Blackbeard's Sunken Prize: The 300-Year Voyage of Queen Anne's Revenge


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Description

In 1717, the notorious pirate Blackbeard captured a French slaving vessel off the coast of Martinique and made it his flagship, renaming it Queen Anne's Revenge. Over the next six months, the heavily armed ship and its crew captured all manner of riches from merchant ships sailing the Caribbean to the Carolinas. But in June 1718, with British authorities closing in, Blackbeard reportedly ran Queen Anne's Revenge aground just off the coast of what is now North Carolina's Fort Macon State Park. What went down with the ship remained hidden for centuries, as the legend of Blackbeard continued to swell in the public's imagination. When divers finally discovered the wreck in 1996, it was immediately heralded as a major find in both maritime archaeology and the history of piracy in the Atlantic. Now the story of Queen Anne's Revenge and its fearsome captain is revealed in full detail.

Having played vital roles in the shipwreck's recovery and interpretation, Mark U. Wilde-Ramsing and Linda F. Carnes-McNaughton vividly reveal in words and images the ship's first use as a French privateer and slave ship, its capture and use by Blackbeard's armada, the circumstances of its sinking, and all that can be known about life as an eighteenth-century pirate based on a wealth of artifacts now raised from the ocean floor.



Author: Mark U. Wilde-Ramsing, Linda F. Carnes-McNaughton
Publisher: University of North Carolina Press
Published: 06/11/2018
Pages: 224
Binding Type: Paperback
Weight: 1.50lbs
Size: 10.20h x 8.70w x 0.40d
ISBN13: 9781469640525
ISBN10: 146964052X
BISAC Categories:
- History | Maritime History & Piracy
- Transportation | Ships & Shipbuilding | History
- Social Science | Archaeology

About the Author
Mark U. Wilde-Ramsing is the former deputy state archaeologist (underwater) of North Carolina and past director of the Queen Anne's Revenge Shipwreck Project. Linda F. Carnes-McNaughton is the current program archaeologist and curator at Fort Bragg's Cultural Resources Management Program.