of marque expired the following year, he turned to piracy and sailed to Madagascar. As he made his way through the Cape of Good Hope, putting into Augustine Bay for water, wood and other provisions, Halsey picked up several castaway sailors of the lost Degrave, formerly under the command of Captain Young. Leaving Augustine, he sailed for the Red Sea in search of treasure ships the Great Mogul of India operated in the Indian Ocean.

In late 1706, the Charles spotted a large Dutch ship which Halsey declined to attack, reluctant to offend a European power. His crew condemned the captain and his gunner for cowardice and relieved them of their posts. The crew, who presumed the ship to be a lone merchantman, pressed forward with their attack only to discover, as they approached their intended victim, that the Dutch ship was well gunned. It fired a warning shot towards the Charles, which injured a crew member manning the wheel as well as unstripping the swivel gun and severely damaging the topsail. The Dutch attack caught the crew off guard and many to fled into the ship's hold. Despite the damage, the Charles escaped and Halsey was reinstated as commander shortly afterwards.

After seizing two coastal traders off the Nicobar Islands in February 1707, he sailed to the Straits of Malacca fared poorly due to the low morale of the crew following the incident of the Dutch ship.

Returning to Madagascar, Halsey recruited additional men including his Quartermaster Nathaniel North. Setting sail for Mocha, he encountered a British squadron consisting of five warships shortly after entering the Red Sea in August 1707. Despite facing a combined 62 guns, Halsey chose to engage the British fleet and, after forcing the largest to flee, the remaining warships scattered with Halsey capturing two of the warships, along with £50,000 in money and cargo.

Following his return to Madagascar in January 1708, his flotilla was virtually destroyed in a hurricane. Halsey died of a fever soon after.

Πέμπτη 26 Αυγούστου 2010

Against All Flags

After James Stewart's financial windfall attending his "percentage of profits" deal on Winchester 73, Errol Flynn decided to cash in by making his own deal with Universal Pictures, accepting a moderate fee up front and a huge chunk of the gross for Against All Flags.

Set in the 16th century, the film casts Flynn as a British naval officer unjustly condemned for desertion. He escapes punishment and joins Anthony Quinn's pirate band, wherein he and Quinn vie for the attentions of glamorous female buccaneer Maureen O'Hara. Flynn incurs O'Hara's wrath when he rescues a lovely middle-eastern princess (Alice Kelley) from slave traders, but O'Hara still comes to Flynn's aid when he is left to die by Quinn. Flynn and O'Hara team up to thwart Quinn's evil schemes, whereupon it is revealed that Flynn's "disgrace" was a ruse, concocted by the British government to stem pirate activities in Madagascar.

Though suffering several injuries during shooting, Errol Flynn  was back in his old fighting form in Against All Flags, requiring a double only in a few scattered longshots. The film was poorly remade in 1967 as The King's Pirate, with Doug McClure inadequately filling Errol Flynn's seven-league boots. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
Cast

    * Errol Flynn - Brian Hawke
    * Maureen O'Hara - Spitfire Stevens
    * Anthony Quinn - Roc Brasiliano
    * Alice Kelley - Princess Patma
    * Mildred Natwick - Molvina MacGregor

Robert Warwick - Capt. Kidd; Harry Cording - Gow; John Alderson - Jonathan Harris; Phil Tully - Jones; Lester Matthews - Sir Cloudsley; Tudor Owen - William the Armourer; Maurice Marsac - Capt. Moisson; James Craven - Capt. Hornsby; James Fairfax - Cruikshank the Barber; Charles Fitzsimmons - Flag Lieutenant; Arthur E. Gould-Porter - Lord Portland; Chuck Hamilton - Pirate; Olaf Hytten - King William; Ethan Laidlaw - Townsman; Keith McConnell - Quartermaster; Paul Newlan - Crop-ear Collins; Bill Radovich - Hassan; Michael Ross - Swaine; Lewis L. Russell - Oxford; Carl Saxe - Pirate; John Anderson - Jonathan Harris

The History of Turtle Ship



The 'Turtle War' Ship (Keo-Book-Sun) is a very famous Korean war ship that was under the command of Admiral Lee Sun Shin (1545-1598). The Ship played a significant role in driving back the Japanese fleet during the Hydeyoshi Invasion of Korea in the year 1592. It was also used in many other naval battles as well as the 'Han-San Naval Engagement' which was one of four major naval engagements worldwide.
Designed by Admiral Lee, and built with a steel dome cover over the deck of a classical type Korean ship called, 'Phan-Ok', hundreds of sharp swords were installed on the outer surface of the dome to make boarding the ship by enemies difficult and hazardous. The name is derived from the Korean word for turtle, (Keo-book-ee). Also because of its shape which resembled that of a turtle. A large dragon`s head was attached to the bow of the ship to make it appear more threatening and terrifying to its enemies. Along its sides were mounted numerous cannons at each of the many openings as well as one in the bow structure.

The 'Turtle-War-Ship' sailed amidst the Japanese fleet inflicting many casualties on Hydeyoshi`s naval forces, using its many cannons and sulfuric fires during the 'Im-Jin Engagement' of 1592. This ship became a very famous ship in Korea and was upgraded on a yearly basis during the Chosun Dynasty.
The model kit of the 'Turtle-War-Ship' uses many evidential materials referred to in Admiral Lee`s diary, figures, rebuilt models, etcetera. This particular kit is a copy of the 'Turtle-War-Ship' from the 'Left Oceanic District' in Jeon-Ra province of Korea. Even though the detailed structural drawings and dimensions are not available today, the two deck structure was used in keeping with the known ship designs and schematics from that period in Korean History that are available to us today.

Τετάρτη 25 Αυγούστου 2010

18th-Century Ship Found at Trade Center Site

18th-Century Ship Found at Trade Center Site
By DAVID W. DUNLAP

In the middle of tomorrow, a great ribbed ghost has emerged from a distant yesterday.

On Tuesday morning, workers excavating the site of the underground vehicle security center for the future World Trade Center hit a row of sturdy, upright wood timbers, regularly spaced, sticking out of a briny gray muck flecked with oyster shells.

Obviously, these were more than just remnants of the wooden cribbing used in the late 18th and early 19th centuries to extend the shoreline of Manhattan Island ever farther into the Hudson River. (Lower Manhattan real estate was a precious commodity even then.)

“They were so perfectly contoured that they were clearly part of a ship,” said A. Michael Pappalardo, an archaeologist with the firm AKRF, which is working for the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey to document historical material uncovered during construction.

By Wednesday, the outlines made it plain: a 30-foot length of a wood-hulled vessel had been discovered about 20 to 30 feet below street level on the World Trade Center site, the first such large-scale archaeological find along the Manhattan waterfront since 1982, when an 18th-century cargo ship came to light at 175 Water Street.

The area under excavation, between Liberty and Cedar Streets, had not been dug out for the original trade center. The vessel, presumably dating from the mid- to late 1700s, was evidently undisturbed more than 200 years.

News of the find spread quickly. Archaeologists and officials hurried to the site, not only because of the magnitude of the discovery but because construction work could not be interrupted and because the timber, no longer safe in its cocoon of ooze, began deteriorating as soon as it was exposed to air.

For that reason, Doug Mackey, the chief regional archaeologist for the New York State Historic Preservation Office, was grateful for the rainfall. “If the sun had been out,” he said, “the wood would already have started to fall apart.”

As other archaeologists scrambled with tape measures over what appeared to be the floor planks of the ship’s lowermost deck, Mr. Mackey said, “We’re trying to record it as quickly as possible and do the analysis later.” All around the skeletal hull, excavation for the security center proceeded, changing the muddy terrain every few minutes.

Romantics may conjure the picture of an elegant schooner passing in sight of the spire of Trinity Church. Professional archaeologists are much more reserved.

They were even careful not to say for certain whether they were looking at the prow or the stern of the vessel, though the fanlike array of beams seemed to suggest that the aft (rear) portion of the ship was exposed. Mr. Pappalardo said the whole vessel may have been two or three times longer than the portion found.

Perhaps the most puzzling and intriguing find was a semicircular metal collar, several feet across, apparently supported on a brick base, built into the hull. Perhaps it was some sort of an oven or steam contraption.

About the farthest Mr. Mackey and Mr. Pappalardo would go in conjecture was to say that the sawed-off beams seemed to indicate that the hull had deliberately been truncated, most likely to be used as landfill material.

A 1797 map shows that the excavation site is close to where Lindsey’s Wharf and Lake’s Wharf once projected into the Hudson. So, no matter how many mysteries now surround the vessel, it may turn out that the ghost even has a name.

Τρίτη 24 Αυγούστου 2010

Πειρατικές ιστορίες στη Μεσόγειο

Στα τέλη του 16ου αιώνα χρι­στιανοί πειρατές έκαναν την εμφάνισή τους στην ανατολική Μεσόγειο, ασκώντας πειρατεία παράλληλα με μουσουλμάνους, Βέρβερους και Οθωμανούς. Οι χριστιανοί κουρσάροι βρίσκο­νταν συνήθως στην υπηρεσία του πάπα, των Ισπανών αντιβασιλέων της Νάπολης και της Σικελίας, καθώς και των Μεδίκων της Φλω­ρεντίας. Πρέπει να σημειωθεί ότι οι Μέδικοι της Φλωρεντίας χρηματοδότησαν πάρα πολλές κουρσάρικες επιδρομές ενάντια στην Οθωμανική Αυτοκρατορία. Κινητήρια δύναμη σε αυτές τις επιδρομές υπήρξε το Τάγμα του Αγίου Στεφάνου, που ιδρύθηκε το 1561 στην Πίζα και το χρημα­τοδοτούσε με προσωπικά του κεφάλαια ο εκάστοτε Δούκας της Φλωρεντίας. Το 1608 τα λάφυρα μόνο των οκτώ ιστιοφόρων της Φλωρεντίας ανέρχονταν στο α­στρονομικό ποσό του ενός εκα­τομμυρίου δουκάτων. Αξιοσημεί­ωτο είναι το γεγονός ότι η Μεγάλη Δούκισσα Χριστίνα, πριγκίπισσα της Λορένης, χρησιμοποίησε όλα τα χρήματα της προίκας της για την κατασκευή ιστιοφόρων, που θα ταξίδευαν και θα κούρσευαν με τα προσωπικά της εμβλήματα. Η πειρατεία αποτελούσε εκείνη την εποχή εξαιρετικά κερδοφόρα επένδυση.
Την ίδια τακτική ακολούθησαν και οι Ισπανοί αντιβασιλείς της Νάπολης και της Σικελίας. Κύριος εκφραστής αυτής της πολιτικής υπήρξε ο Δον Πέδρο Τελέζ Γκιρόν, ο Δούκας της Οσούνας. Κατά τη δεκαετή θητεία του ως αντιβασι-λέας της Νάπολης δημιούργησε ίσως τον μεγαλύτερο χριστιανικό κουρσάρικο στόλο της εποχής και τον χρηματοδοτούσε ο ίδιος. Στη Νάπολη είχε συγκεντρωθεί η αφρόκρεμα των χριστιανών κουρ­σάρων. Οι επιδρομές του στο αρ­χιπέλαγος δεν είχαν στόχο μόνο το κέρδος, αλλά και την πρόκλη­ση όσο το δυνατόν περισσότερων ζημιών στην Οθωμανική Αυτο­κρατορία, με την παράλυση του εμπορίου της και την αύξηση του κύρους της Ισπανίας σε ολόκληρη τη Μεσόγειο. Ο Δον Πέδρο Τελέζ Γκιρόν είχε αποκτήσει τόσο με­γάλη δύναμη, που προσπάθησε ακόμα και να καταλάβει την ίδια τη Βενετία· την τελευταία στιγμή όμως τα σχέδιά του αποκαλύφθη­καν. Το γεγονός αυτό αποτέλεσε και την αιτία της πτώσης του.
Αξίζει να σημειωθεί ότι τόσο ο Δούκας της Τοσκάνης όσο και ο αντιβασιλέας της Νάπολης είχαν στενές σχέσεις με το ελληνικό στοιχείο. Οι εντολές που έδιναν στους καπετάνιους των πλοίων τους ήταν σαφείς: να μην επιτί­θενται σε ελληνικά πλοία ούτε να πλήττουν τα χωριά και τις περιου­σίες των Ελλήνων. Αντίθετα μάλι­στα, τους παρότρυναν να παρέ­χουν στους Έλληνες κάθε δυνατή βοήθεια και να καλλιεργούν το ε παναστατικό πνεύμα τους ενάντια στους Τούρκους. Δεν είναι λίγες οι καταγραφές που αναφέρουν ότι ισπανικές γαλέρες αλλά και γαλιόνια της Φλωρεντίας εφοδία­σαν τους κατοίκους της Μάνης με μπαρούτι, αρκεβούζια και άλλα πο­λεμοφόδια. Η πολεμική ενίσχυση που πρόσφεραν όμως στη Μάνη έ­κρυβε ένα κρυφό σχέδιο: είχαν την ελπίδα ότι οι Μανιάτες τελικά θα απογοητεύονταν από τις συνεχείς συγκρούσεις και θα μετανάστευαν στην Τοσκάνη και στη Νάπολη. Στις εν λόγω περιοχές υπήρχε μεγάλη ανάγκη για εργατικά χέρια, προκει­μένου να καλλιεργηθούν τα χωρά­φια και να αρχίσουν να αποδίδουν. Το σχέδιό τους όμως δεν πραγμα­τοποιήθηκε. Εξάλλου, η πολιτική της Βενετίας ήταν αντίθετη, καθώς επιδίωκε την παραμονή των Μα­νιατών στην πατρίδα τους, επειδή οι Βενετοί χρησιμοποιούσαν τα λι­μάνια τους για ανεφοδιασμό και ως καταφύγιο. Επίσης, συχνά πυκνά κατέφευγαν στη Μάνη για να επαν­δρώσουν τις γαλέρες τους.
Παρά την έντονη πειρατική δρά­ση στα επόμενα τριάντα χρόνια μέ­χρι τις αρχές του 17ου αιώνα, ξεκί­νησε πιο συστηματικά ο επανεποι-κισμός των νησιών από χριστιανι­κούς, ελληνικούς και αλβανικούς πληθυσμούς, με πρωτοβουλία κατά κύριο λόγο της Πύλης, κα­θώς και η οικιστική ανοικοδόμη­ση στο Αιγαίο. Εκείνη την περίοδο οι κάτοικοι των νησιών άρχισαν να παίρνουν κάποια μέτρα προστασί­ας για να μπορούν να προφυλάσ­σονται από τις πειρατικές επιδρο­μές. Απομακρύνθηκαν από τα πα­ράλια και μετοίκησαν στα βουνά, ώστε να έχουν τη δυνατότητα να διακρίνουν καλύτερα την έλευση πειρατικών πλοίων. Επίσης, για την καλύτερη προστασία τους άρχισαν να χτίζουν κάστρα. Συνή­θως ήταν μικρά και μπορούσαν να φιλοξενήσουν περιορισμένο αριθ­μό κατοίκων. Με την πάροδο του χρόνου όμως έγιναν μεγαλύτερα και μπορούσαν να συντηρήσουν σχεδόν όλους τους κατοίκους του εκάστοτε νησιού για αρκετά μεγάλο χρονικό διάστημα. Λόγω του περιορισμένου χώρου των κά­στρων, οι κάτοικοι έχτιζαν ψηλές κατοικίες και οι δρόμοι ήταν στε­νοί για οικονομία χώρου. Ένα άλλο μέτρο που λάμβαναν οι νησιώτες ήταν ότι έχτιζαν τα χωριά τους με μια ιδιαίτερη αρχιτεκτονική, ώστε οι εξωτερικοί τοίχοι των σπιτιών να σχηματίζουν οχυρωμένα τείχη. Μέσα στον οικισμό υπήρχαν πολ­λά στενά και δαιδαλώδη δρομά­κια, τα οποία οι κάτοικοι γνώριζαν καλά, όχι όμως και οι επιδρομείς. Επίσης, οι κάτοικοι έσκαβαν κρύ­πτες στα σπίτια τους και έκρυβαν εκεί τα πολύτιμα αγαθά τους ή κρύβονταν και οι ίδιοι για να μη συλληφθούν από τους πειρατές.
Πολλά νησιά του Αιγαίου γνώ­ρισαν πρωτοφανή άνθηση, διότι αναδείχθηκαν ως σταθμοί μετα­πρατικού εμπορίου, καθώς και ορμητήρια για τους πειρατές και τους κουρσάρους που δρούσαν στο αρχιπέλαγος. Οι κοινότητες των νησιών και των παραθαλάσ­σιων περιοχών, αν δεν ασκούσαν οι ίδιες πειρατεία, συνεργάζονταν με τους πειρατές προσφέροντας ασφαλές καταφύγιο, φτηνή δια­σκέδαση και αγορά για τα προϊό­ντα της πειρατείας. Η Μήλος απο­τελεί χαρακτηριστικό παράδειγ­μα. Ήταν το σημαντικότερο λιμάνι στο Αιγαίο, ένα από τα κυριότερα κέντρα πειρατικού εμπορίου, και χρησιμοποιήθηκε αποκλειστικά από χριστιανούς κουρσάρους και πειρατές. Η Μήλος αποτελούσε ταυτόχρονα και ένα από τα βασι­κότερα πειρατικά ορμητήρια των Κυκλάδων. Η δύναμη που απέκτη­σε ήταν τέτοια, ώστε όταν το 1670 ο οθωμανικός στόλος προσπάθη­σε να αποκαταστήσει την τάξη στο νησί, εκδιώχθηκε από τους ίδιους τους πειρατές. Δεν είναι τυχαίο ότι η Μήλος κατάφερε να ανακηρυ­χθεί το μοναδικό πειρατικό κρά­τος στον κόσμο, υπό την εξουσία του διαβόητου Ιωάννη Καψή. Στις αρχές του 17ου αιώνα έμποροι, μι-κροτραπεζίτες αλλά και μεγάλες εμπορικές επιχειρήσεις της Ευρώ­πης έστελναν εκεί αντιπροσώπους για να διαπραγματευτούν την αγο­ρά των προϊόντων της πειρατείας σε εξαιρετικά χαμηλές τιμές.
Τα κυριότερα λάφυρα της πει­ρατείας ήταν οι άνθρωποι γιατί μπορούσαν να χρησιμοποιηθούν ως κωπηλάτες στις γαλέρες, να πουληθούν ως σκλάβοι ή να εξαγο­ραστούν από τους συγγενείς τους, ειδικά εάν ήταν εύπορα πρόσωπα. Πρέπει να τονιστεί ότι η εξαγορά των αιχμαλώτων ήταν μία από τις πιο επικερδείς επιχειρήσεις εκείνη την εποχή. Αυτή ήταν και η αιτία που συγκροτήθηκαν ειδικά ταμεία από τους Έλληνες, για να μπορούν να προσφέρουν το αντίστοιχο χρη­ματικό ποσό («σκλαβιάτικα») για την εξαγορά των αιχμαλώτων. Στη δυτική Ευρώπη είχαν δημιουργη­θεί εταιρείες για την εξαγορά αιχ­μαλώτων από τους πειρατές. Όταν ένας σκλάβος κατάφερνε να πλη­ρώσει τα λύτρα που του ζητούσαν, τότε απελευθερωνόταν και του χο­ρηγούσαν ένα πιστοποιητικό («τε-σκερές»), με το οποίο ο ιδιοκτήτης του σκλάβου βεβαίωνε ότι είχε λά­βει τα λύτρα.
Σημαντικά λάφυρα επίσης ήταν τα ζώα και οι σοδειές, γιατί μπο­ρούσαν να εκποιηθούν άμεσα και ταυτόχρονα να θρέψουν το πλήρω­μα του εκάστοτε πειρατικού πλοί­ου. Άλλη αξιόλογη λεία ήταν τα εμπορεύματα, ιδιαίτερα τα πολύ­τιμα, που μετέφεραν τα εμπορικά πλοία. Βέβαια, οι πειρατές που τα άρπαζαν δεν μπορούσαν να απο­κομίσουν κέρδος ανάλογο με την αξία τους. Ο κυριότερος λόγος ή­ταν ότι επιθυμούσαν να βγάλουν το κέρδος της λείας τους γρήγορα, με αποτέλεσμα να εκποιούν τα εμπο­ρεύματα σε πολύ μικρότερη τιμή από την πραγματική τους αξία.
Ο 17ος αιώνας χαρακτηρίζεται από τη μεγάλη βενετοτουρκική σύγκρουση, με επίκεντρο πλέον την Κρήτη, που βρισκόταν υπό βενετική κατοχή και αποτελούσε την τελευταία μεγάλη κτήση της Βενετίας. Η Κρήτη κατακτήθηκε γρήγορα από τους Οθωμανούς, αλλά η τελευταία ελεύθερη πόλη της, ο περίφημος Χάνδακας, πολι­ορκήθηκε για είκοσι πέντε ολόκλη­ρα χρόνια, μέχρι ο Μοροζίνι να συν­θηκολογήσει και να τον παραδώσει στους Οθωμανούς. Η πολιορκία του Χάνδακα έγινε για την Ευρώπη σύμβολο της αντίστασης κατά του οθωμανικού επεκτατισμού, ενώ αποτελεί και τη μακροβιότερη πο­λιορκία στην ιστορία. Στο πλαίσιο των βενετοτουρκικών πολέμων πολλοί πειρατές και κουρσάροι, ανάμεσά τους και Έλληνες νησιώ­τες, επετίθεντο και στις δύο αντι­μαχόμενες δυνάμεις, ανάλογα με τα συμφέροντά τους, γεγονός που αποτέλεσε ένα νέο είδος ναυτικού πολέμου στο Αιγαίο.
Το 17ο αιώνα τρεις κυρίαρχες δυ­νάμεις λειτουργούσαν παράλληλα και ανταγωνιστικά, προσπαθώντας να κερδίσουν το έπαθλο που λεγό­ταν αρχιπέλαγος: οι Οθωμανοί, οι Βενετοί και οι πειρατές. Αυτή η ρευστή κατάσταση διαμόρφωσε ένα πλαίσιο αυτονομίας για τα νη­σιά του Αιγαίου· αναπτύχθηκε ένα διανησιωτικό πλέγμα επικοινωνίας και εμπορικής κίνησης, που συνυ­πήρχε με την πειρατεία. Με την οριστική λήξη των βενετοτουρ-κικών πολέμων το 1699 με τη Συν­θήκη του Κάρλοβιτς, άρχισε και η οικονομική και οικιστική ανάπτυ­ξη του Αιγαίου. Η πειρατεία εξακο­λουθούσε να υφίσταται, φαίνεται όμως ότι είχε ενταχθεί σε μεγάλο βαθμό στην οικονομική και κοινω­νική πρακτική και νοοτροπία των αιγαιοπελαγίτικων κοινοτήτων.
Τον 18ο αιώνα στόχος των χρι­στιανών κουρσάρων, με πρωτο­στάτη την Αγγλία, δεν ήταν πλέον οι μουσουλμάνοι αλλά τα γαλλικά εμπορικά πλοία, τα οποία συνερ­γάζονταν στο εμπόριο με την Οθω­μανική Αυτοκρατορία και κυριαρ­χούσαν. Ταυτόχρονα, η Ρωσία προ­ωθούσε τα επεκτατικά σχέδιά της προς τον Νότο, εις βάρος της Οθωμανικής Αυτοκρατορίας. Γι’ αυ­τόν τον σκοπό χρησιμοποιούνταν και Έλληνες νησιώτες ως κουρσά­ροι. Η Γαλλία βρισκόταν στο μάτι του κυκλώνα, καθώς τα υπόλοιπα ευρωπαϊκά κράτη δημιουργούσαν συμμαχίες προσπαθώντας να δια­κόψουν τη συνεχώς εντεινόμενη επεκτατική πολιτική των Γάλλων. Παράλληλα, και η ίδια η φύση της πειρατείας άλλαξε· στόχος πλέον ήταν κατά κύριο λόγο τα πλοία εν κινήσει και τα εμπορεύματά τους και όχι οι άνθρωποι με προορισμό την υποδούλωση. Καταλυτικό ρό­λο σε αυτό έπαιξε η διάδοση του ιστιοφόρου, γεγονός που ανέκο­ψε τη ζήτηση για κωπηλάτες στις γαλέρες.
Από τις αρχές του 18ου αιώνα, υπό αυτές τις νέες συνθήκες, ανα­πτύχθηκε μια νέα εμπορική και ναυ­τική τάξη που λειτουργούσε στα ό­ρια μεταξύ εμπορίου και πειρατείας στις αιγαιοπελαγίτικες κοινότητες. Αυτή ανέλαβε και τον πολιτικό έ­λεγχο των κοινοτήτων στο πλαίσιο της αυτοδιοίκησης. Στα τέλη του 18ου αιώνα εκμεταλλεύτηκε τις ρωσοτουρκικές και αγγλογαλλικές συγκρούσεις, και με την εμπορική και πειρατική της ιδιότητα σχεδόν μονοπωλούσε την εμπορική κίνη­ση στο Αιγαίο και στην ανατολική Μεσόγειο μέχρι το τέλος των Να­πολεόντειων Πολέμων.
Οι Έλληνες μέσα από την πειρα­τεία κατόρθωσαν να αποκτήσουν τα απαραίτητα κεφάλαια για να μπορέσουν να κατασκευάσουν μεγάλα ιστιοφόρα, κάτι που δεν τους επέτρεπε η Πύλη. Αυτά τα πλοία τα χρησιμοποίησαν κυρίως για εμπόριο, δημιουργώντας έναν από τους μεγαλύτερους εμπορι­κούς στόλους της Μεσογείου. Ως έμποροι, ρίσκαραν συνεχώς ανα­λαμβάνοντας μεταφορές που οι ξένοι ανταγωνιστές τους δεν τολ­μούσαν να πραγματοποιήσουν. Αξιοσημείωτο είναι το γεγονός ότι έσπαγαν τον αγγλικό αποκλεισμό των γαλλικών και των ισπανικών α­κτών συνεχώς και τους εφοδίαζαν με τρόφιμα, αποκομίζοντας τερά­στια κέρδη.
Πρέπει να τονιστεί ότι η πειρα­τεία πρόσφερε στους Έλληνες την πολεμική πείρα και τα απαραίτητα κεφάλαια, ώστε να είναι άκρως ε­τοιμοπόλεμοι για την Επανάσταση του 1821. Μέσα από την πειρατεία προέκυψαν η ελληνική ναυτιλία και το ελληνικό εμπόριο. Οι Έλλη­νες πειρατές ασκούσαν πειρατεία με σκληρότητα αλλά ταυτόχρονα με φαντασία και μεράκι. Η σχεδόν μυθιστορηματική πολλές φορές δράση τους δεν παύει να ασκεί μια έντονη γοητεία. Με την πτώση της Κωνσταντινούπολης το 1453, οι Έλληνες έπρεπε να αντισταθούν στους Οθωμανούς κατακτητές για να διασφαλίσουν την ύπαρξή τους, και μια μορφή αντίστασης που επέλεξαν ήταν η πειρατεία.
http://www.topontiki.gr/articles/view/8804
Πηγή: Κατερίνα Καριζώνη,
Λεωνίδας Γουργουρίνης,
Χάρης Γιαννόπουλος
Πειρατεία στη Μάνη και στη Μεσόγειο
Εκδόσεις: Αδούλωτη Μάνη,
Γ. Λ. Δημακογιαννης
Σελ.: 158

Δευτέρα 23 Αυγούστου 2010

Sir Henry Morgan

Admiral Sir Henry Morgan (Harri Morgan in Welsh), (ca. 1635 – 25 August 1688) was a Welsh Admiral and privateer, who made a name for activities in the Caribbean. He was one of the most notorious and successful privateers from Wales, and one of the most dangerous pirates who worked in the Spanish Main.

Henry Morgan was reportedly the oldest son of Robert Morgan, a squire of Llanrumney in the Welsh county of Monmouthshire. Other sources suggest he was from Abergavenny within the same county. An entry in the 'Bristol Apprentice Books' showing 'Servants to Foreign Plantations': February 9, 1655, included "Henry Morgan of Abergavenny, Labourer, Bound to Timothy Tounsend of Bristol, Cutler, for three years, to serve in Barbadoras on the like Condiciouns".

There was no record of Morgan before 1665. He later said that he left school early, and was "more used to the pike than the book". Exquemelin says that he was indentured in Barbados. After Morgan sued the publishers for libel and was awarded £200, Exquemelin was forced to retract his statement. Subsequent editions of his book were amended.

Richard Browne, Morgan's surgeon at Panama, said that Morgan came to Jamaica in 1658 as a young man, and raised himself to "fame and fortune by his valour".[2] Recent versions of his life claim that, despite having had little experience as a sailor, Morgan sailed to the Caribbean to take part in the Western Design,[citation needed] Cromwell's plan to invade Hispaniola. His first battle at Santo Domingo ended in a failed attempt to take the island. The fleet moved on to Jamaica, which the English force successfully invaded and occupied.

His uncle Edward Morgan was Lieutenant-Governor of Jamaica after the Restoration of Charles II of England in 1660. Henry Morgan married his uncle's daughter Mary, a cousin. Morgan was reportedly the "Captain Morgan" who joined the fleet of Christopher Myngs in 1663. He was part of the expedition of John Morris and Jackman when they took the Spanish settlements at Vildemos (on the Tabasco river); Trujillo, (Honduras) and Granada (in Coahuila, Mexico).

In late 1665, Morgan commanded a ship in the old privateer Edward Mansfield's[3] expedition sent by Sir Thomas Modyford, the governor of Jamaica. They seized the islands of Providencia and Santa Catalina Island, Colombia. When Mansfield was captured by the Spanish and executed shortly afterward, the privateers elected Morgan as their admiral.

By 1661 Commodore Christopher Mings appointed Morgan captain of his first vessel. He plundered the Mexican coast under Lord Thomas Hickman Windsor’s commission in 1665. When Lord Windsor, governor of Jamaica, refused to stop the pirates from attacking Spanish ships, the Crown relieved him, and appointed Sir Thomas Modyford in his place. Although Modyford proclaimed loyalty to the Crown, he became a critical element of Morgan’s exhibitions by going against the word of the king and granting Morgan letters of marque to attack Spanish ships and settlements. Modyford was originally appointed governor of Barbados for both his loyalty and service to King Charles II during the English Civil War and his familial relation to the First Duke of Albemarle, but he was later removed from this position. Modyford was then appointed Governor of Jamaica as an attempt to save his dignity. This, along with the Royalist’s defeat at Worcester, decreased Modyford’s loyalty to the crown. As governor, Modyford was required to call in all pirates and privateers of the West Indies because England and Spain were temporarily at peace. However, the majority of these buccaneers either refused to return or did not receive the message that there was a recall, including Morgan.

When Morgan did return, Modyford had already received letters from the King of England warning him to force all of the pirates to return to port. Modyford chose to neglect these warnings and continue to issue letters of marque under the guise that it was for the King’s best interest to protect Jamaica, and this was a necessary element in that goal. Because Modyford desired to get rid of the Dutch presence in the Caribbean he issued a letter of marque to Captain Edward Mansvelt to assemble a fleet of fifteen ships which was manned by roughly 500-600 men. Having just returned from a successful expedition of the Mexican Coast, where he captured several ships off the coast of Campeche, Morgan was appointed vice admiral of the fleet. Mansvelt was given orders to attack the Dutch settlement of Curaçao, but once the crew was out at sea it was decided that Curaçao was not lucrative enough for the impending danger associated with attacking it. With this in mind, a vote was taken and the crew decided that attacking a different settlement would be a safer and more lucrative alternative. Unhappy with this decision, many of the buccaneers deserted the expedition and headed back to port while others continued on with Admiral Mansvelt and Vice-Admiral Morgan to attack the Spanish island of Providence.

When Morgan and Mansvelt’s fleet arrived at Providence, the Spanish were unprepared. Unable to form a defense, the Spanish surrendered all of their forts. Mansvelt and Morgan ruthlessly decided to destroy all but one of these forts. The buccaneers lived in the city and collected all of its wealth while Morgan and Mansvelt sailed around Costa Rica. Eventually, they spotted a Spanish man-of-war on the horizon and decided to return to Jamaica to gather reinforcements so that the island of Providence could be a town run and inhabited by pirates. As a sign of his sympathy toward pirates Modyford appointed his brother, Sir James Modyford, as governor of Providence. In the mind of Mansvelt, the idea of a pirate-run settlement was brilliant. However, he and Modyford both overlooked the true essence of a pirate: a pirate is not a soldier who is disciplined and prepared to fight the world’s best armies when the armies were ready for them. Rather, Mansvelt’s pirates were conditioned to raid a town, then leave. Thus, the pirate reign in Providence was short-lived as the island was quickly recaptured by the Spanish. After this expedition, Modyford was again reprimanded by the King of England and asked to recall all of his pirates and privateers. Once again, Modyford refused.

After learning of a rumor that the Spanish planned to attack Jamaica in retaliation for the sack of Providence, Modyford provided yet another commission to the buccaneers. This time, he gave the commission directly to Morgan to take Spanish citizens prisoner in order to protect the island of Jamaica. Modyford used the excuse of protecting the King’s influence in the Americas, but this was most likely simply a guise for his own personal agenda of gaining money and keeping his post as Governor of Jamaica. Nonetheless, Morgan assembled a fleet of ten ships in a way that was quite different from most Admirals of the time. Instead of sending out a flyer and allowing willing buccaneers of the region to come to him, Morgan sailed to the places where the most daring pirates could be found. When he arrived at the ports, he dressed himself in red silk and wore fancy gold and jewels so that he appeared to be extremely successful so that more swashbucklers were drawn to him. Using a word-of-mouth approach, he was able to acquire five hundred of the best pirates in the area.
[edit] Puerto Principe: first independent command

In 1667, he was commissioned by Modyford to capture some Spanish prisoners in Cuba in order to discover details of the threatened attack on Jamaica. Collecting 10 ships with 500 men, Morgan landed on the island and captured and sacked Puerto Principe (Camaguey).

Modyford almost immediately entrusted Morgan with another expedition against the Spaniards, and he proceeded to ravage the coast of Cuba. In a meeting held by Morgan prior to the start of their journey, he proposed that the fleet attack Havana. Although this suggestion showed his arrogance, after much debate it was decided that they did not have enough men to take Havana, so they decided instead to take Puerto Principe. While on their quest for Spanish ships, Morgan’s fleet encountered heavy storms that brought them to the south shore of modern-day Cuba as opposed to the north shore where they had originally aimed. Due to the rough journey, Morgan’s men had very little food and water and were forced to land on the south shore to search for provisions instead of continuing on to the north shore of Cuba. Once on land, the crew met a French crew that had also been driven ashore in search of provisions and decided to join forces. A Spanish prisoner that Morgan held hostage escaped and warned the citizens of Puerto Principe of the impending attack. The citizens quickly deserted the town with their valuables, leaving very little for the buccaneers. After searching the town and torturing its residents for information regarding the location of their riches, Morgan’s fleet was only able to gather fifty-thousand pieces of eight. This was not enough to pay off the debts that the buccaneers had accumulated back in Jamaica, so they were required to find more riches before returning to Port Royal.


In order to cover their debts, Morgan and his men decided to aim for a city that harbored lots of valuables. As the third most important Spanish city in the New World, Porto Bello was an obvious choice for the buccaneers. Furthermore, Porto Bello was considered the center of Spanish trade in the Americas, so it contained warehouses of the goods and valuables of many wealthy merchants. Because of its enormous concentration of wealth, Porto Bello was extremely well protected by three Spanish forts.

However, the French crew refused to take part in this voyage because they did not get along with Morgan’s English crew. It was reported that there was a dispute between a Frenchman and Englishman that had been decided to be solved in a duel when the Englishman stabbed the other in the back before the duel could take place. In addition to this, the French believed that they had been cheated out of their fair share of the loot by Morgan. Whereas the reputation of most pirates would have been ruined by this rumor, Morgan set sail to sack Porto Bello with his original fleet of ten ships and five-hundred men. When the fleet reached the settlement on the northern coast of South America, the buccaneers found the fortresses very intimidating. With this in mind, Morgan gave them a rousing speech in which he reminded them that the Spanish did not know of their presence and promised them gold and silver. When the sun went down, the ships began to sail towards Puerto do Naos where there was a river that could lead them to Porto Bello. With information gained from a prisoner, the buccaneers were able to quickly destroy the first fort. Seeing how easily the first two castles were taken, the third castle surrendered, enabling Morgan’s buccaneers to overrun the city. Not long after this, the Spanish counterattacked in an attempt to protect their wealth and center of trade but the buccaneers were ready for the battle and Morgan organized an ambush of the fleet in a narrow passage. After defeating the much larger and more powerful Spanish fleet, Morgan and his men continued to inhabit Porto Bello for two months while they collected all of the wealth of the city that they could find before ransoming the Spanish for the safety of its town and citizens. From the ransom alone, Morgan and his men collected roughly 100,000 pieces of eight to bring their total loot from Porto Bello to over 200,000 pieces of eight. In a foreshadowing of Morgan’s future endeavors, the governor of Panama asked him how he had beaten the Spanish army sent from his city along with an emerald ring and a request that he not attack Panama. Soon after, England sent Port Royal HMS Oxford (as a gift meant to protect Port Royal); Port Royal gave it to Morgan to help his career.

Because Modyford had already been warned to recall his pirates, his recent commission to Morgan once again put him under enormous pressure from the Crown. Modyford officially denounced the attacks on the town by citing that he sanctioned only attacks on ships. Modyford attempted to justify his commission by emphasizing the rumored Spanish invasion of Jamaica. However, he did not believe that merely talking of a rumored attack would be enough to save his governorship and dignity, so he decided to try to provoke the Spanish into actually attacking Jamaica. Although seemingly illogical, Modyford hoped to cover up his last commission by granting Morgan yet another one.

In the same fashion as before, Morgan set out to assemble a fleet of buccaneers that would be willing to engage in a bold attack on the Spanish Main and was able to attract nine-hundred men to his eleven-ship fleet. Once gathered, Morgan brought his men to the Isla Vaca, also known as Cow Island, to decide on a city to attack. After deliberation it was decided that the Spanish settlement of Cartagena would be their intended target because of the riches it contained. It was one of Spain’s most important cities, and held all of the gold that was in transit from Peru to Spain, so sacking Cartagena would not only provoke the Spanish into an attack while weakening one of their strongest cities, but it would also make for a very large loot.

The night that the final decision to attack Cartagena was made, there was a celebration. During this rum-filled celebration, a few intoxicated sailors accidentally lit a fuse that ignited explosives on-board Morgan’s flagship, the Oxford, which was originally a gift given to Modyford to help protect Jamaica from privateers like Morgan. However, the ship ended up in Morgan’s possession and became his flagship. When the Oxford was destroyed, many men lost their lives, and many others chose to desert seeing the tragedy as an omen of bad luck, so the fleet was decreased to only ten ships and eight-hundred men. However, Morgan still continued onto the Spanish Main to attack Cartagena in March of 1669.

The voyage to Cartagena proved to be just as disastrous to the strength of the fleet. Because the crew was forced to sail into the wind the entire way to the Spanish Main, many of the vessels were unable to continue on because the either the sailors were too exhausted from working day and night or the ship was under too much stress. When Morgan finally made it to the Spanish Main, his original crew of nine-hundred had been diminished to only five hundred: a force far too weak to overtake the highly-protected city of Cartagena. A French captain onboard suggested to Morgan that they attempt to sack a town named Maracaibo that he had been to three years prior.

Reaching the town of Maracaibo, however, was no easy feat. The town was located on Lake Maracaibo, but to reach the lake they had to go through a narrow and shallow channel. Although the channel was only twelve feet deep, narrow, winding, and sprinkled with islands and sandbars, the French captain claimed that he could direct the ships safely through it. Unknown to him, the Spanish had built a fort at the channel’s narrowest point since the last time the captain had been there three years ago. When the fleet reached this point, they were unable to navigate the rough terrain because of the cannon and gun fire coming from the fort. Morgan was left with no choice but to order his men to land on the beach despite their lack of protection from the Spanish gun fire. Once nightfall arrived, Morgan and his men slowly entered the fort but only found that there were no Spaniards there at all. Instead, the Spanish had left a slow-burning explosive as a trap for the buccaneers.

In order to protect his fleet for their voyage back through the channel, Morgan stole all of the supplies from the fort and ordered his men to bury the cannons in the sand. Because the Spanish already knew about Morgan’s plan to attack Maracaibo, the men took canoes and small vessels through the channel to the town as opposed to the lengthy process of bringing the larger vessels. This modified plan was still not quick enough and the residents of Maracaibo were able to escape with their valuables before the buccaneers arrived. After searching the area and torturing any citizens they could find for three weeks, Morgan and his men loaded the large vessels with their provisions and booty, as well as prisoners to be used as messengers, and set off to attack the nearby town of Gibraltar.

On January 1669, HMS Oxford was blown up accidentally when the ammunitions depot was lit during a party, with Morgan and his officers narrowly escaping death. In March he sacked Maracaibo, Venezuela which had emptied out when his fleet was first spied, and afterwards spent a few weeks at the Venezuelan settlement of Gibraltar on Lake Maracaibo, torturing the wealthy residents to discover hidden treasure.

After collecting the wealth of the town and ransoming its citizens, Morgan loaded the ships to return home. Returning to Maracaibo, Morgan found three Spanish ships, the Magdalena, the San Luis, and the Soledad, waiting at the inlet to the Caribbean; he destroyed the Magdalena, and captured the Soledad, while the San Luis's crew burned down their ship to stop the pirates from having it.[citation needed] In the time that Morgan was ransacking the two towns, the Spaniards had reinforced the fort located at the narrowest point of the passage and barricaded the passage with three Spanish warships. Morgan and his men were given a choice to either surrender or be arrested, so they decided to fight for their freedom.

The buccaneers were outmanned by the Spanish, so they were forced to devise a clever plan to outsmart the Spanish. Morgan ordered the pirate’s largest ship, the Satisfaction, to be turned into a “fire ship” that would be sailed directly into the Spanish Flagship, the Magdalen. Hollowed out logs were filled with explosives and dressed to look like a pirate crew, and the twelve men that manned the ship were instructed to throw grappling hooks into the riggings of the Magdalen so that it couldn’t sail away. Miraculously, Morgan’s plan worked and the Magdalen was destroyed. The second largest Spanish ship, the Santa Louisa, was run ashore by the ship Morgan was now in control of. The final ship, La Marquesa was taken by the pirates after the ropes tangled. After the battle, Morgan was still unable to cross the channel because of the fort, but the Spanish had no ships with which to attack Morgan. Finally, by an ingenious stratagem, he faked a landward attack on the fort which convinced the governor to shift his cannon, allowing Morgan to slowly creep by the fort using only the movement of the tide. In doing so, he eluded the enemy's guns altogether and escaped in safety. On his return to Jamaica he was again reproved, but not punished by Modyford.

The Spaniards for their part started to react and threaten Jamaica. A new commission was given to Morgan as commander-in-chief of all the ships of war in Jamaica, to levy war on the Spaniards and destroy their ships and stores - the booty gained in the expedition being the only pay. Thus Morgan and his crew were on this occasion privateers, not pirates. After ravaging the coasts of Cuba and the mainland, Morgan determined on an expedition to Panama.

He recaptured the island of Santa Catalina on December 15, 1670, and, on December 27, he gained possession of the fortress of San Lorenzo in the Caribbean coast of Panama, killing 300 men of the garrison and leaving 23 alive. Then with 1,400 men he ascended the Chagres River towards the Pacific coast and Panama City.

On January 18, 1671, Morgan discovered that Panama had roughly 1,500 infantry and cavalry. He split his forces in two, using one to march through the forest and flank the enemy. The Spaniards were untrained and rushed Morgan's line where he cut them down with gunfire, only to have his flankers emerge and finish off the rest of the Spanish soldiers. Although Panama was at the time the richest city in New Spain, Morgan and his men obtained far less plunder than they had expected. Much of the city's wealth had been removed onto a Spanish ship that then stood out into the Gulf of Panama, beyond the looters' reach.[4] Most of the inhabitants' remaining goods were destroyed in a fire of unclear cause. Morgan's men tortured those residents of Panama they could catch, but very little gold was forthcoming from the victims. After Morgan's attack, the Panama city had to be rebuilt in a new site a few kilometres to the west (the current site). The former site is called Panamá Viejo and still contains the remaining parts of the old Panama City.

Because the sack of Panama violated a peace treaty between England and Spain, Morgan was arrested and conducted to the Kingdom of England in 1672. He proved he had no knowledge of the treaty. Instead of punishment, Morgan was knighted in 1674 before returning to Jamaica the following year to take up the post of Lieutenant Governor.

By 1681, then-acting governor Morgan had fallen out of favour with King Charles II, who was intent on weakening the semi-autonomous Jamaican Council, and was replaced by long-time political rival Thomas Lynch. He gained considerable weight and a reputation for rowdy drunkenness.

In 1683, Morgan was suspended from the Jamaican Council by the machinations of Governor Lynch. Also during this time, an account of Morgan's disreputable exploits was published by Alexandre Exquemelin, who once had been his confidante, probably as a barber-surgeon, in a Dutch volume entitled De Americaensche Zee-Roovers (History of the Buccaneers of America). Morgan took steps to discredit the book and successfully brought a libel suit against the book's publisher, securing a retraction and damages of two hundred English pounds (Campbell, 2003). The book nonetheless contributed much to Morgan's reputed fame as a bloodthirsty pirate over time.

When Thomas Lynch died in 1684, his friend Christopher Monck was appointed to the governorship and arranged the dismissal of Morgan's suspension from the Jamaican Council in 1688. Morgan's health had steadily declined since 1681. He was diagnosed with "dropsie", but may have contracted tuberculosis in London, and died August 25, 1688. It is also possible that he may have had liver failure due to his heavy drinking. He is buried in Palisadoes cemetery, which sank beneath the sea after the 1692 earthquake.

Morgan had lived in an opportune time for pirates. He was successfully able to use the conflicts between England and her enemies both to support England and to enrich himself and his crews. With his death, the pirates who would follow would also use this same ploy, but with less successful results. He was also one of the few pirates who were able to retire from his piracy, having had great success, and with little legal retribution.

Σάββατο 21 Αυγούστου 2010

Μια 14χρονη φιλοδοξεί να γίνει η νεώτερη ιστιοπλόος που έχει περιπλεύσει τη Γη


Η 14χρονη ολλανδή ιστιοπλόος Λόρα Ντέκερ αναχώρησε σήμερα από το λιμάνι Ντεν Οσε της Ολλανδίας για να κάνει πραγματικότητα το όνειρό της, να γίνει η μικρότερη ιστιοπλόος που θα πραγματοποιήσει μόνη της το γύρο του κόσμου με το ιστιοπλοϊκό της.

Η Λόρα και ο πατέρας της Ντικ Ντέκερ, που τη συνοδεύει στο ιστιοπλοϊκό της Guppy, αναχώρησαν από το ολλανδικό λιμάνι στις 09:00 τοπική ώρα (10:00 ώρα Ελλάδας) κατευθυνόμενοι προς τη Μαύρη θάλασσα, υπό το βλέμμα περίπου 100 θεατών και περίπου 50 δημοσιογράφων.

"Δε φοβάμαι", δήλωσε η Ντέκερ λίγα λεπτά πριν από τον απόπλου και πρόσθεσε ότι επισήμως ο περίπλους της γης θ΄αρχίσει σε τέσσερις εβδομάδες από την Πορτογαλία όπου ο πατέρας της θα την αφήσει μόνη.

Το ταξίδι ως την Πορτογαλία θα διαρκέσει δυο με τρεις εβδομάδες.

Την περασμένη Τρίτη η Λόρα κέρδισε μια μακροχρόνια δικαστική διαμάχη, όταν ολλανδικό δικαστήριο αποδέχθηκε το αίτημά της για άρση της δικαστικής επιτήρησης που τής είχε επιβληθεί. Δικαστική απόφαση του 2009 είχε αφαιρέσει την κηδεμονία της 13χρονης τότε Ντέκερ από τους γονείς της, κατόπιν αιτήματος των κοινωνικών υπηρεσιών που θεώρησαν ότι απειλείται η ζωή της από τα σχέδιά της για περίπλου του πλανήτη. Το οικογενειακό δικαστήριο του Μίντελμπουργκ απεφάνθη ότι η προετοιμασία της Λόρα ήταν ικανή να τής εγγυηθεί ένα ασφαλές ταξίδι και ότι η τελική απόφαση ανήκει στους γονείς της.

Η Λόρα Ντέκερ θα ολοκληρώσει τον περίπλου πριν γιορτάσει την 17η επέτειο των γενεθλίων της στις 20 Σεπτεμβρίου του 2012 για να γίνει η μικρότερη ιστιοπλόος που πραγματοποιεί μόνη της το γύρο του κόσμου.

Το ρεκόρ αυτό κατέχει η Τζέσικα Γουότσον από την Αυστραλία, η οποία ολοκλήρωσε το ταξίδι της στις 15 Μαΐου του 2009 τρεις ημέρες πριν από τα 17ά της γενέθλια.

Gold bar stolen from Mel Fisher Museum


BY ADAM LINHARDT Citizen Staff
alinhardt@keysnews.com

Someone actually lifted the famous gold bar Wednesday evening from the Mel Fisher Maritime Museum.

The 5-pound bar, from the 15th century Spanish galleon the Nuestra Señora de Atocha that Fisher and his crew found off Key West in 1985, was stolen from its secure Plexiglas enclosure about 5:13 p.m., Key West police said.

Security cameras captured images of two people breaking into the case and taking the bar from what museum director Melissa Kendrick called one of Fisher's favorite exhibits, because it allowed visitors to hold the same treasure -- to "lift the gold bar" -- found by his team.

One suspect was described as a white male about 6 feet tall, with dark hair and a medium build. The second suspect is about 5 foot 6 inches tall, reports say, and could be a woman or a man. Detectives were still working on identifying the suspects as of press time Thursday.

According to a police report, a security guard told a museum visitor to "make sure to touch the gold bar," but when the visitor arrived at the exhibit, the bar was gone. The woman reportedly did not see anyone take the bar or acting suspiciously.

Detectives declined to say how they think the suspects broke into the exhibit, said police spokeswoman Alyson Crean. The FBI is working with Key West police, Crean said. The federal agency also investigates art and jewelry/gem theft, according to http://www.fbi.gov/hq.htm.

Kendrick declined to speculate on the bar's worth, noting such treasure has an "antiquity value" on top of the actual gold value. A 5-pound solid gold bar would be worth about $98,800 in today's market, according to gold prices posted Thursday afternoon at http://www.thestreet.com, a financial news website.

The museum is offering a $10,000 reward to anyone with information that leads to the 5-pound bar's intact return, she said.

"This has never happened since we've been here," Kendrick said, referring to the museum's location at 200 Greene St.

In the 1970s, a group stole a silver bar that weighed about 70 pounds from Fisher, but that was before the current museum with its security measures were in place, Kendrick said. It was never recovered.

Former Mel Fisher diver Don Kincaid, who helped recover many artifacts in the early 1980s, was staggered to hear of Wednesday's theft.

"To my knowledge, something like this has never happened before," Kincaid said. "The design of the case that bar was in has thus far been completely successful. The ability to touch that bar was the most common compliment we would get from visitors. It's one of only a few museums where you can touch history."

Detectives ask anyone with information to call 305-809-1015 or Crime Stoppers at 1-800-346-8477.

Παρασκευή 20 Αυγούστου 2010

Captain Woodes Rogers

Rogers and his men search Spanish ladies for their jewels in Guayaquil.
Rogers (right) receives a map of New Providence Island from his son, in a painting by William Hogarth (1729)
Woodes Rogers (ca. 1679 – 15 July 1732) was an English sea captain, privateer, and, later, the first Royal Governor of the Bahamas. He is known as the captain of the vessel that rescued the marooned Alexander Selkirk, whose plight is generally believed to have inspired Daniel Defoe's Robinson Crusoe.

Rogers came from an affluent seafaring family, grew up in Poole and Bristol, and served a marine apprenticeship to a Bristol sea captain. His father, who held shares in many ships, died when Rogers was in his mid-twenties, leaving Rogers in control of the family shipping business. In 1707, Rogers was approached by Captain William Dampier, who sought support for a privateering voyage against the Spanish, with whom the British were at war. Rogers led the expedition, which consisted of two well-armed ships, the Duke and the Duchess, and was the captain of the Duke. In three years, Rogers and his men went around the world, capturing several ships in the Pacific Ocean. En route, the expedition rescued Selkirk, finding him on Juan Fernandez Island on 1 February 1709. When the expedition returned to England in October 1711, Rogers had circumnavigated the globe, while retaining his original ships and most of his men, and the investors in the expedition doubled their money.

While the expedition made Rogers a national hero, his brother was killed and Rogers was badly wounded in fights in the Pacific. On his return, he was successfully sued by his crew on the ground they had not received their fair share of the expedition profits, and Rogers was forced into bankruptcy. He wrote of his maritime experiences in a book A Cruising Voyage Round the World, which sold well, in part due to public fascination at Selkirk's rescue.

Rogers was twice appointed Governor of the Bahamas, where he succeeded in warding off threats from the Spanish, and in ridding the colony of pirates. However, his first term as governor was financially ruinous, and on his return to England, he was imprisoned for debt. During his second term as governor, Rogers died in Nassau at the age of about 53.

Woodes Rogers was the elder son and heir of Woods Rogers, a successful merchant captain. Woodes Rogers spent part of his childhood in Poole, England, where he likely attended the local school; his father, who owned shares in many ships, was often away nine months of the year with the Newfoundland fishing fleet. Sometime between 1690 and 1696, Captain Rogers moved his family to Bristol.[1] In November 1697, Woodes Rogers was apprenticed to Bristol mariner John Yeamans, to learn the profession of a sailor. At 18, Rogers was somewhat old to be starting a seven-year apprenticeship. His biographer, Brian Little, suggests that this might have been a way for the newcomers to become entrenched in Bristol maritime society, as well as making it possible for Woodes Rogers to become a freeman, or voting citizen, of the city. Little also suggests that it is likely that Rogers gained his maritime experience with Yeamans' ship on the Newfoundland fleet.[2]

Rogers completed his apprenticeship in November 1704. The following January he married Sarah Whetstone, daughter of Rear Admiral Sir William Whetstone, who was the Rogers' neighbour and a close family friend. Woodes became a freeman of Bristol because of his marriage into the prominent Whetstone family. In 1706, Captain Rogers died at sea, leaving his ships and business to his son Woodes.[3] Between 1706 and 1708, Woodes and Sarah Rogers had a son and two daughters.[4]

The War of the Spanish Succession started in 1702, during which England's main maritime foes were France and Spain, and a number of Bristol ships were given letters of marque, allowing them to strike against enemy shipping. At least four vessels in which Rogers had an ownership interest were granted the letters. One, the Whetstone Galley, named for Rogers' father in law, received the letters before being sent to Africa to begin a voyage in the slave trade. It did not reach Africa, but was captured by the French.[5] Rogers suffered other losses against the French, although he does not record their extent in his book. He turned to privateering as a means of recouping these losses.[4]

In late 1707, Rogers was approached by William Dampier, a navigator and friend of Rogers' father, who proposed a privateering expedition against the Spanish.[6] This was a desperate move on the part of Captain Dampier to save his career.[6] Dampier had recently returned from leading a two-ship privateering expedition into the Pacific, which culminated in a series of mutinies before both ships finally sank due to Dampier's error in not having the hulls properly cleaned of worms before leaving port. Unaware of this, Rogers agreed. Financing was provided by many in the Bristol community, with the support of Rogers' father in law.[7] Commanding two frigates, the Duke and the Duchess, and captaining the first, Rogers spent three years circumnavigating the globe.[8] The ships departed Bristol on 1 August 1708.[9] Dampier was aboard as Rogers' sailing master.[10]

Rogers encountered various problems along the way. Forty of the Bristol crew deserted or were dismissed, and he spent a month in Ireland recruiting replacements and having the vessels prepared for sea. Many crew members were Dutch, Danish, or other foreigners.[6] Some of the crew members mutinied after Rogers refused to let them plunder a neutral Swedish vessel. When the mutiny was put down, he had the leader flogged, put in irons, and sent to England aboard another ship. The less culpable mutineers were given lighter punishments, such as reduced rations.[11] The ships intended to force the chilly Drake Passage off the tip of South America, but expedition leaders soon realised that they were short of both warm clothing and alcohol, which was then believed to warm those exposed to cold. Considering the latter the more important problem, the expedition made a stop at Tenerife to stock up on the local wine, and later sewed the ships' blankets into cold weather gear.[12] The ships experienced a difficult interoceanic passage; they were forced to almost 62° South latitude[13], which, according to Rogers, "for ought we know is the furthest that any one has yet been to the southward".[14] At their furthest south, they were closer to as-yet-undiscovered Antarctica than to South America.

Rogers stocked his ships with limes to fend off scurvy, a practice not universally accepted at that time.[16] After reaching the Pacific Ocean, the ships' provisions of limes were exhausted and seven men died of the vitamin deficiency disease. Dampier was able to guide the ships to little-known Juan Fernandez Island to replenish supplies of fresh produce.[16] On 31 January 1709, as they neared the island, the sailors spotted a fire ashore and feared that it might be a shore party from a Spanish vessel. The next morning Rogers sent a party ashore and discovered that the fire was from Scottish sailor Alexander Selkirk, who had been stranded there four years previously.[17] Selkirk was to become the inspiration for the classic novel Robinson Crusoe, written by Rogers' friend, Daniel Defoe.[8] According to Rogers' journal, Rogers found Selkirk to be "wild-looking" and "wearing goatskins", noting, "He had with him his clothes and bedding, with a firelock, some powder, bullets and tobacco, a hatchet, a knife, a kettle, a Bible and books."[8] Selkirk, who had been part of the ship's crew that abandoned Dampier after losing confidence in his leadership, was at first reluctant to join the expedition because of the presence of his old commodore, but eventually did so.[18] Selkirk served as a mate aboard the Duke, and was later given command of a small ship captured by the expedition.[19] Selkirk concluded the voyage as master of the Duke.[20]

After leaving Juan Fernandez on 14 February 1709, the expedition captured and looted a number of small vessels, and launched an attack on the town of Guayaquil, today located in Ecuador. When Rogers attempted to negotiate with the governor, the townsfolk secreted their valuables. Rogers was able to get a modest ransom for the town, but some crew members were so dissatisfied that they dug up the recently dead hoping to find items of value. This led to sickness on board ship, of which six men died.[21] The expedition lost contact with one of the captured ships, which was under the command of Simon Hatley. The other vessels searched for Hatley's ship, but to no avail—Hatley and his men were captured by the Spanish. On a subsequent voyage to the Pacific, Hatley would emulate Selkirk by becoming the centre of an event which would be immortalized in literature. His ship beset by storms, Hatley shot an albatross in the hope of better winds, an episode memorialized by Samuel Taylor Coleridge.[22]

The crew of the vessels became increasingly discontented, and Rogers and his officers feared another mutiny. This tension was dispelled by the expedition's capture of a rich prize off the coast of Mexico: the Spanish vessel Nuestra Señora de la Incarnación Disenganio. Rogers sustained a wound to the face in the battle.[21] While the Duke and Duchess were successful in capturing that vessel, they failed to capture the Incarnación's companion, a well-armed galleon named the Begoña, which made its escape after damaging both vessels. The two privateers, accompanied by their two prizes, limped across the Pacific Ocean.[23] The expedition was able to resupply at Guam, which, though governed by the Spanish, extended a cordial welcome to the privateers.[24]
[edit] Homeward voyage

The ships then went to the neutral Dutch port of Batavia in what is now Indonesia, where Rogers underwent surgery to remove a musket ball from the roof of his mouth, and the expedition disposed of the less seaworthy of the two Spanish prizes. Dealing with the Dutch there constituted a violation of the British East India Company's monopoly.[25] When the ships finally dropped anchor in the Thames River on 14 October 1711,[22] a legal battle ensued, with the investors paying the East India Company £6,000 (about £666,000 at 2009 values)[26] as settlement for their claim for breach of monopoly, about four percent of what Rogers brought back. The investors approximately doubled their money, while Rogers gained £1,600 (today perhaps £176,000)[26] from a voyage which disfigured him and cost him his brother, who was killed in a battle in the Pacific.[23] The money was probably less than he could have made at home, and was entirely absorbed by the debts his family had incurred in his absence.[27] However, the long voyage and the capture of the Spanish ship made Rogers a national hero.[23] Rogers was the first Englishman, in circumnavigating the globe, to have his original ships and most of his crew survive.[27]

After his voyage, he wrote an account of it, titled A Cruising Voyage Round the World.[28] While Edward Cooke, an officer aboard the Duchess, also wrote a book, and beat Rogers to print by several months, Rogers' book was much more successful, with many readers fascinated by the account of Selkirk's rescue, which Cooke had slighted. Among those interested in Selkirk's adventure was Daniel Defoe, who sought out Selkirk, and fictionalized the story as Robinson Crusoe.[29]

While Rogers' book enjoyed financial success, it had a practical purpose—to aid British navigators and possible colonists. Much of Rogers' introduction is devoted to advocacy for the South Seas trade. Rogers notes that had there been a British colony in the South Seas, he would not have had to worry about food supplies for his crew. A third of Rogers' book is devoted to detailed descriptions of the places that he explored, with special emphasis on "such [places] as may be of most use for enlarging our trade".[30] He describes the area of the River Plate in detail because it lay "within the limits of the South Sea Company",[30] whose schemes had not yet burst into financial scandal. Rogers' book was carried by such South Pacific navigators as Admiral George Anson and privateering captains John Clipperton and George Shelvocke.[31]

Rogers encountered financial problems on his return. Sir William Whetstone had died, and Rogers, having failed to recoup his business losses through privateering, was forced to sell his Bristol home to support his family. He was successfully sued by a group of over 200 of his crew, who stated that they had not received their fair share of the expedition profits. The profits from his book were not enough to overcome these setbacks, and he was forced into bankruptcy.[32][33] His wife gave birth to their fourth child a year after his return—a boy who died in infancy—and Woodes and Sarah Rogers soon permanently separated.[32]

Rogers decided the way out of his financial difficulty was to lead another expedition, this time against pirates. In 1713, Rogers led what was ostensibly an expedition to purchase slaves in Madagascar and take them to the Dutch East Indies, this time with the permission of the British East India Company. However, Rogers' secondary purpose was to gather details on the pirates of Madagascar, hoping to destroy or reform them, and colonize Madagascar on a future trip. Rogers collected information regarding pirates and their vessels near the island.[34] Finding that a large number of the pirates had gone native, he persuaded many of them to sign a petition to Queen Anne asking her for clemency.[35] While Rogers' expedition was profitable, when it returned to London in 1715, the British East India Company vetoed the idea of a colonial expedition to Madagascar, believing a colony was a greater threat to its monopoly than a few pirates. Accordingly, Rogers turned his sights from Madagascar to the West Indies. His connections included several of the advisers to the new king, George I, who had succeeded Queen Anne in 1714, and Rogers was able to forge an agreement for a company to manage the Bahamas, which were infested with pirates, in exchange for a share of the colony's profits.[36]

At the time, according to the Governor of Bermuda, the Bahamas were "without any face or form of Government" and the colony was a "sink or nest of infamous rascals".[37] Until Rogers obtained his commission, the islands had been nominally governed by absentee Lords Proprietor, who did little except appoint a new, powerless governor when the position fell vacant.[37] Under the agreement that underlaid Rogers' commission, the Lords Proprietor leased their rights for a token sum to Rogers' company for twenty-one years.[38]

On 5 January 1718, a proclamation was issued announcing clemency for all piratical offences, provided that those seeking what became known as the "King's Pardon" surrendered not later than 5 September 1718. Colonial governors and deputy governors were authorized to grant the pardon.[39] Rogers was officially appointed "Captain General and Governor in Chief" by George I on 6 January 1718.[40] He did not leave immediately for his new bailiwick, but spent several months preparing the expedition, which included seven ships, 100 soldiers, 130 colonists, and supplies ranging from food for the expedition members and ships' crews to religious pamphlets to give to the pirates, whom Rogers believed would respond to spiritual teachings. On 22 April 1718, the expedition, accompanied by three Royal Navy vessels, sailed out of the Thames.[41]
[edit] First term

The expedition arrived on 22 July 1718, surprising and trapping a ship commanded by pirate Charles Vane. After negotiations failed, Vane used a captured French vessel as a fireship in an attempt to ram the naval vessels. The attempt failed, but the naval vessels were forced out of the west end of Nassau harbour, giving Vane's crew an opportunity to raid the town and secure the best local pilot. Vane and his men then escaped in a small sloop via the harbour's narrow east entrance. The pirates had evaded the trap, but Nassau and New Providence Island were in

At the time, the island's population consisted of about two hundred former pirates and several hundred fugitives who had escaped from nearby Spanish colonies. Rogers organized a government, granted the King's Pardon to those former pirates on the island who had not yet accepted it, and started to rebuild the island's fortifications, which had fallen into decrepitude under pirate domination. However, less than a month into his residence on New Providence, Rogers was faced with a double threat: Vane wrote, threatening to join with Edward Teach (better known as Blackbeard) to retake the island, and Rogers learned that the Spanish also planned to drive the British out of the Bahamas.[43]

Rogers' expedition suffered further setbacks. An unidentified disease killed almost a hundred of his expedition members, while leaving the long-term residents nearly untouched. Two of the three navy vessels, having no orders to remain, left for New York. Ships sent to Havana to conciliate the Spanish governor there never arrived, their crew revolting and becoming pirates mid-voyage. Finally, the third naval vessel left in mid-September, its commander promising to return in three weeks—a promise he had no intention of keeping. Work on rebuilding the island's fortifications proceeded slowly, with the locals showing a disinclination to work.[44]

On 14 September 1718, Rogers received word that Vane was at Green Turtle Cay near Abaco, about 120 miles (190 km) north of Nassau.[45][46] Some of the pardoned pirates on New Providence took boats to join Vane, and Rogers decided to send two ex-pirate captains, Benjamin Hornigold and John Cockram, with a crew to gather intelligence, and, if possible, to bring Vane to battle. As the weeks passed, and hopes of their return dimmed, Rogers declared martial law and set all inhabitants to work on rebuilding the island's fortifications. Finally, the former pirates returned. They had failed to find an opportunity to kill Vane or bring him to battle, but had captured one ship and a number of pirate captives. Captain Hornigold was then sent to recapture the ships and crews who had gone pirate en route to Havana. He returned with ten prisoners and three corpses.[47] On 9 December 1718, Rogers brought the ten men captured by Hornigold to trial. Nine were convicted, and Rogers had eight hanged three days later, reprieving the ninth on hearing he was of good family. One of the condemned, Thomas Morris, quipped as he climbed the gallows, "We have a good governor, but a harsh one."[45] The executions so cowed the populace that when, shortly after Christmas, several residents plotted to overthrow Rogers and restore the island to piracy, the conspirators attracted little support. Rogers had them flogged, then released as harmless.[48]

On 16 March 1719 Rogers learned that Spain and Britain were at war again. He redoubled his efforts to repair the island's fortifications, buying vital supplies on credit in the hope of later being reimbursed by the expedition's investors. The Spanish sent an invasion fleet against Nassau in May, but when the fleet's commodore learned that the French (now Britain's ally) had captured Pensacola, he directed the fleet there instead. This gave Rogers time to continue to fortify and supply New Providence, and it was not until 24 February 1720 that a Spanish fleet arrived. Wary of Rogers' defences, the Spanish landed troops on Paradise Island (then known as Hog Island), which shelters Nassau's harbour. They were driven off by Rogers' troops.[49]

The year 1720 brought an end to external threats to Rogers' rule. With Spain and Britain at peace again, the Spanish made no further move against the Bahamas. Vane never returned, having been shipwrecked and captured in the Bay Islands—a year later, he was hanged in Jamaica.[50] This did not end Rogers' problems as governor. Overextended from financing New Providence's defences, he received no assistance from Britain, and merchants refused to give him further credit. His health suffered, and he spent six weeks in Charleston, South Carolina, hoping to recuperate. Instead, he was wounded in a duel with Captain John Hildesley of HMS Flamborough, a duel caused by disputes between the two on New Providence.[51] Troubled by the lack of support and communication from London, Rogers set sail for Britain in March 1721. He arrived three months later to find that a new governor had been appointed, and his company had been liquidated. Personally liable for the obligations he had contracted at Nassau, he was imprisoned for debt.[52]

With both the government and his former partners refusing to honour his debts, Rogers was released from debtor's prison only when his creditors took pity on him and absolved him of his debts. Even so, Rogers wrote that he was "perplexed with the melancholy prospect of [his] affairs".[53] In 1722 or 1723, Rogers was approached by a man writing a history of piracy, and supplied him with information. The resulting work, A General History of the Robberies and Murders of the Most Notorious Pyrates, published under the pseudonym Captain Charles Johnson, was an enormous hit on both sides of the Atlantic, and catapulted Rogers again to the status of a national hero. With public attention focused on him again, Rogers was successful in 1726 in petitioning the king for financial redress. Not only did King George I grant him a pension, retroactive to 1721,[42] but the king's son and successor, George II, reappointed him as governor on 22 October 1728.[54]

The Bahamas did not come under external threat during Rogers' second term, but the reappointed governor had difficulties. Still seeking to bolster the island's defences, Rogers sought imposition of a local tax. The assembly, which had been instituted in Rogers' absence, objected, and Rogers responded by dissolving it. The governmental battle exhausted Rogers, who again went to Charleston in early 1731 in an attempt to recover his health. Though he returned in July 1731, he never truly regained his health, and died in Nassau on 15 July 1732.[55]

A harbour-side street in Nassau is named for Rogers.[56] "Piracy expelled, commerce restored" remained the motto of the Bahamas until the islands gained independence in 1973.[8]

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