Bachelorarbeit, 2010
33 Seiten, Note: B13
Introduction
Part 1 IDENTIFYING PIRATES AND UNDERSTANDING THE EVOLUTION OF PIRACY AND ITS SHIFTING RELATIONSHIP WITH THE ENGLISH STATE IN THE EARLY MODERN ERA
Part 2 INFLUENTIAL PIRATICAL FIGURES
Part 2.a Admiral Sir Henry Morgan
Part 2.b William Dampier
Part 2.c Christopher Myngs
Part 2.d Woodes Rogers
Part 3 THE PIRATE AND BUCCANEERING ART OF WAR
Part 3.a Land Battles
Part 3.b Naval Warfare
Conclusion
This dissertation investigates the evolving relationship between the English state and Caribbean pirates, buccaneers, and privateers between 1650 and 1725, analyzing how these outlaws contributed to the expansion and establishment of the British Empire. The primary research goal is to determine the extent to which these seafaring figures acted as catalysts for economic and imperial growth, transitioning from state-sanctioned tools to targets of state suppression.
Part 2.a Admiral Sir Henry Morgan
Henry Morgan is an intriguing figure in terms of what he contributed to Britain, how the state in turn used him and how he is viewed by many as being responsible for the beginnings of an Empire. This section will investigate purely the economic benefits Morgan’s actions brought about. (See Part Three: Pirate, Privateer and Buccaneer Warfare and Tactics for information concerning military aspects).
Jamaica was captured by the English crown in 1655 by Admiral William Penn and General Robert Venables [Donovan, J. 1910]. Later on, by 1675, Henry Morgan’s establishment as vice-governor of Jamaica would end up as infinitely more than just another colony to add to the British Crown’s list; it was, in a way, arguably a new type of English economic expansion. Indeed, Henry Morgan is seen by historians like Niall Ferguson as a man who helped to lay the foundations of the British Empire. Terry Breverton even claims that, if it wasn’t for Henry Morgan’s natural talent as a leader and commander, it would have been unlikely that Jamaica remained in the hands of the English [Breverton, T. 2005. PVII]. Morgan the man is labelled by Ferguson as nothing more than a ‘gangster’ who reinforced the concept that buccaneering was simply ‘a matter of getting rich quick’. Additionally, piracy was a perfect means for the English Government to wage war cheaply and quickly on their Spanish enemies.
Introduction: This chapter establishes the historical context of the "Golden Age of Piracy" and outlines the dissertation's focus on the contribution of outlaws to early British imperial expansion.
Part 1 IDENTIFYING PIRATES AND UNDERSTANDING THE EVOLUTION OF PIRACY AND ITS SHIFTING RELATIONSHIP WITH THE ENGLISH STATE IN THE EARLY MODERN ERA: This section provides a typology of piracy and analyzes how the English state’s relationship with maritime outlaws mutated alongside its rise to global economic power.
Part 2 INFLUENTIAL PIRATICAL FIGURES: This chapter examines the individual contributions of Henry Morgan, William Dampier, Christopher Myngs, and Woodes Rogers, highlighting their roles as economic, scientific, and strategic assets.
Part 3 THE PIRATE AND BUCCANEERING ART OF WAR: This chapter scrutinizes the military tactics employed by pirates and buccaneers in both land-based and naval warfare, demonstrating their vital role in defending colonial interests.
Conclusion: This final section synthesizes the evidence to confirm that pirates were foundational to the development of the British Empire, while explaining why their status ultimately shifted from ally to enemy.
Piracy, Buccaneering, Privateering, British Empire, Caribbean, Henry Morgan, William Dampier, Christopher Myngs, Woodes Rogers, Imperialism, Colonial Expansion, Naval Warfare, Economic History, Port Royal, Spanish Main
The research focuses on the historical relationship between the English state and maritime outlaws (pirates, buccaneers, and privateers) in the Caribbean from 1650 to 1725.
The work covers the economic contribution of pirates, their role in scientific discovery, the evolution of maritime military tactics, and the changing political stance of the British government toward these figures.
The goal is to determine how pirates and buccaneers contributed to the foundations of the British Empire and to explain the shift in state attitude toward them.
The dissertation relies on the analysis of primary historical materials, memoirs, and contemporary accounts, supported by historical analysis from modern scholars in the field of imperial history.
The main sections categorize piracy, provide deep-dive biographies of influential captains, and analyze the specific land and naval tactics that served British interests.
Key terms include Piracy, British Empire, Caribbean, Privateering, and Colonial Expansion.
Morgan helped secure Jamaica and shifted the colonial economic model from simple plundering to real estate investment and the sugar trade.
Dampier was a scientific observer whose journals provided vital geographical data to the British admiralty and the Royal Society, aiding in exploration and imperial knowledge.
As England grew into a mature global economic power, order and trade regularity became more important than the disorder caused by piracy, leading to a crack-down to protect national commercial interests.
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