Matelotage was a same-sex civil union amongst pirates (also amongst sailors) whereby two men would form an economic partnership, share income & inherit each other’s property in the event of their death. They also pledged to fight alongside each other & to look out for one another
In his 1832 novel, Le Négrier, Édouard Corbière defines matelotage as, “this amatelotage of sailors among themselves, this hammock camaraderie, establishes a type of solidarity and commonality of interests and of goods between each man and his matelot.”
Those entering into a matelotage were known as “matelots". It has been suggested this is where the nautical term “matey” came from.
There is a lot of debate about whether or not matelotage was a sexual union.
One the one hand, forming a partnership with a platonic pal at sea does make sense. It’s an insurance policy and gives you some much needed protection in a very dangerous & volatile world where it really was survival of the fittest.
On the other hand, this is basically a marriage & there is some evidence to suggest it was not all that unusual for matelots to be lovers. Not only were (obviously) some pirates gay, but it’s no secret that homosexual relationships did occur from time to time in an all male crew
This is certainly the argument Professor Barry Richard Burg makes in “Sodomy and the Pirate Tradition: English Sea Rovers in the Seventeenth Century Caribbean.”
Burg argues that young matelots would sell sexual favours to older pirates on the ship to earn protection & promotion - as well as cash. But as most pirates didn’t write & sodomy was punishable by death - there are few historical records to really prove this.
But, one such case (and certainly the most well known) cases of a matelotage that was (possibly) sexual was that of John Swann and Captain Robert Culliford, who were pirates in the Indian Ocean during the late 17th century.
Culliford was famous for his scraps with Captain Kidd (pictured). In June 1699 Culliford was living on Ile Ste. Marie near Madagascar John Swann, who is recorded as being “great consort of [Captain] Culliford’s, who lives with him.”
We have no way of knowing of widespread the practice of matelotage, or indeed same sex relationships, were in the pirate world. But it seems it wasn’t exactly a secret on land either
In 1645, Governor Le Vasseur wrote from Tortuga to his superiors in France requesting that the government send 2,000 sex workers to the colony specifically to stop the practice of matelotage.
The plan didn’t work though because the men not only married they women they sent, but they shared them with the matelot.
Ultimately, we just don’t have the records to say definitively just what was going on here. For my money, I think there were most certainly same sex lovers who entered into a matelotage, but that there were also many who just wanted some kind of financial protection while at sea.
Both these these things are true at the same time. If you would like to read more about the practice of matelotage & the various arguments for and against, this is a wonderful article that covers the surviving evidence. digitalcommons.lmu.edu/cgi/viewconten…
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Today is #WorldPenguinDay , so here is a story about the “astonishing depravity" and "hooligan males" of the Adélie penguins recorded in Cape Adare in 1911.
This is George Murray Levick, a scientist with the 1910-13 Scott Antarctic Expedition. He arrived at Cape Adare in 1911 & observed the penguins for a year. He was the first scientist ever to observe the breeding cycle of the penguins.
George photographed the penguins throughout. This is one of his.
I can’t believe I’ve been woken up the for this, but here we go.
1. The historian Strabo (64BCE - 24 ACE) described operations on the clitoris
2. Galen (129-126 ACE) called the clitoris “the nymph” in his “on the usefulness of the parts of the body.”
3. Soranus of Ephesus (1st century ACE) also calls it a “nymph” and describes it as “hidden underneath the labia such as young brides hide under their veil.”
4. Other ancient writers who describe the clitoris include, Caelius Aurelianus, Iianus, Albucasis, and Avicenna. They would call it a “nymph,” a “myrtleberry,” or “tongue bag.” The romans called it “landica.”
5. Although the clitoris is not mentioned in the Kama Sutra, it was in other ancient Hindu texts. The Sanskrit for clitoris is “smart-chatra,” which translates to “umbrella of the love god.” (Best. Clit. Fact. Ever.)
Wewe Gombel is a female ghost in Javanese folklore. It is said that she kidnaps children and hides them under her breasts.
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Wewe Gombel, or “Hantu Kopek" as she’s known in Malaysia, has a complicated legend. It is said that in life, she married the man of her dreams, but they never had children because she was infertile.
Her husband grew resentful and began shagging around. One day, Wewe Gombel caught her husband in bed with another woman. She flew into a rage & killed him.
July 22nd is the Feast Day of Mary Magdalene in the Christian faith. Much has been made of who Mary was, but she almost certainly wasn’t a sex worker. That story came about in 591, when Pope Gregory I got his Marys muddled.
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Mary Magdalene, (who debuts in Luke 8:2) was mixed up with with Mary of Bethany (Luke 10:39), and the anonymous "sinful woman" who washed Jesus's feet in Luke 7:36–50.
The Mary who washed Jesus’ feet had been up to naughty things & all three were conflated. To be fair, there are quite a few Marys knocking about.
Mary Carleton (1642-73) was the most infamous thief & harlot of Port Royal, Jamaica. She was said to be “A stout frigate … or else she never could have endured so many batteries & assaults … she was as common as a barber’s chair: no sooner was one out, but another was in.”
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Mary was born Mary Moders in Canterbury, England - possibly to a fiddler. There is not much that is certain about her life because she was an exceptional bullshit artist. Most of what we know about her was written in jail reports that were designed to shock, or from Mary herself.
These reports say Mary married a shoemaker called Thomas Stedman, who she eventually left to marry a surgeon called Thomas Day. Her first arrest and trial was for bigamy.
This is the legendary burlesque artist & 'vaginiste', Honeysuckle Devine. She was once described as a 'one woman slum', & had one of the most extraordinary acts in the history of burlesque.
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Honeysuckle was born Betty Allsup in Rock Island, Illinois in 1938. She was one of 14 children & described her father as a 'hillbilly, banjo-playing lumberjack.'
As a teenager she became deeply religious & at 21 she went to Philadelphia to become a postulant at the Grey Nuns of the Sacred Heart Convent