Great profit was made both ways as pirates sold their wares at low prices and merchants got great deals. Such was the success of many pirates during the Golden Age of Piracy that even legitimate merchants would await the arrival of pirate ships returning from the Caribbean or from the Pacific and Indian Oceans who would sell silks, spices and other commodities. By the end of the 1720s, following growing suppression of pirate activity by the Royal Navy of Great Britain and other sovereignties, piracy was a thing of the past, although smuggling continued. The Golden Age of SmugglingĪ pirate captain of any worth and his quartermaster would have been expert smugglers during the period between the 1690s and 1720s when piracy was at its height along the coast of North Africa and the Caribbean. Many smugglers were involved in more large scale corruption involving governors and port officials, as authorities turned a blind eye to smuggling operations, while other smugglers performed small scale smuggling operations “importing” to private buyers in the dead of the night in quiet coves. Smuggling is and was the act of importing goods into a country illegally, whether to avoid import taxes, to ship in products that were illegal in the country or (as was the case of pirates) to avoid anyone asking questions as to the origin of the products for sale.
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