Region
Caribbean
15 pirates in the codex documented as operating here.
The Caribbean was the centre of pirate activity for most of two centuries. From the buccaneers of Hispaniola and Jamaica in the seventeenth century, through the Bahamas-based crews of the Golden Age, to the smaller-scale predation of the post-Golden-Age period, the sea’s combination of rich Spanish shipping and a thousand uninhabited cays for shelter and provisioning made it the natural theatre for any pirate operation that wanted both prizes and bases. Almost every pirate documented on this site touched these waters at some point in their career.
Pirates of this region
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Jean Lafitte
c. 1780 – c. 1823French-Creole privateer and smuggler whose Barataria Bay operation south of New Orleans dominated the Gulf of Mexico contraband trade in the 1810s; later commander of a privateer base on Galveston Island.
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Pierre Lafitte
c. 1770 – November 1821Elder brother and business partner of Jean Lafitte; the New Orleans–side operator of the Barataria and Galveston privateering enterprise, responsible for moving prize cargoes into the city's wholesale market and managing relations with Louisiana authorities.
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Sir Henry Morgan
c. 1635 – 25 August 1688Welsh privateer in English service who led the buccaneer assaults on Portobelo (1668), Maracaibo (1669), and Panama City (1671); subsequently knighted and appointed Lieutenant Governor of Jamaica.
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Henry Every
c. 1659 – fate unknown after 1696English pirate whose September 1695 capture of the Mughal treasure ship Ganj-i-Sawai in the Indian Ocean produced what was at the time the richest single prize in pirate history; touched off a global manhunt and the first international piracy bounty; vanished into obscurity in 1696.
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William Kidd
c. 1654 – 23 May 1701Scottish-born New York privateer commissioned in 1695 to suppress piracy in the Indian Ocean; arrested on charges of having turned pirate himself; tried and hanged at London in 1701; the most documented commission-gone-wrong case of the Golden Age, and the principal source of the buried-treasure motif in subsequent pirate literature.
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Edward Teach
c. 1680 – 22 November 1718English pirate active in the Caribbean and along the American Atlantic coast in 1716–1718; commanded the captured French slaver La Concorde, which he refitted as the forty-gun Queen Anne’s Revenge and used to blockade the harbour of Charleston.
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Stede Bonnet
c. 1688 – 10 December 1718Barbadian sugar planter who bought a sloop in 1717 and turned pirate without prior maritime experience; sailed in consort with Blackbeard 1717–1718; captured, tried, and hanged at Charleston in December 1718.
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Benjamin Hornigold
c. 1680 – 1719English pirate captain operating from New Providence in the Bahamas 1713–1718; Edward Teach's first captain; accepted the King's pardon in 1718 and served thereafter as a pirate-hunter under Governor Woodes Rogers until his disappearance in 1719.
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Samuel Bellamy
c. 1689 – 26 April 1717English pirate captain whose fourteen-month career in 1716–1717 was one of the most prolific in absolute prize-take of the Golden Age; captain of the slaver Whydah Gally, refitted as his flagship in February 1717 and lost off Cape Cod in a storm two months later.
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Howell Davis
c. 1690 – 19 June 1719Welsh pirate active 1718–1719, briefly elected captain of a vessel taken from his employers and then a small consort fleet on the West African coast; killed in an ambush at Príncipe just weeks before Bartholomew Roberts was elected to succeed him.
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Bartholomew Roberts
17 May 1682 – 10 February 1722Welsh pirate considered by most reckoning the most successful of the Golden Age; captured an estimated four hundred vessels across a three-year career spanning the Caribbean, West African coast, and Atlantic seaboard.
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Anne Bonny
c. 1697 – after October 1720 (further dates disputed)Irish-born pirate active with John "Calico Jack" Rackham’s small Caribbean crew in 1720; one of two women, with Mary Read, convicted of piracy at the Spanish Town trials of November 1720.
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Mary Read
c. 1685 – April 1721English-born pirate active aboard John Rackham's sloop William in 1720; one of two women, with Anne Bonny, convicted of piracy at the Spanish Town trials.
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John "Calico Jack" Rackham
c. 1682 – 18 November 1720English pirate active in the Caribbean 1718–1720; quartermaster turned captain who commanded the sloop William through a short career of small prizes; remembered chiefly for sailing with Anne Bonny and Mary Read and for the flag design that bears his name.
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Sir Francis Drake
c. 1540 – 28 January 1596English privateer, navigator, and vice-admiral in royal service under Elizabeth I; the second person to circumnavigate the globe (1577–1580); commanded the 1587 raid on Cádiz and the English fleet against the Spanish Armada in 1588; described in Spanish sources of his lifetime as the most prominent pirate of the age.