1. Pirate Panache
Legendary and ruthless sea-raider "Black
Bart" may win the award for the most prolific pirate, with more than
400 ships reportedly falling to his sword in the early 18th century.
But Bart was much more civilized than history would have you believe.
The Welsh-born Bartholomew Roberts (sound less tough now, doesn't he?)
always wore a damask waistcoat, snappy breeches, and a dashing red
feather in his cap. The refined Bart also drank only tea and water,
commanded lights-out by 8 p.m., and had musicians play hymns for him on
Sundays.
2. Yo-Ho-Ho and an Epidural
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Grace O'Malley (born
Gráinne O'Malley)
was the Irish Sea Queen of the 16th century. Earning her sea legs as a
kid on voyages with her father, O'Malley went on to lead a crew of
200 sailors as part of her Celtic Sea "protection service." Her
specialty? Intercepting merchant ships to negotiate their safe passage
to Galway and ruthlessly pillaging any "uninterested customers."
Infamous for being lewd, gambling too much, and cussing like—well—a
sailor, O'Malley truly proved her mettle when she gave birth
mid-voyage. Soon after the delivery, Turkish pirates attacked the ship,
and when the flailing crew came running to O'Malley, she reportedly
snapped, "May you be seven times worse off this day 12 months from now,
you who cannot do without me for one day!" When the postpartum
hell-raiser finally emerged on deck waving her gun, the attackers
quickly remembered they had other engagements.
3. X Marks the 401(k)
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When
pirate icon Edward "Blackbeard" Teach met his Waterloo at Ocracoke
Island (his pillaging hub off the coast of North Carolina) in 1718, his
enemies confiscated 25 hogshead of sugar, 145 bags of cocoa, a barrel
of indigo, and a bale of cotton. Not exactly the sacks full of rubies
and sapphires the British Royal Navy was hoping for. When asked where
the real treasure was, it's said he replied, "Only I and the devil
know." Since that time, beachcombers have donned Hawaiian-print
shirts and scoured the Carolina coast with metal detectors—most likely
in vain. Blackbeard's treasure is almost certainly more legend than
fact. Pirates usually acquired their pieces of eight (Spanish silver
coins), gold doubloons, and pricey jewels from black market trade of the
coffee, tea, slaves, textiles, and medicines they stole from ships.
But for all the talk of buried treasure, pirates weren't known for
their retirement planning. They usually blew the money on women, booze,
and gambling.
4. Playing the Parrot Card
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Our
modern-day image of a pirate usually comes fully outfitted with
peg-leg, eye-patch, and parrot. Why? The stereotype comes directly from
the fictional character of Long John Silver in Robert Louis Stevenson's
Treasure Island. Silver's feathered sidekick, Captain Flint,
was a nice touch, but it's doubtful pirates had pets. With long voyages
and scanty rations, a parrot would have a made a better snack than
companion.
5. Stealing Second
The
Pittsburgh Pirates haven't always been named after the thieves of the
high seas. Originally, the Major League club was known as the
nature-loving Pittsburgh Alleghenies (after the mountain range in the
eastern region of Pennsylvania). But in 1880, after stealing away
second-baseman Louis Bierbauer from the Philadelphia Athletics, a local
newspaper called the team "a bunch of pirates." This suited them just
fine, and they've been flying the Jolly Roger ever since.
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