- Michiel Andrieszoon
-
Michiel Andrieszoon fl. 1683 – 1684 Nickname Michel Andrieszoon
Mitchel Andrieszoon
Michiel l'Andresson
Michiel LandressonType Buccaneer Place of birth The Netherlands Allegiance Dutch Years active 1680s Rank Captain Base of operations Caribbean Commands le Tigre Battles/wars Raid of Veracruz (1683)
Battle of Cartagena (1683)Michiel Andrieszoon (fl. 1683–1684) was a Dutch buccaneer who served as lieutenant to Captain Laurens de Graaf. He commanded the le Tigre which was manned by a 300-man crew and armed with between 30-36 guns and, in 1683, was one of the leaders of the raid on Veracruz. This was one of the last major buccaneering raids in the Spanish Main and included such captains as Yankey Willems, Nicholas van Hoorn and Michel de Grammont. He was with de Graaf when they rendezvoused with the rest of the fleet from Petit-Goâve in February 1683. The two men had with them two ships, a bark and a sloop, and 500 men. Andrieszoon took part in raiding Spanish ships in the Bay of Honduras and off the coast of Central America for several weeks. They arrived at Veracruz on May 17 and, after some reconnaissance, attacked at dawn the following morning and successfully looted the Spanish stronghold.[1]
In late-November, Andrieszoon was with de Graff, Yankey Willems, François Le Sage and several others attacking the local coastal traffic near Cartagena. When Viceroy Juan de Pando Estrada was informed of the buccaneer's presence, he ordered three Spanish warships to confront them. On December 23, the small squadron sailed out to meet the enemy fleet. Under the leadership of 26-year-old Captain Andres de Pez y Malzarraga, his command consisted of the 40-gun San Francisco, 34-gun Paz and a 28-gun galliot carrying 800 soldiers. Instead of fleeing, the smaller ships sailed around the Spaniards and confusing its gunners. The San Francisco ran aground early in the battle, the galliot was captured by Willems while the Paz struck after four hours of fighting. Casualties were relatively light with only twenty buccaneers and ninety soldiers killed and the rest taken prisoner. The buccaneers took the warships for themselves, de Graaf raising the San Francisco and making it his new flagship, and later released the prisoners with a message for the governor thanking him for the Christmas present. Andrieszoon presumably remained with the expedition as they blockaded for three weeks before de Graff headed northwest for Roatan and Saint Domingue.[1]
References
- ^ a b Marley, David. Wars of the Americas: A Chronology of Armed Conflict in the New World, 1492 to the Present. Santa Barbara, California: ABC-CLIO, 1998. (pg. 192, 194) ISBN 0-87436-837-5
Further reading
- Galvin, Peter R. Patterns of Pillage: A Geography of Caribbean-based Piracy in Spanish America, 1536–1718. New York: Peter Lang, 1999. ISBN 0-8204-3771-9
- Little, Benerson. The Buccaneer's Realm: Pirate Life on the Spanish Main, 1674–1688. Potomac Books, 2007. ISBN 1-59797-101-4
- Marley, David. Sack of Veracruz: The Great Pirate Raid of 1683. Winsor, Ontario: Netherlandic Press, 1993. ISBN 0-919417-32-9
Categories:- Dutch pirates
- 1683 births
- 1684 deaths
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.