English captain and pirate
<a href="https://www.last.fm/music/Henry+Every">Read more on Last.fm</a>
5 total works indexed
· 1998 · cited 19,470x
· 2019 · cited 19,320x
· 2020 · cited 15,320x
· 2016 · cited 14,582x
· 1996 · cited 13,937x
via Crossref · CC0
via Wikipedia infobox
Henry Every, also known as Henry Avery (born 20 August 1659; disappeared June 1696), sometimes erroneously given as Jack Avery or John Avery, was an English pirate who operated in the Atlantic and Indian oceans in the mid-1690s. He probably used several aliases throughout his career, including Benjamin Bridgeman, and was known as Long Ben to his crewmen and associates.
Dubbed the Arch Pirate and the King of Pirates by contemporaries, Every was infamous for being one of the very few major pirate captains to escape with his loot without being arrested or killed in battle, and for being the perpetrator of what has been called the most profitable act of piracy in history. Although Every's career as a pirate lasted only two years, his exploits captured the public's imagination, inspired others to take up piracy, and spawned works of literature. He began his pirate career while he was first mate aboard the warship Charles II. As the ship lay anchored in the northern Spanish harbour of Corunna, the crew grew discontented as Spain failed to deliver a letter of marque and Charles II's owners failed to pay their wages, so they mutinied. Charles II was renamed the Fancy and the crew elected Every its captain.
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).