Sir Francis Drake: The Queen's Pirate

Author:   Harry Kelsey
Publisher:   Yale University Press
ISBN:  

9780300071825


Pages:   584
Publication Date:   11 August 1998
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   Out of stock   Availability explained


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Sir Francis Drake: The Queen's Pirate


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Overview

In this biography, Harry Kelsey seeks to shatter the familiar image of Sir Francis Drake. The Drake of legend was a pious, brave and just seaman who initiated the move to make England a great naval power and whose acts of piracy against his countries enemies earned him a knighthood for patriotism. Kelsey paints a different picture of Drake as an amoral privateer at least as interested in lining his pockets with Spanish booty as in forwarding the political goals of his country, a man who became a captain general of the English navy but never waged traditional warfare with any success. Drawing on much new evidence, Kelsey describes Drake's early life as the son of a poor family in 16th-century England. He explains how Drake dabbled in piracy, gained modest success as a merchant, and then took advantage of the hostility between Spain and England to embark on a series of pirate raids on undefended Spanish ships and ports, preempting Spanish demands for punishment by sharing much of his booty with the Queen and her councillors. Elizabeth I liked Drake because he was a charming rogue, and she made him an integral part of her war plans against Spain and its armada, but she quickly learned not to trust him with an important command: he was unable to handle a large fleet; was suspicious almost to the point of paranoia and had no understanding of personal loyalty. For Drake, the mark of success was to amass great wealth - preferably by taking if from someone else - and the primary purpose of warfare was to afford him the opportunity to accomplish this.

Full Product Details

Author:   Harry Kelsey
Publisher:   Yale University Press
Imprint:   Yale University Press
Dimensions:   Width: 16.50cm , Height: 4.10cm , Length: 24.00cm
Weight:   0.990kg
ISBN:  

9780300071825


ISBN 10:   0300071825
Pages:   584
Publication Date:   11 August 1998
Audience:   College/higher education ,  Professional and scholarly ,  Undergraduate ,  Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Out of Print
Availability:   Out of stock   Availability explained

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Reviews

A scholarly debut exposing the celebrated 16th-century English seaman, explorer, and early favorite of Queen Elizabeth's for what be truly was: a ruthless pirate, a greedy robber-merchant, and a religious bigot and hypocrite who posed as a devout Christian. Kelsey (History/Univ. of California, Riverside) spent years exploring the great libraries of Europe and the US, only to discover that this hero of the English Renaissance was really not a very nice guy. A poor youth, Drake learned piracy from John Hawkins and his family, and he rose in the world largely on the strength of his reputation as a merciless raider of poorly defended Spanish merchant ships. He was also well known as a disloyal friend who abandoned comrades under fire, executed a close friend on flimsy evidence, deprived relatives of payment and inheritances, profited from the slave trade, and supported the earl of Essex's bloody pacification of Ireland. He lived most of his life off the spoils of his one great achievement, a three-year circumnavigation of the world. Kelsey shows how Drake transformed piracy into an act of patriotism by currying favor - and sharing booty - with the queen and her nobles in exchange for a title. During the religious wars with Spain, Drake plundered and destroyed churches, monasteries, and convents and killed clergy in Spanish settlements. Poorly educated, crude, profane, and ambitious to amass great wealth by taking it from others, Drake was actually a poor warrior, and Kelsey maintains that he usually performed badly in massed combat actions. After he disappeared during the great naval battle with the Spanish Armada, he was never given high command again and finally lost favor with Elizabeth. Kelsey's enormous research range and great detailing of Drake's life restore reality and truth to the history of the times. A great achievement in the fields of biography and history. (Kirkus Reviews)


In this iconoclastic biography of one of the most romantic figures of the Elizabethan age, American scholar Kelsey shatters many of our fondly held beliefs about Drake. It turns out that he was not a loyal, brave and pious servant of the crown after all, but instead a greedy, self-serving, paranoid and ineffectual leader of men whom the Queen never really trusted. Kelsey follows his career from humble Tavistock lad to profit-loving pirate, merchant and naval captain, consistently arguing that Drake was always more privateer than patriot. This is a convincing picture, well-grounded in the evidence, and one which sheds valuable light on the world of Elizabethan politics and patronage as well as the swashbuckling life at sea. (Kirkus UK)


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