{"version":"1.0","type":"rich","provider_name":"Acast","provider_url":"https://acast.com","height":250,"width":700,"html":"<iframe src=\"https://embed.acast.com/$/65a28c429ba8e30016dff20e/682e307ca6fdc699fd596d2d?\" frameBorder=\"0\" width=\"700\" height=\"250\"></iframe>","title":"The Orkney Pirate John Gow ~ with Angus Konstam","description":"<p><strong>Be part of Tom Muir's Tales in the Landscape crowdfunder: https://www.crowdfunder.co.uk/p/tales-in-the-landscape</strong></p><p><br></p><p>Episode 18: June 11, 2025 - full \"strawberry\" moon with Angus Konstam, naval historian and author of The Pirate Menace: Uncovering the Golden Age of Piracy</p><p>Tonight, Tom is joined by his friend, Naval historian and writer Angus Konstam. Interestingly, this full moon night coincides with the 300th anniversary of the hanging of Orkney's pirate, John Gow.</p><p>Hear about:</p><p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• The Valient Book of Pirates - early days</p><p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• Unraveling the difference between pirate fact and fiction</p><p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• Cuddly pirates?</p><p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• Why not to&nbsp;use a live parrot at a pirate event</p><p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• Orkney's most-known pirate, John Gow - not the stuff of legends</p><p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• Did an oppressive system create piracy?</p><p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• The pirate John Gow's early days in Stromness</p><p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• Privateering - the big business of licensed piracy</p><p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• The difficulty of tracking down information about a pirate's early life</p><p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• Gow, a navigator and a literate pirate</p><p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• Gow's first failed attempt at a life of piracy</p><p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• Dire happenings on the Caroline, and the birth of the Pirate Gow</p><p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• Re-imagining the Caroline, according to pirate tradition; enter the Revenge</p><p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• About drying fish for transport by ship</p><p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• The Navy's pirate pardon scheme</p><p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• Gow the fish pirate?</p><p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• Finding a place to lie low when the scene got too hot - Stromness! - and how Gow's story came to an end</p><p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• Love pirate-style: Helen Gordon, the Odin Oath, and what happened to Gow's hand?</p><p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The pirate press gang</p><p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• The attack on the Hall of Clestrain - pirates soundly defeated by clever women</p><p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• Where was the original Hall of Clestrain?</p><p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• Final bungled attempts at Carrick House, the home of Gow's old schoolmate</p><p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• The pirates' come-uppance \"sooth\"</p><p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• Where was Execution Dock in London?</p><p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• Twice-hang-ed Gow</p><p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• How Pirate Gow's telescope came to the Stromness Museum and a shoe buckle from James Fea the pirate-catcher in the Orkney Museum</p><p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• What is known about John Fullerton: Orkney's other pirate?</p><p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• Mrs Captain Mary Jones the pirate-killer</p><p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• A bit about the dread pirate Blackbeard and psychological warfare, and how many times did hid headless body swim around his ship?</p><p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;• Women pirates from the Bahamas, who \"pleaded their bellies\"</p>","author_name":"Tom Muir and Rhonda Muir"}