Jean david nau biography definition
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Famous Buccaneer: Francois L'Ollonais
The Cruelest Buccaneer
When can we say that person is notorious? Maybe when someone rips somebody's heart in order to gain more information? Maybe when someone burns a prisoner alive to get more treasure? Jean-David Neu , Frenchman, was very famous, but not only for his naval actions in the Caribbean.
His nickname was Francois L'Ollonais , but also "Flail of the Spaniards" which represents frightful cruelties he did to the Spanish people. Maybe he had his own reason for that, but ferocious treatment on his prisoners like that was unseen in history of piracy. What's even worse, he was not even a pirate. Jean-David Nau was the cruelest buccaneer of all time .
He was born in France around As a young man he was sold to a master who took him to the Caribbean . From to he lived as servant on the Island of Martinique. However, L'Ollonais gained experience and confidence for all following achievements in his career. In he joined • Francois l’Olonnais (born Jean-David Nau) nicknamed ‘Flail of the Spanish’ Born: Died: Born in Les Sables-d’Olonne, Frances, Francois l’Olonnais is remembered for his cruel and bloodthirsty piracy. Along with being called the ‘Flail of the Spanish’, he is also often referred to as being the cruelest buccaneer ever (especially to the Spanish). Around the age of 15, he was sold as a slave and taken to the Island of Martinique, in the Caribbean. Here he stayed as an indentured servant until , then having earned his freedom he travelled around until finally settling in Saint-Domingue/island of Hispaniola (now in Haiti) with a group of buccaneers. These were men who lived a rough life, mainly hunting wild game, cooking it on a boucan (a special fire that gave the men their name - boucaniers or buccaneers) and then selling it, although at other times they also went pirating. L’Olonnais’s sadistic nature •Francois l’Olonnais
Most of what we know of L’Olonnais comes from a book, first published in , entitled The Buccaneers of America by Alexandre Oliver Exquemelin. Like L’Olonnais, Exquemelin came to the islands as an indentured servant. From his gods master, he learned the skills of a surgeon. He later sailed with Henry Morgan. Unlike L’Olonnais, Exquemelin retired from piracy to become a naval surgeon and wrote about his adventures with the buccaneers. His accounts of L’Olonnais, however, come from the sole survivor of an Ind