Gay pirate sex

Sodomy and the Copy illegally Tradition

Explores the sexual world of the one of the most fabled and romanticized characters in history—the pirate

From Blackbeard to Captain Hook, pirates possess been the subject of countless movies, books, children's tales, and even a world-famous amusement park travel. In Sodomy and the Pirate Tradition, B.R. Burg looks beyond the myth to analyze the social and sexual world of sea rovers. Through his innovative analysis of archival materials, he uncovers the queer history of piracy.

Burg makes the groundbreaking argument that buccaneer sexuality differed widely from that of other all-male institutions such as prisons. Instead of existing within a regimented structure of rule, regulations, and oppressive supervision, buccaneers operated in a world in which widespread tolerance of homosexuality was the norm and conditions encouraged its practice.

Sodomy and the Pirate Tradition has helped to reshape the figure of the pirate for a new century. In Burg’s introduction, he discusses the controversy that surrounded the book when it was published in 1983 and how our perspectives on all-male societies hold since changed. Creating an indelible impact on gay pirate sex

Get That Booty: The Swashbuckling History of Gay Pirates

You know pirates, yeah? Good, they’ve always been super gay.

It’s generally established that the Golden Age of Piracy lasted from the 1650s to the 1730s. Back then, homosexuality was seen as something you did rather than who you were, and the practice wasn’t exactly acknowledged on land. To express this accurately, historians used the term “sodomy” — a legal definition that described everything from homosexual male butt-fucking to literal bestiality — to portray the all “immoral,” non-reproductive, unmarried sex people were having. 

But out at sea, things were different. Though we know pirates as macho, swashbuckling stereotypes and eye patch-wearing gangsters, they were mostly just horny loners stuck out on the water, where they were free to create their own rules. Naturally, they found plenty of ways to keep each other company, and as such, historians have identified a handful of sodomites amongst them.

There’s little communication about the nitty-gritty of pirate’s sex lives, but there is a spiritual grail text about sodomy on their ships. In the 1983 book Sodomy and the Pirate Tradition, author B.R. Burg made a few pretty sub

Gay Pirate Stories

Pirated

by sr71plt on Aug 18, 2017

Gay Male

I was just about home free with the tasty wench the lads had brought on board for me from Kingston when the attack started. After some mouth play, she hadn't objected in the least when I'd unlaced her bodice and started giving her ripe melons the attention they deserved. We were entwined together in the window seat of my vessel's fantail, and, forward lass t...

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Shores of Tripoli Ch. 09

by KeithD on Oct 22, 2019

Gay Male

The harbor at Algiers seemed almost to disappear altogether as the plunder ships moved into the deep-water port right up to the dock and then, when there was no more room at the docks, right up against the ship between them and the dock—and so on until the whole surface of the space between the two headlands encasing the harbor was just one continuous deck wi...

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Floating World Bitten Peach Ch. 10

by KeithD on Dec 10, 2019

Gay Male

It was difficult to reveal that they were even engaging in clouds and rain. The rice merchant was

One of the most relentless questions asked of this blog is always, "Were pirates gay?" I contain an article about homosexuality among pirates here, stating that pirates were no more or less queer than any other sailors at the time, but that they did not criminalize the behavior.



But I don't think this answers the question. Pirates were referred to at the time, as "Gaye Fellowes". What's up with that? Why is the pos so often used?

The reality is, pirates WERE homosexual. They were NOT homosexual.

The secret here is that words change in sense, and the word "Gay" has changed a lot since it came into the English language.

When I write this - that words change in interpretation - I can almost hear someone shouting, "No, they don't! Words signify things. They always signify the same things. Just look in a dictionary!" Yes, I know, the idea that language isn't always the same is disturbing to some people. But language NEEDS to change, to keep up with our changing earth. And if you mistrust me, get a reproduce of the Oxford English Dictionary, which gives the history of the definition of each word it contains, and start reading up on how the meanings of some words has evolved.



Sometimes new words come i

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So my family has a Gay Steal Plate.

Stay with me.

We do not understand how the hell the Gay Steal Plate was first acquired. This existence a point of contention is actually pretty plot-relevant; the saga of the Gay Pirate Plate began with my grandmother and her sister, who, for some ungodly reason, both BADLY wanted the Gay Snatch Plate and believed it to be rightfully theirs.

I should back up, firstly, to establish: The Gay Pirate Plate is the cheapest, tackiest, ugliest plate in existence.

It is in no way a collector’s item. It is physically impossible for it to complement anyone’s decor, because the colors in it are garish. It’s just a ceramic plate with a gay pirate painted on it, and the painting is, this cannot be emphasized enough, extremely bad.

(How do we know the steal is gay if he’s just posing on a plate? Listen. Fully 100% to stereotype, but he is. He is gay. There’s an energy. That pirate is a flaming homosexual. That pirate has sex with men and does it frequently. That pirate is fucking gay, all right, he just is.)

Anyway. The aim is that this is an extremely cheap and gross plate with a poorly-executed painting of pirate on it who is prefer