Pierre Francois
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Pierre Francois (Anglicized as "Peter Francis") was a mid-17th-century ''flibustier'', or French buccaneer, active in the Caribbean. He is best known for a single attack on a Spanish pearl-diving fleet. His story appears only in Alexandre Exquemelin's ''History of the Buccaneers'' and the truth of his account is uncertain.


History

No definitive dates are given for Francois' exploits. According to Exquemelin, Francois had been lying in wait for Spanish ships traveling between
Campeche Campeche (; yua, Kaampech ), officially the Free and Sovereign State of Campeche ( es, Estado Libre y Soberano de Campeche), is one of the 31 states which make up the 32 Federal Entities of Mexico. Located in southeast Mexico, it is bordered by ...
and
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but had little success. His 26-man crew grew restless so they elected to raid the Spanish pearl-diving operations off Rio de le Hacha. Francois tried to slip in unnoticed but the small pearl-diving boats fled under the guns of a
man-of-war The man-of-war (also man-o'-war, or simply man) was a Royal Navy expression for a powerful warship or frigate from the 16th to the 19th century. Although the term never acquired a specific meaning, it was usually reserved for a ship armed wi ...
for protection. When they let down their guard Francois instead attacked the Vice-Admiral's 8-gun, 60-man ship, capturing it after a fierce boarding action. He sunk his old leaking vessel and forced the Spanish crew to help man the new ship. Putting up a Spanish flag, he tried to board the 200-man, 24-gun man-of-war itself but the warship gave chase. Francois fled the warship but unfurled too much sail in a strong wind, breaking his ship's mast. The warship caught them and defeated Francois and his buccaneers, who agreed to surrender "on condition that they should not be used as slaves to carry stones, or be employed in other labours for three or four years, as they served their negroes" and were instead set ashore. Another source (via Exquemelin, from a different translation) claims Francois and his men were sentenced to servitude anyway, eventually sent to Spain where they escaped and returned to France.


Authenticity

The story of Pierre Francois is known from a single source, Alexandre Exquemelin's ''History of the Buccaneers in America''. Exquemelin accompanied Henry Morgan and other buccaneers during their exploits in the 1660s and 1670s and wrote detailed accounts. Exquemelin's eyewitness account of Morgan, L'Olonnais, and the other expeditions he directly witnessed is "generally reliable; modern historians judge it to be largely accurate in its descriptions." But especially regarding second-hand accounts he related, such as Pierre Francois, "it remains a matter of opinion as to how much of Exquemelin's book is reliable."


See also

* Alexandre Bras-de-Fer and
Daniel Montbars Daniel Montbars (1645–1707?), better known as Montbars the Exterminator, was a 17th-century French buccaneer. For several years, he was known as one of the most violent buccaneers active against the Spanish during the mid-17th century. His reput ...
– two buccaneers whose stories were not in Exquemelin's original Dutch book, but appeared only in later French translations.


References

{{DEFAULTSORT:Francois, Pierre 17th-century pirates Year of birth missing Year of death missing French privateers