Here are some useful pirate phrases to use when you come up against some of the many modern day problems we all face in 2023!
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]]>These six Great British Pirates are surrounded by twisting tales of treasure and terror on the high seas. They may not be the greatest pirates ever, but each has a great claim to fame and a Trail or two near their hometowns!
The most famous pirate of them all was probably Edward Teach, more commonly known as Blackbeard. Blackbeard was born in Bristol and started his career as a crew member for the pirate Benjamin Hornigold.
He definitely understood power dressing! Before a battle, he would dress all in black, strap several pistols to his chest and put on a large black captain’s hat. Then, he would put slow-burning fuses in his hair and beard. The fuses constantly sputtered and gave off smoke, surrounding him with a greasy fog. He looked like a demon, and most of his victims simply surrendered their cargo rather than fight him.
But, despite his infamy, Blackbeard wasn't particularly successful when he was alive. His prizes were quite small compared to some pirates on this list, and he was only active for 15 months. But in death, he became a legend. This is probably thanks to his appearance in Daniel Defoe's "General History of the Robberies and Murders of the Most Notorious Pyrates", in which a mix of fact and fiction portrayed Blackbeard as one of the cruellest pirates to ever sail the high seas.
John "Calico Jack" Rackham was also born in Bristol and is known for two reasons. Firstly, he had two of the most famous and ferocious female pirates in his crew, Anne Bonny and Mary Read. Secondly, his flag, a black one with a skull over crossed cutlasses, has been adopted as one of the most recognisable contemporary pirate flags.
Calico Jack sailed as a quartermaster under the infamous pirate Charles Vane and eventually took over the ship when the crew deposed their captain due to cowardice (although more likely due to Vane's personal greed). He accepted a pardon from Governor Woodes Rogers in 1719 and enjoyed shore leave in the Bahamas, where he met and began a relationship with Anne Bonny.
His retirement didn't last long, and Rackham turned back to piracy just a few months later, this time with Bonny, and later Mary Read, at his side. They were captured and tried the following year. While Jack couldn't avoid his fate, his relationship with Anne Bonny may have saved her life. Both Bonny and Read were pregnant, so their deaths were delayed. Read lost her life to fever in prison, but no one knows what happened to Bonny after her trial.
Captain Edward “Ned” Low (sometimes Lowe or Loe) was born in Westminster in the late 17th century. Although he was active for only three years, Low remains notorious as one of the most vicious pirates of the Golden Age of Piracy, with a reputation for violence and torture. He sounds like a really nasty piece of work!
Towards the end of his career in piracy, nasty Ned became more ambitious, more vicious, and supposedly started spiralling into madness. He unwisely turned on his own crew, which (unsurprisingly) led to their mutiny. They marooned Low on a desert island, and he was never seen again.
No one truly knows what happened to Low after he was left stranded by his crew. A French account says he was captured by a French ship and taken to Martinique, where he met his fate. Others say he was never captured and lived out the rest of his days in Brazil. There was even the rumour that the mutiny never occurred and that his ship sank in a storm with the captain and crew lost at sea. It's a real mystery!
The most successful pirate operating in the Golden Age of Piracy was Bartholomew “Black Bart” Roberts. He was born in 1682 in Little Newcastle, between Fishguard and Haverfordwest in Pembrokeshire.
He had a pretty dodgy start to his sailing career (yes, dodgier than being a pirate) but was forced into piracy when Captain Howell Davis captured the slave ship Roberts was the second mate of. When Davis was killed just six weeks later, the reluctant pirate Roberts was named captain.
He may not be as famous as some other pirates on this list, but he was arguably a 'better' pirate, with his success measured by the number of ships he had (four) and the number of pirates he controlled (hundreds). He and his crew captured and looted more ships than many of the other notorious pirates put together, and in just three years!
Also born in Wales, in what's now a suburb of Cardiff, was Sir Henry Morgan. He was knighted by King Charles II for his services to the crown and even became acting Lieutenant Governor of Jamaica THREE times, despite being known as a famous Caribbean pirate and privateer! In fact, King Charles had even called for Sir Henry's arrest less than three years before knighting him.
Despite the many TV shows, movies and video games about pirates released in recent years, he’s still arguably the most prominent in popular culture. He’s had two novels written about him - John Steinbeck’s "A Cup of Gold" and Josephine Tey’s "The Privateer" – and appears on Captain Morgan’s Spiced Rum labels!
Thomas Tew was one of the most famous pirates of the Red Sea. He was so famous, in fact, that King William III mentioned him by name in his Royal Warrant given to pirate hunters due to him being a "wicked and ill-disposed person".
Believed to have been born in Maidford, Northamptonshire, Captain Tew went on to be known as the Rhode Island Pirate and pioneered the Pirate Round route - from the western Atlantic, down past the tip of Africa, stopping at Madagascar or Comoros before finding the perfect spot to intercept ships from countries like India and Yemen.
His sea chest is the only known authentic chest with its origins leading back to a pirate! It can be seen in the pirate-themed museum in the Florida Keys, which perhaps makes him the most careless for losing it! It's believed that Tew used this iron strongbox to carry his ill-gotten gains from the Red Sea to Rhode Island but left it behind when he went on his final, fateful voyage.
With so many fearsome British pirates leaving their mark on the high seas over the years, it's hard to whittle the list down to just six... So, here are a few more!
Of course, there's Mary Read, born in Devon (possibly Plymouth), who gained fame by sailing with Calico Jack and the Irish pirate Anne Bonny, as mentioned above. Then there's John (or Jack) Ward, known later as Yusuf Reïs, born in Faversham in the 16th century. Jack didn't have the best start to his piratical career, but through his outlandish ways and lack of morals, he somehow managed to amass a fortune and retire in Tunisia in comfort, spending the latter years of his life teaching navigation and gun skills to young corsairs. Jack Ward was also the inspiration for the fictional pirate Captain Jack Sparrow!
You might've noticed that we haven't talked much about buried treasure. Well, it turns out that not many pirates actually had big chests filled with gold and jewels that they buried on a desert island... Sorry! But one British pirate did just that. Captain William Kidd, born in Dundee, was known to have buried a small treasure trove on Gardiners Island, New York, which was recovered and used as evidence in his piracy trial. However, it's rumoured that even more of Captain Kidd's buried treasure is waiting to be recovered across the USA and maybe even around the world!
Last but not least is a relatively unknown pirate who caused heaps of trouble in Cornwall in the 16th century. Mary Wolverston, a gentlewoman from Suffolk, was the daughter of Phillip Wolverston, a 'gentleman pirate'. She married into the ancient Cornish Killigrew Family and, thanks to her husband's Governorship of Pendennis Castle and control of all shipping in the Carrick Roads harbour, the duo started preying on ships with pricey cargoes, raiding them and stashing the goods in Arwenack House, Falmouth. It's said that Lady Killigrew enjoyed the adventure of piracy far more than her husband did! She was still up to no good in her 60s when she was eventually arrested, tried and sentenced to death. However, she received a pardon from Queen Elizabeth I herself and lived for at least another five years as a free woman.
Turn your boring day out into a full-blown pirate adventure with Treasure Trails! Set off on a voyage of discovery with a treasure hunt, where you'll hunt around to crack the clues and reveal the location of the long-lost treasure trove.
There are over 1,200 Trails across the UK, including detective mystery and spy mission-themed adventures too! Discover hidden gems, learn fascinating facts and have heaps of fun unleashing your inner treasure seeker as you explore. Where will you go first?
While these may not be the greatest explorers - and some have a few controversies that have followed them through the centuries - each was or is great in their own way!
Starting with the 16th century, we have Sir Francis Drake – he was born in Tavistock in Devon and had strong links to Plymouth. With the sea in his blood, he's probably best known for his piracy and illicit slave trading.
The Spanish thought of him as a pirate, but we Brits hailed him as a hero, particularly as he was knighted by Queen Elizabeth I after he explored the coast of South America. He was involved in the Spanish Armada but died from dysentery and fever. He was apparently buried in a lead coffin at sea near Portobello, Panama, and even today, divers continue to search for his coffin.
A statue to Sir Francis Drake has stood in Tavistock since 1883, with a duplicate erected on Plymouth Hoe a year later. In 2020, the public called for both to be removed, but instead, there are plans for information boards explaining Drake's whole history - the good, bad and ugly - to be installed near the statues.
Like Drake, William Dampier, from East Coker, Somerset, was a sailor. It would appear that he wasn’t the best leader, as he struggled to manage the crews placed under him. In 1702, a court martial declared him unfit to command any of His Majesty's ships!
His real claim to fame was as an author. He was a very popular writer, and his works set an entire fashion in travel literature, influencing men like Swift and Defoe. His account of the winds and currents of the Pacific in a 1699 volume has earned the respect of navigators and meteorologists to the present day.
His writings are the first example of words like chopsticks and barbecue used in English, landing him over 80 citations in the Oxford English Dictionary. He also recorded the first-ever English-language recipes for guacamole and mango chutney.
Everyone will have heard of our 18th-century explorer, Captain James Cook, who was born in Middlesbrough on the border of North Yorkshire and County Durham, beside the banks of the River Tees. He began his naval career at 17 with a merchant navy apprenticeship, where he learnt skills that would help him in his future expeditions.
In 1769, the planet Venus was due to pass in front of the Sun, a rare event visible only in the southern hemisphere. The British government decided to send an expedition to observe it with the secret motive of searching for the fabled southern continent. Cook was chosen as commander of HMS Endeavour and undertook a nine-month voyage to Tahiti. After observing the transit of Venus, Cook and his crew set off into uncharted territory, stopping at Huahine, Bora Bora, Raiatea, New Zealand and, finally, Australia, becoming the first European ship to land on the east coast in a place Cook named Botany Bay.
Like Drake, he's seen in two lights by the modern world. He played a major part in taking Australian land away from the Aboriginal people and was known to be violent towards them and other indigenous people he met on his voyages. But, his achievements in mapping the Pacific, New Zealand and Australia radically changed Western perceptions of world geography.
Born in Blantyre, just south of Glasgow, in the 19th century, Dr David Livingstone studied medicine and theology and became a missionary.
He was posted to the Kalahari and became convinced his mission was to bring Christianity to the people in the interior of Africa. He 'discovered' Victoria Falls and was the first European to cross the width of Southern Africa.
Livingstone spent years trying to find the source of the Nile despite very poor health. After nothing was heard of him for many months, Henry Stanley, an explorer and journalist born in Denbigh, set out to find him. After meeting him at Lake Tanganyika, he uttered his immortal line, "Dr Livingstone, I presume".
If the name Robert Falcon Scott doesn't ring any bells, it may be because this Plymouth-born naval officer and explorer is better known by his nickname - Scott of the Antarctic. By the 20th century, most of the land on Earth had been discovered, mapped and explored widely, but Antarctica and the Arctic were still largely unknown.
Scott first set off on the Discovery expedition (1901-04), where they discovered the Polar Plateau. He's better known for his ill-fated second expedition on the Terra Nova (1910-13), where he'd hoped to be the first to reach the South Pole.
In September 1911, 16 men - including Scott - set out on a march towards the pole in parties of four, with the plan that three groups would turn around at certain points, with one party making the final stretch. In the end, five men set off on the final leg to the pole on 3rd January 1912, passing Ernest Shackleton's furthest south point on 9th. However, when they got within 15 miles of the pole, they could see a flag flying in the distance - Norwegian explorer Roald Amundsen had beaten them to the pole a month before.
This wasn't the only tragedy. On the journey back, frostbite was setting in, which was causing them to slow down in extreme conditions with few supplies. Edgar Evans was the first to pass away on 17th February. A month later, Lawrence Oates - with severe frostbite on his feet and hands, left the tent saying, "I am just going outside and may be some time" and never returned. The remaining three kept attempting to advance, but they weren't able to get closer than 11 miles to the depot. Scott's last diary entry was on 29th March 1912.
Image: By Municipal Archives of Trondheim from Trondheim, Norway - British Jostedals Glacier Expedition (1970), CC BY 2.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=34033772
Time for something a little cheerier! Described by The Guinness Book of Records as “the world’s greatest living explorer” in 1984, Sir Ranulph Twisleton-Wykeham-Fiennes, 3rd Baronet, OBE (pictured to the far left), was born in Windsor in 1944.
In his life, he's been on a number of fantastic expeditions, including travelling up the White Nile in 1969, exploring the Jostedal Glacier in 1970 and, notably, the Transglobe Expedition between 1979-82. The latter, devised by his wife Ginny (who was the first woman awarded the Polar Medal), had Fiennes circumnavigating the globe north to south, including trekking through both poles, using only surface transport. This had never been attempted before and hasn't been since.
He was also the first person to cross Antarctica on foot and the oldest Briton to climb Everest in 2009, aged 65, where he also became the first person ever to have crossed both polar ice caps AND climbed Everest.
If that's not enough, his other claims to fame are as an author with over 24 published fiction and non-fiction books and as the UK’s top celebrity fundraiser who's raised over £14m for UK charities.
While you might not be able to follow the footsteps of these great adventurers on a global expedition, there are over 1,200 Treasure Trails across the UK just waiting to be explored with.
Set off on a voyage of discovery with a treasure hunt, detective mystery or spy mission self-guided quest, where you'll find hidden gems, learn fascinating facts and have heaps of fun unleashing your inner explorer.
Are you ready to go on a thrilling investigation, unearthing fascinating facts and cracking vital clues along the way? Detective mystery Trails are the perfect challenge for wannabe super sleuths. Not sure which case to accept first? Check out our top 10 for exploration inspiration.
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