
A thrilling, meticulously researched account of history’s most daring privateers.

A thrilling, meticulously researched account of history’s most daring privateers.
From the thirteenth to the nineteenth century, merchant ships sailed in constant fear of privateers — heavily armed, privately owned vessels licensed to capture enemy ships and claim their cargo.
But who were these audacious men who risked everything in pursuit of fortune on the high seas? And what truly separated privateering from buccaneering and outright piracy?
In this riveting history, Donald Macintyre charts the golden age of privateering — from its Elizabethan origins, through the daring exploits of British and French buccaneers against Spanish treasure ships, to its eventual outlawing and brief revival during the American Civil War.
Meet legendary figures like Sir Henry Morgan, Jean Bart, Fortunatus Wright, and Robert Surcouf, and follow their adventures from the stormy waters of the Caribbean to the Indian Ocean. Macintyre vividly reveals the relentless pursuit of prizes and how these maritime raiders shaped naval strategy — including the convoy system, which Macintyre himself would later use against German U-boats in World War II.