A primary seventeenth-century account of Caribbean piracy, drawn from firsthand observation and early colonial record. First published in 1678, The Buccaneers of America offers a detailed and often unvarnished narrative of the activities of the freebooters who operated in the Spanish Main during the height of European imperial rivalry. Attributed to John Esquemeling-believed to have served as a surgeon among the buccaneers-the work combines eyewitness testimony with compiled reports of major expeditions and figures.
The text provides descriptions of notable raids, including those associated with Henry Morgan, alongside accounts of daily life, discipline, violence, and survival among the pirate crews. It also reflects the broader geopolitical tensions of the period, as England, France, and the Netherlands contested Spanish dominance in the Caribbean. While shaped by its time and perspective, the narrative remains one of the most influential early sources on piracy, informing both historical study and later literary representations of the buccaneer tradition.
This edition presents the complete text of a work that stands at the intersection of travel narrative, maritime history, and early modern reportage, preserving its historical voice while remaining accessible to contemporary readers.