| *'''Michelle Rodriguez:''' ''It's Thursday, February 19th, 1688, off the coast of Ilavache, south of Saint-Domingue. Quartermaster Mathurin Desmarestz standing on the deck of the Santa Rosa, a Spanish 14-gun frigate. The sun is setting, the sky darkening, but the 70 sailors on board are living it up.<br><br>The rum is flowing and the sea shanties echo out into the darkness. The sailors on board are dancing, shouting and brandishing their swords to the heavens as one.<br><br>48 hours earlier, Mathurin Desmarestz and his travel companions were being held on an island by the French Navy. For these buccaneers who answered an omen, it was akin to being thrown in jail. Their only wish was to sail where the mood and the wind took them, always on a permanent quest for new spoils, and they could not accept being held back.<br><br>Today, though, they are free once more. The pirates made a successful getaway. Under the cover of dusky shadows, they boarded a vessel, weighed anchor and set off towards the south.<br><br>For the quartermaster Desmaretz, this would be the start of a pirating adventure that would take him across the world.<br><br>To celebrate the release of the new Skull and Bones video game, discover the stories of some of the most infamous pirates of the Indian Ocean. The cruel, bloodthirsty privateers, buccaneers and sailors turned criminals terrorized and pillaged the seas. Pirates were not born, they were made.<br><br>I'm Michelle Rodriguez, and you're listening to Gangsters of the Seas.<br><br>Some pirates are opportunists, others are born for it. Mathurin Desmaretz was the second kind of pirate, at home on the seven seas. He was a true outlaw, an insatiable bandit sailing from target to target.<br><br>His seafaring history is teeming with mystery and legend. All his crew knew about him was that he was born in France, somewhere on the Atlantic coast, probably around 1650. He must have been around 30 when he started making a name for himself.<br><br>At this time, Mathurin Desmaretz was set up on the French side of the island of Saint-Domingue, a former Spanish colony captured by the French a few decades earlier.<br><br>St. Domain and Tortuga Island to its north were well-known spots for privateers and buccaneers. Privateers work on commission, like sailors for hire, and remain within a given geographic area. Buccaneers, however, are not even really sailors.<br><br>They are hunters, pillagers. They sail on privateer vessels when needed for missions, but always come back to land afterwards. Privateers and buccaneers created a brotherhood with a system of rules and an honor code.<br><br>Under the self-styled name of the Brethren of the Coast, they were essentially based on Tortuga Island. Mathurin Desmarestz was one of them. In 1686, he boarded a ship captained by the privateer Lorenz de Graff.<br><br>This Dutch-born French captain was commissioned to hunt enemy ships. It was a win-win. Privateers took home some coin and France weakened its enemy's navies.<br><br>During the summer, Mathurin Desmaretz was involved in the boarding of a small Spanish frigate, the Santa Rosa, near Cartagena in Colombia. The French privateers stood strong in the face of cannon fire. They started boarding and reached the vessel.<br><br>The fighting was violent. Some privateers were killed. Others maimed.<br><br>Despite this, Desmaretz and his crew ultimately subdued the Spanish sailors. The captain took control of the Santa Rosa and set sail.<br><br>Although Lawrence de Graaff and his crew were adventurers sent on behalf of the governor of Saint-Domingue, they remained cruel, bloodthirsty pillagers at heart. As they were increasingly becoming a nuisance, the authorities eventually caught up with them. The governor ordered them to relocate to Ilavache.<br><br>This former pirate hangout south of the island of Hispaniola had become the garrison for the buccaneers and privateers brought to heel. Once here, they could take to the seas only if so ordered by the admiral governing the island. And they would not be able to attack other ships when doing so.<br><br>A few hundred buccaneers were stuck on the island. Mathurin Desmarestz himself, among them, wasn't planning to stick around. He wanted to be back at sea.<br><br>And in particular, he wanted to be free. At the start of 1688, the governor of St. Domaine was preparing to check on the privateers held on the island. And Desmaretz was setting up a crew of 70 men who refused to be held down.<br><br>With the support of Lorenz de Graff, the men boarded the Santa Rosa at dusk on February 18th, 1688. They raised anchor and set sail. Mathurin Desmaretz then became more than a simple buccaneer happy to do dirty work.<br><br>With Jean Charpeau, elected captain, Desmaretz was appointed quartermaster. He would therefore manage the navigation organization and the supplies for the ship. Desmaretz was the captain's right-hand man.<br><br>With the Isle of Vache behind them, the Santa Rosa and her crew set off for Roatan, an island off the coast of Honduras. They were on the hunt for the Spanish ships transporting the wealth of the colonies back to Europe.<br><br>Upon their arrival, they met Jean Fatton, another notorious privateer who had washed up there a few months earlier. They were members of the Brethren of the Coast. It was only natural, therefore, that they joined the Santa Rosa.<br><br>In October 1688, they were spotted in Newcastle, on the Delaware coast. They were coming to sell the cargo of the Dutch vessel captured a few months prior. Charpin was no longer captain of the Santa Rosa at this point.<br><br>He had been left along the American coast and replaced by Jean Faton. The new captain wanted a change of scenery, and so he suggested to his crew that they set off for Africa. The eastern waters were safer, as pirates like themselves were being permanently pursued in the Caribbean.<br><br>In March of 1689, after several long weeks at sea, the pirate ship finally spotted the islands of Cape Verde. The voyage was rough and took a toll on the ship. Mathurin Desmaretz did not have time to drop anchor, though, as he quickly realized that a nasty surprise was waiting for them.<br><br>They were boarded by a French military vessel commanded by Captain Jean Ducasse. Ducasse needed them for a mission he was conducting against the Dutch colony of Suriname in South America. He immediately requisitioned the pirate ship and her crew.<br><br>Their strive for freedom was once again out of their grasp. Although the captain allowed them to capture the Spanish ship en route, the expedition did not go as smoothly as planned. The French fleet was not even able to attack the Dutch territories.<br><br>A little later, after helping take back the island of St. Kitts, the pirate crew was finally able to break free from the clutches of Jean Ducasse.<br><br>They sailed to Martinique, where the quartermaster intended to leverage his network. Once there, the Count of Blenoc, the governor of Antille, provided his assistance. After all, they were friends and money had changed hands.<br><br>With the Count's support, Mathurin Desmarestz, bought his own ship, the Machine, a merchant vessel that could carry a crew of 120. Some months later, in June 1690, Desmaretz captured his first loot as captain. It all happened off the coast of Trinidad.<br><br>He had been following the Ballista, a towering Spanish ship for several days. The French captain decided the time was right for an attack. He fired a few warning shots and started circling the ship.<br><br>When they were close enough, the crew slung their grappling hooks and climbed aboard.<br><br>Once on board, the French crew didn't hold back. They ran across the main deck, yelling and waving their weapons as they went. Sword and dagger strikes rained down on their enemies and the deck was bathed in blood.<br><br>Mathurin Desmarestz ordered a search of all the decks, piece by piece. Once the final holdouts had been killed or thrown to the waves, the captain started the tally. He was not disappointed.<br><br>In the cargo hold, the pirates had found nearly 45 tons of cocoa, 3,000 flasks of Madeira wine, dozens of iron and steel chests and rolls of fine silk. The plentiful spoils would allow Desmaretz to start a new ambitious campaign. He left the helm of the machine to one of his crew members, the pirate Etienne de Montembeau, and took control of the Spanish vessel, which he renamed the Belle Estrelle.<br><br>In the summer of 1691, both pirate ships arrived in Montenegro. Desmaretz was not planning on hanging around, though. His protector, the Count of Belénac, had returned to France.<br><br>And Desmaretz knew that his successor would likely have him arrested. He stayed long enough to stock up on food and munitions and added 10 guns to his new ship. The machine and the Belle Estrelle sailed eastward to the African coast.<br><br>The captain ordered a first stop in the Azores in early 1692. This stop lasted longer than planned due to the unexpected series of easy loot. Ship after ship passed within range of his guns, all were attacked.<br><br>In a few short months, the pirates had captured a good seven Dutch and English ships. After this fruitful interlude, Desmaretz decided to follow the African coast line south. He knew that around the coast of Gambia, he could easily attack slave traders sailing to the Americas and the Caribbean colonies.<br><br>Their precious human cargo was worth its weight in gold.<br><br>However, the Bellis Trail was quickly spotted. In December 1692, an agent of the Royal African Company reported multiple attacks from the French pirate in a message sent to London. He described the bloodthirstiness of the crew and expressed the concerns of the trading companies working in the region.<br><br>But Demarest did not spend too long in Gambia either. He continued his path southward. An idea had been gnawing at him for months.<br><br>He wanted to reach the Indian Ocean and continue to the Red Sea. Throughout his travels, he had heard rumors of this new sea, a land of plenty for pirates. His head swirled with stories of exploits of the English pirates there.<br><br>He had heard tales of the Mughal vessels whose holds abounded with fantastic treasure, enough loot to keep the crew comfortable for several lifetimes. These stories were all Mathurin Desmarestz needed to weigh anchor.<br><br>At the end of their long voyage, the French pirate crew wasted no time upon their arrival in the Red Sea. Sailing from south to north, from Yemen to Surat, they attacked all Mughal and Arabian vessels whose paths they crossed. From small trading boats to armed navy ships, nothing would stop Mathurin Desmaretz.<br><br>The captain himself headed the boarding each time. He built a notorious name for himself over time. Stories of his sudden attacks, of bee-headed corpses, and the countless dead bodies thrown overboard struck terror into the hearts of the Indian sailors.<br><br>For more than two years, the crew of the Belle Astrale prowled the Red Sea. Mathurin Desmaretz didn't even bother sailing back down to Madagascar to spend some of his loot, finding supplies and provisions along the coast of Arabia and Africa. Slowly but surely, his hold became full of remarkable treasure.<br><br>However, Desmaretz kept playing with fire and putting himself at risk. During the boarding of a Mughal vessel that was much larger and better armed than the Belestrel, she took serious damage. Multiple cannon shots tore through the hull and the sails of the pirate frigate.<br><br>Captain Desmaretz was forced to retreat.<br><br>In September 1694, after several weeks at sea, he landed at the port of Rajapur in India. This area, halfway between Goa and Mumbai, was controlled by the English and their East India Company. They were not gracious hosts.<br><br>If they had recognized the captain of the Belestrel, they would have certainly been tempted to deliver him to the Magal emperor, whose ships had been under attack for months. But Desmaretz did not stick around. Rather than having his boat repaired there, he chose instead to purchase a grab, a small Indian boat.<br><br>This second vessel would allow him to save his crew and some of his loot if the Belestrel ended up sinking. With the good winds in his sails, Mathurin Desmaretz was able to make it to the small island of Mawali in the Comoros Archipelago. With its base surrounded by rays of sharp rocks, he would be able to keep curious vessels away and repair the Belestrel in peace.<br><br>Several weeks of work later, the pirate ship was finally ready to set sail once again. Laid in with treasures, Captain Desmaretz hoped to make a triumphant return to Martinique and enjoy his new fortune.<br><br>Unfortunately, his luck turned. As he was leaving the port of Mawali, a violent storm broke out.<br><br>Powerful gales battered the sails of the ship, pushing her dangerously close to the rocks. Despite his desperate maneuvers, Desmaretz was powerless. And the Belestrel broke up, sinking at the entrance to the bay.<br><br>The crew had just enough time to save a small portion of the treasure and weapons stored in the hold. Now, though, the sailors had to make it back to dry land.<br><br>Desmaretz had no choice but to send six of his men to the neighboring island of Nizhwani to purchase a new ship. This island had a lot more foot traffic though. The pirates were quickly spotted.<br><br>English pirate Henry Every, who had stopped on his way to the Indian Ocean, confiscated the gold they had on them. The six men were forced to explain what had happened to them, and to reveal the position of the rest of the crew. Some days later, Mathurin Desmaretz was able to make out the sails of Captain Every's towering ship on the horizon, as it made its way towards Mowali.<br><br>He took his crew and attempted to find refuge inland. Despite their efforts, Every ultimately captured 50 of his men, forcing them into his own crew. Only a handful of them evaded capture.<br><br>In 1697, Mathurin Desmaretz resurfaced on La Reunion, then called the Boubon Island. He had undertaken a difficult voyage on a small boat from the Comoros. With him were just a few sick and exhausted men.<br><br>The French pirate had lost everything, his treasure, his crew and his ship. He was only 44, but looked a good 15 years older. He was sick, weak and had lost an arm.<br><br>Given his pitiful state, he was granted amnesty by the governor of the island, who felt sorry for him and forgave his criminal past. Full of new hope, he married a 17-year-old Creole widow that year. At the wedding, he finally revealed his true identity.<br><br>He was really called Isaac Verrette. He was just an average Joe from Sainte, a small town in the Charent region of Western France. After a life adventuring on the high seas, he died just three years later.<br><br>As penniless as when he set out.<br><br>I'm Michelle Rodriguez and this has been an Ubisoft podcast produced by Paradiso Media. Thanks for listening.'' | | *'''Michelle Rodriguez:''' ''It's Thursday, February 19th, 1688, off the coast of Ilavache, south of Saint-Domingue. Quartermaster Mathurin Desmarestz standing on the deck of the Santa Rosa, a Spanish 14-gun frigate. The sun is setting, the sky darkening, but the 70 sailors on board are living it up.<br><br>The rum is flowing and the sea shanties echo out into the darkness. The sailors on board are dancing, shouting and brandishing their swords to the heavens as one.<br><br>48 hours earlier, Mathurin Desmarestz and his travel companions were being held on an island by the French Navy. For these buccaneers who answered an omen, it was akin to being thrown in jail. Their only wish was to sail where the mood and the wind took them, always on a permanent quest for new spoils, and they could not accept being held back.<br><br>Today, though, they are free once more. The pirates made a successful getaway. Under the cover of dusky shadows, they boarded a vessel, weighed anchor and set off towards the south.<br><br>For the quartermaster Desmaretz, this would be the start of a pirating adventure that would take him across the world.<br><br>To celebrate the release of the new Skull and Bones video game, discover the stories of some of the most infamous pirates of the Indian Ocean. The cruel, bloodthirsty privateers, buccaneers and sailors turned criminals terrorized and pillaged the seas. Pirates were not born, they were made.<br><br>I'm Michelle Rodriguez, and you're listening to Gangsters of the Seas.<br><br>Some pirates are opportunists, others are born for it. Mathurin Desmaretz was the second kind of pirate, at home on the seven seas. He was a true outlaw, an insatiable bandit sailing from target to target.<br><br>His seafaring history is teeming with mystery and legend. All his crew knew about him was that he was born in France, somewhere on the Atlantic coast, probably around 1650. He must have been around 30 when he started making a name for himself.<br><br>At this time, Mathurin Desmaretz was set up on the French side of the island of Saint-Domingue, a former Spanish colony captured by the French a few decades earlier.<br><br>St. Domain and Tortuga Island to its north were well-known spots for privateers and buccaneers. Privateers work on commission, like sailors for hire, and remain within a given geographic area. Buccaneers, however, are not even really sailors.<br><br>They are hunters, pillagers. They sail on privateer vessels when needed for missions, but always come back to land afterwards. Privateers and buccaneers created a brotherhood with a system of rules and an honor code.<br><br>Under the self-styled name of the Brethren of the Coast, they were essentially based on Tortuga Island. Mathurin Desmarestz was one of them. In 1686, he boarded a ship captained by the privateer Lorenz de Graff.<br><br>This Dutch-born French captain was commissioned to hunt enemy ships. It was a win-win. Privateers took home some coin and France weakened its enemy's navies.<br><br>During the summer, Mathurin Desmaretz was involved in the boarding of a small Spanish frigate, the Santa Rosa, near Cartagena in Colombia. The French privateers stood strong in the face of cannon fire. They started boarding and reached the vessel.<br><br>The fighting was violent. Some privateers were killed. Others maimed.<br><br>Despite this, Desmaretz and his crew ultimately subdued the Spanish sailors. The captain took control of the Santa Rosa and set sail.<br><br>Although Lawrence de Graaff and his crew were adventurers sent on behalf of the governor of Saint-Domingue, they remained cruel, bloodthirsty pillagers at heart. As they were increasingly becoming a nuisance, the authorities eventually caught up with them. The governor ordered them to relocate to Ilavache.<br><br>This former pirate hangout south of the island of Hispaniola had become the garrison for the buccaneers and privateers brought to heel. Once here, they could take to the seas only if so ordered by the admiral governing the island. And they would not be able to attack other ships when doing so.<br><br>A few hundred buccaneers were stuck on the island. Mathurin Desmarestz himself, among them, wasn't planning to stick around. He wanted to be back at sea.<br><br>And in particular, he wanted to be free. At the start of 1688, the governor of St. Domaine was preparing to check on the privateers held on the island. And Desmaretz was setting up a crew of 70 men who refused to be held down.<br><br>With the support of Lorenz de Graff, the men boarded the Santa Rosa at dusk on February 18th, 1688. They raised anchor and set sail. Mathurin Desmaretz then became more than a simple buccaneer happy to do dirty work.<br><br>With Jean Charpeau, elected captain, Desmaretz was appointed quartermaster. He would therefore manage the navigation organization and the supplies for the ship. Desmaretz was the captain's right-hand man.<br><br>With the Isle of Vache behind them, the Santa Rosa and her crew set off for Roatan, an island off the coast of Honduras. They were on the hunt for the Spanish ships transporting the wealth of the colonies back to Europe.<br><br>Upon their arrival, they met Jean Fatton, another notorious privateer who had washed up there a few months earlier. They were members of the Brethren of the Coast. It was only natural, therefore, that they joined the Santa Rosa.<br><br>In October 1688, they were spotted in Newcastle, on the Delaware coast. They were coming to sell the cargo of the Dutch vessel captured a few months prior. Charpin was no longer captain of the Santa Rosa at this point.<br><br>He had been left along the American coast and replaced by Jean Faton. The new captain wanted a change of scenery, and so he suggested to his crew that they set off for Africa. The eastern waters were safer, as pirates like themselves were being permanently pursued in the Caribbean.<br><br>In March of 1689, after several long weeks at sea, the pirate ship finally spotted the islands of Cape Verde. The voyage was rough and took a toll on the ship. Mathurin Desmaretz did not have time to drop anchor, though, as he quickly realized that a nasty surprise was waiting for them.<br><br>They were boarded by a French military vessel commanded by Captain Jean Ducasse. Ducasse needed them for a mission he was conducting against the Dutch colony of Suriname in South America. He immediately requisitioned the pirate ship and her crew.<br><br>Their strive for freedom was once again out of their grasp. Although the captain allowed them to capture the Spanish ship en route, the expedition did not go as smoothly as planned. The French fleet was not even able to attack the Dutch territories.<br><br>A little later, after helping take back the island of St. Kitts, the pirate crew was finally able to break free from the clutches of Jean Ducasse.<br><br>They sailed to Martinique, where the quartermaster intended to leverage his network. Once there, the Count of Blenoc, the governor of Antille, provided his assistance. After all, they were friends and money had changed hands.<br><br>With the Count's support, Mathurin Desmarestz, bought his own ship, the Machine, a merchant vessel that could carry a crew of 120. Some months later, in June 1690, Desmaretz captured his first loot as captain. It all happened off the coast of Trinidad.<br><br>He had been following the Ballista, a towering Spanish ship for several days. The French captain decided the time was right for an attack. He fired a few warning shots and started circling the ship.<br><br>When they were close enough, the crew slung their grappling hooks and climbed aboard.<br><br>Once on board, the French crew didn't hold back. They ran across the main deck, yelling and waving their weapons as they went. Sword and dagger strikes rained down on their enemies and the deck was bathed in blood.<br><br>Mathurin Desmarestz ordered a search of all the decks, piece by piece. Once the final holdouts had been killed or thrown to the waves, the captain started the tally. He was not disappointed.<br><br>In the cargo hold, the pirates had found nearly 45 tons of cocoa, 3,000 flasks of Madeira wine, dozens of iron and steel chests and rolls of fine silk. The plentiful spoils would allow Desmaretz to start a new ambitious campaign. He left the helm of the machine to one of his crew members, the pirate Etienne de Montembeau, and took control of the Spanish vessel, which he renamed the Belle Estrelle.<br><br>In the summer of 1691, both pirate ships arrived in Montenegro. Desmaretz was not planning on hanging around, though. His protector, the Count of Belénac, had returned to France.<br><br>And Desmaretz knew that his successor would likely have him arrested. He stayed long enough to stock up on food and munitions and added 10 guns to his new ship. The machine and the Belle Estrelle sailed eastward to the African coast.<br><br>The captain ordered a first stop in the Azores in early 1692. This stop lasted longer than planned due to the unexpected series of easy loot. Ship after ship passed within range of his guns, all were attacked.<br><br>In a few short months, the pirates had captured a good seven Dutch and English ships. After this fruitful interlude, Desmaretz decided to follow the African coast line south. He knew that around the coast of Gambia, he could easily attack slave traders sailing to the Americas and the Caribbean colonies.<br><br>Their precious human cargo was worth its weight in gold.<br><br>However, the Bellis Trail was quickly spotted. In December 1692, an agent of the Royal African Company reported multiple attacks from the French pirate in a message sent to London. He described the bloodthirstiness of the crew and expressed the concerns of the trading companies working in the region.<br><br>But Demarest did not spend too long in Gambia either. He continued his path southward. An idea had been gnawing at him for months.<br><br>He wanted to reach the Indian Ocean and continue to the Red Sea. Throughout his travels, he had heard rumors of this new sea, a land of plenty for pirates. His head swirled with stories of exploits of the English pirates there.<br><br>He had heard tales of the Mughal vessels whose holds abounded with fantastic treasure, enough loot to keep the crew comfortable for several lifetimes. These stories were all Mathurin Desmarestz needed to weigh anchor.<br><br>At the end of their long voyage, the French pirate crew wasted no time upon their arrival in the Red Sea. Sailing from south to north, from Yemen to Surat, they attacked all Mughal and Arabian vessels whose paths they crossed. From small trading boats to armed navy ships, nothing would stop Mathurin Desmaretz.<br><br>The captain himself headed the boarding each time. He built a notorious name for himself over time. Stories of his sudden attacks, of bee-headed corpses, and the countless dead bodies thrown overboard struck terror into the hearts of the Indian sailors.<br><br>For more than two years, the crew of the Belle Astrale prowled the Red Sea. Mathurin Desmaretz didn't even bother sailing back down to Madagascar to spend some of his loot, finding supplies and provisions along the coast of Arabia and Africa. Slowly but surely, his hold became full of remarkable treasure.<br><br>However, Desmaretz kept playing with fire and putting himself at risk. During the boarding of a Mughal vessel that was much larger and better armed than the Belestrel, she took serious damage. Multiple cannon shots tore through the hull and the sails of the pirate frigate.<br><br>Captain Desmaretz was forced to retreat.<br><br>In September 1694, after several weeks at sea, he landed at the port of Rajapur in India. This area, halfway between Goa and Mumbai, was controlled by the English and their East India Company. They were not gracious hosts.<br><br>If they had recognized the captain of the Belestrel, they would have certainly been tempted to deliver him to the Magal emperor, whose ships had been under attack for months. But Desmaretz did not stick around. Rather than having his boat repaired there, he chose instead to purchase a grab, a small Indian boat.<br><br>This second vessel would allow him to save his crew and some of his loot if the Belestrel ended up sinking. With the good winds in his sails, Mathurin Desmaretz was able to make it to the small island of Mawali in the Comoros Archipelago. With its base surrounded by rays of sharp rocks, he would be able to keep curious vessels away and repair the Belestrel in peace.<br><br>Several weeks of work later, the pirate ship was finally ready to set sail once again. Laid in with treasures, Captain Desmaretz hoped to make a triumphant return to Martinique and enjoy his new fortune.<br><br>Unfortunately, his luck turned. As he was leaving the port of Mawali, a violent storm broke out.<br><br>Powerful gales battered the sails of the ship, pushing her dangerously close to the rocks. Despite his desperate maneuvers, Desmaretz was powerless. And the Belestrel broke up, sinking at the entrance to the bay.<br><br>The crew had just enough time to save a small portion of the treasure and weapons stored in the hold. Now, though, the sailors had to make it back to dry land.<br><br>Desmaretz had no choice but to send six of his men to the neighboring island of Nizhwani to purchase a new ship. This island had a lot more foot traffic though. The pirates were quickly spotted.<br><br>English pirate Henry Every, who had stopped on his way to the Indian Ocean, confiscated the gold they had on them. The six men were forced to explain what had happened to them, and to reveal the position of the rest of the crew. Some days later, Mathurin Desmaretz was able to make out the sails of Captain Every's towering ship on the horizon, as it made its way towards Mowali.<br><br>He took his crew and attempted to find refuge inland. Despite their efforts, Every ultimately captured 50 of his men, forcing them into his own crew. Only a handful of them evaded capture.<br><br>In 1697, Mathurin Desmaretz resurfaced on La Reunion, then called the Boubon Island. He had undertaken a difficult voyage on a small boat from the Comoros. With him were just a few sick and exhausted men.<br><br>The French pirate had lost everything, his treasure, his crew and his ship. He was only 44, but looked a good 15 years older. He was sick, weak and had lost an arm.<br><br>Given his pitiful state, he was granted amnesty by the governor of the island, who felt sorry for him and forgave his criminal past. Full of new hope, he married a 17-year-old Creole widow that year. At the wedding, he finally revealed his true identity.<br><br>He was really called Isaac Verrette. He was just an average Joe from Sainte, a small town in the Charent region of Western France. After a life adventuring on the high seas, he died just three years later.<br><br>As penniless as when he set out.<br><br>I'm Michelle Rodriguez and this has been an Ubisoft podcast produced by Paradiso Media. Thanks for listening.'' |
| | *'''Michelle Rodrigues:''' ''It's September 5th, 1717, port of Nassau on the island of New Providence. Woods Rogers, a former privateer and newly appointed royal governor of the Bahamas, stands on a barrel. He holds a letter from George I, King of Great Britain and Ireland.<br><br>Hundreds of pirates are gathered before him, listening intently. They know his visit to the pirate haven isn't a social call. But contrary to all expectations, the new governor is there to propose a pact.<br><br>George I is offering the pirates his royal pardon. The only condition is that they stop their illegal activities. If they accept, they can remain free.<br><br>But if they refuse, they will be hunted down and killed without warning. The pirates have one year to get back in line. In the crowd, Edward England, a pirate popular with the community, makes an unexpected decision.<br><br>Despite having been a sailor in the merchant navy who almost unwillingly became a pirate, he chooses to refuse the king's pardon and instead decides to embrace a new life. After several weeks of preparation, he manages to put together a crew. He also finds a ship, a small sloop armed with several cannons.<br><br>The new captain sets sail in early 1718, heading east towards his pirate destiny.<br><br>To celebrate the release of the new Skull and Bones video game, discover the stories of some of the most infamous pirates of the Indian Ocean. The cruel, bloodthirsty privateers, buccaneers and sailors turned criminals terrorized and pillaged the seas. Pirates were not born, they were made.<br><br>I'm Michelle Rodriguez, and you're listening to Gangsters of the Seas.<br><br>Edward England was born in Ireland around 1685. Born into neither the gentry or the middle classes, he was just an ordinary man. When the war of the Spanish succession broke out, he was only 15 years old.<br><br>And like many young men, he became a privateer to fight the French ships on the Atlantic Ocean. The war lasted 13 years. Once peace was restored, Edward England was one of the thousands of privateers and buccaneers who found themselves without a job.<br><br>Because without a war to fight or a letter of mark from the Admiralty, attacking a ship was considered an act of piracy. Many of these English, French and Dutch men chose to continue preferring to become pirates rather than unemployed. It was the start of the golden age of piracy in the Caribbean.<br><br>Edward England kept on the straight and narrow. He didn't want to become a pirate and instead boarded a merchant ship as a simple sailor. Based in Jamaica, the ship he worked on was now a target for the hundreds of outlaws operating in the region.<br><br>While sailing between islands, his ship was attacked by Captain Winter. Some of the crew, including England, were forced to join the pirates. And without really knowing how, he found himself on the island of New Providence, the largest pirate haven in the Caribbean.<br><br>Known as the Republic of Pirates, it was a base where pirates could have their ships repaired and stock up on provisions and ammunition between expeditions. Renowned pirates were established there, including Captain Hornigold, the leader of the pirate community, Black Sam and the French pirate Olivier Lavasseur, nicknamed the Buzzard. These legendary pirates formed themselves into the flying gang.<br><br>Edward England soon made himself noticed. Brave and reckless, he was popular with the other pirates. Unlike the majority of the cruel and bloodthirsty men on this island, he stood out for being good-hearted and lenient with his victims.<br><br>For England, killing or torturing without a valid reason was out of the question. This character trait astonished his peers. But as England didn't say anything about their practices, they left him alone.<br><br>In 1716, he became a real pirate, joining the crew of Henry Jennings, a privateer turned pirate with experience operating in the Caribbean. With Jennings, England took part in an expedition off the coast of Florida. They went looking for a vast treasure lost by the Spaniards a few months earlier.<br><br>During this expedition, the pirates raided coastal villages looking for gold coins. They were terribly cruel to the villagers, killing men, raping women and burning their villages. Again, Edward England stood out from his peers, refusing to resort to such violence, which he considered unnecessary.<br><br>During their quest, the pirates managed to get their hands on 87,000 pounds in gold and silver coins, equivalent to nearly $18 million today. But Captain Jennings' Florida expedition made waves. The Kingdom of Spain complained to the English, and the king was forced to take action.<br><br>That was when Woods Rogers, the new governor of the Bahamas, offered the pirates of New Providence the king's pardon. Captain Jennings accepted and retired wealthy to an island plantation, as did Benjamin Hornigold. But Edward England refused to take this way out and embraced his new life as a pirate.<br><br>If he wanted to avoid being caught by the English ships hunting down pirates, he had to leave the Caribbean. So with the new crew of his small ship, he headed east to the African coast. He went to the mouth of the Gambia River to hunt for merchant ships involved in the triangular trade.<br><br>His first prey soon appeared on the horizon, the Cadigan, an English vessel captained by a man named Skinner. Several of England's men recognized Skinner when they climbed aboard the other ship and captured its crew. A dozen of them served under him during the War of the Spanish Succession.<br><br>And it's safe to say that he wasn't a very popular captain. After working without pay in difficult conditions under him, the pirates were thrilled to cross paths with their former captain.<br><br>One of the pirates said, Captain Skinner, it's you. I'm much in your debt and now I shall pay you in your own coin. The pirates tied the captain to the ship's deck and started throwing empty bottles at him.<br><br>But when some decided to take the torture a step further, Edward England intervened. He refused to allow his prisoners to be tortured. Instead, the pirate captain stepped forward with his gun, shot Skinner in the head, and then let the ship and the rest of the crew go.<br><br>1719 was the most prolific year of the pirate captain's career. Captured more than a dozen ships, each time without much effort and without losing many men. The ship's holds were stripped bare and then they were sunk, burned, or became part of Edward's small fleet.<br><br>He also chose a new ship from his prizes, the Pearl, a 34 cannon frigate, which he renamed the Royal James. After several months of action, the pirate's fleets were looking worse for wear. They had to stop for repairs.<br><br>So Edward England made port in a small town in the Gulf of Guinea. Over the several weeks it took to repair the vessels, the pirates made themselves comfortable. Looking for a good time, they grew increasingly belligerent.<br><br>And the tension went up a notch when they started raping the village's women. Male villagers weren't happy and became aggressive too. The situation escalated and mass fighting broke out on land.<br><br>Although some pirates were killed, the villagers were massacred. Before setting sail, the pirates made sure to burn down almost the entire village. After their departure, Captain England got his crew to vote on their next destination.<br><br>They had to stay away from the Caribbean and had already stripped the ships of the African Coast Bear. So naturally, they decided to head further east into the Indian Ocean. They'd heard talk of the pirate exploits of Thomas Too and Henry Every and wanted to help themselves to the treasures circulating on the eastern seas.<br><br>The Royal James and the pirate fleet rounded the Cape of Good Hope and entered the Mozambique Channel in early 1720. They planned to travel north to Madagascar.<br><br>When he arrived in the Comoros, to the northwest of Madagascar, Edward England had an improbable encounter. He discovered the remains of Olivier Levasseur's ship, shattered on the rocks. The French pirate and part of his crew were on the beach.<br><br>The captain was aware of the buzzard's reputation. An experienced pirate, Olivier Levasseur was a perfect ally. He came aboard and set sail with the English squadron to the Malabar coast of India, where they captured several ships.<br><br>They targeted merchant ships owned by the Mughal Empire and the Maratha Confederacy, but also attacked European ships, even the most heavily armed ones. When they spotted a Dutch warship off the Indian coast, the pirates didn't hesitate for a moment. The Dutch crew could do nothing in the face of these men on a rampage.<br><br>As their 34 cannon ship was much larger and more powerful than his ship, Edward England naturally decided to have it for himself. He named it Fancy, in honor of legendary Captain Henry Every. In the late summer of 1720, the pirates spotted a promising convoy not far from the Comoros.<br><br>Through their spyglass, they could see two English ships and a ship owned by the East India Company. The vessels were equipped for fighting, but their holds were potentially filled with treasure. With the three ships in his pirate fleet, Edward England set sail for new targets.<br><br>But when they saw the black flag, two of the ships sailed off, managing to escape. The Cassandra, the East India Company ship, was now facing the pirates alone. Its captain, James McCray, was in the area to hunt down pirate ships, and he wasn't going to go down without a fight.<br><br>He had seen the pirate ships heading for him, so the first shots fired came from both sides. But England had the advantage. His fleet had over 60 cannons, and he was looking to make his gunpowder do the talking.<br><br>A rain of cannonballs fell on the Cassandra. On board, Captain McCray went all in. He performed a series of maneuvers to avoid the deluge of fire.<br><br>He even managed to respawn. Several of his cannons hit the fancy, leaving the ship's hull in a pitiful state. Nevertheless, the pirates launched a boarding party.<br><br>The Cassandra's crew witnessed their ship overrun by a wave of savages. Despite being prepared, they couldn't believe their eyes. No fighter was spared.<br><br>Anyone who didn't surrender had their throats cut or were thrown overboard. Scores of men lost their lives, but the pirate crew was also severely weakened as the English sailors managed to aim true. Bullets and swords flew.<br><br>Gradually, the bodies of pirates and East Indian men became a stockpile on the Cassandra's deck.<br><br>After over five hours of unusually violent fighting, the pirates managed to gain the upper hand. Seeing the number of bodies, Captain McCray and some of his men realized that the battle was lost. But that didn't mean that they would surrender.<br><br>In desperation, they climbed aboard makeshift rafts or dove into the water and swam away. They reached a beach on Anjuan and hid in the jungle. McCray and his men holed up in the dense forest for several days, but they were wounded, hungry and thirsty.<br><br>When they couldn't continue a day longer, the East India Company captain decided to surrender to Edward England. They returned to the Cassandra aboard a small boat, presenting themselves to the pirates with their hands in the air. McCray and the English sailors were in luck.<br><br>The pirate captain stuck to his guns, loyal to his principles. He wouldn't kill his enemies without a reason. But he still had to convince his men.<br><br>His crew was ready to attack the prisoners. John Taylor, England's former quartermaster and now captain of his own ship in the fleet, wanted to make an example of them. He planned to torture and kill them.<br><br>Edward England used a novel strategy to convince Taylor to agree with him. He knew he wouldn't be able to calm him down sober, so he made the solution simple, convince Taylor with alcohol. The captain invited Taylor to his cabin and then encouraged him to drink himself senseless.<br><br>The ruse paid off. Two hours later, staggering and slurring his words, John Taylor announced he agreed with his captain. James McCray was allowed to leave alive.<br><br>Although he had to give England the Cassandra, McCray got what was left of the Fancy and the pirates sailed away. By some miracle, Captain McCray managed to return to India aboard the wreck of the Fancy. Once there, he wasted no time in sharing his tale with the authorities.<br><br>In a letter to the king, he told of the abuses committed by the pirates, the severed limbs, decapitated bodies and everything that remained, all lying on the deck of his ship. The news spread like wildfire. Edward England and his pirate fleet became marked men.<br><br>A few weeks later, when he boarded an English ship, Edward England learned that he was being hunted. His crew were furious and blamed him for his leniency with McCray. If the captain had killed them, they wouldn't be the target of all the ships in the East India Company.<br><br>John Taylor proposed a vote to remove the captain from his post, and unsurprisingly, Edward England was forced to relinquish command of the Cassandra. Worse still, he was marooned on a beach on the island of Mauritius with three other sailors. They were put ashore with provisions for just a few days, abandoned to their fate, and indirectly condemned to death.<br><br>But Mauritius had plenty of resources. The four men hunted and fished for food. The island had also at one time been used by the Dutch, and the men used the abandoned remains of their houses to build a small boat.<br><br>Against all odds, they survived and managed to set sail. Four months after being marooned on their desert island, the sailors arrived in St. Augustine's Bay, Madagascar. Edward England had lost everything.<br><br>He no longer had a ship or any treasure. He had lost a limb and was unable to join a crew. The former pirate with the glorious past drowned his sorrows.<br><br>Instead of scouring the seas, he scoured taverns, living off the charity of the inhabitants of the pirate haven. But destiny caught up with him. In 1721, Edward England died of a tropical disease, destitute and in complete anonymity.<br><br>I'm Michelle Rodriguez and this has been an Ubisoft podcast produced by Paradiso Media. Thanks for listening.'' |