Women in piracy

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File:鄭一嫂.jpg
Zheng Yi Sao (1775–1844; right) as depicted in 1836

Template:Women in society sidebar Although the majority of pirates in history have been men,Template:Sfn there are around a hundred known examples of female pirates,Template:SfnTemplate:Efn about forty of whom were active in the Golden Age of Piracy.Template:Sfn Some women have been pirate captains and some have commanded entire pirate fleets. Among the most powerful pirate women were figures such as Zheng Yi Sao (1775–1844) and Huang Bamei (1906–1982), both of whom led tens of thousands of pirates.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn

In addition to the few that were pirates themselves, women have also historically been more heavily involved in piracy through secondary roles, interacting with pirates through being smugglers, lenders of money, purchasers of stolen goods, tavern keepers and prostitutes, and through having been family members of both pirates and victims.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Some women also married pirates and turned their homes or establishments into piratical safe havens.Template:Sfn Through women in these secondary roles, pirates were strongly supported by the agency of women.Template:Sfn Some influential women, including monarchs such as Elizabeth I of England (Template:Reign), have also acted as powerful patrons of pirates.Template:Sfn Although they have received little academic attention, women still occupy these important secondary roles in contemporary piracy. Piracy off the coast of Somalia is for instance supported to a large extent by on-shore women who participate in transportation, housing and recruitment.Template:Sfn

Seafaring in general has historically been a highly masculine-gendered activity.Template:Sfn Women who became pirates at times disguised themselves as men in order to do so since they were otherwise rarely allowed on pirate ships. On many ships in the Golden Age of Piracy, women were prohibited by the ship's contract (required to be signed by all crew members) due to being seen as bad luck and due to fears that the male crew members would fight over the women. Many famous female pirates, such as Anne Bonny (disappeared after 28 November 1720) and Mary Read (died April 1721), accordingly dressed and acted as men.Template:Sfn Since the gender of many pirate women was only exposed after they were caught, it is possible that there were more women in piracy than is otherwise indicated by surviving sources.Template:Sfn

In addition to historical female pirates, women in piracy have also frequently appeared in legends and folklore. The earliest legendary female pirate is perhaps Atalanta of Greek mythology, who according to legend joined the Argonauts in the years before the Trojan War.Template:Sfn Scandinavian folklore and mythology, though the tales themselves are unverified, includes numerous female warriors (shield-maidens) who command ships and fleets.Template:Sfn Female pirates have had varying roles in modern fiction, often reflecting cultural norms and traditions. Beginning in the 20th century, fictional pirate women have sometimes been romanticized as symbols of female liberty.Template:Sfn

List of named female pirates

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  Disputed historicity or legendary figure

Ancient pirates

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Name Lifespan Active Culture Notes
Dido
a.k.a. Elissa
~800 BC Phoenician The legendary founder of Carthage.Template:Sfn Sometimes considered a pirate since her legend involves her leading a sea expedition,Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn raids,Template:Sfn and the kidnapping of a large group of women.Template:Sfn
Tchiao Kuo-fu-jaTemplate:Sfn
a.k.a. Ch’iao K’uo Fü Jên
~600 BC Chinese Legendary Chinese pirate who appears in a legend wherein she and her crew liberate a captive young woman named P’ao.Template:Sfn
Queen Artemisia I of Caria 480 BC Greek Queen of the city-state of Halicarnassus. The earliest historical female pirate, Artemisia captained a fighting shipTemplate:Sfn and led the most famous pirate fleet in the Mediterranean.Template:Sfn She participated in the second Persian invasion of Greece (480–479 BC), fighting alongside Xerxes I of the Achaemenid Empire.Template:Sfn
Queen Teuta of the Ardiaei 231–228 BC Illyrian Queen regent of the Ardiaei tribe, active in the Adriatic Sea. Sanctioned a number of pirate attacks against the Roman Republic and fought against the Romans in the First Illyrian War (229–228 BC).Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn

Vendel and Viking Age

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Name Lifespan Active Culture Notes
Princess Sela c.Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". 420Template:Sfn Norwegian Appears in the Gesta Danorum.Template:SfnTemplate:Efn Sister of the Norwegian king Koller, with whom she quarreled, and led her own raids both in sea and land. Killed by the Jutish king-turned-pirate Aurvandill after she attempted to avenge her brother.Template:Sfn
Alf and Alfhild
a.k.a. Alvid; Altilda; Atwilda; Alvilda
c.Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". 550Template:Sfn Geatish Appears in the Gesta Danorum.Template:Efn Her story is akin to a fairy tale and she consequently appears to be a mythical figure.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Daughter of the Geatish king Synardus. Turned to piracy to escape an enforced marriage and led an all-female pirate crew. Eventually tracked down and defeated by her intended spouse, whereafter she married him on account of his prowess in battle.Template:Sfn
Groe c.Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". 550Template:Sfn Geatish Appears in the Gesta Danorum.Template:Efn One of the women accompanying Afhild.Template:Sfn
Stikla 8th century? Norwegian Appears in the Gesta Danorum.Template:SfnTemplate:Efn Shield-maiden and pirateTemplate:Sfn who alongside her sister Rusila fought against the Norwegian ruler Olov for control of his kingdom.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Defeated and killed by Olov's forces who were aided by the Danish king Harald Wartooth.Template:Sfn
Rusila 8th century? Norwegian Appears in the Gesta Danorum.Template:Efn Sister of Stikla, fought with her against Olov and Harald.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn
Veborg c.Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". 770Template:Sfn Danish Briefly mentioned in the Gesta Danorum.Template:Efn Longship captain who was killed in battle.Template:Sfn Participated in the legendary Battle of Brávellir.Template:Sfn
Hetha c.Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". 770Template:Sfn Danish Briefly mentioned in the Gesta Danorum.Template:Efn Longship captain who became the ruler of Zealand.Template:Sfn Participated in the legendary Battle of Brávellir.Template:Sfn
Wisna c.Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". 770Template:Sfn Danish Briefly mentioned in the Gesta Danorum.Template:Efn Longship captain who became a standard-bearer and lost her right hand in battle.Template:Sfn Participated in the legendary Battle of Brávellir.Template:Sfn
Rusla, "Red Daughter" 8th/9th century? Norwegian Appears in the Gesta Danorum.Template:Efn Sometimes conflated with Rusila but appears to be a distinct figure.Template:Sfn Sister of the Norwegian ruler Tesondus, who had been deposed by the Danish king Omundus. Angered at the Danish conquest and her brother being content with it, she fought against both but was ultimately defeated.Template:Sfn
Lagertha 9th century Norwegian Appears in the Gesta Danorum.Template:Efn Viking shield-maiden who accompanied and later married the legendary hero and king Ragnar Lodbrok.Template:Sfn

Medieval and Renaissance pirates

Name Lifespan Active Culture Notes
Æthelflæd, Lady of the Mercians c.Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". 870–918 911 Anglo-Saxon Ruler of Mercia. Became a military leader after her husband's death in battle against the Danes in 911. Took command of the fleets to rid the seas of the Viking raiders. Sometimes referred to as a pirate.Template:Sfn
Joanna of Flanders, "the Flame"
a.k.a. Joanna of Montfort
c.Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". 1295–1374 1341–1347 French / Breton Duchess of Brittany by marriage to John of Montfort. Famous and admired in Brittany for her skills as a warrior and military leader. Fought alongside her troops against the French in the War of the Breton Succession (1341–1365), at points commanding great fleets in naval battles. Sometimes referred to as a pirate.Template:Sfn
Jeanne de Clisson, "Lioness of Brittany"
a.k.a. Jeanne de Belleville
1300–1359 1343–1350s French / Breton French/Breton noblewoman. Turned to piracy to avenge her husband Olivier IV de Clisson. who was executed as a traitor during the War of the Breton Succession. Purchased three ships, which she commanded, and attacked French ships off the coast of Normandy. Ended her pirate career after she remarried to the English knight Walter Bentley in the 1350s.Template:Sfn
Elise Eskilsdotter d. 1483 1455–1470s Norwegian Norwegian noblewoman who turned to piracy to avenge her husband Olav Nilsson. Attacked ships in the seas near Bergen.Template:Sfn
Grace O'Malley
a.k.a. Gráinne Ní Mháille, Granuaile
c.Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". 1530–1603 16th century Irish Daughter of a local chieftain in Connacht. Her family ran both a legitimate shipping business and a piracy business. Inherited her father's lands (Umhaill), becoming a powerful Irish ruler. With her three ships and two hundred men, O'Malley plundered ships both from England and from other parts of Ireland. She became so prolific that Queen Elizabeth I put a bounty on her head and considered sending the royal fleet against her. Captured by the English in 1577 but released in a hostage exchange and continued to engage in piracy. Entered into English service as a privateer in 1593.Template:Sfn
Sayyida al Hurra 1485–1561 1515–1542 Moroccan Ruler of the western coasts of Morocco for over thirty years and a powerful Barbary corsair, operating out of Tétouan. Allied with the Ottoman corsair Oruç Reis, who operated out of Algiers. Raided Christian ships from Spain, regaining wealth her family had lost during the expulsions of Muslims from Spain. Much of the wealth was used to revive Tétouan. Earned the title al-Hurra (the free woman) and later married Ahmed el Outassi, Sultan of Morocco. Wishing to retain her political influence, she forced Outassi to travel to Tétouan for the wedding, the only time in Moroccan history a royal wedding was not held in the capital.Template:Sfn
Mary Wolverston, Lady Killigrew
a.k.a. Elizabeth Killigrew; Old Lady Killigrew
Template:Floruit 1525–1587 16th century English Daughter of the pirate Philip Wolverston, who educated her in piracy in her youth.Template:Sfn Married into the Cornish Killigrew family, owners of Arwenack. Among other businesses, the Killigrews ran a criminal enterprise of seizing ships, hiding stolen goods, and bribing officials to look the other way.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Wolverston was actively involved in the family's piracy. In 1582, she led crews on her own pirate attacks against a SpanishTemplate:SfnTemplate:SfnTemplate:Sfn and then a German ship.Template:Sfn Wolverston was thereafter imprisoned and sentenced to death by Queen Elizabeth I but was ultimately pardoned.Template:SfnTemplate:SfnTemplate:Sfn
Dorothy Monk, Lady Killigrew 16th century English Daughter-in-law of Mary Wolverston. Also charged with having engaged in piracy.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn
Elizabetha Patrickson Template:Floruit 1634 17th century English Raided English ships alongside her husband William. Indicted on piracy, robbery, and murder charges on 10 March 1634 in an English court. She was tortured into a confession and later hanged.Template:Sfn

Golden Age of Piracy

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Name Lifespan Active Culture Notes
Charlotte de Berry 1636–? 17th century English Reportedly kidnapped and forced to go to sea, whereafter she organized a mutiny, took control of the ship and began a pirate career of her own.Template:Sfn She is likely fictional since her earliest known mention in a literary work dates to 1836.Template:Sfn
Jacquotte Delahaye Template:Floruit 1656 Mid-17th century Haitian or Spanish Legendary pirate whose story differs between accounts, sometimes said to have been motivated by revenge and other times said to have wished to earn wealth to support her family. Supposedly rose to command a hundred pirates. Depending on the account said to have either continuously dressed as a man or to have taken a male alias after faking her death. Likely fictional as she first appears only in accounts written significantly later than her purported lifespan.Template:Sfn
Christina Anna Skytte 1643–1677 1657–1668 Swedish A baroness who is said to in 1657 have joined her brother Gustav Skytte, who secretly owned a pirate ship. Together they assaulted ships in the Baltic Sea. Fled the country to escape the authorities in 1663 but returned and retired from piracy in 1668. Her role in the piracy is somewhat disputed since the relevant court documents (which confirm the piracy of her brother and fiancé) do not explicitly mention her.Template:Sfn
Neel Cuyper
a.k.a. Cornelia; Nellie Cowper; Santa Rubia
c.Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". 1655–1695 Late 17th century Dutch Served on Dutch merchant ships masquerading as a man. Captured by pirates who recruited her on account of her experience. After some time with the pirates, Cuyper was discovered to be a woman, whereafter she was disembarked together with her share of the loot at Tortuga. Later founded a resort for pirates at Labadee in Haiti, eventually becoming known as the "Queen of Labadee Bay". Killed

during a 1695 raid by English and Spanish forces.Template:Sfn

Mrs. Beare Template:Floruit 1684–1689 Late 17th century English or Jamaican Full name unknown. Wife of the pirate John Phillip Beare, Mrs. Beare, originally from Jamaica. She joined him on pirate voyages, frequently donning men's clothing. She is described as a woman with a promiscuous reputation.Template:Sfn
Anne Dieu-le-Veut 1661–1710 Late 17th century French According to legends the wife of the Dutch pirate Laurens de Graaf, whom she is said to have accompanied on pirate raids. Her legend conflicts with known historical information on Laurens de Graaf's life;Template:Sfn although documentary evidence confirms her as a real person, she only married de Graaf after he is believed to have left his pirate life behind him.Template:Sfn
Ingela Gathenhielm 1692–1729 1711–1721 Swedish Married the shipowner and privateer Lars Gathenhielm, who also operated a pirate business. Ingela was deeply involved in her husband's business and took charge of it after Lars died in 1718.Template:Sfn
Maria Lindsey 1740s–1760s English Prostitute who married the pirate Eric Cobham.Template:Sfn Thought to have been insane, she joined Cobham and they assembled a pirate crew together. They conducted pirate attacks together in New England and Newfoundland; Cobham's memoirs portray Lindsey as ruthless in how she dealt with captives.Template:Sfn
Anne Bonny
a.k.a. Ann Fulford
1720 English Primarily known through Captain Charles Johnson's 1724 book A General History of the Pyrates;Template:Sfn though much of her story is of uncertain veracity, contemporary records confirm her existence and that she was convicted for piracy.Template:Sfn According to limited documentation, Bonny joined the pirate John Rackham (pirate)Template:Sfn in 1720.Template:Sfn Also part of Rackham's crew was another female pirate, Mary Read. Captured and convicted in late 1720 but escaped execution through claiming to be pregnant, whereafter her further fate is unknown.Template:Sfn
Mary Read 1720 English Primarily known through Captain Charles Johnson's 1724 book A General History of the Pyrates;Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn though much of her story is of uncertain veracity, contemporary records confirm her existence and that she was convicted for piracy.Template:Sfn According to Johnson's story, she turned to piracy after a ship she was on was captured by pirates. Joined the crew of John "Calico Jack" Rackham in 1720,Template:Sfn of which Anne Bonny was also part.Template:Sfn Captured and convicted in late 1720 but escaped execution through claiming to be pregnant. Died in prison around April 1721, perhaps related to childbirth complications.Template:Sfn
Martha Farley
a.k.a. Mary Farley; Mary Harvey; Mary Farlee
Template:Floruit 1726 Early 18th century English? Tried for piracy in Virginia alongside three men in 1726; whereas all men were executed, Farley was spared by the court.Template:Sfn Though Farley does not appear to have taken an active militant role alongside the men, she was present during at least one capture of a ship and is thought to have aided in eavesdropping on the conversations of the prisoners.Template:Sfn
Mary Critchett
a.k.a. Mary Crickett; Mary Crichett
d. 1729 Early 18th century English Tried for piracy in Virginia alongside a crew of five men in 1729 and executed.Template:Sfn Critchett and the others had been felons who escaped and stole a ship in the Rappahannock River before making their way into the Chesapeake Bay, where they captured another ship.Template:Sfn
Martha Herring Template:Floruit 1714–1735 1714–1715 English? Daughter of a captain killed in 1714 a mutiny by her lover Sandy Gordon, who turned to piracy. Herring continued to follow Gordon aboard the Flying Scot. Gordon was killed in 1715 and Herring then stayed behind on the island on which the two were married.Template:Sfn
Flora Burn Template:Floruit 1741 18th century American She served as one of the 35 sailors aboard the American privateer ship, HMS Revenge, during the year 1741. The ship was operating on the eastern coast of North America. She held a one-and-three-quarter share of the bounty within the crew.[1][2]

18th–19th centuries

Name Lifespan Active Culture Notes
Sarah Bishop c.Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". 1759 - c.Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". 1809 1778–1780 American Bishop was captured by a British privateer ship during a raiding party in 1778 and became a crew member. Her duties included standing watch, handling the ship's wheel, and performing sexual services. She became the captain's wife, and after two years in captivity, managed to escape by going overboard. Later, she became a hermit in Ridgefield, Connecticut.Template:Sfn[3]
Rachel Wall c.Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". 1760–1789 1781–1782/1789 American One of the most notorious American pirates and perhaps the earliest female pirate to be born in America itself.Template:Sfn Partook in the capture and plunder of several ships in 1781–1782 through luring them with false distress. Sole survivor after her ship came under attack and thereafter ostensibly retired from piracy. Alleged to have continued to rob ships during the night. Imprisoned and then hanged in 1789 after she assaulted a woman and stole her bonnet.Template:Sfn
Zheng Yi Sao
a.k.a. Ching Shih; Cheng I Sao
1775–1844 1801–1810 Chinese Wife of the pirate Zheng Yi.Template:Sfn Participated in his piracy from the time of their marriage in 1801 onwards.Template:Sfn After her husband's death in 1807, she took command of his powerful Red Flag Fleet and dominated the South China Sea both militarily and politically. Enforced various pirate codes, including making the rape of female captives punishable by death.Template:Sfn At the height of her power in 1805 she commanded 400 junks and between 40,000 and 60,000 pirates.Template:Sfn After facing significant opposition from government authorities as well as major powers such as the East India Company and the Portuguese Empire she surrendered in 1810 and was allowed to retire in peace.Template:Sfn
Jossabee Template:Floruit 1804 Early 19th century Algerian Mentioned by the French author H. Mesnik in his book Les femmes pirates (1804), wherein he claimed to have lived with her for a time.Template:Sfn
Margaret Jordan
a.k.a. Margaret Croke
Template:Floruit 1809 Early 19th century Irish Wife of the pirate Edward Jordan. Tried for piracy and murder following a violent dispute with investors over the schooner The Three Sisters. Found innocent and released by the court so that she could care for her children.Template:Sfn Despite this it is almost certain that she assisted her husband in his piracy, and thus was a pirate herself.Template:Sfn
Lucia Allen
a.k.a. Lucie; Lucille; Señora del Norte
Template:Floruit 1821 Early 19th century American Friend and perhaps mistress of the pirate captain Pierre Lafitte. Recorded to have accompanied Lafitte on a pirate voyage and raid in the summer of 1821. May have died in childbirth in November that year.Template:Sfn
Johanna Hård
a.k.a. Johanna Jungberg
1789–1851 1823 Swedish In popular remembrance considered the last Swedish pirate. Lived on Vrångö Island and was the widow of a bookkeeper.Template:Sfn Lived by smuggling and running a speakeasy. Accused of piracy in 1823, Hård was found not guilty and the veracity of the accusation remains unknown.Template:Sfn
Ng Akew
a.k.a. Aku
Template:Floruit 1849 19th century Chinese Part of the crew of an American gunpowder and opium-trader ship Ruparell,Template:Sfn having been purchased as a slave by its captain James Bridges Endicott.Template:Sfn Known for a series of events in 1849 when she personally smuggled opiumTemplate:Sfn and acted as the representative of a pirate fleet to negotiate with Captain Lockyer of the British navy ship HMS Medea.Template:Sfn
Eliza Welsh 1806–after 1871 Middle 19th century Spanish Lived with a Captain Graham aboard HMS Devonshire who became a pirate. Welsh accompanied him and partook in his piracies. Captured by the British navy, whereafter Graham was hanged in London and Welsh was placed in a prison camp in Tasmania, where she spent twenty years.Template:Sfn
Sadie Farrell, "Sadie the Goat" Template:Floruit 1869Template:Sfn 1850s–1869s Irish AmericanTemplate:Sfn River pirate who led the Charlton Street Gang in the rivers surrounding New York City, raiding ships, villages and small towns and flying a Jolly Roger flag.Template:Sfn She earned her nickname before becoming a pirate; it derived from her strategy to headbutt people in the stomach, whereafter one of her male companions would rob the now grounded victim.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn

20th century

Name Lifespan Active Culture Notes
Lo Hon-cho
a.k.a. Lo Honcho
1921–1922 Chinese Took charge of a pirate fleet after her husband’s death in 1921,Template:Sfn probably in her mid-20s. Earned a ruthless reputation through her attacks in the region surrounding Beihai. Commanded 64 junks at the height of her power. Captured by the Chinese military in October 1922.Template:Sfn
Lai Choi San
a.k.a. Lai Sho Sz’en
Template:Floruit 1931–1939 1920s–1930s Chinese Active in the South China Sea and the East China Sea, commanded 12 junks. Her historicity, or at least the historicity of her exploits, are disputed since she is mainly known from the report I Sailed with Pirates (1931) by Aleko Lilius, a journalist of dubious repute. She appears to have been a real figure since she is also mentioned in a later report by a war journalist during the Sino-Japanese War.Template:Sfn
Tan Chin Chiao, "Golden Grace"
a.k.a. T'ang Ch'ên Ch'iao
Template:Floruit 1935 Early 20th century Chinese Also called the "Queen of the Pirates". Commanded several pirate ships, arrested in Daya Bay in 1935.Template:Sfn Recorded as having proclaimed herself the "mortal enemy of the West".Template:Sfn
P’en Ch’ih Ch’iko Template:Floruit 1936 Early 20th century Chinese Commanded over a hundred pirates in 1936.Template:Sfn
Ki Ming
a.k.a. King Mi; Ching Mi
Early 20th century Chinese Attacked and tried to seize the RMS Empress of Canada in Manila, aided by a gang of her crewmembers hidden among the steerage passengers.Template:Sfn
Huang Bamei, "Two Guns"
a.k.a. Huang P’ei-mei; Huang P'emei
1906–1982 1931–1951 Chinese Active along the coasts of the Zhejiang and Jiangsu provinces in the 1930s. Her gang, among other local criminal gangs, was recruited by the National Revolutionary Army of the Republic of China at the outbreak of the Second Sino-Japanese War in 1937, although she was of dubious allegiance.Template:Sfn Huang's fleet grew considerably during the war; at her height she commanded 50,000 pirates and 70 ships.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn After the war she returned to piracy, raiding around Lake Tai. Recruited by the military again in 1949 to fight in the Chinese Civil War. Largely retired from maritime activities in 1951.Template:Sfn
Sister Ping 1949–2014 1970s–1990s Chinese Operated out of Guangzhou as an owner and financer of pirate ships in the South China Sea. Also known for smuggling Chinese immigrants into the United States and Europe. Was convicted in the United States and sentenced to 35 years in prison.Template:Sfn
Linda 20th century Filipino Full name unknown. Pirate responsible for several raids along the Philippine coasts,Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn encountered by the French sailor Frances Guillain.Template:Sfn
Susan Frani 1990s Filipino Member of the pirate crew of Emilio Changco, with whom she had an intimate relationship. Perhaps the sole female member of the crew.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn The Changco crew operated in the 1980s and 1990s and hijacked numerous ships in Philippine waters.Template:Sfn

Pirate women in fiction

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File:Peters, Jean (Anne of the Indies) 01.jpg
Jean Peters as the fictional pirate Anne Providence in Anne of the Indies (1951)

Historical fictional depictions of pirate women have often reflected stereotypes of their times concerning not only women but also women in power.Template:Sfn Depictions of female pirates in A General History of the Pyrates (1724) for instance showcase a degree of unease.Template:Sfn Illustrations in a Dutch 1725 edition of the book depict female pirates as unpleasant and bare-chested, trampling on figures representing justice and commerce.Template:Sfn Pirate fiction grew increasingly popular in the mid-18th century and among the many tales written were novels starring female pirates.Template:Sfn Several such narratives with women pirates and warriors were often highly formulaic, with the women going to sea or war in order to either win or regain the affection of a man.Template:Sfn Some tales saw female pirates exceeding their male counterparts in courage, skill and virtue.Template:Sfn Some works, such as Fanny Campbell, the Female Pirate Captain (1844), included great adventures but also ended with the central woman finding a man and settling down, perhaps an attempt to not conflict too much with traditional notions of femininity.Template:Sfn

In the 20th century, fictional pirate women sometimes became symbols of feminism and female liberty; whereas male pirates were often used to tell stories of escape from wage slavery, female pirates illustrated escape from gender subordination.Template:Sfn Such romanticization of pirates, whether male or female, is not grounded in history since pirates were typically violent criminals, thieves and murderers.Template:Sfn An early work in this tradition is F. Tennyson Jesse's Moonraker (1927), wherein the pirate captain Lovel is revealed to be a woman with strong ideals on female liberty.Template:Sfn Still, there also continued to be stories wherein women were seduced by pirates, such as the 1944 film Frenchman's Creek, and films wherein female pirates seduced men, such as Anne of the Indies (1951).Template:Sfn Anne Providence, the main character of Anne of the Indies, was the first famous female pirate in film.Template:Sfn

The female pirate is sometimes cast as a feminist, or even an anarchist, icon.Template:Sfn Ulrike Ottinger's 1978 film Template:Ill is about several women from different career backgrounds joining the pirate crew of "Madame X" above the Chinese ship OrlandoTemplate:Sfn and was inspired by the Chinese pirate women of the early 20th century.Template:Sfn Among the various messages of the film were a critique of patriarchal and hierarchical power structures.Template:Sfn Disney's Pirates of the Caribbean film series includes several female pirates,Template:Sfn most notably Elizabeth Swann. Although Swann is included in some stereotypical scenes and begins as the Governor's daughter and a damsel in distress, she is turned into a courageous pirate and heroine over the course of the film series.Template:Sfn Swann and Anamaria are depicted in Pirates of the Caribbean as cross-dressing, recalling real historical pirate women who did the same.Template:Sfn The fourth film introduced Angelica, a former love interest of Jack Sparrow and the daughter of Edward Teach / Blackbeard, who grows up at a Spanish convent until she learned the art of the con from Sparrow, and corrupted her as she grows up to be an accomplished sailor and a dangerous pirate.[4][5][6]

See also

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Notes

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References

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  1. Jameson, J. F. (Ed.). (1923). Privateering and Piracy in the Colonial Period: Illustrative Documents. New York: The Macmillan Company. (pp. 395-378).
  2. Stanley, J. (1996). Bold in Her Breeches: Women Pirates Across the Ages (p. 143). London; San Francisco: Pandora.
  3. De Pauw, Linda Grant. (1982). Seafaring Women. Boston: Houghton Mifflin, pp. 60-61.
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Bibliography

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  • Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  • Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  • Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  • Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  • Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  • Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  • Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  • Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  • Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".

Script error: No such module "Navbox".