Buccaneers of the Caribbean
by Jon Latimer
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"This book deals with the same pirates as Leeson does, but takes an entirely different approach. What Buccaneers of the Caribbean does is give us a more vivid glimpse of the reality of things. The Jack Sparrows, the Johnny Depps – the Pirates of the Caribbean – were engaged in a land war, fighting the Spanish. Jon Latimer suggests that fighting the Spanish in the New World made them frontline troops in British imperialism. And I find that argument a lot more convincing than the one made by Leeson. Of course, many of them were motivated by greed. All pirate activities are about making money, that’s why they do it. But, Latimer also brings out the strong anti-Catholic strain in the pirates of the Caribbean. A lot of them were ardent Protestants from England and Holland who wanted to fight the Catholics. They may not even have realised it themselves, but the culture that produced them suggested that it’s OK to fight Spain. There were times in the 17th century when England was at war with Spain and times when it wasn’t but there is this feeling that, whether at war or not, it’s was always all right to attack the Spanish! Well, we need to go back a bit. In the 1580s and 1590s England is at war with Spain and there were lots of privateers. Privateers are people working as mercenaries who have letters of commission which allow them to attack the merchant shipping of a hostile nation. In those days they didn’t have a very big navy so it was a way of getting adventurers to fight your war for you. People who do that aren’t pirates, they are privateers, and that means they’ve got a quasi-legal status and these were the buccaneers. There’s this great story in the book about a famous pirate, Henry Morgan, who was so outraged when a London pamphlet described him as a pirate that he sued them. He ended up winning the princely sum of £200. I find it incredible that he had a lawyer in London who could actually take out an action for libel. The distinction between privateer and pirate is one that the privateers clung to because pirates were criminals but in everyday life there really wasn’t much difference between them. It depends where you go in the world. The pirates of the Barbary Coast saw themselves as soldiers for Allah. They described themselves as mujahidin, on a sea jihad against encroaching Christians. The Barbary Coast was the interface between Christianity and Islam – where the two cultures meet. Even in the 17th and early 18th century, there is a sort of grudging admiration for pirates in literature. And later on in the 18th century you have more and more of a sense of the pirate as an outlaw, rather like the Robin Hood of society. They’re stealing from the wicked Spanish Conquistadors and the Ottoman Empire which makes them the good guys."
Pirates · fivebooks.com