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David Cordingly

    5 de diciembre de 1938

    David Cordingly es un distinguido historiador naval inglés, ampliamente considerado una autoridad líder en piratería. Su extensa obra profundiza en el romance y la realidad de la vida en el mar, separando los hechos históricos de los mitos y leyendas. Los escritos de Cordingly exploran las vidas de los marineros y los roles de las mujeres en la historia marítima, fundamentados en una investigación meticulosa y una narrativa cautivadora. Sus análisis ofrecen a los lectores una inmersión profunda en el fascinante mundo de la aventura marítima y los eventos históricos significativos.

    Piraten
    Billy Ruffian
    Under the Black Flag
    Pirates
    Pirates
    The Maritime Compendium
    • Pirates

      • 176 páginas
      • 7 horas de lectura

      The image of the pirate is one that has never failed to capture the imagination, but behind the melodramatic portrayals of such villains as Long John Silver, with wooden leg and eye-patch, lies a much harsher reality. This book is the first port of call for anyone keen to separate the fact from the fiction.

      Pirates2021
      3,9
    • Billy Ruffian

      The Bellerophon and the Downfall of Napoleon

      • 384 páginas
      • 14 horas de lectura

      Under fourteen captains, the ship Bellerophon played a conspicuous part in three of the most famous sea battles: the battle of the Glorious First of June (1794); the battle of the Nile (1798); and the battle of Trafalgar (1805). This book presents the story of an eighteenth-century fighting ship - known to her crew as the Billy Ruffian.

      Billy Ruffian2004
    • Piraten

      • 256 páginas
      • 9 horas de lectura

      A wonderful illustrated history of pirates from the sixteenth century until present.

      Piraten1997
    • Pirates

      Terror on the High Seas-From the Caribbean to the South China Sea

      • 256 páginas
      • 9 horas de lectura

      Piracy has long attracted ruthless individuals seeking fortune. For young men, it provided an escape from monotonous shore jobs, offering excitement, treasure, and the allure of adventure, including wine, women, and travel. However, it was a perilous pursuit; most famous pirates, like Blackbeard and Kidd, had brief careers lasting only two to three years, and few, such as Morgan or Drake, lived long enough to enjoy their ill-gotten gains. Historically, piracy has existed since ancient times, with Phoenician merchant ships targeted in the Mediterranean during the second millennium B.C. In Greece, Aegean islands were home to generations of pirates, and in 78 B.C., Julius Caesar was famously held for ransom by them. The discovery of vast gold treasures by Spanish conquistadores in the New World ignited two centuries of buccaneering, marking the Golden Age of Piracy. Meanwhile, the riches of the East led to the emergence of formidable pirates in the South China Sea, known for their numbers and brutality. Piracy has never fully disappeared; it persists along the coasts of Brazil, West Africa, and notably in the Malacca Strait, where the world's highest concentration of merchant shipping continues to attract these ancient marauders.

      Pirates1996
      4,0
    • Examines the popular image of pirates in modern times and compares it with the real world of pirates, who were more often murderers and thieves than romantic heros.

      Under the Black Flag1996
      3,7