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Ancient piracy
The earliest documented instances of piracy are the exploits
of the
Sea Peoples who threatened the
Aegean and
Mediterranean in the 13th century BC. In
Classical Antiquity, the
Tyrrhenians and
Thracians were known as pirates. The island of
Lemnos long resisted
Greek influence and remained a haven for Thracian pirates.
By the 1st century BC, there were pirate states along the
Anatolian coast, threatening the commerce of the
Roman Empire.
On one voyage across the
Aegean Sea in 75 BC,[1]
Julius Caesar was kidnapped by
Cilician pirates and held prisoner in the
Dodecanese islet of
Pharmacusa.[2]
He maintained an attitude of superiority throughout his
captivity. When the pirates decided to demand a ransom of twenty
talents of gold, Caesar is said to have insisted that he was
worth at least fifty, and the pirates indeed raised the ransom
to fifty talents. After the ransom was paid, Caesar raised a
fleet, pursued and captured the pirates, and imprisoned them.
The Senate finally invested
Pompey with powers to deal with piracy in 67 BC (the
Lex Gabinia), and Pompey after three months of naval
warfare managed to suppress the threat. In the 3rd century,
pirate attacks on
Olympos (city in
Anatolia) brought impoverishment. Among some of the most
famous ancient pirateering peoples were the
Illyrians, populating the western Balkan peninsula.
Constantly raiding the
Adriatic Sea, the Illyrians caused many conflicts with the
Roman Republic. It was not until 68 BC that the Romans
finally conquered Illyria and made it a province, ending their
threat.
As early as 258 AD, the
Gothic-Herulic
fleet ravaged towns on the coasts of the
Black Sea and
Sea of Marmara. The
Aegean coast suffered similar attacks a few years later. In
264, the
Goths
reached
Galatia and
Cappadocia, and Gothic pirates landed on
Cyprus and
Crete.
In the process, the Goths seized enormous booty and took
thousands into captivity.
In 286 AD,
Carausius, a Roman military commander of Gaulish origins,
was appointed to command the
Classis Britannica, and given the responsibility of
eliminating
Frankish and
Saxon pirates who had been raiding the coasts of
Armorica and Belgic
Gaul.
In the Roman province of Britannia,
Saint Patrick was captured and enslaved by
Irish pirates.
Early
Polynesian
warriors attacked seaside and riverside villages. They used
the sea for their
hit-and-run tactics - a safe place to retreat to if the
battle turned against them.
[edit]
Middle Ages
The widely known and far reaching pirates in medieval
Europe were the
Vikings, warriors and looters from
Scandinavia. They raided the coasts, rivers and inland
cities of all Western Europe as far as
Seville, attacked by the Norse in 844. Vikings even attacked
coasts of North Africa and Italy. They also plundered all the
coasts of the
Baltic Sea, ascending the rivers of Eastern Europe as far as
the Black Sea and Persia. The lack of centralized powers all
over
Europe during the
Middle Ages favoured pirates all over the continent.
After the
Slavic
invasions of the Balkan peninsula in the 5th and 6th
centuries, a
Slavic tribe settled the land of
Pagania between
Dalmatia and
Zachlumia in the first half of the
7th century
These Slavs revived the old Illyrian piratical habits and
often raided the Adriatic Sea. By 642 they invaded southern
Italy and assaulted Siponte in
Benevento. Their raids in the Adriatic increased rapidly,
until the whole Sea was no longer safe for travel.
The "Narentines,"
as they were called, took more liberties in their raiding quests
while the
Venetian Navy was abroad, as when it was campaigning in
Sicilian waters in 827-82. As soon as the Venetian fleet would
return to the Adriatic, the Narentines temporarily abandoned
their habits again, even signing a Treaty in Venice and
baptising their Slavic pagan leader into Christianity. In 834 or
835 they broke the treaty and again raided Venetian traders
returning from Benevento, and all of Venice's military attempts
to punish the Marians in 839 and 840 utterly failed. Later, they
raided the Venetians more often, together with the
Arabs. In 846 the Narentines broke through to Venice itself
and raided its lagoon city of Kaorle. In the middle of March of
870 they kidnapped the Roman Bishop's emissaries that were
returning from the Ecclesiastical Council in Constantinople.
This caused a Byzantine military action against them that
finally brought Christianity to them.
After the
Arab raids on the
Adriatic coast c. 872 and the retreat of the Imperial Navy,
the Narentines restored their raids of Venetian waters, causing
new conflicts with the Italians in 887-888. The Narentine piracy
traditions were cherished even while they were in
Serbia, serving as the finest Serb warriors. The Venetians
futilely continued to fight them throughout the 10th-11th
centuries.
In 937,
Irish pirates sided with the Scots, Vikings,
Picts,
and Welsh in their invasion of England.
Athelstan drove them back.
In
12th century the coasts of west Scandinavia were plundered
by
Slavic pirates from the southwest coast of
Baltic Sea.
H Thomas Milhorn mentions a certain Englishman named
William Maurice, convicted of piracy in 1241, as the first
person known to have been
hanged, drawn and quartered,[3]
which would indicate that the then-ruling King
Henry III took an especially severe view of this crime.
The
ushkuiniks were
Novgorodian pirates who looted the cities on the
Volga and
Kama
Rivers in the 14th century.
As early as
Byzantine times, the
Maniots - one of
Greece's toughest populations - were known as pirates. The
Maniots considered piracy as a legitimate response to the fact
that their land was poor and it became their main source of
income. The main victims of Maniot pirates were the
Ottomans but the Maniots also targeted ships of European
countries.
The
Haida
and
Tlingit tribes, who lived along the coast of southern
Alaska and on islands in northwest
British Columbia, were traditionally known as fierce
warriors, pirates and
slave-traders, raiding as far as
California. |