Talk:Blackbeard/Archive 5

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Edit request on 10 March 2012

It says on place of death 'Ocracoke, Province of North Carolina' on the 22 November 1718, but it was called Province of Carolina until 1729, 11 years after blackbeards death. So I request that it be changed from 'Province of North Carolina' to 'Province of Carolina' 91.20.70.111 (talk) 19:58, 10 March 2012 (UTC)

 Done Thanks! Dru of Id (talk) 01:06, 11 March 2012 (UTC)

"a sloop belonging to ye subjects of the King of Spain"

"a sloop belonging to ye subjects of the King of Spain"

"ye" = "the". It is not pronounced as "YE". The letter Y in this era was used for the letter Thorn or þorn (Þ, þ)--one of the old Anglo-Saxon letters representing a TH sound. So "ye" in this context is not pronounced as if it is another form of the word "you". Why not have this quotation spelled in modern form as "a sloop belonging to the subjects of the King of Spain", instead of helping to prolong this silly idea that many people have, and in their ignorance who pronounce it wrongly: "ye olde curiositie shoppe" etc??? — Preceding unsigned comment added by 68.71.8.75 (talk) 06:17, 3 April 2012 (UTC) sorry ... forgot to add the tildes...

68.71.8.75 (talk) 06:41, 3 April 2012 (UTC)

Economist Peter Leeson believes that pirates were generally shrewd businessmen, far removed from the modern, romanticised view of them as murderous tyrants

Economist Peter Leeson believes that pirates were generally shrewd businessmen, far removed from the modern, romanticised view of them as murderous tyrants

Is "tyrants" the right word? Usually a tyrant is a despotic king or some other type of leader, such as Castro, etc. Can a man who is captain of a ship be a tyrant? 68.71.8.75 (talk) 06:40, 3 April 2012 (UTC)

Born in South Carolina?

I am not saying I advocate this theory, but I met the author of the book listed here, and he seemed to have done his research. Should something be added to the article about this, perhaps involving speculation in the least?

http://www.postandcourier.com/article/20111205/PC1602/312059917 — Preceding unsigned comment added by 68.58.196.197 (talk) 07:38, 17 April 2012 (UTC)

Duffus admits much of his writing is speculative, and it would appear his book represents a fringe theory. The book is also published by Looking Glass Productions, which was established by none other than...Kevin Duffus. Parrot of Doom 08:54, 17 April 2012 (UTC)

Edit request on 22 November 2012

The third sentence reads "settling on the Caribbean island of New Providence"... It should read "settling on the Bahamian island of New Providence"...

New Providence is NOT in the Caribbean. It is in the Atlantic Ocean, one of the islands of the Bahamas. Barreav (talk) 18:02, 22 November 2012 (UTC)

You're talking about now. The article talks about then. Parrot of Doom 22:21, 22 November 2012 (UTC)
Actually, you're right. I'll change it now, thanks for pointing it out. Parrot of Doom 22:39, 22 November 2012 (UTC)

Place of Birth?

Only Captain Johnson says Blackbeard was born in Bristol, and he uses no background sources. The author Ken Duffus postulates he was born in Goose Creek, South Carolina. Anyone want to tackle this? alot of the Charleston historical community is starting to consider this theory — Preceding unsigned comment added by 153.9.254.113 (talk) 19:35, 24 January 2013 (UTC)

Duffus's book, The Last Days of Blackbeard the Pirate, is published by none other than Ken Duffus. Until his theories gain weight, I think he'll remain on the fringe of historical research. Parrot of Doom 20:46, 24 January 2013 (UTC)

Edit request on 26 March 2013

I would like to edit some simple misunderstood facts. Coga16 (talk) 22:47, 26 March 2013 (UTC)

Not done: It is not possible for individual users to be granted permission to edit a semi-protected article. You can do one of the following:
  • You will be able to edit this article without restriction four days after account registration if you make at least 10 constructive edits to other articles.
  • You can request the article be unprotected at
    this page
    . To do this, you need to provide a valid rationale that refutes the original reason for protection.
  • You can provide a specific request to edit the article on this talk page and an editor who is not blocked from editing the article will determine if the requested edit is appropriate. —KuyaBriBriTalk 15:28, 27 March 2013 (UTC)

Last Name slowburn edit war.

Question. In modern times, isn't the man far better known as "Teach"?

If so the article should go with Teach, per

WP:COMMONNAME
.

 APL (talk) 16:57, 4 April 2013 (UTC)

Citation comments

Apparently Editor Parrot of Doom believes that changes that I have made to citations in this article are detrimental – I can't be all evil because Editor Parrot of Doom has made changes based on the {{clarify}} templates I added. So, I'll explain the other changes I made.

In this citation, |title= is the title of Leeson's paper but |url= points to a list of all of Leeson's papers. This forces readers to search for the paper.

{{Citation | last = Leeson | first = Peter T. | title = Pirational Choice: The Economics of Infamous Pirate Practices | url = http://www.peterleeson.com/Papers.html | page = 21 | accessdate = 21 April 2010 | year = 2010}}
Leeson, Peter T. (2010), Pirational Choice: The Economics of Infamous Pirate Practices, p. 21, retrieved 21 April 2010 {{citation}}: Check date values in: |accessdate= (help)

The changes I made pointed |url= to the paper referred to in |title=; I added |format= because the document is not html and because the pdf icon does not have alt= text for those who use screen readers; because the paper is dated, I removed |accessdate=:

{{Citation | last = Leeson | first = Peter T. | title = Pirational Choice: The Economics of Infamous Pirate Practices | url = http://www.peterleeson.com/Pirational_Choice.pdf |format=pdf | page = 21 | year = 2010}}
Leeson, Peter T. (2010), Pirational Choice: The Economics of Infamous Pirate Practices (pdf), p. 21


This citation refers to an article on Scientific American's website.

{{Citation | last = Matson | first = John | title = What Would Blackbeard Do? Why Piracy Pays | url = http://www.scientificamerican.com/article.cfm?id=pirates-rational-choice&page=2 | publisher = scientificamerican.com | page = 2 | date = 26 November 2008 | accessdate = 20 February 2010}}
Matson, John (26 November 2008), What Would Blackbeard Do? Why Piracy Pays, scientificamerican.com, p. 2, retrieved 20 February 2010 {{citation}}: Check date values in: |accessdate= and |date= (help)

I changed |publisher= to |website= and wikilinked the magazine's article for proper formatting and because raw urls are ugly; because the interview is dated |accessdate= is not required:

{{Citation | last = Matson | first = John | title = What Would Blackbeard Do? Why Piracy Pays | url = http://www.scientificamerican.com/article.cfm?id=pirates-rational-choice&page=2 | website=[[Scientific American]] | page = 2 | date = 26 November 2008}}
Matson, John (26 November 2008), "What Would Blackbeard Do? Why Piracy Pays", Scientific American, p. 2 {{citation}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)


This citation lists as publisher the incorrect name of the magazine Proceedings:

{{Citation | last = Ross | first = I. | title = Blackbeard | publisher = United States Naval Institute Proceedings | date = October 1974 | pages=72–74}}
Ross, I. (October 1974), Blackbeard, United States Naval Institute Proceedings, pp. 72–74

I changed |publisher= to |magazine= for proper formatting; I used the magazine's correct name with wikilink; I added volume and issue number, and even found an online copy of the article on the Proceedings web site (I had noticed that the article's name was incorrect though I failed to fix it in my edit – it's corrected here):

{{Citation | last = Ross | first = I. | title = Blackbeard! | magazine=[[Proceedings (magazine)|Proceedings]] |volume=100 |issue=9 |url=http://www.usni.org/heritage/blackbeard | date = October 1974 | pages=72–74}}
Ross, I. (October 1974), ""Blackbeard!"", Proceedings, vol. 100, no. 9, pp. 72–74


This citation is to an article in The New York Times:

{{Citation | title = In Shipwreck Linked to Pirate, State Sees a Tourism Treasure | publisher = The New York Times, hosted at nytimes.com | url = http://www.nytimes.com/1997/11/09/us/in-shipwreck-linked-to-pirate-state-sees-a-tourism-treasure.html | date = 9 November 1997 | accessdate = 21 April 2010 | page = 134}}
In Shipwreck Linked to Pirate, State Sees a Tourism Treasure, The New York Times, hosted at nytimes.com, 9 November 1997, p. 134, retrieved 21 April 2010 {{citation}}: Check date values in: |accessdate= and |date= (help)

I changed |publisher= to |newspaper= for correct formatting with wikilink; I removed extraneous text (", hosted at nytimes.com") from the citation so that it doesn't become part of the citation's COinS metadata; and again, I removed |accessdate= because the article is dated:

{{Citation | title = In Shipwreck Linked to Pirate, State Sees a Tourism Treasure | newspaper=[[The New York Times]] |url=http://www.nytimes.com/1997/11/09/us/in-shipwreck-linked-to-pirate-state-sees-a-tourism-treasure.html | date = 9 November 1997 | page = 134}}
"In Shipwreck Linked to Pirate, State Sees a Tourism Treasure", The New York Times, p. 134, 9 November 1997 {{citation}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)


And the last is a citation to a web site:

{{Citation | title = Blackbeard's Cove | url = http://www.blackbeardscove.net/ | publisher = blackbeardscove.net | year = 2007 | accessdate = 21 April 2010}}
Blackbeard's Cove, blackbeardscove.net, 2007, retrieved 21 April 2010 {{citation}}: Check date values in: |accessdate= (help)

I changed |title= to use the full title on the web site's home page; I changed |publisher= to |website=:

{{Citation | title = Blackbeard's Cove Family Fun Park| url = http://www.blackbeardscove.net/ | website= blackbeardscove.net | year = 2007 | accessdate = 21 April 2010}}
"Blackbeard's Cove Family Fun Park", blackbeardscove.net, 2007, retrieved 21 April 2010 {{citation}}: Check date values in: |accessdate= (help)

That's it. So, I object to Editor Parrot of Doom's reversion of my edit.

Trappist the monk (talk) 18:03, 3 May 2013 (UTC)

Thanks for spotting the errors (now corrected), however my point still stands - the changes you've suggested above are your personal preference. Not mine. As per
WP:CITE, you shouldn't really make such changes. Parrot of Doom
18:29, 3 May 2013 (UTC)
You're welcome. But, I think you seem to be asserting ownership: ... the changes you've suggested above are your personal preference. Not mine. You are saying to me that my preference for proper use of {{
WP:CITE
which claim seems to be lacking in substance.
I presume that you meant
WP:CITEVAR. Not really applicable here because none of the changes above violate the restrictions listed under To be avoided. While explicit approbation isn't given to these particular changes, common sense would suggest that changes that bring citations into compliance with the {{citation
}} documentation and common practice are improvements and so allowed under that extraordinarily vague heading Generally considered helpful.
Since my change to Wood (2004) bringing the subscription required link-note inside Wood's citation with |subscription=yes is apparently acceptable, why then are these others unacceptable?
Trappist the monk (talk) 19:55, 3 May 2013 (UTC)
They're my personal preference because I wrote the article. There's nothing wrong with how its citations are formatted and I want them to remain as they are. Now please go away and bother someone else with your technobabble. Parrot of Doom 22:02, 3 May 2013 (UTC)
Trappist, CITEVAR applies to more than just the specific restrictions given under "To be avoided". Editors are permitted to use any style of citation they please, whether or not it corresponds to a particular template documentation. As long as there are no obvious errors (and Parrot has fixed these, correct?), any idiosyncrasies of the established citation style are allowed to stand pending a consensus to do otherwise. Nikkimaria (talk) 01:10, 4 May 2013 (UTC)
@Editor Nikkimaria: Did you read my explanations? Did I fail to clearly state the reasons for the changes? Do you not see that the changes do not modify the article's citation style but instead make improvements to five individual citations? I am not interested in changing the article's citation style.
Yes, Editor
harvnb}} reference without a matching citation and a citation not referenced in article text. The changes I made do fix what I consider to be errors, either in content or, as in the case of naked urls, contrary to a guideline or policy (Link titles
). To reiterate:
None of these changes change the article's citation style. The errors exist and should be fixed.
Trappist the monk (talk) 17:47, 4 May 2013 (UTC)
I disagree with this interpretation of
WP:CITEVAR
. Its references to "citation style" clearly mean whether the article is styled using CS1, Vancouver, Harvard with inline footnotes, Harvard with parentheses in the text, etc.—that is, the system of referencing in the article as a whole, not the details of individual citations. (I speak with some confidence because I think I can actually remember what got this written into guidelines; there was a dustup on FAC about 7 years ago over whether it was acceptable to use parenthesized Harvard references (SlimVirgin, 2006) rather than the "little blue numbers" of inline footnotes for referencing.) CITEVAR prohibits the wholesale rewriting of citation styles, e.g., the way B'rer Rabbit used to convert Truthkeeper's articles at FAC to {{sfn}} incidental to fixing broken references. (And look where that got him.)
Your position that the template documentation is not binding is tantamount to saying that citation templates have no fixed semantics, which vitiates their use in creating metadata, among other things. I disagree. I think the templates do have inherent semantics, that {{citation | author="X"}} is just as much a statement of fact as "The book was written by X" in the text of an article, and is similarly subject to correction. If authors don't want to be bound by those semantics, an available alternative is to hand-format their references rather than use the templates, which remains a perfectly legitimate way to write articles.
Look, I'm intimately familiar with the wikipolitical history here, and I know the promoters of the latest shiny new technical toy (references! infoboxes! coordinates!) have been, frankly, colossal dicks preoccupied with steamrolling the people who actually write articles with bogus invocations of
WP:OWN and so on. At times I've been in there arguing with them about that behavior. Trappist is not, from what I've seen of his activities, one of those people. His changes (with the possible exception of flipping from {{citation...}} to {{cite x...}}) seem rational to me, and I think he deserves to be responded to without the assumption that because he's technically knowledgeable, he's here to poke a stick in authors' eyes. Choess (talk
) 01:10, 9 May 2013 (UTC)