Pirates of the Atlantic

Robbery, murder and mayhem off the Canadian East Coast

by Dan Conlin

The reality beyond the myths and stories about pirates operating off the Canadian coast.

Pirates have scoured the Atlantic coast from the fifteenth century to the present day. Separating the myth from reality, author Dan Conlin explains how piracy came to Atlantic Canada from rival European empires that sought to conquer and settle North America.

Through the Golden Age of Piracy, bands of raiders included Peter Easton, the “King of Pirates,” the notorious Bartholomew Roberts and the vicious Ned Low, who raided the rich fishing grounds and secure harbours of Newfoundland for their ample supplies, manpower and ships. After a period of time in the seventeenth century when piracy was rare and defences were weakened, pockets of piracy sprung up in China and the Caribbean, as well as from shipboard mutinies. Rich trade routes, poverty, political strife, corrupt governments and weak navies allowed for pirates “to declare war on the world.” Their violence blossomed again in the late twentieth century, and continues today.

This book is the story of true pirate lives and their echoes in folklore and popular culture. It exposes their surprisingly democratic codes, lavish dress, and extensive collections of weapons, which are illustrated by full-colour photographs of rare museum and privately owned artifacts.

About the Author

Dan Conlin

DAN CONLIN was Curator of Marine History at the Maritime Museum of the Atlantic, and an authority on Nova Scotia privateering.

Reviews

Pirates’ high production value and its archival reproductions alone are worth the purchase price.”

Maura Hanrahan, Atlantic Books Today

“From the grisly cover photo . . . to ghostly folk tales, the topic never fails to thrill.
Dan Conlin's Pirates of the Atlantic is a brief but lively account of a popular subject.”

Heather Craig, Telegraph Journal

Subjects (BISAC)

Subjects

Scroll to Top