Atlas of Hispanic-American History

(Marvins-Underground-K-12) #1
buccaneering and privateering was often
vague, with the British and French only
too happy to see their enemy Spain
harassed, even without official approval.
Some buccaneers were explicitly hired by
their governments to fight as privateers in
the War of the Spanish Succession
(1701–1714), in which Austria, England,
Denmark, the Dutch Republic, Portugal,
and several other European nations joined
forces against France and Spain. But
pirates also menaced the colonies of other
nations. The infamous English pirate
Blackbeard (Edward Teach, ca.

1680–1718) was killed by the British for
his attacks on Virginia, a British colony.
Even aside from the attacks of pirate
ships, Spanish control of the Caribbean
was greatly weakened by the mid-18th
century, for other nations had planted
colonies throughout the West Indies. The
Netherlands took possession of the
Leeward Islands in the 1630s, England of
the Bahamas in the 1640s. Jamaica, set-
tled by Spain in 1509, was ceded to
England in 1670. The western part of the
island of Hispaniola that was to become
Haiti was ceded to France in 1697. Just

52 ATLAS OF HISPANIC-AMERICAN HISTORY


Selected Settlements in the Spanish Southeast, 1565–1657


While the Spanish would in time expand Florida settlement southward during the 17th century, swamplands in southern Florida
slowed the pace of development. With the exception of a settlement at Tegesta, most of the earliest settlements were in the
north. In fact, although no precise borders existed, the Spaniards viewed what they called La Florida as extending northward into
the Carolinas.
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