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January 10, 2018 08:57 am PST

Blackbeard's pirates liked to read novels

It turns out that 18th-century pirates liked to curl up a with a good book.

In 1718, Queen Anne's Revenge -- the flagship of the infamous pirate Blackbeard -- went aground offshore of North Carolina. The wreck was found in 1996, and last year conservators discovered a mass of wet textile pieces inside a breech-loading cannon. Several of the scraps were printed with uniformly-oriented text, and the conservators realized they'd found tiny fragments of a book.

But which book could it be?

After a lot of head-scratching, one clue finally helped them figure it out: The piece you see above, with the word "Hilo" in italics. It referred to Ilo, a Spanish settlement in Peru -- which is talked about in the 1712 tome A Voyage to the South Sea, and Round the World, Performd in the Years 1708, 1709, 1710 and 1711.

From National Geographic:

Stories about the plunder of Spanish holdings were popular in the 17th and 18th centuries, says Kenyon. "The English audiences were eating this up."When these printed accounts didn't match with the book fragments from Queen Anne's Revenge, the researchers looked to other stories of Pacific voyages that referenced the plunder of Ilo and eventually determined that their bits of paper came from pages 177, 178, and 183-188 of the 1712 first edition of Captain Edward Cooke's A Voyage to the South Sea, and Round the World, Performd in the Years 1708, 1709, 1710 and 1711.Cooke's book describes his experiences on an expedition made by two ships, Duke and Dutchess, led by Captain Woodes Rogers. Rogers also published an account of the voyage, and both books describe the rescue of Alexander Selkirk from an island on which he had been marooned for four years. That rescue became the inspiration for Daniel Defoes 1719 novel Robinson Crusoe.

The entire text of A Voyage to the South Sea is beautifully scanned at the Internet Archive, so you can spend tonight reading the same book Blackbeard's minions were perusing when they went to a watery grave.(Photos via the N.C. Department of Natural and Cultural Resources)


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