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  1. Not really. Pirate is the most general of the four terms. Originating with the Greek peiratēs, meaning brigand, it can be applied to a wide range of nautical misbehavior, including coastal raiding and intercepting ships on high seas. Robbery, kidnapping, and murder all qualify as piratical activities, provided there’s some water and a boat ...

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  2. Jan 18, 2022 · While the terms ‘buccaneer’ and ‘corsair’ can refer to both pirates and privateers, the difference between the former pair had more to do with geography. ‘Corsair’ was the name given to those operating on the Mediterranean Sea and the Barbary Coast of North Africa, many of whom were privateers authorised by their governments in the ...

    • Elinor Evans
    • Pirates
    • Privateers
    • Buccaneers
    • Corsairs

    Piratesare men and women who attack ships or coastal towns in an attempt to rob them or capture prisoners for ransom. Essentially, they are thieves with a boat. Pirates do not discriminate when it comes to their victims. Any nationality is fair game. They do not have the (overt) support of any legitimate nation and generally are outlaws wherever th...

    Privateers were men and ships in the semi-employ of a nation that was at war. Privateers were private ships encouraged to attack enemy ships, ports, and interests. They had the official sanction and protection of the sponsoring nation and had to share a portion of the plunder. One of the most famous privateers was Captain Henry Morgan, who fought f...

    The Buccaneers were a specific group of privateers and pirates who were active in the late 1600s. The word comes from the French boucan, which was smoked meat made by hunters on Hispaniola out of the wild pigs and cattle there. These men set up a business of selling their smoked meat to passing ships but soon realized that there was more money to b...

    Corsair is a word in English applied to foreign privateers, generally either Muslim or French. The Barbary pirates, Muslims who terrorized the Mediterranean from the 14th until the 19th centuries, were often referred to as "corsairs" because they did not attack Muslim ships and often sold prisoners into enslavement. During the "Golden Age" of Pirac...

  3. This method was called "barbicoa" (a term from which the modern word "barbecue" derivates), and it was used by a Santo Domingo tribe. In the 17th century, the word was related to caribbean pirates based on Hispaniola, Tortuga Island and Port Royal. The word "Filibuster" originates from the French term "flibustier" ("filibuster" in English ...

  4. Nov 28, 2023 · PIRATES, PRIVATEERS, AND CORSAIRS. November 28, 2023 Adam Nichols Corsairs. In this post, we get back to basics. Barbary corsairs are also often called Barbary pirates, but they were not pirates, at least not the sort of wild buccaneering freebooters—like Captain Kidd or Blackbeard—that the word ‘pirate’ typically brings to mind.

  5. Corsair is a term that described two types of pirate that operated in two completely different areas of the world, but their prolonged presence and disruptive operations caused them to remain remembered forever. These original corsairs were organized pirate fleets of Barbary pirates that operated out of large ports in Barbery Coast, most ...

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  7. French corsairs. Corsairs (French: corsaire) were privateers, authorised to conduct raids on shipping of a foreign state at war with France, on behalf of the French crown. Seized vessels and cargo were sold at auction, with the corsair captain entitled to a portion of the proceeds. Although not French Navy personnel, corsairs were considered ...

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