Pirate Weapons



The weapons used by pirates throughout the ages are as unique and varied as the pirates themselves. The weapons from Roman Empire times would be completely different than those used by pirates in China 1000 years later. Generally though, when people say “pirate” they are referring to the pirates that plagued the Caribbean from the late 1500’s to the early 1800’s.

Pirates of this time were experts at exploiting the weaknesses and strengths of the weapons they used and encountered. The cutlass is the ultimate bladed weapon associated with pirates. The advantages that the cutlass had over many other swords at the time are its weight, length and thickness. During the golden age of piracy (late 1600’s to early 1700’s), advances in steel forging allowed blades to be thinner and lighter without sacrificing the strength of the sword. As the cutlass was a thicker, heavier style sword, it was able to easily bash aside most other bladed weapons of the time. This exposed the body of whomever the pirate was fighting, making a kill or capture much easier. As a shorter sword, the cutlass was better suited to fighting on deck or in the closed quarters of a ship. Combined with a short but sturdy dagger, or often a dirk, a pirate was an enemy you would not want to face close up. Many pirates used a battle axe to help board, kill, or disarm their victims as well. This variety of weapons assured that a pirate was always ready for any situation.


At further distances you weren’t safe either. Matchlock, or flintlock, pistols and blunderbusses wreaked havoc on a crew. Although not incredibly accurate, pistols were small and a single pirate could carry many of them, assuring numerous hits. The famous pirate Blackbeard was rumored to have carried three bandoliers full of pistols into battle! The blunderbuss was the maritime weapon of mass destruction. Equivalent to a modern shotgun, the blunderbuss fired a massive spread of anything you could put in it. From iron balls to metal shavings and beyond, the blunderbuss packed a massive punch and if you were unlucky enough to survive being hit by it, the wounds were crippling, grievous, and often couldn’t be patched up or healed. As most pistols, and even more advanced rifles, were still inaccurate, especially on a ship rolling at sea, the blunderbuss sprayed death in a broad spread which made accuracy rather redundant.

So let’s say that you wanted to stay out of range of both bladed weapons and smaller fire arms. It seems like the smart thing to do if you wanted to live or avoid being captured. Well, the pirates had a solution to your smart thinking. Grappling hooks and cannons quickly brought you to where the pirates wanted you. Cannons could fire iron balls at your ship, punching holes in it and possibly sinking it. They could also fire grape shot which consisted of, like the blunderbuss, whatever pirates wanted to put in the cannon. Silverware. Small pellet balls. Pretty much anything could be pushed down the barrel of a cannon and when it was fired-- it was a bad day to be a human wherever the cannon was aimed. Once your ship was crippled and many of your fellow crew members were killed from cannon fire, the pirates closed in on your ship and grappling hooks were thrown over. Pirates used these to pull their victim’s ships up next to the pirate’s ship and board them. Now you, as a member of a crew being attacked by pirates, could either surrender and hope you’re treated well or you could fight back and most likely die.

Clothes may make the man, and it certain made the pirate wearing them, but it was their weapons and prowess in battle that made pirates rightly feared for generations on all the seven seas.


by Alex Smith, MRL staff writer