{"title":"Piracy in Colonial North America","authors":"M. G. Hanna","doi":"10.1093/acrefore/9780199329175.013.813","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Historians of colonial British North America have largely relegated piracy to the marginalia of the broad historical narrative from settlement to revolution. However, piracy and unregulated privateering played a pivotal role in the development of every English community along the eastern seaboard from the Carolinas to New England. Although many pirates originated in the British North American colonies and represented a diverse social spectrum, they were not supported and protected in these port communities by some underclass or proto-proletariat but by the highest echelons of colonial society, especially by colonial governors, merchants, and even ministers.\n Sea marauding in its multiple forms helped shape the economic, legal, political, religious, and cultural worlds of colonial America. The illicit market that brought longed-for bullion, slaves, and luxury goods integrated British North American communities with the Caribbean, West Africa, and the Pacific and Indian Oceans throughout the 17th century. Attempts to curb the support of sea marauding at the turn of the 18th century exposed sometimes violent divisions between local merchant interests and royal officials currying favor back in England, leading to debates over the protection of English liberties across the Atlantic. When the North American colonies finally closed their ports to English pirates during the years following the Treaty of Utrecht (1713), it sparked a brief yet dramatic turn of events where English marauders preyed upon the shipping belonging to their former “nests.” During the 18th century, colonial communities began to actively support a more regulated form of privateering against agreed upon enemies that would become a hallmark of patriot maritime warfare during the American Revolution.","PeriodicalId":105482,"journal":{"name":"Oxford Research Encyclopedia of American History","volume":"3 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2020-05-29","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Oxford Research Encyclopedia of American History","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1093/acrefore/9780199329175.013.813","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
Historians of colonial British North America have largely relegated piracy to the marginalia of the broad historical narrative from settlement to revolution. However, piracy and unregulated privateering played a pivotal role in the development of every English community along the eastern seaboard from the Carolinas to New England. Although many pirates originated in the British North American colonies and represented a diverse social spectrum, they were not supported and protected in these port communities by some underclass or proto-proletariat but by the highest echelons of colonial society, especially by colonial governors, merchants, and even ministers.
Sea marauding in its multiple forms helped shape the economic, legal, political, religious, and cultural worlds of colonial America. The illicit market that brought longed-for bullion, slaves, and luxury goods integrated British North American communities with the Caribbean, West Africa, and the Pacific and Indian Oceans throughout the 17th century. Attempts to curb the support of sea marauding at the turn of the 18th century exposed sometimes violent divisions between local merchant interests and royal officials currying favor back in England, leading to debates over the protection of English liberties across the Atlantic. When the North American colonies finally closed their ports to English pirates during the years following the Treaty of Utrecht (1713), it sparked a brief yet dramatic turn of events where English marauders preyed upon the shipping belonging to their former “nests.” During the 18th century, colonial communities began to actively support a more regulated form of privateering against agreed upon enemies that would become a hallmark of patriot maritime warfare during the American Revolution.
研究英属北美殖民地的历史学家,在从殖民到革命的广泛历史叙述中,大都把海盗问题放在次要地位。然而,海盗和不受管制的私掠行为在东海岸从卡罗来纳到新英格兰的每个英国社区的发展中发挥了关键作用。尽管许多海盗起源于英属北美殖民地,代表着多元化的社会阶层,但在这些港口社区中,他们并没有得到一些下层阶级或原始无产阶级的支持和保护,而是受到殖民地社会最高层的支持和保护,特别是殖民地的总督、商人甚至部长。多种形式的海上掠夺帮助塑造了殖民时期美国的经济、法律、政治、宗教和文化世界。整个17世纪,非法市场带来了人们渴望的金条、奴隶和奢侈品,将英属北美社区与加勒比海、西非、太平洋和印度洋融为一体。在18世纪之交,为了遏制对海上掠夺的支持,当地商人利益集团和英国王室官员之间有时会出现激烈的分歧,从而引发了关于如何保护英国在大西洋彼岸自由的争论。在《乌得勒支条约》(Treaty of Utrecht, 1713)签订后的几年里,北美殖民地最终对英国海盗关闭了港口,这引发了一场短暂但戏剧性的事件转折,英国掠夺者掠夺了属于他们以前“巢穴”的船只。在18世纪,殖民地社区开始积极支持一种更规范的私掠形式,以对抗商定的敌人,这将成为美国革命期间爱国者海战的标志。