Reddit Reddit reviews The Sack of Panamá: Captain Morgan and the Battle for the Caribbean

We found 3 Reddit comments about The Sack of Panamá: Captain Morgan and the Battle for the Caribbean. Here are the top ones, ranked by their Reddit score.

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The Sack of Panamá: Captain Morgan and the Battle for the Caribbean
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3 Reddit comments about The Sack of Panamá: Captain Morgan and the Battle for the Caribbean:

u/Elphinstone1842 · 5 pointsr/AskHistorians

There are lots of great books about Port Royal in its heyday. The first ones I'd recommend are The Sack of Panama by Peter Earle and Empire of Blue Water by Stephen Talty which both give really solid broad introductions to the politics and environment of the Caribbean and Port Royal's relationship with buccaneers during its heyday in the 1660s until 1671 when England started to crack down on them.

If you want more specialized reading exclusively on Port Royal then I'd recommend Pirate Port: The story of the sunken city of Port Royal by Robert F. Marx for some light reading, and if you want a really excessively meticulous study of everything you ever wanted to know about Port Royal from written records and archaeological findings with lots of maps and reconstructions included then read Port Royal Jamaica by Michael Pawson and David Buisseret.

Lastly, a great primary source on Port Royal in its heyday is the contemporary book The Buccaneers of America which was published by Alexandre Exquemelin in 1678. Exquemelin himself was an actual former French/Dutch buccaneer and the book contains many of his first-person recollections, such as this describing the activities of buccaneers in Port Royal in the 1660s which has clearly influenced some modern pirate tropes:

> Captain Rock sailed for Jamaica with his prize, and lorded it there with his mates until all was gone. For that is the way with these buccaneers -- whenever they have got hold of something, they don't keep it for long. They are busy dicing, whoring and drinking so long as they have anything to spend. Some of them will get through a good two or three thousand pieces of eight in a day -- and next day not have a shirt to their back. I have seen a man in Jamaica give 500 pieces of eight to a whore, just to see her naked. Yes, and many other impieties.

> My own master used to buy a butt of wine and set in the middle of the street with the barrel-head knocked in, and stand barring the way. Every passer-by had to drink with him, or he'd have shot them dead with a gun he kept handy. Once he bought a cask of butter and threw the stuff at everyone who came by, bedaubing their clothes or their head, wherever he best could reach.

> The buccaneers are generous to their comrades: if a man has nothing, the others will come to his help. The tavern-keepers let them have a good deal of credit, but in Jamaica one ought not to put much trust in these people, for often they will sell you for debt, a thing I have seen happen many a time. Even the man I have just been speaking about, the one who gave the whore so much money to see her naked, and at that time had a good 3,000 pieces of eight -- three months later he was sold for his debts, by a man in whose house he had spent most of his money.

u/[deleted] · 4 pointsr/AskHistorians

Well, I probably like the story of Henry Morgan the best. Accounts vary, but the short version is that he was a privateer (a pirate licensed by the Crown or government) for England against its enemies, chiefly Spain, in the 1600s. He later turned full-blown pirate, attacking anyone he came across. Despite this, in his later years, he was knighted and later served as lieutenant-governor of Jamaica until he fell out of favour with King Charles II.

I would encourage you to read The Sack of Panamá: Captain Morgan and the Battle for the Caribbean by Peter Earle, as although it doesn't tell the complete life of Morgan, it is one of the more accurate versions of (part of) his life.

u/eternalkerri · 3 pointsr/AskHistorians

I used Alexander O. Esquemelins book Buccaneers in America

Bennerson Little's The Sea Rover's Practice

And The Sack of Panama

edit: sorry about that last post, I should have cited, but I was quite ill the past two days.