[Men of Invention and Industry by Samuel Smiles]@TWC D-Link book
Men of Invention and Industry

CHAPTER I
86/94

In spite of proclamations, during the first five years after the accession of James I., there were continual complaints.

This lawless way of life even became popular.

Many Englishmen furnished themselves with good ships and scoured the seas, but little careful whom they might plunder." It was found very difficult to put down piracy.

According to Oliver's History of the city of Exeter, not less than "fifteen sail of Turks" held the English Channel, snapping up merchantmen, in the middle of the seventeenth century! The harbours in the south-west were infested by Moslem pirates, who attacked and plundered the ships, and carried their crews into captivity.

The loss, even to an inland port like Exeter, in ships, money, and men, was enormous.
[15] Naval Tracts, p.


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