Unexpected and Surprising Facts About England’s Iconic Queens

Unexpected and Surprising Facts About England’s Iconic Queens

Khalid Elhassan - February 13, 2022

Unexpected and Surprising Facts About England’s Iconic Queens
Fire ship attack on the Spanish Armada. Flickr

16. An Elizabethan Adventurer’s End

Francis Drake’s preemptive raids delayed King Philip II’s plans to invade England but did not scotch them for good. The following year, the combined Spanish fleet, the famous Armada, set sail. Drake played a key role in its dispersal and eventual destruction. Particularly on the night of July 29th, 1588, when he organized fire ships against the Armada assembled in Calais. In a panic, the Spanish ships sailed out of that port and into the open sea. There, they were scattered by a combination of English warships and adverse weather. It was the acme of Drake’s success, as well as his popularity both with the public and in the royal court. From then on, things were mostly anticlimactic, until his eventful life finally came to an anticlimactic end in 1596.

Unexpected and Surprising Facts About England’s Iconic Queens
Replica of Drake’s ship, the Golden Hind. Wikimedia

After a series of failed raids and attacks against Spanish America, Drake caught dysentery while anchored off Portobelo in Panama, and died. His career, with its turns from soldier and sailor to pirate, illustrates the era’s murky lines between outright piracy and legalized piracy, also known as privateering. In the years to come, the difference between a pirate liable for the hangman’s noose, and a privateer likely to receive official acclaim and adulation, was no more than a piece of paper. Those who plundered the seas with a letter of marque in their pocket were lionized. Those who did the same without such a fig of legality were condemned as pirates.

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