Skull and Crossbones
By coffeeshot
@coffeeshot (3783)
Australia
October 14, 2007 1:50am CST
I got this paragraph from an article on the www.straightdope.com site. It explained what was real and what was made up about pirates eg. did they really go around with a parrot on their shoulder etc. This part is all about where the skull and crossbones came from:
Skull and crossbones. This was only one of many pirate-flag insignia. Why fly a pirate flag, anyway? To terrorize victims into surrendering without a struggle. The earliest such flags were plain red or black sheets — red symbolizing blood and battle, black for death. Later captains added emblems: hearts dripping blood, fiery balls, hourglasses, cutlasses, skeletons, etc. Around 1718, Captain Richard Worley flew a black flag with a white death's-head and crossed femurs, a symbol of death dating to medieval times. By about 1730 this design had caught on among English, French, and Spanish pirates in the West Indies and was called the "Jolly Roger" or "Old Roger."
1 person likes this
4 responses
@david2005 (798)
• Canada
5 Feb 08
Thanks,that was really interesting and I never new any of that before. See people you can learn something off of mylot.
1 person likes this
@jennybianca (12912)
• Australia
15 Oct 07
I didn't know some of this history regarding the skull & crossbones.
I sure know that pirates fascinate my kids for some reason. They love dressing up as pirates & play acting.




