Pirate Nation

Pirate Nation
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For all the romantic mythology surrounding the court of Queen Elizabeth I, the financial underpinning of the reign of ‘Gloriana’ was decidedly sordid. Elizabeth’s policy of seizing foreign assets made her popular at home but drew her into a partnership with pirates who preyed on the state’s foes and friends alike, being rewarded or punished depending on how much of a cut the Queen received, rather than the legitimacy of their action. For this reason the rule of law at sea was arbitrary and almost non-existent. Even those, such as the Lord Admiral and the Court of Admiralty, who were tasked with policing the seas and eliminating piracy, managed their own pirate fleets. While honest merchants could rail and protest, the value to the exchequer of this dubious income was enormous, often equaling, on an annual basis, the input from all other sources such as taxation or customs dues. Moreover, the practice of piracy taught English seamen how to fight and, when the nation was at its greatest peril, in 1588, it was pirates who kept the Spanish Armada away from invading the English coast. Charles Howard, commander of the British forces, Richard Grenville, Walter Raleigh and Francis Drake, were all pirates who became ‘admirals all for England’s sake’, and were well rewarded by the Queen for their exploits. This highly original book argues that the deeply ingrained piratical and self-interested approach to naval warfare by these English captains almost allowed the Armada to succeed. A radical reassessment of Elizabethan maritime history, Pirate Nation makes this and a number of other startling revelations about the myth and the reality of Elizabethan naval policy. A highly readable work, this radical reappraisal of Elizabethan maritime practice offers provocative insights about some of the most cherished events in British history.

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David Childs. Pirate Nation

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PIRATE NATION

Hoping pirates provide you with pleasure

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The account of Dainty’s Pacific voyage was written wonderfully well in The Observations of Sir Richard Hawkins, who proved to be a better raconteur than rover, ultimately losing his ship in a fight with the Spanish. Yet the whole voyage lurched towards this final ignominy with Hawkins always learning lessons after the event, while refreshingly admitting his own culpability in most of the incidents that occurred.

It began on day one, 8 April 1593, when Hawkins saw Dainty off from Blackwall, determined to join her himself that night at Gravesend. However, seeing the ship anchored at Barking he rowed out and clambered onboard to be greeted with a tale of near woe. Dainty had sailed with her gunports open and they, because the vessel was deeply laden, lay perilously close to the waterline. A sudden fresh wind had caused the ship to heel and water to rush in at the open ports pulling the vessel over. Luckily, once this was noted and the ‘sheet flowne, she could hardly be brought upright.’ Danger described, Hawkins recommended that ports be shut and caulked, although the example he quotes in evidence is the loss of Great Harry at Portsmouth in 1545 not, as it in fact and famously was, Mary Rose. It had been a close thing and Hawkins’s crew insisted that the ship be lightened before she proceeded into the Channel, so some 6 or 8 tons were duly offloaded into a hoy hired for the purpose.

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