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  2. Plundering Time - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Plundering_Time

    The Plundering Time (1644–1646), also known as "Claiborne and Ingle's Rebellion", was a period of civil unrest and lawlessness in the English colony of the Province of Maryland. William Claiborne and Richard Ingle both took opportunities to seize property and pillage in an around Kent Island and St. Mary's City, Maryland .

  3. Confederate privateer - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Confederate_privateer

    Most of the privateers managed to remain free, but enough were caught that the owners and crew had to consider the risk seriously. The capture of the privateers Savannah and Jefferson Davis resulted in important court cases that did much to define the nature of the Civil War itself. Initial enthusiasm could not be sustained.

  4. Letter of marque - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Letter_of_marque

    A letter of marque and reprisal (French: lettre de marque; lettre de course) was a government license in the Age of Sail that authorized a private person, known as a privateer or corsair, to attack and capture vessels of a foreign state at war with the issuer, licensing international military operations against a specified enemy as reprisal for a previous attack or injury.

  5. File:A history of American privateers (IA ...

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:A_history_of_American...

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  6. Andrew White (Jesuit) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Andrew_White_(Jesuit)

    The beginning of the English Civil War in 1642, with its conflicts between Catholics and Protestants, ended White's mission in the Maryland Colony. In 1644, Richard Ingle, a Protestant privateer, assembled a party of Puritans who had been expelled from Jamestown and seized St. Mary's. They imprisoned the colonial leadership, looted Catholic ...

  7. White Anglo-Saxon Protestants - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/White_Anglo-Saxon_Protestants

    The popular and sociological usage of the term WASP has sometimes expanded to include not just "Anglo-Saxon" or English-American elites but also American people of other Protestant Northwestern European origin, including Protestant Dutch Americans, Scottish Americans, [10] [36] Welsh Americans, [37] German Americans, Ulster Scots or "Scotch ...

  8. English Dissenters - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/English_Dissenters

    Such "enthusiasm" was seen as the cause of the English Civil War and its attendant atrocities, and thus it was a social sin to remind others of the war by engaging in enthusiasm. During the 18th century, popular Methodists such as John Wesley and George Whitefield were accused of blind enthusiasm (i.e., fanaticism), a charge against which they ...

  9. History of Protestantism in the United States - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_Protestantism...

    The NCC took a prominent role in the Civil Rights Movement, and fostered the publication of the widely usedRevised Standard Version of the Bible, followed by an updated New Revised Standard Version, the first translation to benefit from the discovery of the Dead Sea Scrolls. The organization is headquartered in New York City, with a public ...