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  2. Bahamas travel warning issued in wake of 18 murders so far ...

    www.aol.com/bahamas-travel-warning-issued-wake...

    Think twice about a tropical getaway to the Caribbean this winter. The U.S. embassy in the Bahamas has released a security warning and travel advisory that the island nation is currently unsafe ...

  3. Flying Gang - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flying_Gang

    The Flying Gang was an 18th-century group of pirates who established themselves in Nassau, New Providence in the Bahamas after the destruction of Port Royal in Jamaica. [2] The gang consisted of the most notorious and cunning pirates of the time, and they terrorized and pillaged the Caribbean until the Royal Navy and infighting brought them to ...

  4. Nassau, The Bahamas - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nassau,_The_Bahamas

    Nassau had a population of 128,420 females and 117,909 males and was home to 70,222 households with an average family size of 3.5 according to the 2010 census. [19] Nassau's large population in relation to the remainder of the Bahamas is the result of waves of immigration from the Family Islands to the capital. Consequently, this has led to the ...

  5. Piracy in the Caribbean - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Piracy_in_the_Caribbean

    Central America and the Caribbean (detailed pdf map) The "Piracy of the Caribbean" refers to the historical period of widespread piracy that occurred in the Caribbean Sea. Primarily between the 1650s and 1730s, where pirates frequently attacked and robbed merchant ships sailing through the region, often using bases or islands like port royal.

  6. Republic of Pirates - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Republic_of_Pirates

    Pirates established themselves in Nassau, and essentially established their own republic with its own governors. By 1713, the War of the Spanish Succession was over, but many British privateers were slow to get the news, or reluctant to accept it, and so slipped into piracy. This led to large numbers of unemployed privateers making their way to ...

  7. Golden Age of Piracy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Golden_Age_of_Piracy

    In 1897, a more systematic use of the phrase "Golden Age of Piracy" was introduced by historian John Fiske, who wrote, "At no other time in the world's history has the business of piracy thriven so greatly as in the seventeenth century and the first part of the eighteenth. Its golden age may be said to have extended from about 1650 to about 1720."

  8. Extreme ocean temperatures threaten to wipe out Caribbean coral

    www.aol.com/news/extreme-ocean-temperatures...

    Unusually warm waters in the Caribbean Sea are fueling what some scientists say is the region’s worst episode of coral bleaching ever recorded — yet another worrisome development in what has ...

  9. Beryl strengthens into a hurricane in the Atlantic, forecast ...

    www.aol.com/news/tropical-storm-beryl-forms...

    The storm is approaching the southeast Caribbean just days after the twin-island nation of Trinidad and Tobago reported major flooding in the capital, Port-of-Spain, as a result of an unrelated ...