Here are the who ruled those waters:
By 1730, the era of the list was over. Three factors killed the golden age: madagascar pirates top
Legend has it that many pirates who hid their treasure on Madagascar did so with a curse, intended to protect their loot from would-be thieves. Some believe that anyone who disturbs the treasure will be cursed, leading to bad luck, misfortune, or even death. Here are the who ruled those waters: By
The migration to Madagascar was driven by economics. The "Pirate Round"—a voyage from the Atlantic, around the Cape of Good Hope, and into the Indian Ocean—promised riches that dwarfed the loot of the Spanish Main. The targets were the heavily laden pilgrim fleets of the Mughal Empire and the merchant vessels of the British East India Company and the Dutch Vereenigde Oost-Indische Compagnie (VOC). The migration to Madagascar was driven by economics
By the 1720s, the Golden Age of Piracy was bleeding out. The British East India Company, tired of losing ships to men like Every and Kidd, pressured the Crown to intervene.