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The Republic of Pirates: Being the True and Surprising Story of the Caribbean Pirates and the Man Who Brought Them Down Paperback – Illustrated, June 30, 2008
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In the early eighteenth century, the Pirate Republic was home to some of the great pirate captains, including Edward "Blackbeard" Teach, "Black Sam" Bellamy, and Charles Vane. Along with their fellow pirates — former sailors, indentured servants, and runaway slaves — this "Flying Gang" established a crude but distinctive democracy in the Bahamas, carving out their own zone of freedom in which servants were free, blacks could be equal citizens, and leaders were chosen or deposed by a vote.
They cut off trade routes, sacked slave ships, and severed Europe from its New World empires. For a brief, glorious period the Republic was a success as the pirates became heroes in the eyes of the people.
Drawing on extensive research in the archives of Britain and the Americas, award-winning author Colin Woodard tells the dramatic untold story of the Pirate Republic that shook the very foundations of the British and Spanish Empires and fanned the democratic sentiments that would one day drive the American revolution.
- Print length400 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherMariner Books
- Publication dateJune 30, 2008
- Dimensions5.31 x 0.69 x 8 inches
- ISBN-10015603462X
- ISBN-13978-0156034623
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Editorial Reviews
Review
"Contain[s] passages that are absolutely riveting, sometimes for their high-seas action, sometimes for their wicked illumination of life aboard an antiquated vessel at sea for months on end." -- The Toronto Star
"Disregard Robert Louis Stevenson's rowdy buccaneers, the Disney factor's lively rascals and those musical lads from Penzance: Here are the real pirates of the Caribbean, and the facts are as colorful and exciting as fiction." -- Kirkus Reviews (starred review)
A New York Times Bestseller
"The Republic of Pirates is the ultimate in beach reading -- breezy, colorful, and rich in history and action." -- The Christian Science Monitor
From the Inside Flap
For a brief, glorious period the pirate republic was enormously successful. At its height it cut off trade routes, sacked slave ships, and severed Britain, France, and Spain from their New World empires. The Royal Navy went from being unable to catch the pirates to being afraid to encounter them at all. Imperial authorities and wealthy shipowners denounced the pirates as the enemies of mankind, but huge numbers of common people saw them as heroes. Finally one man volunteered to pacify the pirate s Bahaman lair and destroy any who resisted -- Woodes Rogers, a famous privateer himself and scion of a powerful merchant family.
Drawing on extensive research in the archives of Britain and the Americas, Colin Woodard tells the dramatic untold story of the Pirate Republic that shook the very foundations of the British and Spanish Empires and fanned the democratic sentiments that would one day drive the American revolution."
From the Back Cover
For a brief, glorious period the pirate republic was enormously successful. At its height it cut off trade routes, sacked slave ships, and severed Britain, France, and Spain from their New World empires. The Royal Navy went from being unable to catch the pirates to being afraid to encounter them at all. Imperial authorities and wealthy shipowners denounced the pirates as the enemies of mankind, but huge numbers of common people saw them as heroes. Finally one man volunteered to pacify the pirate’s Bahaman lair and destroy any who resisted -- Woodes Rogers, a famous privateer himself and scion of a powerful merchant family.
Drawing on extensive research in the archives of Britain and the Americas, Colin Woodard tells the dramatic untold story of the Pirate Republic that shook the very foundations of the British and Spanish Empires and fanned the democratic sentiments that would one day drive the American revolution.
About the Author
Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
The Legend
1696
The sloop arrived in the afternoon of April Fool’s Day 1696, swinging around the low, sandy expanse of Hog Island and into Nassau’s wide, dazzlingly blue harbor.
At first, the villagers on the beach and the sailors in the harbor took little notice. Small and nondescript, this sloop was a familiar sight, a trading vessel from the nearby island of Eleuthera, fifty miles to the east. She came to Nassau, the capital of the Bahamas, on a regular basis to trade salt and produce for cloth and sugar, and to get news brought in from England, Jamaica, and the Carolinas. The bystanders expected to see her crew drop anchor, load their goods into their longboat, and row toward the beach, as the capital had no wharves or piers. Later, their cargoes disposed of, the crew would go drinking in one of Nassau’s public houses, trading updates of the ongoing war, the movements of the infernal French, and cursing the absence of the Royal Navy.
But not on this day.
The sloop’s crew rowed ashore. Its captain, a local man familiar to all, jumped onto the beach, followed by several strangers. The latter wore unusual clothing: silks from India, perhaps, a kerchief in bright African patterns, headgear from Arabia, as rank and dirty as the cheap woolens worn by any common seaman. Those who came near enough to overhear their speech or peer into their tanned faces could tell they were English and Irish mariners not unlike those from other large ships that came from the far side of the Atlantic.
The party made its way through the tiny village, a few dozen houses clustered along the shore in the shadow of a modest stone fortress. They crossed the newly cleared town square, passing the island’s humble wooden church, eventually arriving at the recently built home of Governor Nicholas Trott. They stood barefoot on the sun-baked sand and dirt, the fecund smell of the tropics filling their nostrils. Townspeople stopped to stare at the wild-looking men waiting on the governor’s doorstep. A servant opened the door and, upon exchanging a few words with the sloop’s master, rushed off to inform His Excellency that an urgent message had arrived.
~Nicholas Trott already had his hands full that morning. His colony was in trouble. England had been at war with France for eight years, disrupting the Bahamas’ trade and supply lines. Trott received a report that the French had captured the island of Exuma, 140 miles away, and were headed for Nassau with three warships and 320 men. Nassau had no warships at its disposal; in fact, no ships of the Royal Navy had passed this way in several years, there not being nearly enough of them to protect England’s sprawling empire. There was Fort Nassau, newly built from local stone, with twenty-eight cannon mounted on its ramparts, but with many settlers fleeing for the better protection of Jamaica, South Carolina, and Bermuda, Trott was finding it almost impossible to keep the structure manned. There were no more than seventy men left in town, including the elderly and disabled. Half the male population was serving guard duty at any one time in addition to attending to their usual occupations, which left many of them, in Trott’s words, “terribly fatigued.” Trott knew that if the French attacked in force, there was little hope of holding Nassau and the rest of New Providence, the island on which his tiny capital was perched. These were Trott’s preoccupations when he received the merchant captain from Eleuthera and his mysterious companions.
The strangers’ leader, Henry Adams, explained that he and his
colleagues had recently arrived in the Bahamas aboard the Fancy, a private warship of forty-six guns and 113 men, and sought Trott’s permission to come into Nassau’s harbor. Adams handed over a letter from his captain, Henry Bridgeman, containing a most outlandish proposition. The Fancy, Bridgeman claimed, had just arrived in Eleuthera from the coast of Africa, where he had been slave trading without the permission of the Royal Africa Company, which owned a monopoly over such activities. Captain Bridgeman’s letter explained that the Fancy had run low on provisions and its crew was in need of shore leave. Were the governor to be so kind as to allow the ship into the harbor, he would be amply rewarded. Every member of the crew would give Trott a personal gift of twenty Spanish pieces of eight and two pieces of gold, with Bridgeman, as commander, kicking in a double share. The strangers were offering him a bribe worth some £860 at a time when a governor’s annual salary was but £300. To top it off, the crew would also give him the Fancy herself, once they had unloaded and disposed of the (as yet) unspecified cargo. He could pocket nearly three years of wages and become the owner of a sizeable warship simply by letting the strangers ashore and not asking any pointed questions.
Trott pocketed the letter and called an emergency meeting of the colony’s governing council. The minutes of that meeting have since been lost, but from the testimony of others in Nassau at the time, it’s clear that Governor Trott neglected to mention the bribes to the councilmen. Instead, he appealed to their shared interest in the colony’s security. The Fancy, he pointed out, was as large as a fifth-rate frigate of the Royal Navy, and her presence might deter a French attack. The addition of her crew would nearly double the number of able-bodied men on New Providence, ensuring that Fort Nassau’s guns would be manned in the event of an invasion. And besides, where would they be if Bridgeman chose to refit his vessel at the French port of Martinique or, worse, decided to attack Nassau itself? Violating the Royal Africa Company’s monopoly was a fairly minor crime, an insufficient reason to deny him entry.
The members of the council concurred. The governor gave Henry Adams a “very civil” letter welcoming the Fancy to Nassau, where she and her crew “were welcome to come and to go as they pleased.” Not long thereafter, a great ship rounded Hog Island,* her decks crowded with sailors, her sides pierced with gun ports, and her hull sunk low in the water under the weight of her cargo. Adams and his party were the first to come ashore, their longboat filled with bags and chests. The promised loot was there: a fortune in silver pieces of eight and golden coins minted in Arabia and beyond. Longboats ferried the crew ashore throughout the day. The rest of the crew resembled the landing party: ordinary-looking mariners dressed in oriental finery, each bearing large parcels of gold, silver, and jewels. The man calling himself Captain Bridgeman also came ashore and, after a closed meeting with Trott, turned the great warship over to him. When the governor arrived aboard the Fancy, he found they had left him a tip: The hold contained more than fifty tons of elephant tusks, 100 barrels of gunpowder, several chests filled with guns and muskets, and a remarkable collection of ship’s anchors.
* In 1962, the Bahamian legislature renamed it Paradise Island at the request of American supermarket tycoon Huntington Hartford. It is now taken up by luxury resort hotels.
Trott would later claim to have had no reason to suspect the Fancy’s crew of being involved in piracy. “How could I know it?” he testified under oath. “Supposition is not proof.” Captain Bridgeman and his men had claimed to be unlicensed merchants, he added, and the people of New Providence “saw no reason to disbelieve them.” But Trott was no fool. He had been a merchant captain himself and well knew that treasures of the sort the Fancy carried were not the product of some unsanctioned bargaining with the people of Africa’s Slave Coast. Standing aboard the Fancy, her hold filled with ivory and weapons, her sails patched from cannonball damage and musket balls embedded in her deck work, Trott was forced to make a choice: enforce the law or pocket the money. He didn’t ponder very long.
On the governor’s orders, boats began ferrying the Fancy’s remaining cargo ashore. Soon the beach was littered with chests of ivory tusks and firearms, piles of sails, anchors and tackle, barrels of gunpowder and provisions, heavy cannon and their ammunition. Trott put his personal boatswain and several African slaves aboard the ship. The ivory tusks, the pieces of eight and bags of gold coins were delivered to his private quarters. Captain Bridgeman and his men were free to drink and carouse in Nassau’s two pubs and could leave whenever they wished.
Copyright © 2007 by Colin Woodard
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopy, recording, or any information storage and retrieval system, without permission in writing from the publisher.
Requests for permission to make copies of any part of the work should be submitted online at www.harcourt.com/contact or mailed to the following address: Permissions Department, Harcourt, Inc., 6277 Sea Harbor Drive, Orlando, Florida 32887-6777.
Product details
- Publisher : Mariner Books; Reprint edition (June 30, 2008)
- Language : English
- Paperback : 400 pages
- ISBN-10 : 015603462X
- ISBN-13 : 978-0156034623
- Item Weight : 12.8 ounces
- Dimensions : 5.31 x 0.69 x 8 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #32,858 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #15 in Maritime History & Piracy (Books)
- #100 in Crime & Criminal Biographies
- #101 in Traveler & Explorer Biographies
- Customer Reviews:
About the author

Colin Woodard, an award-winning author and journalist, is the director of Nationhood Lab at Salve Regina University's Pell Center for International Relations and Public Policy. He is a contributing writer at Politico and a longtime correspondent of The Christian Science Monitor, The San Francisco Chronicle and The Chronicle of Higher Education. His work has appeared in The Economist, The Washington Post, The New York Times, Smithsonian, Newsweek, The Guardian, Bloomberg View, Washington Monthly and dozens of other national and international publications. A native of Maine, he has reported from more than fifty foreign countries and seven continents, and lived for five years in Eastern Europe during and after the collapse of communism. As State & National Affairs Writer at the Press Herald and Maine Sunday Telegram, he won a 2012 George Polk Award and was a finalist for the 2016 Pulitzer Prize for Explanatory Reporting.
His fourth book, "American Nations: A History of the Eleven Rival Regional Cultures of North America", is a Wall Street Journal bestseller that was named a Best Book of 2011 by the editors of The New Republic and the Globalist and won the 2012 Maine Literary Award for Non-Fiction. "The Republic of Pirates", a definitive biography of Blackbeard, Sam Bellamy, and other members of the most famous pirate gang in history, is a New York Times bestseller and was the basis of the 2014 NBC drama "Crossbones", starring John Malkovich. His latest is "Union: The Struggle to Forge a Story of United States Identity" (Viking Press, June 2020), which was named a Christian Science Monitor Book of the Year.
He is also the author of "American Character: A History of the Epic Struggle Between Individual Liberty and the Common Good", which was a finalist for the 2016 Chautauqua Prize and won the 2016 Maine Literary Prize for Non-fiction; the New England bestseller "The Lobster Coast", a cultural and environmental history of coastal Maine; "Ocean's End: Travels Through Endangered Seas", a narrative non-fiction account of the deterioration of the world's oceans.
A graduate of Tufts University and the University of Chicago, he lives in Midcoast Maine.
Customer reviews
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Learn more how customers reviews work on AmazonCustomers say
Customers find the book engaging and informative, providing a well-researched account of the Golden Age of Piracy. They appreciate the author's storytelling style that reads like a story rather than a history book. Readers enjoy the rich character development and how the chapters are centered around a central character. Overall, they describe the book as entertaining and fun.
AI-generated from the text of customer reviews
Customers find the book engaging and informative. They describe it as a fun, exciting read about the Golden Age of Piracy. The story is well-researched, but some readers feel the writing style is confusing.
"...Color me surprised to find that I have not only read and enjoyed said book, but am now also just a tiny bit obsessed over the entire pirate..." Read more
"...It's this type of romanticizing that keeps our interest. While the author really has a story to tell, this is good maritime history as well...." Read more
"...What makes this book so readable, is that not only does Woodard recount the hazards of early 18th century sailing so well, but he places it in its..." Read more
"...This book is a terrific read and chock full of details. Well worth the money spent." Read more
Customers find the book provides detailed information about pirates and life during the late 1600s. They appreciate the well-researched account of their exploits and consider it an essential pirate history book.
"...Woodard’s narrative provides lush sensory details that are often glossed over in visual art...." Read more
"...This is the basic thesis of the book. Sounds just like a story out of the Wild West, doesn't it? That's because it really is...." Read more
"Probably the best book written about the pirates who raised havoc in the Caribbean and the Eastern Coast of North America from Charleston to Maine...." Read more
"...I think you will find this book an informative and entertaining read." Read more
Customers find the book engaging and well-written. They describe it as a story rather than a history book. The author provides useful information on key topics and events in a series of vignettes. Readers appreciate that the book reads like fiction rather than non-fiction.
"...I loved finding out the real tales behind some of my favorite men: “Calico” Jack Rackham, Charles Vane, Blackbeard, and more...." Read more
"...and the writing not only puts the events into context, but tells the story well, by describing the motivations and personalities of the Golden Age..." Read more
"...The book reads like fiction in that my interest was intently held and it was hard to put it down...." Read more
"...The Republic of Pirates tells their true story and tells it well. Dr. Mohler was right. This is a good choice for a summer reading list...." Read more
Customers appreciate the book's historical accuracy. They find it engaging and provide a detailed account of the major players during the time period. The author does an excellent job of reporting the history in an engaging and compelling way. The book is described as the definitive history of Maine from the 1600s and is another five-star book. It also provides interesting stories and corrects historical inaccuracies.
"...if you have even a whisper of interest in this brief, shining, and golden age where men and women fought for a freedom that called to their hearts..." Read more
"...The metaphor works. Believable? At first glance, maybe not, but then the author begins to lay out the evidence, from primary sources...." Read more
"...Put into context, the reader, besides learning about a fascination time period that was as exciting and really as short lived as the outlaw period..." Read more
"Almost too graphic at times, but an interesting history" Read more
Customers enjoy the character development in the book. They find the characters interesting and rich with personalities, describing how the chapters are centered around a central character. The book provides information on many famous names and their real stories behind them. Readers appreciate the well-researched educated guesses about identities, locales, and origins.
"...The book looks at such well-known and infamous villains as Blackbeard, Stede Bonnet and Anne Bonny (though she appears only very briefly)...." Read more
"...In addition, none of the characters are wonderful or evil; they're a realistic mix of both good and bad, just as people truly are...." Read more
"...I loved the way the author described the places, routes and characters...." Read more
"...the myths and legends to get to the real stories of these interesting characters...." Read more
Customers enjoy the book's entertainment value. They find it well-written and humorous.
"...This book is a rare combination, being both highly entertaining and thoroughly fact-checked...." Read more
"...history buff with a sense of humor, but I found it informing and entertaining." Read more
"Just finished this and it is both entertaining and scholarly - obviously the result of a huge amount of research...." Read more
"Excellent read! Interesting, informative, entertaining" Read more
Customers have mixed opinions about the pacing of the book. Some find it fast-paced and enjoyable, while others feel it's repetitive and slow at times. The pacing seems to jump around a bit for some readers.
"...Another thing that irks me is the way it jumps. One paragraph may span 50 or 60 years then end up back where it started...." Read more
"...My biggest issue was the pacing, it was ultimately repetitive and quite boring at times...." Read more
"...Woodard pulled me through the book with much haste. I have another of his books and look forward to starting it." Read more
"The book is pretty good. It gets a little slow at certain points but it does cover all the major well known pirates and their adversaries...." Read more
Customers find the book repetitive and boring at times. They find the pacing slow and difficult to follow, leading to a not very memorable read. Readers feel the book needs a more efficient approach and mention redundancy.
"...its most raw and bare; it’s difficult to read at times and even more difficult to process...." Read more
"...On the other I couldn't help but think that the book needed a more efficient approach...." Read more
"...This led to a not very memorable book. Did I learn a lot? Yes. Was that information presented in a engaging creative way? No." Read more
"...It was a good quick read that will likely leave you wanting more (It did for me and I ended up ordering several other books on the topic of pirates)" Read more
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Top reviews from the United States
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- Reviewed in the United States on April 11, 2021Mere months ago, had someone told me I would be reviewing a non-fiction book about the Golden Age of Piracy, I would have thrown shade like a boss while reaching for my next dark romance.
Color me surprised to find that I have not only read and enjoyed said book, but am now also just a tiny bit obsessed over the entire pirate aesthetic after being nudged toward this passionate world long gone by.
With only the Starz television show Black Sails to inform my scanty knowledge of the era, I was thrilled to find that author Colin Woodard’s book focused on some of the very real characters featured in the show.
I find that while Black Sails is an exceptional visual feast, it is highly glamorized and only loosely based on fact. While this in no way reduces my love for the show, Woodard’s work balances this fantasy-laden world well.
In short, Black Sails forms the pearl within the oyster that is the larger world as told by Woodard.
Woodard’s narrative provides lush sensory details that are often glossed over in visual art. Here, the reader is thrust baldly into the pirate’s life beginning on page one. Be prepared to vicariously experience the salt-encrusted skin of a kiss, briny sea spray, gritty sand embedded within every seam, the torpid blanketing of tropical heat, and the buzz of flies around decaying flesh.
I loved finding out the real tales behind some of my favorite men: “Calico” Jack Rackham, Charles Vane, Blackbeard, and more. These stories, however, aren’t the swashbuckling, airbrushed, happily ever after tales Hollywood has produced like an unending conveyor belt of Little Debbie creme pies. This is history at its most raw and bare; it’s difficult to read at times and even more difficult to process.
But if you have even a whisper of interest in this brief, shining, and golden age where men and women fought for a freedom that called to their hearts like the sound of distant horns, then hesitate no longer.
Jump.
- Reviewed in the United States on September 15, 2013Of the major works dedicated to Caribbean piracy, this one favors the Romantic interpretation. Neither great national heroes, nor psychopathic dictators, the men we today call the "pirates" were outlaw, adventure-seeking republicans in search of a tolerable life outside the miserable conditions of the Royal Navy or merchant marine. The pirates became outlaws because the "law" was so ruthless and arbitrary, particularly in how it was applied on board a ship. This is the basic thesis of the book. Sounds just like a story out of the Wild West, doesn't it? That's because it really is. It's a story that we can easily translate to England's Wild West. The metaphor works.
Believable? At first glance, maybe not, but then the author begins to lay out the evidence, from primary sources. Here, in the Caribbean of the early 18th century, are a group of men with grandiose aspirations living on the edge of civilization, where laws are vague and life is rough hewn. A group of these enterprising fellows established their own stable and independent quasi-state in the British Bahamas, for themselves and other deserters and outcasts of society, before their constant economic harassment attracted the attention of the colonial governors of Virginia, South Carolina, New Providence (Bahamas) and, eventually, King George I. They were gone by 1730, killed, lost, imprisoned or dispersed, just as the western gunslingers were gone by 1890.
It's this type of romanticizing that keeps our interest. While the author really has a story to tell, this is good maritime history as well. The book gives us a good overview of colonial conditions, culture and economics as they existed in the Caribbean during the period. The author's language is colorful enough to immerse the reader in the setting, perhaps not as well as a novelist, but with some flair that leaves us entertained. It's a good story and keeps your attention.
There are some editorial errors in the books. Misspellings, grammatical, etc... They're never really bothersome, but they do reveal a less professional copy editing effort.
Top reviews from other countries
- KristenReviewed in Canada on August 11, 2022
5.0 out of 5 stars Really Great Book!
I was not expecting that I was going to love this book as much as I did, but honestly I could not put this down. I really liked how even though it was written from a historical perspective, it felt almost like a novel at times due to way the author wrote it, which I really enjoyed. There is a lot of detailed description about daily life during this era that was super interesting to read about as well - it really painted a visual picture about how brutal of an era this was. Definite must-read for anyone interested in the Golden Age of Piracy!
- gregReviewed in France on February 9, 2016
5.0 out of 5 stars Very good
This is a wonderful book. It's the very real story of the real pirates of the Caribbean based on archives and their story is better than fiction. Read it.
- Amazon CustomerReviewed in India on May 23, 2017
5.0 out of 5 stars A brilliant account of the 'real history' of pirates.
An informative and thrilling read. Colin Woodward does a fantastic job of accounting the amazing adventures and legends of the Pirates of The Carribean. Thoughout the years, the legends of pirates have been romanticized and fantisized, but, as this book accounts, the real life stories of these rebellious bandits is equally (if not more) fantastical and tragic.
-
T.Reviewed in Germany on October 10, 2024
5.0 out of 5 stars Realer Abenteuerbericht
Gut geschriebene Geschichte der Piraten in der Karibik
- Dr Mervyn EastmanReviewed in the United Kingdom on August 2, 2021
5.0 out of 5 stars Informative, accessible & highly readable
Woodward is to be congratulated. The book took me back to a childhood of pirate costumes, chasing my sister around a makeshift deck and threatening her with walking the plank. Now ,with grandchildren of an age of pirate obsessions I feel better informed to at least offer some intelligence alongside Disney and J.M.Barry!
Highly recommended for those who dress up and frighten their children or grandchildren with a plastic cutlas and a paper eye patch! A book however for all readers with an interest in learning the difference between fact and fiction, but never loosing the magic of childhood play and the thrill of our own imagined pirate republic!