Monday, January 5, 2009
The Republic of Pirates: Being the True and Surprising Story of the Caribbean Pirates and the Man Who Brought Them Down
The Republic of Pirates: Being the True and Surprising Story of the Caribbean Pirates and the Man Who Brought Them Down
For a brief, glorious period the Pirate Republic was enormously successful. It cut off trade routes, sacked slave ships, and severed Europe from its New World empires. Imperial authorities and wealthy shipowners denounced its residents as the enemies of mankind, but common people saw them as heroes. Colin Woodard tells the dramatic untold story of the Pirate Republic that shook the very foundations of the British and Spanish Empires and fanned the democratic sentiments that would one day drive the American Revolution.
Product Details
Editorial Reviews
From Publishers Weekly
Woodard (The Lobster Coast) tells a romantic story about Caribbean pirates of the "Golden Age" (1715–1725)—whom he sees not as criminals but as social revolutionaries—and the colonial governors who successfully clamped down on them, in the early 18th-century Bahamas. One group of especially powerful pirates set up a colony in the Bahamas. Known as New Providence, the community attracted not only disaffected sailors but also runaway slaves and yeomen farmers who had trouble getting a toehold in the plantation economy of the American colonies. The British saw piracy as a threat to colonial commerce and government. Woodes Rogers, the governor of the Bahamas and himself a former privateer, determined to bring the pirates to heel. Woodard describes how Rogers, aided by Virginia's acting governor, Alexander Spotswood, finally defeated the notorious Blackbeard. Woodard's portrait of Rogers is a little flat—the man is virtually flawless ("courageous, selfless, and surprisingly patriotic"), and the prose is sometimes breathless ("they would know him by just one word... pirate"). Still, this is a fast-paced narrative that will be especially attractive to lovers of pirate lore and to vacationers who are Bahamas-bound. Maps. (May)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
From Booklist
The early eighteenth century was the so-called golden age of piracy, particularly in the Caribbean. Although much of the romantic musings about "pirate honor" is nonsense, an unusual group of pirates, led by Edward "Blackbeard" Teach and Sam Bellamy, actually set up a functioning government in the Bahamas with pretensions to establishing a form of social justice. Their "republic" attracted deserting sailors who could not tolerate harsh naval discipline, runaway slaves, and impoverished farmers. In this republic, called New Providence, a rough but democratic and egalitarian ethos apparently took hold. But, according to Woodard, the British government saw the existence of this independent entity as an intolerable threat. So, on the theory of sending a thief to catch a thief, they sent Woodes Rogers, a former privateer, to crush the republic. This breezy, fast-moving book is filled with exciting action and colorful characters. It will provide general readers and those with a special interest in the period much enjoyment. Jay Freeman
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved
Review
"Fascinating simply in the breadth of its research...Woodard has done an impressive job of sifting through conflicting, often apocryphal accounts and countless muths and legends to offer an engrossing depiction that is every bit as gritty, suspenseful and electrifying as any in fiction. And I promise, reading the book is far shorter and infinitely more rewarding that sitting through the Pirates of the Caribean sequels." -- Powells.com, 23 June 2007
"It's a rollicking tale, filled with rich details of the lives of men who, for their own personal gain, challenged the spread of empires.." -- New Orleans Times-Picayune, 5 June 2007
"Meticulously researched and thrillingly told... Woodard brings this slice of outlaw history gloriously to life, realizing a worthy tome for anyone who's so much as muttered a tiny "arrrr."" -- Baltimore City Paper, 19 September 2007
"The Republic of Pirates...adds a new dimension to an era that was, in equal parts, thrilling and disturbing...What [the pirate captains] and their crews achieved, and destroyed, is the focus of Colin Woodard's fascinating book [which offers] rip-roaring adventure stories from a distant past [and]...an opportunity to understand pirates as they truly were -- and be grateful that the worst of them, at least, are gone." -- New York Times Book Review , 3 June 2007
"The book offers one of the most realistic views ever of the Golden Age of Piracy in the 1700s... The Republic of Pirates is narrative history at its best." -- Winston-Salem Journal (NC), 13 May 2007
Customer Reviews
Republic of Dullness
I hate to be the one that drops the review average, but for a book about pirates it was surprisingly dull. I realize that the very nature of pirates means there is not much archival material to work with other than official documents that are very likely biased, but I came away from this book not much more enlightened than when I started.
The title is never really addressed, in my opinion. Mr. Woodard simply states the pirates wanted a base and made one on Nassau. So how, exactly, was it a republic by and for pirates? We never find out. At no point is there any mention of how such a society functioned. Was it rule by the strongest, most daring, the one with the best charisma? Don't know, it is never stated. Instead, we get a pretty complete rundown of ships taken.
And then the pirates themselves. While finding out about the real Blackbeard is interesting (he is not as bloodthirsty as the books I read as a kid made out), there is still way too much about the ships he captured and not enough about him. Charles Vane, another pirate, is mentioned in the introduction as a particularly violent one, but when, after much slogging, we come to the brief section about him it is just more captured ships.
It seems to me that Woodard had a great prospectus and sold the book based on it, and then found there was not much to write about. UNDER THE BLACK FLAG was much better. It talks more about the daily lives of the pirates and how the ship hierarchy was organized.
I wanted this book to tell me about how a society of pirates functioned, not an insurance adjustors claim list.
Provides a fascinating history of real pirate worlds
Captains such as Blackbeard and Charles Vane created the 'Flying Gang' and established the Pirate Republic in the Bahamas, where blacks were equal citizens, servants became free, and leaders were voted in - or out. Most think of 'pirates' and how they cut off trade routes and sacked ships, but actually they were heroes in the eyes of many - and REPUBLIC OF PIRATES: BEING THE TRUE AND SURPRISING STORY OF THE CARIBBEAN PIRATES AND THE MAN WHO BROUGHT THEM DOWN provides a fascinating history of real pirate worlds - perfect for any collection interested in pirates.
Diane C. Donovan
California Bookwatch
The Golden Age of Piracy: crime and adventure in its context
The Golden Age of Piracy, roughly a 30 year period at the beginning of the 18th century, has taken on such a romantic notion in the modern mind, that when you actually discover the true events of the period, that the true story becomes much larger than the caricature that has been painted by Disney or other children's' stories. What Woodard, a native Maine journalist, attempts to do in this book is explain who the pirates actually were, what their motivation was, and why their heyday ended so rapidly. What makes this book so readable, is that not only does Woodard recount the hazards of early 18th century sailing so well, but he places it in its economic, social and political context.
What made the pirates of the age so different from previous pirates, for piracy has been around as long as men have taken to the sea, was that these pirates were considered outlaws by every nation, and quite a large percentage of the few thousand who made up the Golden Age, were political dissenters, and hopeful insurgents against the new House of Hanover of Britain, and supporters of the deposed House of Stuart.
Woodard inserts several things into his narrative that make this book worthwhile. His description of the extremely harsh social and economic conditions that sailors of the day had to serve under goes a long way to describe why a sailor with an otherwise spotless record would choose to leave legitimate merchant or military service for the high risk life of a Caribbean pirate. The author also makes the at time arcane world of 18th century sailing understandable and real. The reader, by the end of the book, should know the difference and significance between sloops, various rates of line ships, and frigates for example.
The book focuses on the personalities of the era especially well. The rise pirate "republic" of the failed British colony of the Bahamas is shown to be personality driven by pirates like Vane and Hornigold. The public persona of Blackbeard, as well as the bumbling of Stede Bonnet illustrates how pirates used or misused their personal gifts to advance their high risk/ high reward profession.
Put into context, the reader, besides learning about a fascination time period that was as exciting and really as short lived as the outlaw period of the American west or the gangster rule of Chicago, can see how a pattern of the rule of law and social convention breaks down in all sorts of time periods and circumstances. The British government solution, led by the Bahamian Governor, Woodes Rogers, was to aggressively assert authority over the center of the insurgence and then to alternate between warnings of mercy and systematic hunting of the lawbreakers by getting them to use their natural suspicion to turn on each other.
This is a fascinating book for the general reader. There are sufficient maps of the 18th century Caribbean and the North American coast, and the writing not only puts the events into context, but tells the story well, by describing the motivations and personalities of the Golden Age of Piracy so that they make sense within their time period.
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Posted by Horde at 2:20 PM
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