software piracy - определение. Что такое software piracy
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Что (кто) такое software piracy - определение

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Hardware Against Software Piracy; EToken
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software piracy      
pirate         
  • Four Chinese pirates who were hanged in Hong Kong in 1863
  • French ship under attack by Barbary pirates, ca. 1615
  • Amaro Pargo]] was one of the most famous corsairs of the [[Golden Age of Piracy]]
  • Bombardment of Algiers]] by the Anglo-Dutch fleet in 1816 to support the ultimatum to release European slaves
  • piracy in the Indian Ocean]]
  • [[Bartholomew Roberts]]' crew carousing at the [[Calabar River]]; illustration from ''The Pirates Own Book'' (1837). Roberts is estimated to have captured over 470 vessels.
  • Bartholomew Roberts was the pirate with most captures during the Golden Age of Piracy. He is now known for hanging the governor of [[Martinique]] from the yardarm of his ship.
  • "Mic the Scallywag" of the Pirates of Emerson Haunted Adventure Fremont, California
  • [[Blackbeard]]'s severed head hanging from Maynard's bowsprit; illustration from ''The Pirates Own Book'' (1837)
  • Book about pirates "De Americaensche Zee-Roovers" was first published in 1678 in Amsterdam
  • Spanish warships bombarding the [[Moro Pirates]] of the southern Philippines in 1848
  • Pirate [[Anne Bonny]] (1697–1720). Engraving from [[Captain Charles Johnson]]'s ''General History of the Pyrates'' (1st Dutch Edition, 1725)
  • ''Capture of the Pirate Blackbeard, 1718'' depicting the battle between [[Blackbeard]] and [[Robert Maynard]] in Ocracoke Bay; romanticized depiction by [[Jean Leon Gerome Ferris]] from 1920
  • Commodore]] gives a presentation on piracy at the MAST 2008 conference
  • Garneray]]
  • "Cossacks of Azov fighting a Turk ship" by [[Grigory Gagarin]]
  • Pirates of the Caribbean]]'' film series
  • [[Dan Seavey]] was a pirate on the [[Great Lakes]] in the early 20th century.
  • U.S. naval officer [[Stephen Decatur]] boarding a Tripolitan gunboat during the [[First Barbary War]], 1804
  • Double-barrelled ''[[lantaka]]'' cannons, ''[[kalasag]]'' shields, armor, and various swords (including ''[[kalis]]'', ''[[panabas]]'', and ''[[kampilan]]'') used by [[Moro pirates]] in the Philippines (c. 1900)
  • Hanging of [[Captain Kidd]]; illustration from ''The Pirates Own Book'' (1837)
  • A contemporary flyer depicting the [[public execution]] of 16th-century pirate [[Klein Henszlein]] and his crew in 1573
  • prahu]] in Skerang river
  • [[International Maritime Organization]] (IMO) conference on capacity-building to counter piracy in the Indian Ocean
  • Malay]] word for "pirate", ''lanun'', originates from an [[exonym]] of the Iranun people
  • [[Jacques de Sores]] looting and burning Havana in 1555
  • Queen Mary 2}}
  • Mural representing the attack of [[Charles Windon]] to [[San Sebastián de La Gomera]] (1743)
  • Panama]] in 1671 – the second most important city in the Spanish New World at the time; engraving from 1681 Spanish edition of [[Alexandre Exquemelin]]'s ''The Buccaneers of America''
  • British]] forces engaging Iranun pirates off [[Sarawak]] in 1843
  • [[Henry Every]] is shown selling his loot in this engraving by Howard Pyle. Every's capture of the Grand Mughal ship ''[[Ganj-i-Sawai]]'' in 1695 stands as one of the most profitable pirate raids ever perpetrated.
  • Incidents of pipeline vandalism by pirates in the [[Gulf of Guinea]], 2002–2011
  • Born to a noble family in [[Puerto Rico]], [[Roberto Cofresí]] was the last notably successful pirate in the Caribbean.
  • The cemetery of past pirates at Île Ste-Marie (St. Mary's Island)
  • Puerto del Príncipe]] being sacked in 1668 by Henry Morgan
  • Modern reconstruction of skull alleged to have belonged to 14th century pirate [[Klaus Störtebeker]]. He was the leader of the privateer guild [[Victual Brothers]], who later turned to piracy and roamed European seas.
  • Roman trireme]] in Tunisia
  • Niger Delta]], a center of piracy
  • A collage of Somali pirates armed with [[AKM]] [[assault rifles]], [[RPG-7]] [[rocket-propelled grenade]] launchers and [[semi-automatic pistol]]s in 2008
  • Map showing the extent of Somali pirate attacks on shipping vessels between 2005 and 2010
  • pirates in the Strait of Malacca]]
  • Iranun]] pirate
  • Suspected [[Somali pirates]] keep their hands in the air
  • The Vitalienbrüder. Piracy became endemic in the [[Baltic sea]] in the [[Middle Ages]] because of the [[Victual Brothers]].
  • Pirate treasure looted by [[Samuel Bellamy]] and recovered from the wreck of the ''Whydah''; exhibit at the [[Houston Museum of Natural Science]], 2010
  • A fleet of [[Vikings]], painted mid-12th century
  • Japanese]] pirate raids
ACT OF ROBBERY OR CRIMINALITY AT SEA
French privateers; Pirate ship; Piratical; Maritime piracy; Piratry; Pirates; Pirate; Sea piracy; Pirateering; Maritime terrorism; Maritime Piracy; Pirate ships; Pie rat; Pirate and Piracy; Priate; Buccaneer-Americans; Maritime hijacking; Sea raider; Piracy in terrorism; Piracy iure gentium; Piracy jure gentium; Sea pirate; Pirate Captain; Piracy in Asia; Chinese pirates; Lanun; Anti-piracy measures; Roman piracy; Piracy in antiquity; Piracy in Antiquity; Water pirate; Chinese pirate; History of piracy in Southeast Asia; Piracy in the East Indies; Piracy in Malaysia; Economics of piracy; Legal aspects of piracy
(pirates, pirating, pirated)
1.
Pirates are sailors who attack other ships and steal property from them.
In the nineteenth century, pirates roamed the seas.
N-COUNT
2.
Someone who pirates video tapes, cassettes, books, or computer programs copies and sells them when they have no right to do so.
A school technician pirated anything from video nasties to computer games.
VERB: V n
pirated
Pirated copies of music tapes are flooding the market...
ADJ
3.
A pirate version of something is an illegal copy of it.
Pirate copies of the video are already said to be in Britain.
ADJ: ADJ n
pirate         
  • Four Chinese pirates who were hanged in Hong Kong in 1863
  • French ship under attack by Barbary pirates, ca. 1615
  • Amaro Pargo]] was one of the most famous corsairs of the [[Golden Age of Piracy]]
  • Bombardment of Algiers]] by the Anglo-Dutch fleet in 1816 to support the ultimatum to release European slaves
  • piracy in the Indian Ocean]]
  • [[Bartholomew Roberts]]' crew carousing at the [[Calabar River]]; illustration from ''The Pirates Own Book'' (1837). Roberts is estimated to have captured over 470 vessels.
  • Bartholomew Roberts was the pirate with most captures during the Golden Age of Piracy. He is now known for hanging the governor of [[Martinique]] from the yardarm of his ship.
  • "Mic the Scallywag" of the Pirates of Emerson Haunted Adventure Fremont, California
  • [[Blackbeard]]'s severed head hanging from Maynard's bowsprit; illustration from ''The Pirates Own Book'' (1837)
  • Book about pirates "De Americaensche Zee-Roovers" was first published in 1678 in Amsterdam
  • Spanish warships bombarding the [[Moro Pirates]] of the southern Philippines in 1848
  • Pirate [[Anne Bonny]] (1697–1720). Engraving from [[Captain Charles Johnson]]'s ''General History of the Pyrates'' (1st Dutch Edition, 1725)
  • ''Capture of the Pirate Blackbeard, 1718'' depicting the battle between [[Blackbeard]] and [[Robert Maynard]] in Ocracoke Bay; romanticized depiction by [[Jean Leon Gerome Ferris]] from 1920
  • Commodore]] gives a presentation on piracy at the MAST 2008 conference
  • Garneray]]
  • "Cossacks of Azov fighting a Turk ship" by [[Grigory Gagarin]]
  • Pirates of the Caribbean]]'' film series
  • [[Dan Seavey]] was a pirate on the [[Great Lakes]] in the early 20th century.
  • U.S. naval officer [[Stephen Decatur]] boarding a Tripolitan gunboat during the [[First Barbary War]], 1804
  • Double-barrelled ''[[lantaka]]'' cannons, ''[[kalasag]]'' shields, armor, and various swords (including ''[[kalis]]'', ''[[panabas]]'', and ''[[kampilan]]'') used by [[Moro pirates]] in the Philippines (c. 1900)
  • Hanging of [[Captain Kidd]]; illustration from ''The Pirates Own Book'' (1837)
  • A contemporary flyer depicting the [[public execution]] of 16th-century pirate [[Klein Henszlein]] and his crew in 1573
  • prahu]] in Skerang river
  • [[International Maritime Organization]] (IMO) conference on capacity-building to counter piracy in the Indian Ocean
  • Malay]] word for "pirate", ''lanun'', originates from an [[exonym]] of the Iranun people
  • [[Jacques de Sores]] looting and burning Havana in 1555
  • Queen Mary 2}}
  • Mural representing the attack of [[Charles Windon]] to [[San Sebastián de La Gomera]] (1743)
  • Panama]] in 1671 – the second most important city in the Spanish New World at the time; engraving from 1681 Spanish edition of [[Alexandre Exquemelin]]'s ''The Buccaneers of America''
  • British]] forces engaging Iranun pirates off [[Sarawak]] in 1843
  • [[Henry Every]] is shown selling his loot in this engraving by Howard Pyle. Every's capture of the Grand Mughal ship ''[[Ganj-i-Sawai]]'' in 1695 stands as one of the most profitable pirate raids ever perpetrated.
  • Incidents of pipeline vandalism by pirates in the [[Gulf of Guinea]], 2002–2011
  • Born to a noble family in [[Puerto Rico]], [[Roberto Cofresí]] was the last notably successful pirate in the Caribbean.
  • The cemetery of past pirates at Île Ste-Marie (St. Mary's Island)
  • Puerto del Príncipe]] being sacked in 1668 by Henry Morgan
  • Modern reconstruction of skull alleged to have belonged to 14th century pirate [[Klaus Störtebeker]]. He was the leader of the privateer guild [[Victual Brothers]], who later turned to piracy and roamed European seas.
  • Roman trireme]] in Tunisia
  • Niger Delta]], a center of piracy
  • A collage of Somali pirates armed with [[AKM]] [[assault rifles]], [[RPG-7]] [[rocket-propelled grenade]] launchers and [[semi-automatic pistol]]s in 2008
  • Map showing the extent of Somali pirate attacks on shipping vessels between 2005 and 2010
  • pirates in the Strait of Malacca]]
  • Iranun]] pirate
  • Suspected [[Somali pirates]] keep their hands in the air
  • The Vitalienbrüder. Piracy became endemic in the [[Baltic sea]] in the [[Middle Ages]] because of the [[Victual Brothers]].
  • Pirate treasure looted by [[Samuel Bellamy]] and recovered from the wreck of the ''Whydah''; exhibit at the [[Houston Museum of Natural Science]], 2010
  • A fleet of [[Vikings]], painted mid-12th century
  • Japanese]] pirate raids
ACT OF ROBBERY OR CRIMINALITY AT SEA
French privateers; Pirate ship; Piratical; Maritime piracy; Piratry; Pirates; Pirate; Sea piracy; Pirateering; Maritime terrorism; Maritime Piracy; Pirate ships; Pie rat; Pirate and Piracy; Priate; Buccaneer-Americans; Maritime hijacking; Sea raider; Piracy in terrorism; Piracy iure gentium; Piracy jure gentium; Sea pirate; Pirate Captain; Piracy in Asia; Chinese pirates; Lanun; Anti-piracy measures; Roman piracy; Piracy in antiquity; Piracy in Antiquity; Water pirate; Chinese pirate; History of piracy in Southeast Asia; Piracy in the East Indies; Piracy in Malaysia; Economics of piracy; Legal aspects of piracy
piracy         
  • Four Chinese pirates who were hanged in Hong Kong in 1863
  • French ship under attack by Barbary pirates, ca. 1615
  • Amaro Pargo]] was one of the most famous corsairs of the [[Golden Age of Piracy]]
  • Bombardment of Algiers]] by the Anglo-Dutch fleet in 1816 to support the ultimatum to release European slaves
  • piracy in the Indian Ocean]]
  • [[Bartholomew Roberts]]' crew carousing at the [[Calabar River]]; illustration from ''The Pirates Own Book'' (1837). Roberts is estimated to have captured over 470 vessels.
  • Bartholomew Roberts was the pirate with most captures during the Golden Age of Piracy. He is now known for hanging the governor of [[Martinique]] from the yardarm of his ship.
  • "Mic the Scallywag" of the Pirates of Emerson Haunted Adventure Fremont, California
  • [[Blackbeard]]'s severed head hanging from Maynard's bowsprit; illustration from ''The Pirates Own Book'' (1837)
  • Book about pirates "De Americaensche Zee-Roovers" was first published in 1678 in Amsterdam
  • Spanish warships bombarding the [[Moro Pirates]] of the southern Philippines in 1848
  • Pirate [[Anne Bonny]] (1697–1720). Engraving from [[Captain Charles Johnson]]'s ''General History of the Pyrates'' (1st Dutch Edition, 1725)
  • ''Capture of the Pirate Blackbeard, 1718'' depicting the battle between [[Blackbeard]] and [[Robert Maynard]] in Ocracoke Bay; romanticized depiction by [[Jean Leon Gerome Ferris]] from 1920
  • Commodore]] gives a presentation on piracy at the MAST 2008 conference
  • Garneray]]
  • "Cossacks of Azov fighting a Turk ship" by [[Grigory Gagarin]]
  • Pirates of the Caribbean]]'' film series
  • [[Dan Seavey]] was a pirate on the [[Great Lakes]] in the early 20th century.
  • U.S. naval officer [[Stephen Decatur]] boarding a Tripolitan gunboat during the [[First Barbary War]], 1804
  • Double-barrelled ''[[lantaka]]'' cannons, ''[[kalasag]]'' shields, armor, and various swords (including ''[[kalis]]'', ''[[panabas]]'', and ''[[kampilan]]'') used by [[Moro pirates]] in the Philippines (c. 1900)
  • Hanging of [[Captain Kidd]]; illustration from ''The Pirates Own Book'' (1837)
  • A contemporary flyer depicting the [[public execution]] of 16th-century pirate [[Klein Henszlein]] and his crew in 1573
  • prahu]] in Skerang river
  • [[International Maritime Organization]] (IMO) conference on capacity-building to counter piracy in the Indian Ocean
  • Malay]] word for "pirate", ''lanun'', originates from an [[exonym]] of the Iranun people
  • [[Jacques de Sores]] looting and burning Havana in 1555
  • Queen Mary 2}}
  • Mural representing the attack of [[Charles Windon]] to [[San Sebastián de La Gomera]] (1743)
  • Panama]] in 1671 – the second most important city in the Spanish New World at the time; engraving from 1681 Spanish edition of [[Alexandre Exquemelin]]'s ''The Buccaneers of America''
  • British]] forces engaging Iranun pirates off [[Sarawak]] in 1843
  • [[Henry Every]] is shown selling his loot in this engraving by Howard Pyle. Every's capture of the Grand Mughal ship ''[[Ganj-i-Sawai]]'' in 1695 stands as one of the most profitable pirate raids ever perpetrated.
  • Incidents of pipeline vandalism by pirates in the [[Gulf of Guinea]], 2002–2011
  • Born to a noble family in [[Puerto Rico]], [[Roberto Cofresí]] was the last notably successful pirate in the Caribbean.
  • The cemetery of past pirates at Île Ste-Marie (St. Mary's Island)
  • Puerto del Príncipe]] being sacked in 1668 by Henry Morgan
  • Modern reconstruction of skull alleged to have belonged to 14th century pirate [[Klaus Störtebeker]]. He was the leader of the privateer guild [[Victual Brothers]], who later turned to piracy and roamed European seas.
  • Roman trireme]] in Tunisia
  • Niger Delta]], a center of piracy
  • A collage of Somali pirates armed with [[AKM]] [[assault rifles]], [[RPG-7]] [[rocket-propelled grenade]] launchers and [[semi-automatic pistol]]s in 2008
  • Map showing the extent of Somali pirate attacks on shipping vessels between 2005 and 2010
  • pirates in the Strait of Malacca]]
  • Iranun]] pirate
  • Suspected [[Somali pirates]] keep their hands in the air
  • The Vitalienbrüder. Piracy became endemic in the [[Baltic sea]] in the [[Middle Ages]] because of the [[Victual Brothers]].
  • Pirate treasure looted by [[Samuel Bellamy]] and recovered from the wreck of the ''Whydah''; exhibit at the [[Houston Museum of Natural Science]], 2010
  • A fleet of [[Vikings]], painted mid-12th century
  • Japanese]] pirate raids
ACT OF ROBBERY OR CRIMINALITY AT SEA
French privateers; Pirate ship; Piratical; Maritime piracy; Piratry; Pirates; Pirate; Sea piracy; Pirateering; Maritime terrorism; Maritime Piracy; Pirate ships; Pie rat; Pirate and Piracy; Priate; Buccaneer-Americans; Maritime hijacking; Sea raider; Piracy in terrorism; Piracy iure gentium; Piracy jure gentium; Sea pirate; Pirate Captain; Piracy in Asia; Chinese pirates; Lanun; Anti-piracy measures; Roman piracy; Piracy in antiquity; Piracy in Antiquity; Water pirate; Chinese pirate; History of piracy in Southeast Asia; Piracy in the East Indies; Piracy in Malaysia; Economics of piracy; Legal aspects of piracy
¦ noun
1. the practice of attacking and robbing ships at sea.
a similar practice in other contexts, especially hijacking.
2. the unauthorized use or reproduction of another's work: software piracy.
piracy         
  • Four Chinese pirates who were hanged in Hong Kong in 1863
  • French ship under attack by Barbary pirates, ca. 1615
  • Amaro Pargo]] was one of the most famous corsairs of the [[Golden Age of Piracy]]
  • Bombardment of Algiers]] by the Anglo-Dutch fleet in 1816 to support the ultimatum to release European slaves
  • piracy in the Indian Ocean]]
  • [[Bartholomew Roberts]]' crew carousing at the [[Calabar River]]; illustration from ''The Pirates Own Book'' (1837). Roberts is estimated to have captured over 470 vessels.
  • Bartholomew Roberts was the pirate with most captures during the Golden Age of Piracy. He is now known for hanging the governor of [[Martinique]] from the yardarm of his ship.
  • "Mic the Scallywag" of the Pirates of Emerson Haunted Adventure Fremont, California
  • [[Blackbeard]]'s severed head hanging from Maynard's bowsprit; illustration from ''The Pirates Own Book'' (1837)
  • Book about pirates "De Americaensche Zee-Roovers" was first published in 1678 in Amsterdam
  • Spanish warships bombarding the [[Moro Pirates]] of the southern Philippines in 1848
  • Pirate [[Anne Bonny]] (1697–1720). Engraving from [[Captain Charles Johnson]]'s ''General History of the Pyrates'' (1st Dutch Edition, 1725)
  • ''Capture of the Pirate Blackbeard, 1718'' depicting the battle between [[Blackbeard]] and [[Robert Maynard]] in Ocracoke Bay; romanticized depiction by [[Jean Leon Gerome Ferris]] from 1920
  • Commodore]] gives a presentation on piracy at the MAST 2008 conference
  • Garneray]]
  • "Cossacks of Azov fighting a Turk ship" by [[Grigory Gagarin]]
  • Pirates of the Caribbean]]'' film series
  • [[Dan Seavey]] was a pirate on the [[Great Lakes]] in the early 20th century.
  • U.S. naval officer [[Stephen Decatur]] boarding a Tripolitan gunboat during the [[First Barbary War]], 1804
  • Double-barrelled ''[[lantaka]]'' cannons, ''[[kalasag]]'' shields, armor, and various swords (including ''[[kalis]]'', ''[[panabas]]'', and ''[[kampilan]]'') used by [[Moro pirates]] in the Philippines (c. 1900)
  • Hanging of [[Captain Kidd]]; illustration from ''The Pirates Own Book'' (1837)
  • A contemporary flyer depicting the [[public execution]] of 16th-century pirate [[Klein Henszlein]] and his crew in 1573
  • prahu]] in Skerang river
  • [[International Maritime Organization]] (IMO) conference on capacity-building to counter piracy in the Indian Ocean
  • Malay]] word for "pirate", ''lanun'', originates from an [[exonym]] of the Iranun people
  • [[Jacques de Sores]] looting and burning Havana in 1555
  • Queen Mary 2}}
  • Mural representing the attack of [[Charles Windon]] to [[San Sebastián de La Gomera]] (1743)
  • Panama]] in 1671 – the second most important city in the Spanish New World at the time; engraving from 1681 Spanish edition of [[Alexandre Exquemelin]]'s ''The Buccaneers of America''
  • British]] forces engaging Iranun pirates off [[Sarawak]] in 1843
  • [[Henry Every]] is shown selling his loot in this engraving by Howard Pyle. Every's capture of the Grand Mughal ship ''[[Ganj-i-Sawai]]'' in 1695 stands as one of the most profitable pirate raids ever perpetrated.
  • Incidents of pipeline vandalism by pirates in the [[Gulf of Guinea]], 2002–2011
  • Born to a noble family in [[Puerto Rico]], [[Roberto Cofresí]] was the last notably successful pirate in the Caribbean.
  • The cemetery of past pirates at Île Ste-Marie (St. Mary's Island)
  • Puerto del Príncipe]] being sacked in 1668 by Henry Morgan
  • Modern reconstruction of skull alleged to have belonged to 14th century pirate [[Klaus Störtebeker]]. He was the leader of the privateer guild [[Victual Brothers]], who later turned to piracy and roamed European seas.
  • Roman trireme]] in Tunisia
  • Niger Delta]], a center of piracy
  • A collage of Somali pirates armed with [[AKM]] [[assault rifles]], [[RPG-7]] [[rocket-propelled grenade]] launchers and [[semi-automatic pistol]]s in 2008
  • Map showing the extent of Somali pirate attacks on shipping vessels between 2005 and 2010
  • pirates in the Strait of Malacca]]
  • Iranun]] pirate
  • Suspected [[Somali pirates]] keep their hands in the air
  • The Vitalienbrüder. Piracy became endemic in the [[Baltic sea]] in the [[Middle Ages]] because of the [[Victual Brothers]].
  • Pirate treasure looted by [[Samuel Bellamy]] and recovered from the wreck of the ''Whydah''; exhibit at the [[Houston Museum of Natural Science]], 2010
  • A fleet of [[Vikings]], painted mid-12th century
  • Japanese]] pirate raids
ACT OF ROBBERY OR CRIMINALITY AT SEA
French privateers; Pirate ship; Piratical; Maritime piracy; Piratry; Pirates; Pirate; Sea piracy; Pirateering; Maritime terrorism; Maritime Piracy; Pirate ships; Pie rat; Pirate and Piracy; Priate; Buccaneer-Americans; Maritime hijacking; Sea raider; Piracy in terrorism; Piracy iure gentium; Piracy jure gentium; Sea pirate; Pirate Captain; Piracy in Asia; Chinese pirates; Lanun; Anti-piracy measures; Roman piracy; Piracy in antiquity; Piracy in Antiquity; Water pirate; Chinese pirate; History of piracy in Southeast Asia; Piracy in the East Indies; Piracy in Malaysia; Economics of piracy; Legal aspects of piracy
piracy         
  • Four Chinese pirates who were hanged in Hong Kong in 1863
  • French ship under attack by Barbary pirates, ca. 1615
  • Amaro Pargo]] was one of the most famous corsairs of the [[Golden Age of Piracy]]
  • Bombardment of Algiers]] by the Anglo-Dutch fleet in 1816 to support the ultimatum to release European slaves
  • piracy in the Indian Ocean]]
  • [[Bartholomew Roberts]]' crew carousing at the [[Calabar River]]; illustration from ''The Pirates Own Book'' (1837). Roberts is estimated to have captured over 470 vessels.
  • Bartholomew Roberts was the pirate with most captures during the Golden Age of Piracy. He is now known for hanging the governor of [[Martinique]] from the yardarm of his ship.
  • "Mic the Scallywag" of the Pirates of Emerson Haunted Adventure Fremont, California
  • [[Blackbeard]]'s severed head hanging from Maynard's bowsprit; illustration from ''The Pirates Own Book'' (1837)
  • Book about pirates "De Americaensche Zee-Roovers" was first published in 1678 in Amsterdam
  • Spanish warships bombarding the [[Moro Pirates]] of the southern Philippines in 1848
  • Pirate [[Anne Bonny]] (1697–1720). Engraving from [[Captain Charles Johnson]]'s ''General History of the Pyrates'' (1st Dutch Edition, 1725)
  • ''Capture of the Pirate Blackbeard, 1718'' depicting the battle between [[Blackbeard]] and [[Robert Maynard]] in Ocracoke Bay; romanticized depiction by [[Jean Leon Gerome Ferris]] from 1920
  • Commodore]] gives a presentation on piracy at the MAST 2008 conference
  • Garneray]]
  • "Cossacks of Azov fighting a Turk ship" by [[Grigory Gagarin]]
  • Pirates of the Caribbean]]'' film series
  • [[Dan Seavey]] was a pirate on the [[Great Lakes]] in the early 20th century.
  • U.S. naval officer [[Stephen Decatur]] boarding a Tripolitan gunboat during the [[First Barbary War]], 1804
  • Double-barrelled ''[[lantaka]]'' cannons, ''[[kalasag]]'' shields, armor, and various swords (including ''[[kalis]]'', ''[[panabas]]'', and ''[[kampilan]]'') used by [[Moro pirates]] in the Philippines (c. 1900)
  • Hanging of [[Captain Kidd]]; illustration from ''The Pirates Own Book'' (1837)
  • A contemporary flyer depicting the [[public execution]] of 16th-century pirate [[Klein Henszlein]] and his crew in 1573
  • prahu]] in Skerang river
  • [[International Maritime Organization]] (IMO) conference on capacity-building to counter piracy in the Indian Ocean
  • Malay]] word for "pirate", ''lanun'', originates from an [[exonym]] of the Iranun people
  • [[Jacques de Sores]] looting and burning Havana in 1555
  • Queen Mary 2}}
  • Mural representing the attack of [[Charles Windon]] to [[San Sebastián de La Gomera]] (1743)
  • Panama]] in 1671 – the second most important city in the Spanish New World at the time; engraving from 1681 Spanish edition of [[Alexandre Exquemelin]]'s ''The Buccaneers of America''
  • British]] forces engaging Iranun pirates off [[Sarawak]] in 1843
  • [[Henry Every]] is shown selling his loot in this engraving by Howard Pyle. Every's capture of the Grand Mughal ship ''[[Ganj-i-Sawai]]'' in 1695 stands as one of the most profitable pirate raids ever perpetrated.
  • Incidents of pipeline vandalism by pirates in the [[Gulf of Guinea]], 2002–2011
  • Born to a noble family in [[Puerto Rico]], [[Roberto Cofresí]] was the last notably successful pirate in the Caribbean.
  • The cemetery of past pirates at Île Ste-Marie (St. Mary's Island)
  • Puerto del Príncipe]] being sacked in 1668 by Henry Morgan
  • Modern reconstruction of skull alleged to have belonged to 14th century pirate [[Klaus Störtebeker]]. He was the leader of the privateer guild [[Victual Brothers]], who later turned to piracy and roamed European seas.
  • Roman trireme]] in Tunisia
  • Niger Delta]], a center of piracy
  • A collage of Somali pirates armed with [[AKM]] [[assault rifles]], [[RPG-7]] [[rocket-propelled grenade]] launchers and [[semi-automatic pistol]]s in 2008
  • Map showing the extent of Somali pirate attacks on shipping vessels between 2005 and 2010
  • pirates in the Strait of Malacca]]
  • Iranun]] pirate
  • Suspected [[Somali pirates]] keep their hands in the air
  • The Vitalienbrüder. Piracy became endemic in the [[Baltic sea]] in the [[Middle Ages]] because of the [[Victual Brothers]].
  • Pirate treasure looted by [[Samuel Bellamy]] and recovered from the wreck of the ''Whydah''; exhibit at the [[Houston Museum of Natural Science]], 2010
  • A fleet of [[Vikings]], painted mid-12th century
  • Japanese]] pirate raids
ACT OF ROBBERY OR CRIMINALITY AT SEA
French privateers; Pirate ship; Piratical; Maritime piracy; Piratry; Pirates; Pirate; Sea piracy; Pirateering; Maritime terrorism; Maritime Piracy; Pirate ships; Pie rat; Pirate and Piracy; Priate; Buccaneer-Americans; Maritime hijacking; Sea raider; Piracy in terrorism; Piracy iure gentium; Piracy jure gentium; Sea pirate; Pirate Captain; Piracy in Asia; Chinese pirates; Lanun; Anti-piracy measures; Roman piracy; Piracy in antiquity; Piracy in Antiquity; Water pirate; Chinese pirate; History of piracy in Southeast Asia; Piracy in the East Indies; Piracy in Malaysia; Economics of piracy; Legal aspects of piracy
n. the crime of robbery of ships or boats on the oceans. Accusation, trial and punishment of pirates may be under international agreement applicable anywhere, or under the laws of the particular nation where the accused has been captured.
Piratical         
  • Four Chinese pirates who were hanged in Hong Kong in 1863
  • French ship under attack by Barbary pirates, ca. 1615
  • Amaro Pargo]] was one of the most famous corsairs of the [[Golden Age of Piracy]]
  • Bombardment of Algiers]] by the Anglo-Dutch fleet in 1816 to support the ultimatum to release European slaves
  • piracy in the Indian Ocean]]
  • [[Bartholomew Roberts]]' crew carousing at the [[Calabar River]]; illustration from ''The Pirates Own Book'' (1837). Roberts is estimated to have captured over 470 vessels.
  • Bartholomew Roberts was the pirate with most captures during the Golden Age of Piracy. He is now known for hanging the governor of [[Martinique]] from the yardarm of his ship.
  • "Mic the Scallywag" of the Pirates of Emerson Haunted Adventure Fremont, California
  • [[Blackbeard]]'s severed head hanging from Maynard's bowsprit; illustration from ''The Pirates Own Book'' (1837)
  • Book about pirates "De Americaensche Zee-Roovers" was first published in 1678 in Amsterdam
  • Spanish warships bombarding the [[Moro Pirates]] of the southern Philippines in 1848
  • Pirate [[Anne Bonny]] (1697–1720). Engraving from [[Captain Charles Johnson]]'s ''General History of the Pyrates'' (1st Dutch Edition, 1725)
  • ''Capture of the Pirate Blackbeard, 1718'' depicting the battle between [[Blackbeard]] and [[Robert Maynard]] in Ocracoke Bay; romanticized depiction by [[Jean Leon Gerome Ferris]] from 1920
  • Commodore]] gives a presentation on piracy at the MAST 2008 conference
  • Garneray]]
  • "Cossacks of Azov fighting a Turk ship" by [[Grigory Gagarin]]
  • Pirates of the Caribbean]]'' film series
  • [[Dan Seavey]] was a pirate on the [[Great Lakes]] in the early 20th century.
  • U.S. naval officer [[Stephen Decatur]] boarding a Tripolitan gunboat during the [[First Barbary War]], 1804
  • Double-barrelled ''[[lantaka]]'' cannons, ''[[kalasag]]'' shields, armor, and various swords (including ''[[kalis]]'', ''[[panabas]]'', and ''[[kampilan]]'') used by [[Moro pirates]] in the Philippines (c. 1900)
  • Hanging of [[Captain Kidd]]; illustration from ''The Pirates Own Book'' (1837)
  • A contemporary flyer depicting the [[public execution]] of 16th-century pirate [[Klein Henszlein]] and his crew in 1573
  • prahu]] in Skerang river
  • [[International Maritime Organization]] (IMO) conference on capacity-building to counter piracy in the Indian Ocean
  • Malay]] word for "pirate", ''lanun'', originates from an [[exonym]] of the Iranun people
  • [[Jacques de Sores]] looting and burning Havana in 1555
  • Queen Mary 2}}
  • Mural representing the attack of [[Charles Windon]] to [[San Sebastián de La Gomera]] (1743)
  • Panama]] in 1671 – the second most important city in the Spanish New World at the time; engraving from 1681 Spanish edition of [[Alexandre Exquemelin]]'s ''The Buccaneers of America''
  • British]] forces engaging Iranun pirates off [[Sarawak]] in 1843
  • [[Henry Every]] is shown selling his loot in this engraving by Howard Pyle. Every's capture of the Grand Mughal ship ''[[Ganj-i-Sawai]]'' in 1695 stands as one of the most profitable pirate raids ever perpetrated.
  • Incidents of pipeline vandalism by pirates in the [[Gulf of Guinea]], 2002–2011
  • Born to a noble family in [[Puerto Rico]], [[Roberto Cofresí]] was the last notably successful pirate in the Caribbean.
  • The cemetery of past pirates at Île Ste-Marie (St. Mary's Island)
  • Puerto del Príncipe]] being sacked in 1668 by Henry Morgan
  • Modern reconstruction of skull alleged to have belonged to 14th century pirate [[Klaus Störtebeker]]. He was the leader of the privateer guild [[Victual Brothers]], who later turned to piracy and roamed European seas.
  • Roman trireme]] in Tunisia
  • Niger Delta]], a center of piracy
  • A collage of Somali pirates armed with [[AKM]] [[assault rifles]], [[RPG-7]] [[rocket-propelled grenade]] launchers and [[semi-automatic pistol]]s in 2008
  • Map showing the extent of Somali pirate attacks on shipping vessels between 2005 and 2010
  • pirates in the Strait of Malacca]]
  • Iranun]] pirate
  • Suspected [[Somali pirates]] keep their hands in the air
  • The Vitalienbrüder. Piracy became endemic in the [[Baltic sea]] in the [[Middle Ages]] because of the [[Victual Brothers]].
  • Pirate treasure looted by [[Samuel Bellamy]] and recovered from the wreck of the ''Whydah''; exhibit at the [[Houston Museum of Natural Science]], 2010
  • A fleet of [[Vikings]], painted mid-12th century
  • Japanese]] pirate raids
ACT OF ROBBERY OR CRIMINALITY AT SEA
French privateers; Pirate ship; Piratical; Maritime piracy; Piratry; Pirates; Pirate; Sea piracy; Pirateering; Maritime terrorism; Maritime Piracy; Pirate ships; Pie rat; Pirate and Piracy; Priate; Buccaneer-Americans; Maritime hijacking; Sea raider; Piracy in terrorism; Piracy iure gentium; Piracy jure gentium; Sea pirate; Pirate Captain; Piracy in Asia; Chinese pirates; Lanun; Anti-piracy measures; Roman piracy; Piracy in antiquity; Piracy in Antiquity; Water pirate; Chinese pirate; History of piracy in Southeast Asia; Piracy in the East Indies; Piracy in Malaysia; Economics of piracy; Legal aspects of piracy
·adj Of or pertaining to a pirate; acquired by, or practicing, piracy; as, a piratical undertaking.
Piracy         
  • Four Chinese pirates who were hanged in Hong Kong in 1863
  • French ship under attack by Barbary pirates, ca. 1615
  • Amaro Pargo]] was one of the most famous corsairs of the [[Golden Age of Piracy]]
  • Bombardment of Algiers]] by the Anglo-Dutch fleet in 1816 to support the ultimatum to release European slaves
  • piracy in the Indian Ocean]]
  • [[Bartholomew Roberts]]' crew carousing at the [[Calabar River]]; illustration from ''The Pirates Own Book'' (1837). Roberts is estimated to have captured over 470 vessels.
  • Bartholomew Roberts was the pirate with most captures during the Golden Age of Piracy. He is now known for hanging the governor of [[Martinique]] from the yardarm of his ship.
  • "Mic the Scallywag" of the Pirates of Emerson Haunted Adventure Fremont, California
  • [[Blackbeard]]'s severed head hanging from Maynard's bowsprit; illustration from ''The Pirates Own Book'' (1837)
  • Book about pirates "De Americaensche Zee-Roovers" was first published in 1678 in Amsterdam
  • Spanish warships bombarding the [[Moro Pirates]] of the southern Philippines in 1848
  • Pirate [[Anne Bonny]] (1697–1720). Engraving from [[Captain Charles Johnson]]'s ''General History of the Pyrates'' (1st Dutch Edition, 1725)
  • ''Capture of the Pirate Blackbeard, 1718'' depicting the battle between [[Blackbeard]] and [[Robert Maynard]] in Ocracoke Bay; romanticized depiction by [[Jean Leon Gerome Ferris]] from 1920
  • Commodore]] gives a presentation on piracy at the MAST 2008 conference
  • Garneray]]
  • "Cossacks of Azov fighting a Turk ship" by [[Grigory Gagarin]]
  • Pirates of the Caribbean]]'' film series
  • [[Dan Seavey]] was a pirate on the [[Great Lakes]] in the early 20th century.
  • U.S. naval officer [[Stephen Decatur]] boarding a Tripolitan gunboat during the [[First Barbary War]], 1804
  • Double-barrelled ''[[lantaka]]'' cannons, ''[[kalasag]]'' shields, armor, and various swords (including ''[[kalis]]'', ''[[panabas]]'', and ''[[kampilan]]'') used by [[Moro pirates]] in the Philippines (c. 1900)
  • Hanging of [[Captain Kidd]]; illustration from ''The Pirates Own Book'' (1837)
  • A contemporary flyer depicting the [[public execution]] of 16th-century pirate [[Klein Henszlein]] and his crew in 1573
  • prahu]] in Skerang river
  • [[International Maritime Organization]] (IMO) conference on capacity-building to counter piracy in the Indian Ocean
  • Malay]] word for "pirate", ''lanun'', originates from an [[exonym]] of the Iranun people
  • [[Jacques de Sores]] looting and burning Havana in 1555
  • Queen Mary 2}}
  • Mural representing the attack of [[Charles Windon]] to [[San Sebastián de La Gomera]] (1743)
  • Panama]] in 1671 – the second most important city in the Spanish New World at the time; engraving from 1681 Spanish edition of [[Alexandre Exquemelin]]'s ''The Buccaneers of America''
  • British]] forces engaging Iranun pirates off [[Sarawak]] in 1843
  • [[Henry Every]] is shown selling his loot in this engraving by Howard Pyle. Every's capture of the Grand Mughal ship ''[[Ganj-i-Sawai]]'' in 1695 stands as one of the most profitable pirate raids ever perpetrated.
  • Incidents of pipeline vandalism by pirates in the [[Gulf of Guinea]], 2002–2011
  • Born to a noble family in [[Puerto Rico]], [[Roberto Cofresí]] was the last notably successful pirate in the Caribbean.
  • The cemetery of past pirates at Île Ste-Marie (St. Mary's Island)
  • Puerto del Príncipe]] being sacked in 1668 by Henry Morgan
  • Modern reconstruction of skull alleged to have belonged to 14th century pirate [[Klaus Störtebeker]]. He was the leader of the privateer guild [[Victual Brothers]], who later turned to piracy and roamed European seas.
  • Roman trireme]] in Tunisia
  • Niger Delta]], a center of piracy
  • A collage of Somali pirates armed with [[AKM]] [[assault rifles]], [[RPG-7]] [[rocket-propelled grenade]] launchers and [[semi-automatic pistol]]s in 2008
  • Map showing the extent of Somali pirate attacks on shipping vessels between 2005 and 2010
  • pirates in the Strait of Malacca]]
  • Iranun]] pirate
  • Suspected [[Somali pirates]] keep their hands in the air
  • The Vitalienbrüder. Piracy became endemic in the [[Baltic sea]] in the [[Middle Ages]] because of the [[Victual Brothers]].
  • Pirate treasure looted by [[Samuel Bellamy]] and recovered from the wreck of the ''Whydah''; exhibit at the [[Houston Museum of Natural Science]], 2010
  • A fleet of [[Vikings]], painted mid-12th century
  • Japanese]] pirate raids
ACT OF ROBBERY OR CRIMINALITY AT SEA
French privateers; Pirate ship; Piratical; Maritime piracy; Piratry; Pirates; Pirate; Sea piracy; Pirateering; Maritime terrorism; Maritime Piracy; Pirate ships; Pie rat; Pirate and Piracy; Priate; Buccaneer-Americans; Maritime hijacking; Sea raider; Piracy in terrorism; Piracy iure gentium; Piracy jure gentium; Sea pirate; Pirate Captain; Piracy in Asia; Chinese pirates; Lanun; Anti-piracy measures; Roman piracy; Piracy in antiquity; Piracy in Antiquity; Water pirate; Chinese pirate; History of piracy in Southeast Asia; Piracy in the East Indies; Piracy in Malaysia; Economics of piracy; Legal aspects of piracy
Piracy is an act of robbery or criminal violence by ship or boat-borne attackers upon another ship or a coastal area, typically with the goal of stealing cargo and other valuable goods. Those who conduct acts of piracy are called pirates, while the dedicated ships that pirates use are called pirate ships.
piratical         
  • Four Chinese pirates who were hanged in Hong Kong in 1863
  • French ship under attack by Barbary pirates, ca. 1615
  • Amaro Pargo]] was one of the most famous corsairs of the [[Golden Age of Piracy]]
  • Bombardment of Algiers]] by the Anglo-Dutch fleet in 1816 to support the ultimatum to release European slaves
  • piracy in the Indian Ocean]]
  • [[Bartholomew Roberts]]' crew carousing at the [[Calabar River]]; illustration from ''The Pirates Own Book'' (1837). Roberts is estimated to have captured over 470 vessels.
  • Bartholomew Roberts was the pirate with most captures during the Golden Age of Piracy. He is now known for hanging the governor of [[Martinique]] from the yardarm of his ship.
  • "Mic the Scallywag" of the Pirates of Emerson Haunted Adventure Fremont, California
  • [[Blackbeard]]'s severed head hanging from Maynard's bowsprit; illustration from ''The Pirates Own Book'' (1837)
  • Book about pirates "De Americaensche Zee-Roovers" was first published in 1678 in Amsterdam
  • Spanish warships bombarding the [[Moro Pirates]] of the southern Philippines in 1848
  • Pirate [[Anne Bonny]] (1697–1720). Engraving from [[Captain Charles Johnson]]'s ''General History of the Pyrates'' (1st Dutch Edition, 1725)
  • ''Capture of the Pirate Blackbeard, 1718'' depicting the battle between [[Blackbeard]] and [[Robert Maynard]] in Ocracoke Bay; romanticized depiction by [[Jean Leon Gerome Ferris]] from 1920
  • Commodore]] gives a presentation on piracy at the MAST 2008 conference
  • Garneray]]
  • "Cossacks of Azov fighting a Turk ship" by [[Grigory Gagarin]]
  • Pirates of the Caribbean]]'' film series
  • [[Dan Seavey]] was a pirate on the [[Great Lakes]] in the early 20th century.
  • U.S. naval officer [[Stephen Decatur]] boarding a Tripolitan gunboat during the [[First Barbary War]], 1804
  • Double-barrelled ''[[lantaka]]'' cannons, ''[[kalasag]]'' shields, armor, and various swords (including ''[[kalis]]'', ''[[panabas]]'', and ''[[kampilan]]'') used by [[Moro pirates]] in the Philippines (c. 1900)
  • Hanging of [[Captain Kidd]]; illustration from ''The Pirates Own Book'' (1837)
  • A contemporary flyer depicting the [[public execution]] of 16th-century pirate [[Klein Henszlein]] and his crew in 1573
  • prahu]] in Skerang river
  • [[International Maritime Organization]] (IMO) conference on capacity-building to counter piracy in the Indian Ocean
  • Malay]] word for "pirate", ''lanun'', originates from an [[exonym]] of the Iranun people
  • [[Jacques de Sores]] looting and burning Havana in 1555
  • Queen Mary 2}}
  • Mural representing the attack of [[Charles Windon]] to [[San Sebastián de La Gomera]] (1743)
  • Panama]] in 1671 – the second most important city in the Spanish New World at the time; engraving from 1681 Spanish edition of [[Alexandre Exquemelin]]'s ''The Buccaneers of America''
  • British]] forces engaging Iranun pirates off [[Sarawak]] in 1843
  • [[Henry Every]] is shown selling his loot in this engraving by Howard Pyle. Every's capture of the Grand Mughal ship ''[[Ganj-i-Sawai]]'' in 1695 stands as one of the most profitable pirate raids ever perpetrated.
  • Incidents of pipeline vandalism by pirates in the [[Gulf of Guinea]], 2002–2011
  • Born to a noble family in [[Puerto Rico]], [[Roberto Cofresí]] was the last notably successful pirate in the Caribbean.
  • The cemetery of past pirates at Île Ste-Marie (St. Mary's Island)
  • Puerto del Príncipe]] being sacked in 1668 by Henry Morgan
  • Modern reconstruction of skull alleged to have belonged to 14th century pirate [[Klaus Störtebeker]]. He was the leader of the privateer guild [[Victual Brothers]], who later turned to piracy and roamed European seas.
  • Roman trireme]] in Tunisia
  • Niger Delta]], a center of piracy
  • A collage of Somali pirates armed with [[AKM]] [[assault rifles]], [[RPG-7]] [[rocket-propelled grenade]] launchers and [[semi-automatic pistol]]s in 2008
  • Map showing the extent of Somali pirate attacks on shipping vessels between 2005 and 2010
  • pirates in the Strait of Malacca]]
  • Iranun]] pirate
  • Suspected [[Somali pirates]] keep their hands in the air
  • The Vitalienbrüder. Piracy became endemic in the [[Baltic sea]] in the [[Middle Ages]] because of the [[Victual Brothers]].
  • Pirate treasure looted by [[Samuel Bellamy]] and recovered from the wreck of the ''Whydah''; exhibit at the [[Houston Museum of Natural Science]], 2010
  • A fleet of [[Vikings]], painted mid-12th century
  • Japanese]] pirate raids
ACT OF ROBBERY OR CRIMINALITY AT SEA
French privateers; Pirate ship; Piratical; Maritime piracy; Piratry; Pirates; Pirate; Sea piracy; Pirateering; Maritime terrorism; Maritime Piracy; Pirate ships; Pie rat; Pirate and Piracy; Priate; Buccaneer-Americans; Maritime hijacking; Sea raider; Piracy in terrorism; Piracy iure gentium; Piracy jure gentium; Sea pirate; Pirate Captain; Piracy in Asia; Chinese pirates; Lanun; Anti-piracy measures; Roman piracy; Piracy in antiquity; Piracy in Antiquity; Water pirate; Chinese pirate; History of piracy in Southeast Asia; Piracy in the East Indies; Piracy in Malaysia; Economics of piracy; Legal aspects of piracy
a.
piracy         
  • Four Chinese pirates who were hanged in Hong Kong in 1863
  • French ship under attack by Barbary pirates, ca. 1615
  • Amaro Pargo]] was one of the most famous corsairs of the [[Golden Age of Piracy]]
  • Bombardment of Algiers]] by the Anglo-Dutch fleet in 1816 to support the ultimatum to release European slaves
  • piracy in the Indian Ocean]]
  • [[Bartholomew Roberts]]' crew carousing at the [[Calabar River]]; illustration from ''The Pirates Own Book'' (1837). Roberts is estimated to have captured over 470 vessels.
  • Bartholomew Roberts was the pirate with most captures during the Golden Age of Piracy. He is now known for hanging the governor of [[Martinique]] from the yardarm of his ship.
  • "Mic the Scallywag" of the Pirates of Emerson Haunted Adventure Fremont, California
  • [[Blackbeard]]'s severed head hanging from Maynard's bowsprit; illustration from ''The Pirates Own Book'' (1837)
  • Book about pirates "De Americaensche Zee-Roovers" was first published in 1678 in Amsterdam
  • Spanish warships bombarding the [[Moro Pirates]] of the southern Philippines in 1848
  • Pirate [[Anne Bonny]] (1697–1720). Engraving from [[Captain Charles Johnson]]'s ''General History of the Pyrates'' (1st Dutch Edition, 1725)
  • ''Capture of the Pirate Blackbeard, 1718'' depicting the battle between [[Blackbeard]] and [[Robert Maynard]] in Ocracoke Bay; romanticized depiction by [[Jean Leon Gerome Ferris]] from 1920
  • Commodore]] gives a presentation on piracy at the MAST 2008 conference
  • Garneray]]
  • "Cossacks of Azov fighting a Turk ship" by [[Grigory Gagarin]]
  • Pirates of the Caribbean]]'' film series
  • [[Dan Seavey]] was a pirate on the [[Great Lakes]] in the early 20th century.
  • U.S. naval officer [[Stephen Decatur]] boarding a Tripolitan gunboat during the [[First Barbary War]], 1804
  • Double-barrelled ''[[lantaka]]'' cannons, ''[[kalasag]]'' shields, armor, and various swords (including ''[[kalis]]'', ''[[panabas]]'', and ''[[kampilan]]'') used by [[Moro pirates]] in the Philippines (c. 1900)
  • Hanging of [[Captain Kidd]]; illustration from ''The Pirates Own Book'' (1837)
  • A contemporary flyer depicting the [[public execution]] of 16th-century pirate [[Klein Henszlein]] and his crew in 1573
  • prahu]] in Skerang river
  • [[International Maritime Organization]] (IMO) conference on capacity-building to counter piracy in the Indian Ocean
  • Malay]] word for "pirate", ''lanun'', originates from an [[exonym]] of the Iranun people
  • [[Jacques de Sores]] looting and burning Havana in 1555
  • Queen Mary 2}}
  • Mural representing the attack of [[Charles Windon]] to [[San Sebastián de La Gomera]] (1743)
  • Panama]] in 1671 – the second most important city in the Spanish New World at the time; engraving from 1681 Spanish edition of [[Alexandre Exquemelin]]'s ''The Buccaneers of America''
  • British]] forces engaging Iranun pirates off [[Sarawak]] in 1843
  • [[Henry Every]] is shown selling his loot in this engraving by Howard Pyle. Every's capture of the Grand Mughal ship ''[[Ganj-i-Sawai]]'' in 1695 stands as one of the most profitable pirate raids ever perpetrated.
  • Incidents of pipeline vandalism by pirates in the [[Gulf of Guinea]], 2002–2011
  • Born to a noble family in [[Puerto Rico]], [[Roberto Cofresí]] was the last notably successful pirate in the Caribbean.
  • The cemetery of past pirates at Île Ste-Marie (St. Mary's Island)
  • Puerto del Príncipe]] being sacked in 1668 by Henry Morgan
  • Modern reconstruction of skull alleged to have belonged to 14th century pirate [[Klaus Störtebeker]]. He was the leader of the privateer guild [[Victual Brothers]], who later turned to piracy and roamed European seas.
  • Roman trireme]] in Tunisia
  • Niger Delta]], a center of piracy
  • A collage of Somali pirates armed with [[AKM]] [[assault rifles]], [[RPG-7]] [[rocket-propelled grenade]] launchers and [[semi-automatic pistol]]s in 2008
  • Map showing the extent of Somali pirate attacks on shipping vessels between 2005 and 2010
  • pirates in the Strait of Malacca]]
  • Iranun]] pirate
  • Suspected [[Somali pirates]] keep their hands in the air
  • The Vitalienbrüder. Piracy became endemic in the [[Baltic sea]] in the [[Middle Ages]] because of the [[Victual Brothers]].
  • Pirate treasure looted by [[Samuel Bellamy]] and recovered from the wreck of the ''Whydah''; exhibit at the [[Houston Museum of Natural Science]], 2010
  • A fleet of [[Vikings]], painted mid-12th century
  • Japanese]] pirate raids
ACT OF ROBBERY OR CRIMINALITY AT SEA
French privateers; Pirate ship; Piratical; Maritime piracy; Piratry; Pirates; Pirate; Sea piracy; Pirateering; Maritime terrorism; Maritime Piracy; Pirate ships; Pie rat; Pirate and Piracy; Priate; Buccaneer-Americans; Maritime hijacking; Sea raider; Piracy in terrorism; Piracy iure gentium; Piracy jure gentium; Sea pirate; Pirate Captain; Piracy in Asia; Chinese pirates; Lanun; Anti-piracy measures; Roman piracy; Piracy in antiquity; Piracy in Antiquity; Water pirate; Chinese pirate; History of piracy in Southeast Asia; Piracy in the East Indies; Piracy in Malaysia; Economics of piracy; Legal aspects of piracy
n.
1) to commit piracy
2) air; literary piracy; piracy on the high seas
3) an act of piracy

Википедия

Aladdin Knowledge Systems

Aladdin Knowledge Systems (formerly Nasdaq: ALDN and TASE: ALDN) was a company that produced software for digital rights management and Internet security. The company was acquired by Safenet Inc, in 2009. Its corporate headquarters are located in Belcamp, MD.