Archaeologists discover shipwrecks belonging to real-life Pirates of the Caribbean: Once-in-a-lifetime moment

Apparently, dead men do tell lots of tales.Pirates of the Caribbean is more than just the title of a movie franchise.For the first time ever, archaeologists have discovered six shipwrecks potentially linked to the real-life buccaneers who inspired the blockbuster sword and sash film series.These historic hulls, discovered off Nassau in the Bahamas, contained guns, ammunition, planks and other pirate artifacts, National Geographic reported.“The Nassau hull shows all the signs of pirate mischief,”  Michael Pateman, who is the director of the Bahamas Maritime Museum in Grand Bahama, said in the statement, Livescience reported.Pateman and his team happened upon this pirate ship cemetery in 2025 while exploring the port city’s waters for wrecks from the Golden Age of Piracy.

During this halcyon era from the late 1600s to the early 1700s, maritime marauders plundered merchant and military vessels sailing the Caribbean, Indian Ocean and elsewhere, with their exploits forming the basis for “Treasure Island,” “Pirates of The Caribbean” and other iconic depictions of pirates in popular culture.Nassau was a haven for these high seas swashbucklers, housing over 1,000 pirates as its peak, including such big names as Blackbeard, Calico Jack Rackham, Henry Avery, and Anne Bonny.In 1718, New Providence governor reported seeing 40 shipwrecks sunk by pirates off the metropolis, but the were subsequently lost to Davey Jone’s Locker — until now.With the blessing of Bahaman cultural authorities, Pateman and his team dove Nassau’s shark-infested harbor, uncovering the aforementioned shipwreck sextet — including three with suspected ties to piracy.One might have been the sunken skeleton of the Fancy, a 46-gun frigate commandeered and captained in the 1690s by Henry Avery, according to the Smithsonian.This bloodthirsty sea raider notably pilfered over £600,000 worth of precious metals and jewels—worth approximately $150 million today—from a Mughal Empire flee...

Read More 
PaprClips
Disclaimer: This story is auto-aggregated by a computer program and has not been created or edited by PaprClips.
Publisher: New York Post

Recent Articles