Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. People also ask

  2. May 15, 2024 · What cannot be denied is that the pirates of the Caribbean lived and died in their own way. They partied hard, swore, took God’s name in vain and joked heartily.

    • Sean Kingsley
    • Who Were The Real Pirates of The Caribbean?
    • The Real Pirates of The Caribbean
    • Gold, Silver and Slavery
    • What Made The Caribbean So Pirate-Friendly?
    • How Did It All End?

    While Disney’s Pirates of the Caribbean films are entirely fictional, there is no doubting that the Caribbean was the centre of piracy in the ‘Golden Age of Piracy’.

    In the 17th century, buccaneers lived on the Caribbean island of Hispaniola and its tiny turtle-shaped neighbour, Tortuga. At first, they lived as hunters, and shot wild pigs with their long-barrelled muskets. Their name came from the special wooden huts called boucans where they smoked their meat. Later, the governors of Caribbean islands such as ...

    From the 16th century, large Spanish ships, called galleons, began to sail back to Europe, loaded with precious cargoes that pirates found impossible to resist. So many successful pirate attacks were made that galleons were forced to sail together in fleets with armed vessels for protection. Spain’s European rivals especially the French and British...

    Pirates, like smugglers need convenient hide-aways and the Caribbean with its many islands and thousands of bays provided the perfect terrain for raiders.
    The local population had been largely killed off by accidentally imported European diseases to which they had no resistance. With constant malaria and frequent epidemics of yellow fever raging thro...
    The existence of thriving land bases such as Nassau where pirates could sell their ill-gotten (or officially-approved) gains was crucial to the pirate economy.

    While the Caribbean was primarily a staging post for Spanish treasure on its way to Madrid, there was little incentive for the British, French or Dutch to do much to discourage piracy. As Spanish power declined and Britain and France asserted themselves as the dominant regional powers it became obvious that potentially lucrative colonies where slav...

    • Kayleena Pierce-Bohen
    • PETS. Life at sea could be exciting, but in between looting and pillaging, it was often boring and lonely. This meant that in order to pass the time, pirates had to find a means to entertain themselves, and this meant that they often chose to have pets aboard their ships.
    • THE SHIPS. While the ships featured in the films were not quite as impressive as the ones used by pirates in real life (theirs were never so large), a few of them were based on ships featured prominently in history.
    • PIRATE CODE. Pirates had enough enemies to contend with that they were discouraged to fight among themselves. This is why every pirate ship had its own list of rules, which every crewman was supposed to abide by.
    • WOMEN ON THE HIGH SEAS. While it's true that pirating was a male dominated vocation, there were still women that sailed the High Seas. Several of them influenced the trajectory of Elizabeth Swann's character, who went from being a damsel in distress to the Pirate King by the end of the third Pirates of the Caribbean film.
    • Edward "Blackbeard" Teach. Edward "Blackbeard" Teach was by far the most famous pirate of his generation, if not the most successful. He was famous for putting lit fuses into his hair and beard, which gave off smoke and made him look like a demon in battle.
    • Bartholomew "Black Bart" Roberts. "Black Bart" Roberts was the most successful pirate of his generation, capturing and looting hundreds of ships in a three-year career from 1719 to 1722.
    • Henry Avery. Henry Avery was the inspiration for a whole generation of pirates. He mutinied on board a ship of Englishmen fighting for Spain, went pirate, sailed halfway around the world and then made one of the biggest scores ever: the treasure ship of the Grand Mughal of India.
    • Captain William Kidd. The infamous Captain Kidd started out as a pirate hunter, not a pirate. He sailed from England in 1696 with orders to attack pirates and the French wherever he could find them.
  3. Pirates of the Caribbean is a Disney media franchise encompassing numerous theme park rides, a series of films, and spin-off novels, as well as a number of related video games and other media publications.

  4. Almost a decade later, Walt Disney Pictures had Jay Wolpert write a script based on the Pirates of the Caribbean ride in 2001, which was based on a story created by Disney executives Brigham Taylor, Michael Haynes, and Josh Harmon.

  1. People also search for