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The most successful pirate of all time - Dian Murray

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    At the height of their power,
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    infamous Caribbean pirates like Blackbeard
    and Henry Morgan
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    commanded as many as ten ships
    and several hundred men.
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    But their stories pale next to the most
    successful pirate of all time.
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    Madame Zheng commanded 1800 vessels,
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    made enemies of several empires,
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    and still lived to old age.
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    Madame Zheng began her life as a commoner
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    working on one of the many
    floating brothels, or flower boats,
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    in the port city of Guangzhou.
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    By 1801, she had attracted
    the of attention
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    of a local pirate captain named Zheng Yi,
    and the two soon married.
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    Guangzhou’s fishermen had long engaged
    in small-scale piracy
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    to supplement their meager incomes
    in the off-season.
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    But a successful peasant uprising in
    neighboring Vietnam
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    at the end of the 18th century
    had raised the stakes.
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    The victorious Tây Sơn rebels
    had unified their country
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    only to face a Chinese invasion
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    and ongoing maritime battles with the
    Vietnamese rulers they had overthrown.
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    So they commissioned Guangzhou’s pirates
    to raid the coast
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    and join the fight against their enemies.
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    Serving their Vietnamese patrons
    turned the Zhengs and other pirates
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    from ragtag gangs aboard single vessels
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    into professional privateer fleets
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    with dozens of ships
    able to hold their own at sea.
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    In 1802, the Tây Sơn were overthrown
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    and the pirates lost
    their safe harbor in Vietnam.
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    But instead of scattering,
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    the Zhengs met the crisis by uniting
    the rival Cantonese pirate groups
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    into a formidable alliance.
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    At its height, the confederation
    included 70,000 sailors
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    with 800 large junks
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    and nearly 1,000 smaller vessels.
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    Those were organized into six fleets
    marked by different colored flags.
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    The Zhengs were unlike many other
    historically known privateers
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    such as Henry Morgan or Barbarossa,
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    who acted on behalf
    of various naval powers.
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    Instead, the Zhengs were now true outlaws,
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    operating without support or approval
    from any government.
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    Zheng Yi met an untimely end in 1807,
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    but his widow didn’t hesitate
    to secure their gains.
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    Through skillful diplomacy,
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    Madame Zheng took
    charge of the confederation,
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    convincing the captains that their best
    interests lay in continued collaboration.
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    Meanwhile, she appointed Zhang Bao,
    the young protege of her late husband,
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    as the commander of her most
    powerful squadron, the Red Flag Fleet.
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    Zhang became not only her right-hand man,
    but her lover and, soon, her new husband.
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    Madame Zheng consolidated her
    power through strict military discipline
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    combined with a surprisingly
    progressive code of laws.
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    Female captives were theoretically
    protected from sexual assault,
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    and while pirates could
    take them as wives,
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    mistreatment or infidelity towards
    them was punishable by death.
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    Under Madame Zheng’s leadership,
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    the pirates greatly
    increased their power,
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    with 200 cannons
    and 1300 guns in the red flag fleet alone.
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    Within a few years, they destroyed 63 of
    Guangdong Province’s 135 military vessels,
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    forcing their commanders
    to hire more than 30 private junks.
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    Madame Zheng was so feared that Chinese
    commanders charged with apprehending her
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    spent most of their time ashore,
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    sometimes sabotaging their own
    vessels to avoid battle at sea.
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    With little to stop them,
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    the pirates were able to mount successful
    - and often brutal -
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    raids on garrisons, villages,
    and markets throughout the coast.
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    Using her administrative talents,
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    Madame Zheng established financial offices
    in cities and villages,
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    allowing her pirates to extract regular
    protection payments on land and sea alike.
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    This effectively created
    a state within a state
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    whose influence reached
    far beyond the South China Sea.
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    At the peak of her power,
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    Madame Zheng’s confederation drove
    five American schooners
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    to safe harbor near Macao,
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    captured a Portuguese brig,
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    and blockaded a tribute
    mission from Thailand
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    – all in a single day.
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    But perhaps Madame Zheng’s greatest
    success lay in knowing when to quit.
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    By 1810, increasing tension
    between the Red and Black Flag Fleets
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    weakened the confederation from within
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    and rendered it more vulnerable
    to attack from without.
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    So when the Chinese government,
    desperate to stop the raids,
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    offered amnesty in exchange
    for the pirates’ surrender,
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    Madame Zheng and Zhang Bao agreed,
    but only on their own terms.
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    Their confederation was successfully
    and peacefully dismantled in April 1810,
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    while Zhang Bao was allowed to retain
    120 junks for personal use
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    and became an officer in the Chinese navy.
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    Now fighting pirates himself,
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    Zhang Bao quickly rose through
    the ranks of military command,
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    and Madame Zheng enjoyed all
    the privileges of her husband’s status.
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    After Zhang Bao died in 1822,
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    Madame Zheng returned with their
    eleven-year-old son to Guangzhou,
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    where she opened a gambling house
    and quietly lived off the proceeds.
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    She died at the age of 69 – an uncommonly
    peaceful end to a pirate’s life.
Title:
The most successful pirate of all time - Dian Murray
Description:

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TED-Ed
Duration:
05:17

English subtitles

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