The Truth about Pirates and Eyepatches

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The amount of misconceptions about pirates and eyepatches has facilitated the need for an entire video dedicated to exploring the subject. I will talk about eye injuries, patches, our cultural association of pirates and eyepatches, and finally, about the possibility of pirates using eyepatches to enhance their vision in the darkness.
Period sources
The Pirate's Own Book - Charles Ellms(normally I'd consider this a secondary source or modern source, since it discusses Golden Age Piracy 100 years after it ended, but in the case of this video I used it to describe events taking place 11 years before the book's publishing)
The Buccaneers of America - Alexandre Exquemelin
A Naval Dictionary of the Maritime - William Falconer
Modern sources
benersonlittle.com/2017/07/19...
The Golden Age of Piracy - Benerson Little
Under the Black Flag - David Cordingly
Piratical Schemes and Contracts - E.T Fox
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eyepatch
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MythBus...
Fictional sources
These are cited to explain our cultural perception of pirates and eyepatches.
The Odyssey - Homer
The Perils of Certain English Prisoners - Charles Dickens
Treasure Island - Robert Louis Stevenson
Captain Blood - Rafael Sabatini
Timestamps
0:00 Introduction
1:02 Eye injuries
5:29 Patches, alternatives, and their use
6:57 Pirates and eyepatches
11:37 Night vision?
23:54 Summary
#pirates #history #eyepatches #eyepatch

Пікірлер: 197

  • @michaelsmith8028
    @michaelsmith802810 ай бұрын

    Firelocks: loaded Cutless: sharpened Piragua: manned Oh yeah it's gold and gunpowder time.

  • @ostrowulf

    @ostrowulf

    10 ай бұрын

    Eye patches on both eyes, for extra good night vission.

  • @morganb6717

    @morganb6717

    10 ай бұрын

    cutless? you'll be wantin' to cut more with a cutlass.

  • @piotrwisniewski70

    @piotrwisniewski70

    6 ай бұрын

    ​@@ostrowulfi had a comic where was a pirate that on even days had an eyepatch on left eye and on uneven days on right eye He was always forgetting on which eye he had it today

  • @thecreweofthefancy
    @thecreweofthefancy10 ай бұрын

    A doctor in the 1930s got confused by costume departments and here we are..... 😢

  • @LadyTylerBioRodriguez

    @LadyTylerBioRodriguez

    10 ай бұрын

    A lot of myths have very weird kinda innocent origins. The vast majority of myths concerning Anne Bonny actually come from a 1964 romance novel. History be like that sometimes, kinda insane.

  • @nikevisor54
    @nikevisor5410 ай бұрын

    The fact that people tell you to "do your research better!!!1!" is absolutely wild to me. Your videos are some of the most completely sourced history content on this entire platform. Keep on keepin' on, GG. We love ya!

  • @bbraswe2

    @bbraswe2

    10 ай бұрын

    Seriously, on the entirety of this platform.

  • @insertyournamehere4328

    @insertyournamehere4328

    10 ай бұрын

    The only persons who can beat him are perhaps the curators from naval/maritime museums, or the senior members of ship modeler communities…

  • @Willoops

    @Willoops

    7 ай бұрын

    Yeah man. Dundee fucked up

  • @rebralhunter6069
    @rebralhunter606910 ай бұрын

    I actually like these debunking videos. The snark and frustration makes them extra entertaining

  • @3b106

    @3b106

    8 ай бұрын

    *deboonking

  • @rebralhunter6069

    @rebralhunter6069

    8 ай бұрын

    @@3b106 deboonk harder!

  • @authentic_shaggy4318
    @authentic_shaggy431810 ай бұрын

    It’s so nice to have a little island of real history told by someone who is genuinely passionate about the topic among the sea of “we’re giants real?” mind poison cash grab videos. Godspeed Gold and Gunpowder.

  • @authentic_shaggy4318

    @authentic_shaggy4318

    10 ай бұрын

    Were*

  • @aishalotter9995

    @aishalotter9995

    10 ай бұрын

    @@authentic_shaggy4318. There

  • @KB8Killa

    @KB8Killa

    10 ай бұрын

    Giants certainly are real

  • @christianguzman4688

    @christianguzman4688

    10 ай бұрын

    Are telling me Shaquille oneal isnt real????!!!! To better research tbh.

  • @Schwarzvogel1
    @Schwarzvogel110 ай бұрын

    Your point about coal miners (or miners of any sort) and milkmaids not using eye patches to help with night-vision acclimatisation really hammers the final nail in the coffin for that myth of pirates wearing eye patches to speed up their eyes' acclimatisation to low-light conditions. Coal mines often have sections filled with dangerous, inflammable gases like carbon monoxide, but the coal miners of that period used *open flames* for illumination. Surely, if the whole eyepatch trick were common knowledge during that area, those men would have preferred to do that instead of bringing open flames into environments filled with combustible gases! As for the milkmaids, many houses in that era were made of wood and were quite flammable as well. Surely, a milkmaid would rather opt for not carrying an open flame down the rickety cellar steps (and risk setting the house on fire if she tripped) if she had a safer option?

  • @epg9274

    @epg9274

    7 ай бұрын

    Unlit mines are totally pitch black no amount of night vision (neither natural or say night vision goggles) will help you see not even your hand in front of your face as unlike on the surface where even in the darkest moonless nights there will be some ambient light from sources like the stars therefore it is necessary to bring your own source of light and before electricity the only option was a flame and before the safety lamp was invented this was an open flame and explosions resulting from “fire damp”(mostly methane sometimes with other nastier gasses like hydrogen sulphide) igniting were common. There were 2 main methods of preventing explosions/fires firstly the best method was maintaining good ventilation so that flammable gases like fire damp and toxic gases like black damp (carbon monoxide) did not build up this was done by using ventilation shafts and strategically located doors that could be opened and closed and later air pumps, however if the gases managed to build up despite the ventilation in the case of fire damp the area would be evacuated then a man would be covered in wet rags and leather and given a long stick with a burning oil soaked rag at one end he would then ignite the gases using the flame at the end of the stick hopefully being far enough away from the resulting fire/explosion that combined with the protection from the wet rags he would not be killed and work could continue. Anyway back to the point on a ship it would pretty much never be completely pitch black as some light would be coming in through stair ways gun ports tiny gaps in the planking and so on bright enough that good night vision would be just about enough to see

  • @epg9274

    @epg9274

    7 ай бұрын

    Just to be clear I’m on no way suggesting that pirates would use eye patches for night vision tho I mean they might have done but as gold and gunpowder says it’s most unlikely

  • @witchboy44
    @witchboy4410 ай бұрын

    THE EYEPATCH GAVE ME X-RAY VISION!

  • @historiaobscurum3308
    @historiaobscurum330810 ай бұрын

    Thank you for making this video. I have a history page I write, and I definitely understand how irritating it is to have to waste time and energy putting out the ignorant fires of mythology instead of being able to use that time to produce content I actually want to spend time on. Stay strong.

  • @mageillus
    @mageillus10 ай бұрын

    I’ll never understand how people prefer cliche debunked fantasy over expanding on historical facts into their projects 🤦🏽‍♂️🤦🏽‍♂️🤦🏽‍♂️

  • @balloon685

    @balloon685

    10 ай бұрын

    That's the whole fucking point of this video

  • @MoxieLaBouche

    @MoxieLaBouche

    10 ай бұрын

    I genuinely enjoy learning that something I used to think was wrong, because it's learning.

  • @mageillus

    @mageillus

    10 ай бұрын

    @@balloon685 exactly my point!

  • @mageillus

    @mageillus

    10 ай бұрын

    @@MoxieLaBouche same, which is why it makes cringe reading some of these comments

  • @Captain_Cinnamon
    @Captain_Cinnamon10 ай бұрын

    I think anyone who has sailed knows this The time between seeing something and reaching it ks generally ... a lot. So 20-25 minutes is really ample time to get used to darkness. And, yea to think of it - you re a pirate - you dont want discomfort 97% of the day to have a good moment transitioning to 3% of the day. Not to mention that losing your perspective is pretty shit on a ship. I am with GG here.

  • @Schwarzvogel1

    @Schwarzvogel1

    10 ай бұрын

    Well said. It also isn't worth the risks of eye infection or irritation from keeping a damp, salty patch over one of your eyes whilst working on board the decks of a ship if you have no reason to cover that perfectly good eye. Ironically, if a pirate were to wear an eyepatch simply to help his eyes adjust to the darkness below decks, the resulting infection he could contract may result in him losing that eye and having a _genuine need_ for an eyepatch! Saltwater isn't sterile, and the sea spray is rich in salt. Salt is generally something most people prefer to keep _out_ of their eyes whenever possible.

  • @H_P_Lovecraft
    @H_P_Lovecraft10 ай бұрын

    Actually no, eyepatches were used to aim better when pirates or privateers were engaging enemy vessels. Source: the talking blue crab I found in South Padre Island

  • @NothingSubversive
    @NothingSubversive10 ай бұрын

    It’s a shame you’re forced to do these debunking videos, your regular content is very interesting, and I appreciate the time and effort you put into the research

  • @potatogrease2420
    @potatogrease242010 ай бұрын

    dude just ripped them to shreds omg this is great

  • @JamesRDavenport
    @JamesRDavenport10 ай бұрын

    Anybody who has ever worn an eyepatch even for short duration, whether for costume, surgery recovery, or pupil dilation should know why that patch theory is ridiculous.

  • @user-ov1ep5rf2l
    @user-ov1ep5rf2l10 ай бұрын

    Also, to further your point. Any bright light whatsoever would immediately restart your eye from acclimating. So any flame or light source below deck would literally immediately stop your eye from being fully acclimated and you'd still have to wait. It would ONLY be useful with literally no light source at all. The sun shining through the deck would fuck up your acclimation as well. It would have to be completely sealed off with no light, which obviously doesn't happen.

  • @alwaysdriveing
    @alwaysdriveing10 ай бұрын

    I actually really enjoy your debunking videos. Although i understand your dislike for it. Great job and actually appreciate the attitude. Never felt insulted personally from any of your videos.

  • @corvaxblackfeather6529
    @corvaxblackfeather652910 ай бұрын

    I'm a Mythbusters fan ^^ Loved the Show and it's many different experiments. Honestly i never took it for 'absolut serious' and just enjoyed the show itself. Your explanation of the many Pirat topics and how they really where living, fighting, suffering wounds and enjoying there gold and plunder really is a GREAT addition for me :)

  • @SkankyBurnedToast
    @SkankyBurnedToast10 ай бұрын

    Man is MAD about this topic. I laughed my ass off at this video. This is your most entertaining video to date

  • @thepoorhistorian2325
    @thepoorhistorian232510 ай бұрын

    Thank you so much for making this video! I feel your frustration and have fought similar arguments in support of using scholarly historical method for drawing conclusions, not made up "epic" history (as I like to call it). Please keep up the great work!

  • @marie-jeannebeaudet6764
    @marie-jeannebeaudet676410 ай бұрын

    Hold on a minute, they used alligator's gland as perfume!?

  • @GoldandGunpowder

    @GoldandGunpowder

    10 ай бұрын

    >The Flesh smells very strong of Musk; especially four Kernels or Cods that are always found about them, two of which grow in the Groin, near each Thigh; the other two at the Breast, one under each Fore-leg, and about the bigness of a Pullets Egg; therefore when we kill an Alligator, we take out these, and having dried them wear them in our Hats for a perfume. The Flesh is seldom eaten but in case of Necessity, because of it strong scent. from: quod.lib.umich.edu/e/ecco/004888554.0001.000/1:6.2?rgn=div2;view=fulltext not a widespread practice but it happened

  • @unknowntrooper_2791
    @unknowntrooper_279110 ай бұрын

    An important addition about the pirate tropes. I find it sad that so much stupidity exists where people believe in nonsense without actual evidence and then act smart. Nice content once more, Cheers!🏴‍☠

  • @barbie_gaahl
    @barbie_gaahl10 ай бұрын

    I hope you make merch with your logo on it soon. Probably the only KZread merch I would buy. I love your videos!

  • @ianslaby5703
    @ianslaby570310 ай бұрын

    I think drachinifel discussed boarding actions once. He talked about the eye patch meme. He pointed out that it didn't make sense to disadvantage yourself when most boarding actions were over when one side had control of the upper deck. Once you had control of this, you had control of the sails and anyone belowdecks was at a disadvantage in a fight. If they continued to resist. The boarders could drop down grenades (though I'm not sure if these were available in the golden age of piracy)

  • @GoldandGunpowder

    @GoldandGunpowder

    10 ай бұрын

    spoke about all of this in the video

  • @ianslaby5703

    @ianslaby5703

    10 ай бұрын

    @@GoldandGunpowder ye i made my comment when i was about halfway through the video. I decided not to delete it because it's free engagement lmao

  • @GoldandGunpowder

    @GoldandGunpowder

    10 ай бұрын

    feel free to link drachinfel's video for people who want to learn more

  • @LeeCausseaux
    @LeeCausseaux10 ай бұрын

    There goes my theory that a pirate, missing an eye, would wear a patch over his good eye to help night vision...

  • @Mabon-sz9nz
    @Mabon-sz9nz10 ай бұрын

    Excellent video.

  • @obsidianjane4413
    @obsidianjane441310 ай бұрын

    I give the rant a solid 3.0. Not enough exasperation or yelling.

  • @classCexplosive
    @classCexplosive10 ай бұрын

    yes, let me sacrifice my acute depth perception in case I decide to go below deck sometime today.

  • @GAIVSCALIGVLA
    @GAIVSCALIGVLA10 ай бұрын

    Hey man, I found your channels a few months ago and I just want to say I really like your work. You clearly put a lot of time and effort into your videos and I very much admire your use of primary sources. You also aren’t afraid to add humor and make the videos funny which I really enjoy. You’re like 1 of 4 history KZreadrs that I actually like. What I admire the most is that you really take your time to explain the subject. That alone is probably your greatest strength. Keep up the good work.

  • @kilgoretrout413
    @kilgoretrout41310 ай бұрын

    One of my favourite channels 🙇‍♂️ bless you ❤😃😃😃

  • @valgorie1811
    @valgorie181110 ай бұрын

    This video was so good and funny. I still loved that video on the worst pirate myths so much that I want you to make another video derived from it.

  • @JesusRocksTryPrayin
    @JesusRocksTryPrayin10 ай бұрын

    Perfect timing! Pirates to steer my attention away from the world for a bit. This channel rocks!

  • @lambed1
    @lambed110 ай бұрын

    I feel like this guy is just going to start Dueling people who say that he is wrong lol

  • @legolav2
    @legolav210 ай бұрын

    I've seen a couple of your videos now and I just wanna say I'm so happy to finally have found a quality golden age of piracy history KZreadr!

  • @als3022
    @als302210 ай бұрын

    When they had a forum we made a HUGE and very civil interestingly, critique of their debunking the splinters myth. They must have never read it because they never returned. But, we mentioned a good chunk of these.

  • @amtmannb.4627
    @amtmannb.462710 ай бұрын

    Lovely video. I remember a historian in a show for kids who explained that pirates had eyepatches because it is so dark under the deck. When my son asked me if that could be true. I answered that I never could read about it in numerous books by real historians about pirates and that the sailors and officers of the French, Spanish or English navy obviously would have had the same problem with life on a ship. I prefer real navy history. (The French musée de la marine is to be reopened in November!) Cheers!

  • @kristijanoros7208
    @kristijanoros720810 ай бұрын

    19:33 you can hear the anger in the hmmms

  • @kendallmangus5456
    @kendallmangus545610 ай бұрын

    Awesome video mate

  • @eddiebendigo7317
    @eddiebendigo73178 ай бұрын

    I have no idea why the algorithm brought me this channel but I'm on an absolute binge now.

  • @Barakon
    @Barakon10 ай бұрын

    22:41 So that’s where the round cartoon bomb came from!

  • @ET-mr4iu
    @ET-mr4iu9 ай бұрын

    It's hard being the voice of reason among the shouting of the ignorant masses..... I've referred your channel to people to set them straight. Keep up your excellent work 👍

  • @otakunthevegan4206
    @otakunthevegan420610 ай бұрын

    The most famous pirate to wear an eyepatch would be Demoman.

  • @accountreality1988
    @accountreality198810 ай бұрын

    i do believe that it would not be uncommon for an man missing an eye to not want to show the world his horrid injury even in every day life on a ship back then. it could be for insecurity reasons too or the fact no one wants to look at it and pirates could be the rude sort. people with missing limbs tend to cover thier wounds in everyday life today and I would not be surprised back then. humans are humans after all.

  • @stefanpuxon
    @stefanpuxon10 ай бұрын

    Love your passion, dude.

  • @bbraswe2
    @bbraswe210 ай бұрын

    I just found this channel and I’ve never been particularly interested in pirates but now I’m binging it. Well done!! if

  • @JustinS236
    @JustinS236Ай бұрын

    Love your videos, thanks for taking the time to deep dive on topics like this!

  • @junglerajah7838
    @junglerajah783810 ай бұрын

    I’m glad I’ve stumbled upon your channel a few years ago. If I hadn’t, I probably would’ve fallen for those other YT channels that still post those clichè pirate myths that people still believe to be true.

  • @storyscholar
    @storyscholar10 ай бұрын

    I love this channel! You're making me want to get that pirate novel out of my system!

  • @krissyb1980
    @krissyb198010 ай бұрын

    I think if I was going to jump on to the deck of a ship and fight a bunch of people in close quarters I would want both eyes open. I wouldn't want to disable my depth perception to see in the dark. If I even lived long enough to go below deck.

  • @williamwallace3780
    @williamwallace378010 ай бұрын

    Was that an implication that Gin Lane is not an accurate depiction of historical Britain? My dude, it is accurate to this day.

  • @kevkuehnertskuelerkuehlschrank
    @kevkuehnertskuelerkuehlschrank10 ай бұрын

    since the last couple of days my opinion about eye patches changed fundamentaly The only acceptable way to wear an eyepatch is as chancellor of germany lol

  • @michaelfahey5570
    @michaelfahey557010 ай бұрын

    Great thorough videos! Love the wow music as well👍.

  • @GOREilla.
    @GOREilla.6 ай бұрын

    Thank you for the deep patience

  • @eskerboots
    @eskerboots10 ай бұрын

    I think there is more reasoning behind the whole 'night vision eyepatch' theory. During a sea battle, a pirate's ship would tremble and jolt from the volleys of cannon and musket fire, from both sides of the battle. Under these circumstances, it may be dangerous to venture into the ship's magazine while holding a lantern; if dropped, it could set the ship aflame. Therefore the pirates could have worn an eyepatch during battle to run errands to and from the magazine, and still be able to adjust their eyes to the darkness in a hurry. However, these are very specific circumstances. The use of the 'night vision eyepatch' - if ever occurred - would ONLY be required in the midst of battle, when adjusting one's eyesight to the darkness very quickly would be necessary. It should also be noted that this would also ONLY be necessary in the magazine, where flammable gunpowder would be stored, unless the ship had no dedicated magazine and the powder was stored in the main hold. Furthermore, ONLY a small number of men or powder boys would be assigned to run to and from the magazine during battle - not the entire crew. Also, pirates rarely attacked other ships first. Most of the time, like you often mention, pirates used intimidation to force their victims into surrender, which usually worked. Sea battles were rare, and spread apart. And even for the few crewmembers who took to the magazine during battle, it would not be at all necessarily to wear an eyepatch all day, or regularly, as if in case of a surprise attack. Even when a surprise attack occurred at sea, the crew would have had ample minutes to prepare, as ships moved very slowly back in the day, and the catching-up of one ship to another would take a long time. This is plenty of time for a few pirates' eyes to adjust to an eyepatch, so this is when pirates would have applied their eyepatches. Anyways, I think the information further above makes the whole 'night vision eyepatch' idea much more plausible. However, even if this strategy was known at the time, it would have been seen by people outside of a pirate crew very rarely, (and was still rarely seen by the crew itself), thanks to the very specific circumstances under which only a few pirates would chose to wear an eyepatch. Therefore, it's unrealistic that many sources depict pirates regularly wearing eyepatches for this reason, and the stereotype has very poor merit.

  • @GOREilla.

    @GOREilla.

    6 ай бұрын

    Say the voices inside your head... There's no actual evidence, none, simple like that. You're not smart, you just got time to think about crap like this and write with fancy words.

  • @paulatejano3283
    @paulatejano328310 ай бұрын

    Amazing video, once again, and very funny! I was wondering recently about weather conditions during sailing. Will you do (or have you done) something about that topic? For example, i always think storms would be absolutely horrofying, especially bc it already is on modern day ships footage, about how they would deal with heat, sun and cold, visibility on sea fog and wind problems.

  • @bigredjanie
    @bigredjanieАй бұрын

    Also with Mythbusters: Even the episode that people are taking at face value has enough nuance to say that there's genuinely no written record of pirates doing this, hence why it's rated as just "Plausible" and not "Confirmed". But so many seemed to just miss that part and act like it's 100% the truth.

  • @jackrice2770
    @jackrice277010 ай бұрын

    You have my sympathy. Engaging with the world via this new medium means having to engage with anyone who has internet access, a device and an opinion...and as we know, opinions are like assholes...everybody's got one. But on to eyes: I suspect the one-eyed villain (or hero) is a purely literary invention. Having only one eye makes accurate depth perception impossible, and this is a huge handicap with either sword or firearms. (Yes, it's true that when aiming a gun many people close their non-dominant eye, but we won't go into the technicalities of accurately aiming a firearm now). I can tell you from experience that it's impossible to fight with a sword without excellent depth perception, although perhaps an experienced swordsman could still manage to defeat a lesser-skilled opponent. Again, what you saw on TeeVee or the Moobies doesn't count. Go ahead, pick up a rapier and fight someone with a patch over one eye and if you're not dead, let me know how it went for you. Sailors would have proportionately had more eye injuries than most other occupations, hell, they had more injuries of all kinds, (sailors were always identified as such in the period by the number of scars. particularly on their hands, arms and faces) but even without naval combat, the ends of flying lines, the rapid movement of large wooden objects and being exposed to high wind conditions would all contribute to a high incidence of eye injuries, thus it was no doubt common to see a retired sailor with only one eye. And most would be retired, because it would be nearly impossible to carry out any tasks aboard ship with a limited field of vision and poor depth perception. Again, go ahead and climb a sixty foot pole in a gale, in the dark, then climb twenty feet out on a beam and wrestle with heavy canvas and tying knots...with one eye covered. Again, if you're not dead, let me know it was for you. You might be a cook, or some other menial task, you could even be the navigator or quartermaster, although the latter was expected to be one of the combat leaders. But for 'young men's adventure tales' books, and exciting films of impossibly good-looking people pretending to do stuff, all sorts of ridiculous lies are told in the pursuit of telling a great whopper of a story. (People not wearing helmets in combat is another of my favorite bitches, too.)

  • @pilum3705
    @pilum370510 ай бұрын

    I was expecting a picture of German Chancellor Olaf Scholz. I am disappointed.

  • @GoldandGunpowder

    @GoldandGunpowder

    10 ай бұрын

    sadly my knowledge and interested in German politics is quite limited

  • @pilum3705

    @pilum3705

    10 ай бұрын

    @@GoldandGunpowder It was only because recently he started wearing an eye patch and now everyone and his mother started making pirate jokes about him.

  • @merafirewing6591

    @merafirewing6591

    8 ай бұрын

    ​@@pilum3705 okay now that is a missed opportunity.

  • @LadyTylerBioRodriguez
    @LadyTylerBioRodriguez10 ай бұрын

    Good use of Pirates Own Book. Its not the most reliable book and in fact it actually plagerised several previously written pirate books. But, when it comes to discussing a pirate from 11 years prior, I'm willing to accept Elm is being honest here.

  • @terryrobinson1416
    @terryrobinson141610 ай бұрын

    So, I'm assuming there was no OSHA or even safety glasses back then? Lol wow, what a time. How did anyone survive.

  • @MoxieLaBouche
    @MoxieLaBouche10 ай бұрын

    You and Milo from miniminuteman should hang out and angrily debunk things together. :)

  • @meltz911
    @meltz91110 ай бұрын

    Keep up the great work!

  • @recoveringlibertarian5982
    @recoveringlibertarian598210 ай бұрын

    Ok cool I did not know about the light room thanks

  • @thelastbrunneng4355
    @thelastbrunneng435510 ай бұрын

    Also missing an eye with no mention of a patch: Tee Weatherly (or Wetherly), one of Joseph Bradish's men aboard Adventure. "Tee Wetherly, short, very small, blind in one eye, about 18" according to VA Governor Francis Nicholson.

  • @CosplayZine

    @CosplayZine

    10 ай бұрын

    Just thought I'd point out blind in one eye doesn't mean missing an eye.

  • @kylemackinnon5696
    @kylemackinnon569610 ай бұрын

    Lol nice subtle mythbusters call out

  • @merafirewing6591
    @merafirewing65918 ай бұрын

    Pirates with eye patches do up the intimidation part, or at least make some people think twice about tangling with that person. But I guess he would still have to deal with loss of depth perception. I would use two eye patches just to cover my eyes so I can at least sleep without being bothered by unwanted lights. Also that thumbnail definitely deserves an oscar.

  • @GoldandGunpowder

    @GoldandGunpowder

    8 ай бұрын

    in the period eyepatches were mostly associated with invalid, pensioned sailors who lost their eyes to splinters from broadsides(chance rather than a personal engagement)

  • @andthenhedead6076

    @andthenhedead6076

    6 ай бұрын

    “I’m going to make myself look like a cripple and half blind myself so I’m more threatening”

  • @georgewithrow1626
    @georgewithrow162610 ай бұрын

    Find your channel very interesting. I can’t wait to hear what you have to say. It is an inception or the actual fax is always something left for history..

  • @brendanturner2362
    @brendanturner23627 ай бұрын

    You had me laughing in this video. Good video!

  • @serendipityforge333
    @serendipityforge33310 ай бұрын

    Well done, sir.

  • @SimonUdd
    @SimonUdd10 ай бұрын

    Have you done an episode on the use of fire ships??? Unconventional pirate tactics could also be a fun like black sams naked tactic

  • @barnettmcgowan8978
    @barnettmcgowan897810 ай бұрын

    Great video! I found it very informative. Too bad you had to make it because people believed silly ideas. I guess common sense is more of a relative concept. If you lack the requisite knowledge or experience your level of common sense will be limited accordingly.

  • @milkqt666
    @milkqt66610 ай бұрын

    I swear this song that you’re using or the piece that you’re using with your videos it’s somewhere in World of Warcraft. I’ve heard it before. I just don’t know what area it’s from.

  • @cdgonepotatoes4219
    @cdgonepotatoes42196 ай бұрын

    I can hardly imagine how horrible it would have been being in maritime combat and not just getting splinters in your eye, but breathing them in as well. Myself I would probably seek out some form of eye cover to save myself like a cloth or a pair of glasses with fake lenses, and be damned if I were to run around without long sleeves.

  • @Schwarzvogel1

    @Schwarzvogel1

    4 ай бұрын

    And how exactly would you afford such a thing if you were just a common sailor, eh? If you put a cloth over your eyes, well, guess what--you've now blindfolded yourself! Any cloth thin enough for you to see through somewhat (e.g. like a cheesecloth) wouldn't do anything to protect you from splinters. As for a pair of glasses, this is the late 17th to 18th century. Polycarbonate hasn't yet been invented. So your only options for the lenses would be glass of some sort, or maybe transparent minerals like mica. Glass tends to shatter into sharp fragments when hit sharply... so your "eye protection" might be even worse than wearing nothing at all if you suddenly found yourself faceplanting against the mast or a cannon breech--which could happen in rough seas, or if you were drunk. Finally, wearing long sleeves all the time in the Caribbean = death by heatstroke. Many sailors (including pirates) in the region went around in short sleeves or bare-chested because whilst death and maiming from wooden splinters in combat wasn't a given--you might never get into a cannonade duel with an opposing vessel--the problems of heatstroke and dehydration under the hot tropical sun *were* constant threats. People back then weren't stupid. They were just as capable of evaluating risk as we are today, given the knowledge and technology available. To give you a modern example, why don't you see all soldiers running around in head-to-toe PPE like EOD suits even though fragments that hit you in the legs or groin can potentially kill you if they sever your femoral artery--and fragments from HE weapons are the primary casualty-causing agent on the modern battlefield? It's because they are smart enough to know that the risk of a mortar shell landing near you and spraying you with jagged chunks of red-hot metal is an issue, but being so gassed from the weight of your kit that you can't quickly run to cover when the shooting starts IS a bigger threat. Hence why only the EOD chaps wear that kit which they need for their specialised role, and even then, they don't wear it all the time unless it is absolutely necessary.

  • @mikigzaielart
    @mikigzaielart10 ай бұрын

    Jag älskar din kanal! 🇸🇪

  • @bookofroger
    @bookofroger10 ай бұрын

    Actually, his name is Ragetti not Pintel

  • @MizMite2002
    @MizMite200210 ай бұрын

    any info on this man...Peter Easton was a Scottish privateer and later pirate in the early 17th century. Conflicting accounts exist regarding his early life. By 1602, Easton had become a highly successful privateer, commissioned to protect English interests in Newfoundland

  • @vercing1324
    @vercing132410 ай бұрын

    Yes.. i can fell your anger....

  • @theromanorder
    @theromanorder10 ай бұрын

    Can you aid bording action to your list of videos to do please

  • @justsomedude5727
    @justsomedude572710 ай бұрын

    Any more/ interesting facts coming about the false/glass eyes or is it mostly just known they were used?

  • @hedgehog3180
    @hedgehog31808 ай бұрын

    I don't think it would have been that hard for someone to discover the eyepatch trick back then, most people figure out that their eyes need time to adjust to low light conditions without intimate knowledge of how the eye works after all. It just wasn't practical because it limits your vision so much, which is also why people today generally don't bother. Most of us when going somewhere dark will just wait to let our eyes adjust because waiting 10-20 minutes is rarely a big deal, and having the use of both eyes is worth the wait. Using an eyepatch only makes sense if you for some reason need to go between low light and bright areas quickly, but also don't need good depth perception and you can't bring any kind of light, and that's just not a very common situation. The only situation I can think of is getting up to use the toilet at night and keeping one eye closed while on the toilet so you don't need to turn on the light in the bedroom and potentially wake up your partner.

  • @thatsnotoneofmeatsmanyuses1970
    @thatsnotoneofmeatsmanyuses197010 ай бұрын

    Grenadiers had no weapons, and had to wait for grenades to be invented...

  • @vg.eternal9773
    @vg.eternal977310 ай бұрын

    I gotta wonder how many eye surgery’s people had back in the day. I heard they were pretty old, I remember this one procedure talking about removing the iris.

  • @homemadehistory7537
    @homemadehistory753710 ай бұрын

    Oh that was nice. Did you ever had a chance to visit a rebuild ship of that era like the batavia? it is actualy not very dark on the gundeck when the gunports are open... and I dont think they would simply have no time to handle the change of the eye during engagement. I took part at noumerous reenactment batles and fights and there is no time for things like this unless you like to be stabed. 🤣and for sure in a mine it wont work for sure because you need a minimum source of light . One mile under ground there is no light at all , just pitch black .... A engagement at night seems not to be a good idea dbecause you can simply not mke out who is friend and foe. It would make sense only in case of a suprise atack at night like taking over a ship on anckor like in the 50s Hornblower movie and in the CS Forester books..... but that is way too late in napolionic war......

  • @The_Mongoose
    @The_Mongoose10 ай бұрын

    I think wooden eye bro was Ragetti

  • @Max_Flashheart
    @Max_Flashheart10 ай бұрын

    Aye Aye Captain.... oh wait!

  • @TheZackofSpades
    @TheZackofSpades10 ай бұрын

    Ye gods. Nuclearmexican really out here thinking he solved pirates eye patch history😅 The warning about the comment section is duly noted

  • @lastigefliege3366
    @lastigefliege336610 ай бұрын

    Stranglethorn Valley OST Nice.

  • @sirBrouwer
    @sirBrouwer10 ай бұрын

    The only reason I could see it being used is. If (big entasif on IF) it would have been effective in being a other scarring tool. during the chase. With the idea that the pirate would only wear it during the chase periode. when they would really have to battle they would just discard the patch. It alone would not be enough but as a addition to all the other scare tactics. Like some Dutch merchant/privateer have documented. Have used clothing to make them look taller. or have (fake) nasty looking scars. it was more to add on to the theater of fear.

  • @benjam0
    @benjam09 ай бұрын

    Funny enough blood letting is still used today though admittedly not very often one form of blood letting is the use of leaches.

  • @daviddion7888
    @daviddion788810 ай бұрын

    HOW DID YOU FIND THOSE 5 LEVASSEURS'S FLAG ?

  • @TheGoodCrusader
    @TheGoodCrusader10 ай бұрын

    I know it was a thing in the navy back then but what do know of beer rations? I think the history of being aloud to drink on the job is pretty funny and interesting

  • @GoldandGunpowder

    @GoldandGunpowder

    10 ай бұрын

    beer spoils quickly in the tropical climates

  • @Barakon
    @Barakon10 ай бұрын

    Did pirates have candles? I suspect they had candles & they often got soaked lol.

  • @hotsauce2446
    @hotsauce24469 ай бұрын

    I think it's likely that one or two pirates/ships may have figured out covering one eye for adjusting to the dark quicker. However I highly doubt this was ever a universally known thing or was even used if you figured it out.

  • @robertstallard7836

    @robertstallard7836

    7 ай бұрын

    Evidence to back up your belief? Include the references of documents describing the practice, and the archive in which they are housed. Title, author and edition of any published works decribing the practice, along with the sources used by that author in coming to his conclusions.

  • @kilgoretrout413
    @kilgoretrout41310 ай бұрын

    Hate to be pedantic but Pepys is pronounced “Peeps” not that it’s important 😊

  • @JamesSmith-wn6ws
    @JamesSmith-wn6ws5 ай бұрын

    It's a nice video

  • @Blefooo
    @Blefooo10 ай бұрын

    Y'all trying to counter a point is always welcome but do your research, g&g does his research thoroughly and thats why we watch him because we know he is right, if you are going to try to counter him provide evidence backing up your claim.

  • @thedutchest
    @thedutchest10 ай бұрын

    Is that adam savage in the thumbnail? 😂

  • @pigmentpeddler5811
    @pigmentpeddler581110 ай бұрын

    pickle me timbers

  • @8BitCyberWarrior
    @8BitCyberWarrior10 ай бұрын

    I'm gonna be honest I think I will be giving Pirates eye patches in my fantasy works because it has sensible functionality, aesthetic appeal, and a now iconic status. Thanks for the history lesson though, I found it quite fascinating 😁

  • @CosplayZine

    @CosplayZine

    10 ай бұрын

    Actually this video explains that it does not in fact have sensible functionality, at least it didn't at that time.

  • @8BitCyberWarrior

    @8BitCyberWarrior

    10 ай бұрын

    @@CosplayZine except for all the parts where it explained the practical functionality, you're correct. I guess you skipped the myth busters segment where they proved that if anyone had half a brain in the Age of Sail they could have found many uses for wearing an eye patch, from seeing better in the dark to covering up horrible blemishes, to improving marksmanship or protecting a sensitive sensory organ. The video basically played both sides of the field, but in summary the facts state that eye patches could have been a common trope among pirates in their golden age, but simply weren't. In a slightly altered timeline of reality, this could easily have been quite different, or at the very least, slightly more different types of sailors would have made use of them if they had better access to scientific and medical knowledge, as well as basic services like leather workers and skilled tailors.

  • @alex37k

    @alex37k

    10 ай бұрын

    @@8BitCyberWarrior With all due respect, you are being absurd here. There are indeed many practical functions for an eyepatch, and all of them involve covering up a maimed or missing eye. If you have two good eyes, there is pretty much no reason ever to cover one with a patch. Even if you did want to do the “see in the dark method” you’d only where the patch for a half hour at dusk. Furthermore, the pirate’s favorite gun was a long musket, which is not very effective with one eye. If you ever close an eye while shooting, it is only for a moment - you need both eyes for depth perception. And fighting in meleee combat with a good eye covered is even worse of an idea. It seems like you missed the point of this video. Of course, you can do anything you want in your fantasy worlds (eyepatches are cool! Go for it!). But to say that GG played both sides of the field and that widespread eyepatch use over a good eye *could’ve* been common, is not only disingenuous - it’s stupid and the reason why this video got made in the first place.

  • @gusess5743

    @gusess5743

    6 ай бұрын

    Make them have neck patches/face patches to cover their syphilitic sores. Way more metal and historically accurate

  • @jefferyboring4410
    @jefferyboring44107 ай бұрын

    I believe the eye patch thing was mostly used by ship loaders like dock workers I’m sure some became pirates. I don’t think it was considered so entertaining a thing as the time. More of a common sense utilitarian technique some used loading back and forth in the bowels of a ship.

  • @robertstallard7836

    @robertstallard7836

    7 ай бұрын

    Evidence to back up your belief? Include the references of documents describing the practice, and the archive in which they are housed. Title, author and edition of any published works decribing the practice, along with the sources used by that author in coming to his conclusions.

  • @gusess5743

    @gusess5743

    6 ай бұрын

    Source: trust me bro

  • @robertstallard7836

    @robertstallard7836

    6 ай бұрын

    @@gusess5743 Ah, of course! I forgot about that... silly me.

  • @jefferyboring4410

    @jefferyboring4410

    6 ай бұрын

    @@gusess5743 source: pirate diary …. Today I was wearing my eye patch taking it on and off so I would have better night vision. I don’t expect anyone to ever find a source on silly things like this. As were use to the internet not haven’t absolutely everything available. U can’t expect their to be a source and the absence of such doesn’t mean anything. Trust me bro

  • @giannidcenzo
    @giannidcenzoАй бұрын

    Sharp