Life Aboard a British Privateer in the Time of Queen Anne: A First-Person Sea Journal of Privateering, Naval Warfare, and Survival Under Queen Anne
Synopsis
Life Aboard a British Privateer in the Time of Queen Anne offers a vivid account of maritime warfare, commerce, and endurance during the War of the Spanish Succession. Drawing on the plain-spoken precision of the early eighteenth-century voyage narrative, the book combines logbook detail with moments of dramatic immediacy: storms, prize-taking, discipline, disease, and the fragile economy of survival at sea. Its literary context belongs to the age of Defoe and Dampier, when factual travel writing helped shape the English prose of adventure and empire. Woodes Rogers was not merely an observer but a participant in the world he describes. A Bristol mariner and privateer, he commanded the Duke and Duchess on a circumnavigation that famously rescued Alexander Selkirk, later associated with Robinson Crusoe. His practical experience, commercial ambitions, and exposure to imperial conflict inform the book's attention to command, profit, risk, and Providence. This is a rewarding volume for readers interested in naval history, early modern travel writing, or the realities behind romantic images of privateering. It illuminates the hard structures of life at sea while preserving the excitement of an expanding world.
Publisher information
- Publisher: Good Press
- ISBN: 9788027290895
- Dimensions: 229 x 152 x 4 mm
- Weight: 114g
- Languages: English
