
The Golden Age of Piracy
The real lives of pirates and privateers in the Caribbean and Indian Ocean. The economics, law, violence, and surprising democracies at sea
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Compra ahora por $14.99
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Narrado por:
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Virtual Voice
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De:
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Lucid Historian

Este título utiliza narración de voz virtual
A pilgrim ship screams under cannon fire in the Arabian Sea. In a ruined Bahamian fort, a ragged assembly raises hands to vote. Between those moments lies the true story of the Golden Age of Piracy: a world where money, law, and fear shaped ruthless violence and unexpected democracies at sea.
The Golden Age of Piracy rips past the clichés to reveal the real lives of pirates and privateers from Port Royal to Madagascar. It shows how war-born sailors turned to plunder when peace cut their pay, how letters of marque turned theft into property, and how crews wrote their own shipboard constitutions that guaranteed wages, votes, and injury insurance in an age that offered seamen neither justice nor safety.
Meticulously researched and propulsively written, this is narrative history with teeth. You will stand on the deck as Henry Every takes the Ganj-i-Sawai and sets off a diplomatic earthquake. You will watch William Kidd twist in a legal noose spun in London. You will walk the streets of Nassau as a pirate republic rises, and feel the heat when Woodes Rogers lands with pardons in one hand and warships in tow. Blackbeard, Bartholomew Roberts, Mary Read, and Anne Bonny stalk these pages, not as cartoons, but as managers of risk and reputation inside a global economy.
Drawing on Admiralty trials, East India Company letters, factory diaries, muster rolls, and the pirates’ own articles, it makes the case that the most democratic workplaces of the early 1700s were not parliaments but creaking decks pounding through trade winds.
If you think you know pirates, think again. This is the untold economy, the hard law, and the fragile democracy behind the skull and crossbones.