this post was submitted on 24 Jun 2024
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European Graphic Novels+

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“Bandes dessinée” refers to Franco-Belgian comics, but let's open things up to include all Euro comics, especially graphic novels. Comics & art from around the world with ‘Euro-stylings' are also welcome. ^^

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One of the things I always loved about Treasure Island was how Stevenson here & there included little bits pertaining to 'The Pirate Code.' For example, what the "black spot" meant exactly, and what the actual differences were between ranks, such as crewman, 'boson,' quartermaster, navigator, and full captain.

I feel that the two books comprising Republic of the Skull (200+ pages in all) do a fascinating job exploring in much greater depth how that all worked in terms of the early 1700's Caribbean and African Coast "golden age of piracy." Whilst meanwhile telling a damn good story, that is!

https://i.imgur.com/fxq9K6n.jpeg

Another fascinating thing I found in this work is that one of our protagonists was based on a real-life African Queen who really did command pirate fleets and conducted counter-wars against the Euros, i.e. Nzinga. In the story, after the pirates met her with some skepticism initially, she proved to pretty much be a genius at language, tactics, and whatever else.

Which was in fact true to the person!
Seriously, it seems she was a sort of perfectly-audacious, 'Albert Einstein' of the day.

Right so, moving on-- it seems there was a special ceremony when it came to threats against 'our brothers and sisters' (i.e. the currently-serving pirates), in which real trials or mock-trials could occur. Here we have the start of one, for example:

https://i.imgur.com/JxRzdUR.jpeg

Primarily, it was a means of helping ones' mates deal with their inevitable mortality.

Republic of the Skull covers literally 4x significant content as I'm attempting to bumble around via these haphazard words. In short, it's the very best pirate-themed work I've ever read.

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