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Fully
Assembled - Not a kit
Available
in white or black sails.
Black sailed model comes
with numbered
Certificate of
Authenticity
(only 250 to
be built). To choose the
Black sailed version,
check the black sailed
option before checkout
by
the price.
27"
long x 10" Wide x 25"
High (1:90 scale)
Amazing
details: planked deck with nail
holes, barrels, buckets,
cannon ball racks,
rudder chains, coiled
ropes, and more!
Meticulously
painted to that of an
actual Corsair Pirate
Ship
10
masterfully stitched,
thick canvass sails that
hold their shape and do
not wrinkle
Highest
quality parts used:
Metal anchors and brass
cannons
Advanced
rigging techniques with
over 100 blocks/deadeyes
Perfectly
taught rigging of
various colors and
thickness to ensure
authenticity Authentic
lifeboat with oars
and wrapped up
sail included
Built
with rare, high quality
woods such as cherry,
walnut, oak, birch and
maple.
The
model rests perfectly on
a large wood base
(marble pictured)
between four arched
metal dolphins.
To
build this ship,
extensive research was
done using various
sources such as museums,
drawings,
paintings and copies of
original plans.
Inspired
by Pirate Ship "Black
Pearl" in Pirates of the
Caribbean.
A Brief history of the
Pirate Ships.
Corsair Pirate Ship:
With its square-rigged
foremast and
fore-and-aft sails on
its main mast, the
brigantine was fast,
easy to maneuver and had
twice the cargo space of
a sloop. No wonder it
became the favorite
vessel of pirates of the
Caribbean. A typical
brigantine carried as
many as 100 pirates and
mounted enough cannon to
intimidate any possible
target.
Privateers:
Piracy in
the Caribbean came out
of the interplay of
larger international
trends and the use of
privateers was
especially popular. The
cost of maintaining a
fleet to defend the
colonies was beyond
national governments of
the 16th and 17th
centuries. Private
vessels would be
commissioned into a
'navy', paid with a
substantial share of
whatever they could
capture from enemy ships
and settlements, the
rest going to the crown.
These ships would
operate independently or
as a fleet and if
successful the rewards
could be great —this
substantial profit made
privatizing something of
a regular line of
business; wealthy
businessmen or nobles
would be quite willing
to finance this
legitimized piracy in
return for a share. The
sale of captured goods
was a boost to colonial
economies as well.
Buccaneers:
Specific
to the Caribbean were
pirates termed
buccaneers which arrived
in the 1630s. The
original buccaneers were
escapees from the
colonies; forced to
survive with little
support, they had to be
skilled at boat
construction, sailing,
and hunting. These
skills transferred well
into being a pirate.
They operated with the
partial support of the
non-Spanish colonies and
until the 1700s their
activities were legal,
or partially legal and
there were irregular
amnesties from all
nations.
Traditionally buccaneers
had a number of
peculiarities. Their
crews operated as a
democracy: the captain
was elected by the crew
and they could vote to
replace him. The captain
had to be a leader and a
fighter—in combat he was
expected to be fighting
with his men, not
directing operations
from a distance.
Spoils
were evenly divided into
shares; when the
officers had a greater
number of shares, it was
because they took
greater risks or had
special skills. Often
the crews would sail
without wages—"on
account"—and the spoils
would be built up over a
course of months before
being divided. There was
a strong esprit de
corps among pirates.
This allowed them to win
sea battles: they
typically outmanned
trade vessels by a large
ratio. There was also
for some time a social
insurance system,
guaranteeing money or
gold for battle wounds
at a worked-out scale.
In combat they were
considered ferocious and
were reputed to be
experts with flintlock
weapons, but these were
so unreliable that they
were not in widespread
military use before the
1670s.
The end of the classic
age of Piracy:
The decline of piracy in
the Caribbean paralleled
the decline of
mercenaries and the rise
of national armies in
Europe. Following the
end of the Thirty Years'
War national power
expanded. Armies were
codified and brought
under Royal control and
privatizing was largely
ended; the navies were
expanded and their
mission was stretched to
cover combating piracy.
The elimination of
piracy from European
waters expanded to the
Caribbean in the 1700s,
West Africa and North
America by the 1710s and
by the 1720s even the
Indian Ocean was a
difficult location for
pirates.
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