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When most people think of pirates,
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they imagine hulking, fearsome men
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with names like Blackbeard or Long John Silver.
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Although the vast majority of pirates
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throughout history have been male,
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One of the most famous and feared pirates
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who ever lived was
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Ching Shih --
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a young Cantonese woman who became the ruler
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of one the largest pirate fleets in history,
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and the mastermind behind
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a floating criminal empire so powerful,
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that even the Chinese military couldn't stop it.
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We don't know much about her early life,
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except that at one point,
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she worked at a brothel in Canton.
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In 1801, Ching Shih married a pirate commander
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named Ching I,
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and soon ruled by his side
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as he expanded his empire,
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unifying countless small, scattered crews of pirates
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into an organized
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and increasingly powerful coalition.
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When her husband died suddenly in 1807,
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Ching Shih knew exactly what to do.
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She stepped in to claim the leadership for herself,
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taking control of somewhere between
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40,000 and 60,000 pirates.
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Their acceptance of a woman as their commander
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remains a remarkable testament to both
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her political skill and the respect
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she must have earned from the crew.
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She soon appointed her adopted son,
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Chang Pao,
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as the commander of her most powerful fleet
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and eventually married him.
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It was a little creepy,
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but the two became a formidable team
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whose raids were feared through
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the South China Sea.
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We don't know exactly what Ching looked like,
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although some historians have assumed
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she caught the eye of her pirate husband
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through good looks rather than `
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her considerable intelligence.
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While there are many flamboyant but dubious
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accounts invented by Western writers of a
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gorgeous goddess,
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wielding swords and wearing glittering battle gear
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covered in golden dragons,
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more reliable texts describe Ching Shih
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as a good military strategist,
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a strict disciplinarian,
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and an excellent businesswoman.
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Although she rejected many traditional ideas
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about what women could and couldn't do,
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other rules were extremely important:
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namely, those enforced on her ships.
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With the help of a code of conduct
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drawn up by Ching Pao,
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she helped establish clear rules for the behavior,
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finances, and power structure of the fleet --
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As well as the draconian punishment that awaited
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anyone who dared to disobey or cheat her.
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Her rule was unquestionably harsh:
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not only for the victims of her raids,
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but for anyone in the fleet who dared
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to step out of line.
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All plunder had to be registered,
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with 80% of the loot paid into a general fund.
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Somewhat ironically,
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stealing from the fund
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was one of the worst crimes a pirate could commit,
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and the punishment was death.
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As one observer noted,
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Ching Shih's strict and often lethal reaction
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to misbehavior kept the crew very honest.
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And the pirates under her command
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took great care to behave themselves well.
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Through careful and ruthless management,
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Ching Shih made the bloody and chaotic work
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of piracy into a highly organized business.
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And business was good --
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making her a very wealthy woman.
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And, of course,
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like so many male leaders,
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conquerors, and generals
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throughout history,
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her prosperity and success
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came at the cost of innocent lives.
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Her remarkable story is a reminder that,
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regardless of the limitations placed on them,
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women can be anything that men can be:
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brilliant and brutal,
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courageous and cruel,
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powerful and dreadful.
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The Chinese government devoted
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considerable effort to crushing the pirates,
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but, thanks in large part to
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Ching Shih's strategic skill,
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her fleets became so powerful
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that the government eventually stopped
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trying to destroy them,
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and started trying to negotiate with them instead.
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Ching Shih knew that piracy was not
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a wise long term career --
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especially when the most common
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retirement plan was death.
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So, in 1810,
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she stepped off a boat,
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surrounded by the wives and children
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of her pirates
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and walked completely unarmed into the office
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of the local Governor General
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to discuss amnesty.
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With a fearsome floating army at her back,
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Ching Shih negotiated a very good deal.
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Not only was she and any other pirates
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who surrendered completely pardoned
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by the government for their many, many crimes;
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they got to keep their all ill-gotten plunder
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and even received jobs from the government
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if they wanted.
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Her husband was appointed a lieutenant
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in the Chinese navy,
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where he commanded a private fleet --
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made up of former pirates, of course.
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Thanks to her exceptional cunning and bravery,
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Ching Shih ended her life of piracy,
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not as a criminal behind bars,
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or the casualty of a raid gone wrong;
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but rather, by gathering her riches,
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and retiring in comfort as a law-abiding citizen.
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Well, mostly law-abiding.
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She spent her later years running
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a gambling establishment back in Canton,
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where she reportedly led a peaceful life,
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or at least, as peaceful as she could manage
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while presiding over a notorious gambling den.
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When she finally died in 1844,
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at 60 years old,
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she had transformed herself
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from a relatively powerless young woman
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into both the most powerful female pirate in history
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and into something almost as rare:
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a pirate who died from old age.