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Flag of Richard Worley

$44.18 $75.11
Description of the Product As the Wars of Religion ended around 1650, European countries resumed the development of their colonial empires. There was money to be made—or stolen—and much of it traveled by ship. After the War of the Spanish Succession in 1714, thousands of Anglo-American sailors were relieved of military duty. A large number of trained idle sailors at a time when the cross-Atlantic colonial shipping trade was beginning to boom meant they turned en masse to piracy. The merchant shippers used this surplus of sailors to drive wages down and created unsavory conditions on board the vessels. Living conditions were so poor that many sailors began to prefer a freer existence as a pirate. . 17th and 18th century colonial governors usually required privateers to fly a specific version of the British flag to distinguish them from naval vessels. After the privateers had turned to piracy, they still used these red and black flags, but now they decorated them with their own designs, and the pirate flag was born. Pirates did not fly the Jolly Roger (a generic term for any pirate flag design) at all times. Only when the pirates' intended victim was within range, the Jolly Roger would be raised, often simultaneously with a warning shot. The flag was probably intended as communication of the pirates' identity, giving target ships an opportunity to surrender without a fight. If a ship decided to resist, the Jolly Roger was taken down and a red flag was flown, indicating that the pirates intended to take the ship by force and without mercy. It was important for a prey ship to know that its assailants were pirates, as privateer or government vessels had to abide by a rule that if a crew resisted, but then surrendered, it could not be executed. Flying a Jolly Roger was a reliable way of proving oneself a pirate. Just possessing a Jolly Roger was considered proof that one was a criminal pirate rather than something more legitimate; only a pirate would dare fly the Jolly Roger, as he was already under threat of execution. The flag of Richard Worley is a variation of the Death's Head, or scull and bones, similar to one that many other pirates used as well. Richard Worley was active as a pirate around 1718 on the east coast of the American colonies and the Bahamas. Flag is double sided with metal grommets Size: 93 cm x 150 cm For indoor/outdoor use Material: Polyester
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