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    Caribbean Macaw - Pirates, #15 of 100 Bloody Objects (Banditry pt 1 of 3)

    enMay 03, 2022
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    About this Episode

    1. Myth and romance  2.  Ancient world  3. Privateers  4.  Corsairs  5.  Famous Pirates  6.  State Pirates  7.  Modern Piracy  PS The Legends

    Pirates have always captured the imagination.  And romance and myth surround them.  Yet the reality was often bleak and violent.  We have images of peglegs and parrots, but the story of piracy often ended at the end of a hangman’s noose and a rotting corpse imprisoned in a gibbet.  They were outcasts and run-of-the-mill criminals and many earnt a wage by working on occasion for navies and governments.  

    Certain factors helped the pirate:  lawlessness on land, availability of hidden harbours and a ready market for the goods they stole.  We remember pieces of eight and hidden treasure, but in fact the merchandise they looted and subsequently traded was usually more prosaic.  Figures such as Blackbeard and Calico Jack have featured in many books and movies.  Today there is still piracy, but it is oil tankers and container ships that are the target.  Piracy costs the world money and poses a challenge to governments.

    So it goes,

    Tom Assheton & James Jackson

    talk@bloodyviolenthistory.com

     

    See also:

    YouTube: BloodyViolentHistory

    https://www.instagram.com/bloodyviolenthistory/

    https://www.jamesjacksonbooks.com

    https://www.tomtom.co.uk

     

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    Recent Episodes from Bloody Violent History

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    https://www.jamesjacksonbooks.com

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    https://www.tomtom.co.uk

     

    If you enjoy the podcast, would you please leave a short review on Apple Podcasts/iTunes, Spotify or Google Podcast App? It takes less than 60 seconds, and it really helps to spread the word

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    https://www.tomtom.co.uk

     

    If you enjoy the podcast, would you please leave a short review on Apple Podcasts/iTunes, Spotify or Google Podcast App? It takes less than 60 seconds, and it really helps to spread the word

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    https://www.instagram.com/bloodyviolenthistory/

    https://www.jamesjacksonbooks.com

    https://www.tomtom.co.uk

     

    If you enjoy the podcast, would you please leave a short review on Apple Podcasts/iTunes, Spotify or Google Podcast App? It takes less than 60 seconds, and it really helps to spread the word

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    Ref:

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    See also:

    YouTube: BloodyViolentHistory

    https://www.instagram.com/bloodyviolenthistory/

    https://www.jamesjacksonbooks.com

    https://www.tomtom.co.uk

     

    If you enjoy the podcast, would you please leave a short review on Apple Podcasts/iTunes, Spotify or Google Podcast App? It takes less than 60 seconds, and it really helps to spread the word

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    YouTube: BloodyViolentHistory

    https://www.instagram.com/bloodyviolenthistory/

    https://www.jamesjacksonbooks.com

    https://www.tomtom.co.uk

     

    If you enjoy the podcast, would you please leave a short review on Apple Podcasts/iTunes, Spotify or Google Podcast App? It takes less than 60 seconds, and it really helps to spread the word

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    See also:

    YouTube: BloodyViolentHistory

    https://www.instagram.com/bloodyviolenthistory/

    https://www.jamesjacksonbooks.com

    https://www.tomtom.co.uk

     

    If you enjoy the podcast, would you please leave a short review on Apple Podcasts/iTunes, Spotify or Google Podcast App? It takes less than 60 seconds, and it really helps to spread the word

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    Contagion part 1

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    Mankind has defeated all comers in the struggles we have had with the animal kingdom – no sabre-tooth tiger, crocodile or shark has been able to stall the Ascent of man … except perhaps our microscopic competitors; pathogens in the form of a virus, bacteria or God forbid, fungus.  Throughout our history these miniscule machines of death have destroyed huge numbers of people across the planet.  And we, humans, seem to positively encourage their many successes with our move to urbanisation, our migrations, our wars.  Pestilence and plague seem to follow our every geopolitical convulsion.  These crafty pathogens find any convenient vector to invade our fragile bodies – they are in the water we drink, the food we eat, the air we breath.

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    See also:

    YouTube: BloodyViolentHistory

    https://www.instagram.com/bloodyviolenthistory/

    https://www.jamesjacksonbooks.com

    https://www.tomtom.co.uk

     

    If you enjoy the podcast, would you please leave a short review on Apple Podcasts/iTunes, Spotify or Google Podcast App? It takes less than 60 seconds, and it really helps to spread the word

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    SHARE this podcast with a friend – do it now

    https://www.bloodyviolenthistory.com/episodes

    To be King, Queen, Pharaoh, Tsar or Emperor a person had to gain power over people, a person had to hold power over people and lastly that person had to pass that power onto their successor of choice.  

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    Even as young democracies emerged, kings, with their conviction upheld by Divine Right, would only reluctantly surrender the levers of power when a sharp blade is held to their throat.  How can monarchs gain, hold and pass on absolute power – have a listen to find out.

    so it goes,

    Tom Assheton and James Jackson

     

    See also:

    YouTube: BloodyViolentHistory

    https://www.instagram.com/bloodyviolenthistory/

    https://www.jamesjacksonbooks.com

    https://www.tomtom.co.uk

     

    If you enjoy the podcast, would you please leave a short review on Apple Podcasts/iTunes, Spotify or Google Podcast App? It takes less than 60 seconds, and it really helps to spread the word

    See https://simplecast.com/privacy/ for privacy information

    Royals in War part 1

    Royals in War part 1

    1.Setting the Scene  2. Classical World  3. Dark Ages.  Chapters 4 to 8 in the next episode

    Today’s episode is Bloody and Violent, but before we go any further, please 

    SHARE this podcast with a friend – do it now

     https://www.bloodyviolenthistory.com/episodes

    Thank you.  Many of you will recognise the opening quote from the fictional TV series A Song of Ice and Fire by George RR Martin.  It may be fiction but it doesn’t mean the sentiment isn’t true.  What Cersei said.  Before democracy, sovereigns ruled – often with absolute power over their court, their military, their subjects.  To be King, Queen, Pharaoh, Tsar or Emperor a person had to gain power over people, a person had to hold power over people and lastly that person had to pass that power onto their successor of choice.  

    ‘War should be the only study of a Prince.  He should consider peace only as breathing time, which gives him leisure to contrive, and furnishes as ability to execute, military plans’.  Yes Machiavelli; despite being tortured by a prince, was still clear headed enough to understand what a prince, a king, had to do to stay on top.  In peacetime a king can maintain his power with spectacles, tournaments and Royal progression across him realm – bread and circuses.  But when a challenge looms, war is not far behind.  The ruler must don his amour and lead his men to victory.  Or death.

    Even as young democracies emerged, kings, with their conviction upheld by Divine Right, would only reluctantly surrender the levers of power when a sharp blade is held to their throat.  How can monarchs gain, hold and pass on absolute power – have a listen to find out.

    so it goes,

    Tom Assheton and James Jackson

     

    See also:

    YouTube: BloodyViolentHistory

    https://www.instagram.com/bloodyviolenthistory/

    https://www.jamesjacksonbooks.com

    https://www.tomtom.co.uk

     

    If you enjoy the podcast, would you please leave a short review on Apple Podcasts/iTunes, Spotify or Google Podcast App? It takes less than 60 seconds, and it really helps to spread the word

    See https://simplecast.com/privacy/ for privacy information