The Pirates of Malabar, and an Englishwoman in India Two Hundred Years Ago
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About This Book
The work combines a survey of maritime hazards with a close account of piracy on the Malabar coast and an Englishwoman's experiences in India two centuries earlier. It details the privations of long sea voyages—scurvy, scarce water, mutiny, and shipwreck—and the ubiquity of pirates from African shores to the Indian Ocean, contrasting buccaneer expeditions with single-ship freebooters who preyed on all nationalities. The narrative examines pirate methods, local complicity in ports, and a naval operation against a fortified pirate stronghold, while portraying the human and commercial costs borne by traders and seafaring communities.
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