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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › BlackbeardBlackbeard - Wikipedia

    Edward Teach (or Thatch; c. 1680 – 22 November 1718), better known as Blackbeard, was an English pirate who operated around the West Indies and the eastern coast of Britain's North American colonies.

  2. Nov 21, 2018 · The death of Blackbeard is one of the most famous events in the history of piracy. Not surprisingly, the exact way in which he was killed is the subject of debate.

  3. May 27, 2024 · Blackbeard (born c. 1680, Bristol?, England—died November 22, 1718, Ocracoke Island, North Carolina [U.S.]) was one of historys most famous pirates, who became an imposing figure in American folklore.

  4. Learn about Blackbeard's fragmented past, including the story of how the Queen Anne's Revenge, formerly a slave ship, came into the pirate's possession.

  5. Nov 20, 2018 · Captain Edward Teach, better known as Blackbeard, a bloodthirsty pirate who had control of the Caribbean Sea in from 1716-1718. The raid against Blackbeard lacked legal authority.

  6. Aug 19, 2021 · Blackbeard (d. 1718), otherwise known as Edward Teach (probably an assumed name), was an infamous English pirate who operated in the Caribbean and Atlantic during a surprisingly short career lasting just 15 months.

  7. Edward Teach, once an ordinary sailor on a weather-beaten privateer ship, was on the cusp of an extraordinary metamorphosis. Against a backdrop of pounding waves and volatile winds, Teach stood on the edge of an unforgiving world, ready to reinvent himself as the infamous pirate, Blackbeard.

  8. Date of Death: November 22, 1718. The name Blackbeard is synonymous with pirating in the eighteenth century. Born Edward Teach (or possibly Thatch), he served England as a privateer in Queen Anne’s War until turning to piracy at war’s end in 1713.

  9. Nov 10, 2021 · On 22 November 1718, Edward Teach, a man better known as Blackbeard, was killed in a fight with Royal Marines on the deck of his ship, Queen Anne’s Revenge. One of the most notorious pirates in history, his severed head was brought back to the governor of Virginia in order to gain a substantial bounty. The period in North America from 1689 to ...

  10. One of the most infamous examples was a man known by two pseudonyms – “Edward Teach” and “Blackbeard”. We don’t precisely know where or when he was born, but he likely served as a privateer in Queen Anne’s War before turning to piracy.

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