Examining the Past: A History Podcast
This episode covers the period after the South Sea raids. Traditional buccaneering declined as European powers increasingly sought to suppress piracy, though wars repeatedly delayed enforcement and allowed piracy to persist in new forms. In the late 17th century, shifting bases in places like the Bahamas, French Hispaniola, and British North America sustained multinational pirate activity, culminating in major raids such as Veracruz (1683) and Cartagena (1697), even as official tolerance steadily eroded. By the early 18th century, piracy briefly revived through privateering during the War of the Spanish Succession, but a coordinated international crackdown—especially by the English Royal Navy—ultimately ended the buccaneer era and ushered pirates into history and legend.
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