Posted on 02/12/2021 2:39:52 AM PST by nickcarraway
At least six pirate skeletons were recently discovered in a shipwreck off the coast of Cape Cod.
The remains were unearthed from the wreck site of the Whydah, which sank near the town of Wellfleet in 1717, according to The Boston Globe.
Investigators at the Whydah Pirate Museum said the skeletons were identified in several large concretions, or hard masses of minerals, from the wreck site. They are now being examined by a team of archeologists led by underwater explorer Barry Clifford, who discovered the Whydah in 1984, the museum said.
(Excerpt) Read more at nypost.com ...
PinGGG!.................
Hoist the black flag!!!
So do Boston pirates stand around saying “aahhhh”.
Interesting.
From another source: “Bellamy’s crew was made up of enslaved Africans, Native Americans, and sailors from across Europe and North America. Originally a British slave ship, the vessel was captured by Bellamy in early 1717.”
Most Americans are aware the Brits engaged in the African slave trade but are unaware that they rounded up Native Americans for the slave trade.
Avast ye swabs.
ARRRRGH!..........................
So did the Spanish, which gave us Squanto...............
Squanto was captured by the Brits, taken to Spain and bought by a religious order. At the time, any Indian who was a Christian could not be enslaved by Spanish law. After his conversion, Squanto was freed and went to England and secured passage back to New England. Apparently he couldn’t find his tribe (it’s unknown why) and so joined up with another Christian group (the Pilgrims).
According to the movie about Squanto, they theorized that the tribe was wiped out by disease, likely Infulenza..............
Yeah that’s a popular speculation. It’s possible but there are other explanations. Warfare was common among the tribes and when a tribe lost they moved to other areas sometimes pretty far away.
But there is usually a tribe that moves into the conquered area and would tell what happened........
My understanding is the Indians that lived in what is now Plymouth, which they called Patuxet (http://www.tolatsga.org/wampa.html), were relatives of the Wampanoag Indians. Even Massasoit, chief of the Wampanoags, acknowledged Patuxet was wiped out by sickness.
Squanto, or Tisquantum (his actual name) was a member of the Patuxet tribe who had lived there, according to Captain John Smith, of the Jamestown Colony fame, in his book:
The generall historie of Virginia, New England & the Summer Isles: together with The true travels, adventures and observations, and A sea grammar
found here: https://archive.org/details/generallhistori00smitgoog
The ship sank because it rammed into a rock. Egyptian pilot.
I thought it sank because it had too much booty!.................
That’s very possible but another narrative I’ve seen says that Squanto was a captive not a member of the Wampanoags. It does make me question the “plague” or sickness narrative but you’re right most sources say sickness killed his tribe.
None of them knew the combination to Davy Jones’ locker
Walk the plank!
Only Sinbad knows for certain
I think there’s no doubt about the Indians of the Americas being almost wiped out by Old World diseases.
It wasn’t done on purpose, of course, as 16th Century Westerners had no idea how germs and viruses act—or even knew they existed.
But thousands of years of East/West traffic from the Far East to Europe and mankind there living cheek and jowl with poultry, swine and cattle meant many, many bacteria and viruses jumped species barriers and wiped out plenty of people in waves of plague. The Old World humans earned their immunity the hard way. The descendants of plague victims’ micros versus the peoples of hardly any disease clashed.
Bad news for Indians. Most of them died from diseases from people they never even saw.
I think the number killed by Old World diseases is overstated. Case in point, what was widely thought mostly Old World diseases turned out to be indigenous hemorrhagic fevers that killed large swaths of Meso-America in the 16th century.
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