The sea-rovers' radical self-government. Walk the cases — press a lit plate to look closer.
Articles of Agreement were written or oral contracts governing pirate crews' conduct, discipline, and prize distribution. Unique to the Golden Age, they formalized democratic governance at sea—establishing rules for combat, compensation, and conflict resolution among men operating outside legal authority.
Pirate crews of the Golden Age practiced radical democratic governance, electing captains by crew vote and binding them to written articles. This system emerged from necessity aboard vessels far from state authority, creating one of history's earliest experiments in contractual self-governance among working men.
Pirate crews democratically elected quartermasters to oversee provisions, plunder, and justice—a radical self-governance system unique to Golden Age piracy, c.1650–1725, that rivaled captain authority and protected crew interests through transparent resource allocation.
Pirate crews of the Golden Age operated under written articles establishing democratic governance, crew votes on major decisions, and equitable plunder distribution—radical self-rule that predated modern democratic reforms by decades.
Pirate councils represented unprecedented maritime self-governance, 1650–1725. Crews elected captains, divided plunder equitably, and enforced written articles. This system challenged hierarchical naval traditions and anticipated modern democratic principles through necessity and pragmatism on lawless oceans.
Pirate shares represented a revolutionary maritime labor system where crews democratically divided plunder by rank. Operating c.1650–1725, this egalitarian model preceded modern wage structures, granting ordinary sailors unprecedented economic agency and voting rights aboard vessels.
Pirate articles of agreement established democratic compensation systems unprecedented in maritime law. Crews negotiated shares, disability pensions, and grievance procedures centuries before labor unions. These written contracts formalized egalitarian principles aboard vessels operating outside state authority.
Pirate crews of the Golden Age practiced radical democratic governance through written articles, elected officers, and mandatory profit-sharing—a revolutionary system that predated modern democracies and contradicted hierarchical naval traditions of their era.
Pirate crews of the Golden Age operated under written articles—radical democratic contracts predating modern labor law. Officers were elected, booty divided by formula, and disputes arbitrated by crew vote. This exhibit explores how maritime outlaws pioneered governance structures that influenced democratic thought.
Pirate crews operated under written articles of agreement establishing democratic governance, profit-sharing, and dispute resolution. These proto-democratic systems predated modern labor unions, granting sailors unprecedented rights and voice in maritime commerce during the Golden Age of Piracy, 1650–1725.
Marooning was the pirate democracy's ultimate punishment—abandoning crew members on remote islands with minimal supplies. This practice reflected both egalitarian justice codes and brutal enforcement of pirate articles, serving as deterrent and exile mechanism within self-governing maritime communities.
Pirate crews established democratic governance systems unprecedented in maritime history, with written articles governing conduct, profit-sharing, and dispute resolution. Captains held office by election and consent, subject to removal. This radical self-governance emerged from necessity and contractual tradition, creating functional hierarchies that balanced authority with crew participation and accountability.
Pirate crews of the Golden Age developed written constitutions and democratic governance systems, distributing power through elected officers and codified rules. These radical self-governing structures—predating modern democracies—regulated plunder division, conflict resolution, and crew discipline aboard vessels operating outside state authority.
Pirate ships operated under written articles establishing democratic governance, profit-sharing, and crew rights—radical self-rule predating modern democracies. Captains held power only by consent; disputes resolved by vote. This system enabled coordination across multinational crews and sustained operations for decades.
A hierarchical pyramid diagram depicting the stratified colonial society of the Caribbean Atlantic World circa 1700, from Atlantic Elite at the apex through Enslaved Africans and Indigenous Peoples to the Marginalized and Dispossessed at the base, with parallel pirate society illustrated on the right.