To read of sea roving's various incarnations - piracy, privateering, buccaneering, la flibuste, la course - is to bring forth romantic, and often violent, imagery. Indeed, much of this imagery has become a literary and cinematic clich?. And what an image it is! But its truth is by halves, and parad
The Sea Rover's Practice: Pirate Tactics and Techniques, 1630β1730
β Scribed by Benerson Little
- Publisher
- Potomac Books Inc
- Year
- 2005
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 321
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
To read of sea roving's various incarnations - piracy, privateering, buccaneering, la flibuste, la course - is to bring forth romantic, and often violent, imagery. Indeed, much of this imagery has become a literary and cinematic cliche? And what an image it is! But its truth is by halves, and paradoxically it is the picaresque imagery of Pyle, Wyeth, Sabatini, and Hollywood that is often closer to the reality, while the historical details of arms, tactics, and language are often inaccurate or entirely anachronistic. Successful sea rovers were careful practitioners of a complex profession that sought wealth by stratagem and force of arms. Drawn from the European tradition, yet of various races and nationalities, they raided both ship and town throughout much of the world from roughly 1630 until 1730. Using a variety of innovative tactics and often armed with little more than musket and grenade, many of these self-described "soldiers and privateers" successfully assaulted fortifications, attacked shipping from small craft, crossed the mountains and jungles of Panama, and even circumnavigated the globe. Successful sea rovers were often supreme seamen, soldiers, and above all, tacticians. It can be argued that their influence on certain naval tactics is felt even today. The Sea Rover's Practice is the only book that describes in exceptional detail the tactics of sea rovers of the period - how they actually sought out and attacked vessels and towns. Accessible to both the general and the more scholarly reader, it will appeal not only to those with an interest in piracy and in maritime, naval, and military history, but also to mariners in general, tall-ship and ship-modeling enthusiasts, tacticians and military analysts, readers of historical fiction, writers, and the adventurer in all of us.
β¦ Table of Contents
Preface
The Perils of Wealth by Stratagem and Force of Arms, Part I
Sea Rovers
Wealth by Force of Arms
Roving Spirits, Charter Parties, and Stout Commanders
Piraguas, Sloops, and Ships
Of Small Arms and Fireworks
Cruising for Purchase
Baptisms, Pissdales, and Dog Watches
Riches and Dangers at Sea
ββA Sail! A Sail!ββ
Colors True and Colors False
Stand to Her Forefoot
Hailing and Showing Teeth
Plucking a Crow
Volleys, Grenades, and Cutlasses
Surprizals at Sea
Surprizals at Anchor
More Surprizals at Anchor
Sending a Smoker and Catching a Tartar
Houses, Towns, and Cities Sacked
Plunder and Prisoners
Rum, Women, Dice, Turtle, and Honor
The Perils of Wealth by Stratagem and Force of Arms, Part II
Comparative Actions of Sea Rovers
Privateer, Buccaneer, and Pirate
Galley, Sloop, and Piragua
Marinerβs Language, 1630 to 1730
Roving Writers and Some I Wish Had Been
Spirits and Belly Timber
Ranges, Distances, Weights, and Measures
Notes
Bibliography
Index
The Author
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
Ch. 1. Introduction -- ch. 2. Prologue : the sack of Rome -- ch. 3. Monuments of the High Renaissance -- ch. 4. A new political order -- ch. 5. Institutions of culture -- ch. 6. Mannerism -- ch. 7. Tridentine reform -- ch. 8. Consolidation -- ch. 9. Destabilization.
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