Pirate Weapons and Distance
The type of pirate weapons used depended on when or if the surrender came:
!-Negotiations could happen quickly after a cannon's warning shot or a precise hit to break the main mast or bowsprit.
!!-It could involve getting a little closer and ruining sails, lobbing grenades, or picking off a few with muskets.
!!!-The bloodiest conflicts were the last-resort, close-contact, melees that came during and after boarding, when hell was unleashed with all sorts of items.

Medium- to Long-range Pirate Weapons
Reputation: the number one choice among pirate weapons to inspire fear, intimidation, and hopefully, surrender! A fierce reputation was a weapon without boundaries. Flying on the winds of conversation among captains and crews, merchants and mariners, it could circle the globe and practically force people to decide in advance to surrender, if ever they would meet up with anyone resembling its description.

Pirate flags were one of the best advertisements for reputation.

Cannons and Artillery: Cannons required four or more men apiece to load, aim, fire, and reposition. By 1700, many improvements for loading, aiming, accuracy, range and speed helped make these pirate weapons more formidable, and its blast of an iron ball 700-1000 yards still turned wooden ship parts into deadly splinter missiles and took down masts with rigging.

Several types of shot for 50-500 yards were mainly meant to disable the ship somehow:

Bombs- hollow iron balls filled with powder and topped with a fuse. The goal was explosion on impact, which was timed by the length of the fuse and when it was lit... an exact science, I'm sure. It could almost achieve the same distance as a standard cannonball, but when it arrived, it made a much prettier sound.
Bar Shot- big iron bars that would make large holes as it passed through any part of the ship. The lack of a predictable trajectory would dictate a much shorter range than a bomb or whatever.
Chain or Nipple Shot- pairs of small iron balls joined with chain or a small bar that would rotate through the air and mince any sails and rigging that they tangled with, but did little damage to decks or hulls- a good medium-range choice.
Medium- to Close-range Pirate Weapons
Stinkpots were small clay pots usually filled with burning sulfur (and sometimes plant gums and rotten fish!) that were thrown onto the deck. A crude form of tear gas, it was hoped the smoke and fumes would overwhelm the victims' desire to fight (or maybe they would vomit themselves into submission).

Hand grenades or grenades were named for the Spanish word for pomegranate, which they resembled. They could be small glass bottles or little pots made of clay, wood, or iron that were filled with black powder mixed with broken glass or scraps of iron and lit with a fuse. Good for shrapnel wounds and shock value.

Anti-personnel cannon rounds:
Bundle Shot - packs of short metal bars to make short work of a crew or passengers...hurts as bad as you think.
Grape shot - bunches of little cast iron balls wrapped in canvas or burlap that would make bunches of folks look like Swiss cheese at close range. Grape was often used with a boarding party or to resist one.
Canister or Case Shot - a box or cage or canister filled up with grape, bundle shot, or stones to get the fight over with.

Just anything- scrap iron, nails, spikes, and yes, when everything else is gone...gold coins! Can you imagine how many of the enemies were trying to catch this shot out of mid-air? Surgeons were said to have cut the coins out of the corpses! Definitely, the most expensive of pirate weapons ever....
Pirate Guns! Lots and Lots of Guns!:

Swivel Guns - These portable pirate weapons were like large rifles or small cannon that could be set in place in their sockets on the rail at whatever point the attackers were attempting to board. A blast of small cannonballs could certainly eliminate most or the entire first wave of intruders.
Muskets- The musket was valued for having more long-distance capacity than the blunderbuss or musketoon - something the Buccaneers valued when attacking the Spanish. Later versions (1800's) with rifled barrels proved a bit trickier to load. Its longer barrel and single-shot capacity were of no great disadvantage while on land raids; at sea, they were used in the early point of a boarding attempt and more often to pick off helmsmen and officers. It was no doubt a great challenge to have good marksmanship when both ships (and the target) were bobbing up and down with the waves.
The Blunderbuss - This muzzle loading 'thunder gun' was like a large shotgun with the firepower of a one-person cannon. The bore of around two inches fanned out to a goofy funnel shape at the end of the barrel, thought to help disperse the small pellets over a larger area. About half the length of a musket with a kick like a mule, this gun was literally fired from the hip or another part of the body that could handle the recoil. Its two principal uses were for boarding parties and personal defense.
The Musketoon... was very similar in operation to the blunderbuss mentioned earlier. It was much shorter than the musket but shared the same barrel shape- another close-range equalizer for boarding and general-purpose tail whooping.
A Flintlock Pistol was highly valued because of its size and maneuverability: a capable pirate weapon in boarding, close-quarters, and disputes in the tavern. A muzzle loading single shotgun was still time-consuming to use, but after firing, the butt end was good for pistol whipping. Flintlocks were often discarded when the fighting got brisk, when the main pirate weapon became the cutlass.


Multi-barreled pistols used varying arrangements of locks and triggers to fire the fixed or rotating barrels. These odd pirate weapons were in demand in spite of being bulky, costly to make, and often unpredictable in use.


Pocket Pistols - These forerunners of the Derringer were tiny muzzle loaded guns of convenience that were placed where they could be retrieved quickly and easily for a last-minute gut or face shot. They are the grandfather of what did in President Abraham Lincoln (besides the stupid doctors poking around in his brain with long probes).
Volley Guns - Whether in pistol or rifle form, these pirate weapons would fire their several barrels at once, forming a kind of dotted line that you were daring any boarders to cross. Remember, there is not a breech loading of these things, so the operator would need to ask for a time-out in the battle just to reload.
Close-range Pirate Weapons: cutlasses, knives, etc.-
The Cutlass is the weapon most associated with the pirates and was probably more common among them at times than even a flintlock pistol. Here is the one thing that would keep working after all the guns were discharged; a pistol took precious time for a reload, but another slash wound was just an arm swing away. With cutlasses being shorter than swords or sabers and having a broader, sturdier, curved blade, they were ideal for fighting in the close confines on or below deck.

They were believed to have evolved from the 'Boucan' hunting knife of the French Buccaneers, and the blades needed to be sturdy for the other tasks on the ship like cutting down doors, cutting lines, and dividing pieces of eight. Their handles offered some cushioning with leather wrapped on the bone or ivory stock. (There was also a straight type of cutlass called a short sword or a stabbing dagger.)

Daggers and Dirks, the smaller knives-
The Dagger was a small multi-purpose knife that was used at supper and slaughter as well. With a straight blade, it was for thrust and puncture, not slash and gash like the cutlass.
It is notable that the dagger always had a cross bar or hilt to keep the hand off the blade and swords off the hand. The hilt's most important function came into play during a cutlass fight, because it could 'catch' the strike of the blade. The user could deflect the blow, swiftly swing the cutlass to the side, and answer with a hard cutting motion of his own.
A Dirk was a particular type of small knife that was designed and used mostly for throwing. It is often depicted as being smaller than a dagger (compare to the Bowie knife or stiletto).
Scabbards- Many pirates being ex-navy men of one degree or another, they brought with them much of the training and expertise of their former occupation. Having clean weapons was ingrained in the pirate of average mettle, and scabbards for your knives were necessary.
Boarding Hooks were used with lines to pull ships closer, which were then lashed together for the boarding.


Other Pirate Weapons-
Boarding Axes, with a two or three-foot handle and a combination of sharp blade and blunt hammer side, were used to cut the ropes of boarding hooks, bring downs masts and rigging, and generally tear through anything like doors, hatches or locks. Even though they were a useful tool, their size and shape did not make them a very good pirate weapon (but someone would always prove to be the innovator).

The Marlinespike (or 'hand fid' if wood) held the Most Favored Pirate Weapon status among those with mutiny on their mind. These nifty picks made of steel, wood, or bone were essential in the various jobs involving ropes and lines, but somebody with crabs in their breeches would inevitably grab one and try to be mean about who's in charge, when do we get paid, and such.

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Patchwork Merchant Mercenaries had its humble beginnings as an idea of a few artisans and craftsmen who enjoy performing with live steel fighting. As well as a patchwork quilt tent canvas. Most had prior military experience hence the name.

 

Patchwork Merchant Mercenaries.

 

Vendertainers that brought many things to a show and are know for helping out where ever they can.

As well as being a place where the older hand made items could be found made by them and enjoyed by all.

We expanded over the years to become well known at what we do. Now we represent over 100 artisans and craftsman that are well known in their venues and some just starting out. Some of their works have been premiered in TV, stage and movies on a regular basis.

Specializing in Medieval, Goth , Stage Film, BDFSM and Practitioner.

Patchwork Merchant Mercenaries a Dept of, Ask For IT was started by artists and former military veterans, and sword fighters, representing over 100 artisans, one who made his living traveling from fair to festival vending medieval wares. The majority of his customers are re-enactors, SCAdians and the like, looking to build their kit with period clothing, feast gear, adornments, etc.

Likewise, it is typical for these history-lovers to peruse the tent (aka mobile store front) and, upon finding something that pleases the eye, ask "Is this period?"

A deceitful query!! This is not a yes or no question. One must have a damn good understanding of European history (at least) from the fall of Rome to the mid-1600's to properly answer. Taking into account, also, the culture in which the querent is dressed is vitally important. You see, though it may be well within medieval period, it would be strange to see a Viking wearing a Caftan...or is it?

After a festival's time of answering weighty questions such as these, I'd sleep like a log! Only a mad man could possibly remember the place and time for each piece of kitchen ware, weaponry, cloth, and chain within a span of 1,000 years!! Surely there must be an easier way, a place where he could post all this knowledge...

Traveling Within The World is meant to be such a place. A place for all of these artists to keep in touch and directly interact with their fellow geeks and re-enactment hobbyists, their clientele.

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