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TITLE: The Kislak Pirates Symposium: Panel I, part 1
SPEAKER: Sabrina Guerra, Franklin Knight
EVENT DATE: 12/08/2007
RUNNING TIME: 77 minutes
DESCRIPTION:
Within some 50 years of its discovery, the Americas became a great and growing source of wealth for the Spanish crown. Silks, spices, precious metals and gems flowed across the Pacific to Mexico and Panama as silver and gold were transported across the Gulf of Mexico from Cuba to Spain. Pirates and privateers preyed on these vessels, often as commissioned agents sent out against the enemies of their sovereigns or as renegades for their own personal gain.
An all-day symposium, "Pirates and Corsairs of the Americas in History and Literature," was sponsored by the Rare Book and Special Collections Division and the Hispanic Division in conjunction with the "Exploring the Early Americas" exhibition.
Featured speakers were Sabrina Guerra, who discussed "Drake and Rogers: Successful Heroes or Frightful Bandits"; and Franklin Knight who presented "Pirates of the Caribbean: An Irregular Form of Imperial Expansion."
Speaker Biography: Sabrina Guerra is professor of history at the Universidad de San Francisco in Quito, Ecuador.
Speaker Biography: Franklin Knight is the Leonard and Helen Stulman Professor of History at The Johns Hopkins University.