This is a list of fictional pirates, organized into either air pirates,[a] sea pirates, or space pirates. They may be outlaws, but are not the same as space marines or space cowboys in space westerns. To learn more about pirates and their context in popular culture as a whole, see the Pirates in popular culture and List of pirate films pages.
Within each category, the characters are organized alphabetically by surname (i.e. last name), or by single name if the character does not have a surname. If more than two characters are in one entry, the last name of the first character is used.
Sea pirates
editNames | Work | Years | Type of Media | Description |
---|---|---|---|---|
Angelica | Pirates of the Caribbean: On Stranger Tides | 2011 | Film | She is the daughter of Blackbeard and a former love interest of Jack Sparrow's.[1][2] She first met Jack just before she was to take a vow of celibacy in a Spanish convent; she later blames Jack for her corruption, although Jack counters this argument citing that she was 'hardly innocent' to begin with. |
Hector Barbossa | Pirates of the Caribbean | 2003-2017 | Film series | Barbossa who appears in all of the films[3] and by the fourth film, On Stranger Tides, he has become a privateer in the Royal Navy and is ordered to be Jack's guide on an expedition for the Fountain of Youth. |
Blackbeard | Pirates of the Caribbean | 2011 | Film | Blackbeard appears in this film[4] He is based on the historical figure of the same name. Blackbeard is a notorious pirate and Jack's most recent nemesis. He is one element retained from the novel On Stranger Tides by Tim Powers, from which Pirates of the Caribbean: On Stranger Tides draws inspiration.[5][6][7] Blackbeard is the captain of the Queen Anne's Revenge and a master of black magic, who wants to find the Fountain of Youth to escape a prophecy that he will be killed by a one-legged man. With the exception of his daughter Angelica, Blackbeard has zombified his entire staff of officers to ensure their loyalty. Said by Jack to be "the one pirate all pirates fear", Blackbeard practices voodoo and has the power to command ships using his magic sword. |
Bloth | The Pirates of Dark Water | 1991-1993 | Animated TV series | The evil pirate lord Bloth will stop at nothing to get the treasures for himself and provides many obstacles for Ren and his crew,[8] serving as the ox-sized, humanoid pirate captain of the feared pirate ship Maelstrom and one of the primary antagonists of the series. Ioz is also a rogue and pirate who joins up with Ren initially for the promise of treasure. |
Captain Chestbeard | Plants vs. Zombies | 2015-present | Comics | Captain Chestbeard appears in the Dark Horse Comics series Plants vs. Zombies as an antagonist opposed by Crazy Dave and Patrice Blazing, and Nate Timely, serving as a common enemy of theirs and Dr. Zomboss, with whom they are later forced to ally, so-named for his incredibly hairy chest.[9] |
Conrad | The Corsair | 1814 | Poetry | Conrad, the protagonist of this tale in verse by Lord Byron published in 1814, which was extremely popular and influential in its day, selling ten thousand copies on its first day of sale,[10] was rejected by society in his youth and later becomes a corsair fighting against humanity (excepting women); in the opera Il corsaro by Giuseppe Verdi, loosely based on Byron's work, Conrad becomes the dashing and chivalrous Corrado. The story is also based on The Corsair are the overture Le Corsaire by Hector Berlioz and the ballet Le Corsaire by Marius Petipa. Many Americans believed that Lord Byron's poem "The Corsair" was based on the life of the privateer/pirate Jean Lafitte.[11] Henry Singleton and Richard Corbould produced paintings based on the work.[12] |
Vandala Doubloons | Monster High | 2015 | Doll franchise | Vandala Doubloons is the daughter of a pirate ghost and has a pet cuttlefish named Aye.[13][b] Her dress is sea-foam green with wave patterns and lace.[14] Her debut was in the TV special Haunted as a Haunted High student that is rescued from detention,[15] and later transfers to Monster High. Her doll was presented at San Diego Comic-Con in 2014.[16] |
Captain Flint | Treasure Island | 1883 | Novel | The pirate captain who hid his treasures on the novel's titular island. |
Sea Hag | Thimble Theatre/Popeye | 1929 | Comics | The Sea Hag is a major enemy of Popeye the Sailor. She is the last witch on earth, and a pirate who sails the Seven Seas in her ship "The Black Barnacle." She has a headquarters on Plunder Island, where she keeps a pride of lions that she uses to dispatch her enemies.[17] She also has a deep knowledge of magic artifacts and has used many of them to great effect over the years. The Sea Hag was created by Elzie Crisler Segar in 1929 as part of the Thimble Theatr comic strip.[18] |
Hassan | Tactical Roar | 2006 | Anime series | Hassan is a man who was "hunting for an escort ship," claiming to be a captain, actually a pirate. This anime series is centered around all-female crew of a commercial Warship, the Pascal Magi, which is trying to fight pirates in the near future.[19] |
Captain Hook | Peter Pan, or The Boy Who Wouldn't Grow Up | 1904 | Play | In 1904, this play by J.M. Barrie was first performed. In the book, Peter's enemy in Neverland is the pirate crew led by Captain Hook. Details on Barrie's conception of Captain Hook are lacking, but it seems he was inspired by at least one historical privateer, and possibly by Robert Louis Stevenson's Long John Silver as well.[20] In film adaptations released in 1924, 1953, and 2003, Hook's dress, as well as the attire of his crew, corresponds to stereotypical notions of pirate appearance. |
Davy Jones | Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man's Chest Pirates of the Caribbean: At World's End Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Men Tell No Tales |
2006 2007 2017 |
Films | Jones is the immortal captain of Flying Dutchman. In At World's End, Beckett uses the heart to force Jones to serve him.[21] In Dead Men Tell No Tales, Jones makes a cameo in a post-credits scene. Will Turner and Elizabeth Swann are asleep when their bedroom is entered by the shadow of an apparently resurrected Davy Jones. Will then awakens and, assuming that he was simply dreaming, goes back to sleep. The camera then pans to the floor, revealing a puddle of water and barnacles.[22] |
Edward Kenway | Assassin's Creed IV: Black Flag | 2013 | Video Game | Kenway is a Welsh privateer-turned-pirate, operating in the Caribbean during the final decades of the Golden Age of Piracy. During this time, he plays an important role in the establishment of a short-lived Pirate Republic, and inadvertently becomes caught in the conflict between the Assassin Brotherhood and the Templar Order. |
Johnny LaFitte | Pirate Blood | 1964 | Short story | LaFitte, of Glenora, California, is a 20th-century descendant of Jean Lafitte who in Edgar Rice Burroughs's story "Pirate Blood," part of The Wizard of Venus novella, gets to the distant Vulture's Island, where his pirate heredity asserts itself in a modern piratical career full of cold-blooded murders and rapes.[23] |
Captain Leatherwing | Batman: Leatherwing | 1994 | Comics | Captain Leatherwing / Batman (in this alternative universe), captain of the Flying Fox, he is employed by King James II of England to pillage rival countries' ships, though he keeps a share for himself and his men. He wears a costume to protect his family name, since England would be appalled at one of her children sailing about the seas like he does. He raids ship and collects gold in the hope that he will one day have enough to buy back the land of his parents, which were stolen from him when they were murdered.[24] |
Monkey D. Luffy | One Piece | 1997–present | Manga and anime series | Monkey D. Luffy is a fictional character and the main protagonist of the One Piece manga series, created by Eiichiro Oda. Luffy made his debut in chapter one as a young boy who acquires the properties of rubber after accidentally eating one of the devil fruits, Gum Gum Fruit. |
Lukkage | Gargantia on the Verdurous Planet | 2013 | Anime series | Lukkage is a pirate leader who launched an attack on the Gargantia after Ledo kills some of her men to protect Bellows and her crew, and has two female sex slaves who also serve as her co-pilots for her mecha, as shown in the episode "The Villainous Empress" and other episodes.[25] Later she develops a romantic interest in Pinion, especially with his hair down. Some time after being defeated by the Gargantia's forces with Ledo's help, she reappears as part of Kugel's fleet, yet she helps to rebel against it. She also reappears in the 2013 OVAs "Abandoned Fleet" and "Altar of the Visitor from Afar" as a scalvenger. |
Rokuro Okajima | Black Lagoon | 2006 | Anime series | Rokuro "Rock" Okajima, who later eventually begins to enjoy his life as a pirate and becomes even more comfortable with corruption,[26] and demonstrates a duplicitous, ruthless side of his personality clearly influenced by Revy and Roanapur.[27] He is one of the pirates in this story follows a team of pirate mercenaries known as the Lagoon Company, that smuggles goods in and around the seas of Southeast Asia in the early to mid 1990s.[c] Their base of operations is located in the fictional harbor city of Roanapur in east Thailand near the border of Cambodia (somewhere in the Amphoe Mueang Trat district, likely on the mainland north/northeast of the Ko Chang island or on the island itself).[28] Other pirates in The Lagoon Company include Revy, Dutch, and Benny. |
Piet Piraat | Piet Piraat | 2001–present | Children's program | Piet, otherwise known as "Pete the Pirate"," is a good-natured adventurous pirate in a Flemish children's program.[29] |
The Pirates | Asterix | 1959–present | Comics | This group of hapless pirates in Albert Uderzo's Astérix are themselves parodies of the characters of Redbeard (see above), and often run into Asterix and Obelix and are subsequently beaten up and usually sunk.[30] |
Captain Pugwash | Captain Pugwash | 1974-1975 | Animated series | Pugwash is a fictional pirate in a series of British children's comic strips and books created by John Ryan. The character's adventures were adapted into a TV series, using cardboard cut-outs filmed in live-action (the first series was performed and broadcast live), also called Captain Pugwash, first shown on the BBC in 1957, a later colour series, first shown in 1974–75, and a traditional animation series, The Adventures of Captain Pugwash, first aired in 1998.[31] |
Captain Redbeard | Redbeard | 1959–present | Comic series | This Belgian comics series by Jean-Michel Charlier and Victor Hubinon stars captain Redbeard.[32][33] |
Santiago Montes | Santiago of the Seas | 2020–present | Animated TV series | The show follows Santiago, an 8-year-old pirate, and his crew as they embark on rescues, uncover hidden treasures and keeps the Caribbean high seas safe. The show is infused with Spanish language and Latino-Caribbean culture and curriculum.[34] |
Long John Silver | Treasure Island | 1883 | Novel | This an adventure novel, by Scottish author Robert Louis Stevenson, narrates a tale of "buccaneers and buried gold." Its influence is enormous on popular perceptions of pirates, including such elements as treasure maps marked with an "X", schooners, the Black Spot, tropical islands, and one-legged seamen bearing parrots on their shoulders.[35] Long John Silver, a cook on the voyage to Treasure Island, is the secret ringleader of the pirate band. His physical and emotional strength are impressive. Silver is deceitful and disloyal, greedy and visceral, and does not care about human relations. Yet he is always kind toward Jim and genuinely fond of the boy. Silver is a powerful mixture of charisma and self-destructiveness, individualism and recklessness.
Stevenson's portrayal of Silver has greatly influenced the modern iconography of the pirate.[36] |
Jack Sparrow | Pirates of the Caribbean | 2003-2017 | Film series | Pirates of the Caribbean is a series of fantasy swashbuckler films produced by Jerry Bruckheimer and based on Walt Disney's theme park attraction of the same name. The film series serves as a major component of the eponymous media franchise. Captain Jack Sparrow is the protagonist of the series, portrayed by Johnny Depp,[37][38] In Dead Man's Chest, it is revealed that Sparrow once made a deal with Davy Jones[39] and in the third film, it is revealed that Sparrow is one of the members of the Brethren Court, acting as Pirate Lord of the Caribbean. In the fifth film, when faced with execution, Jack is rescued by Henry Turner- the son of Will and Elizabeth- who seeks Jack's help in finding the Trident of Poseidon, which gives its wielder control of the seas.[40] Jack Sparrow is also the subject of two series of books, Pirates of the Caribbean: Jack Sparrow and Pirates of the Caribbean: Legends of the Brethren Court, one standalone novel, Pirates of the Caribbean: The Price of Freedom, and has also appeared in numerous video games, such as The Legend of Jack Sparrow.[41] |
Syndicate of Pirates | The Great Pirate Syndicate | 1899 | Novel | The Syndicate of Pirates use flying machines (not yet invented at the time of writing) and secret rays to terrorise the adventurers of the Klondike Gold Rush in Alaska – in George Griffith's book The Great Pirate Syndicate (1899)[42][43] |
Captain Syrup | Wario Land Wario Land II Wario Land: Shake It! | 1994, 1998, 2008 | Video game | A female pirate who serves as Wario's main rival throughout all three titles. |
Dan Tempest | The Buccaneers | 1956-1957 | TV series | Starring Robert Shaw as Dan Tempest, the series, aimed at children, followed the adventures of Tempest and his crew of former pirates as they made their way across the seven seas in Sultana.[44] |
Abraham Tuizentfloot | The Adventures of Nero | 1957 | Comics | Tuizentfloot is a mad man dressed up as a pirate who frequently wants to attack people. He debuted in Marc Sleen's The Adventures of Nero in 1957.[45] |
Various characters | The Pirates of Penzance | 1879 | Opera | In 1879, this comic opera was an instant hit in New York, and the original London production in 1880 ran for 363 performances.[46] The piece, depicting an incompetent band of "tenderhearted" British pirates, is still performed widely today, and obviously corresponds to historical knowledge about the emergence of piracy in the Caribbean. |
Various characters | Sea of Red | 2005-2006 | Comic book series | Featuring 16th century vampire pirates, the series was written by Rick Remender and Kieron Dwyer and drawn by Salgood Sam and Paul Harmon.[47][48] |
Captain Richard Warrington | Naughty Marietta | 1910 | Operetta | Set in New Orleans in 1780, it tells how Captain Richard Warrington is commissioned to unmask and capture a notorious French pirate calling himself "Bras Pique" – and how he is helped and hindered by a high-spirited runaway, Contessa Marietta. The score includes many well-known songs, including "Ah! Sweet Mystery of Life". Naughty Marietta had its first performance on October 24, 1910, in Syracuse, New York,[49] and opened on Broadway on November 7, 1910, playing for 136 performances at the New York Theatre. It enjoyed revivals in 1929 at Jolson's 59th Street Theatre and in 1931 at Erlanger's Theatre. The operetta became Victor Herbert's greatest success. |
Air pirates
editNames | Work | Years | Type of Media | Description |
---|---|---|---|---|
Abney Park | Airship Pirates Chronicles | 2011 | Role-playing game | This game, based on the backstory of the band, Abney Park, is set in the post-apocalyptic world after their album, The End Of Days, a future world with a severely disrupted timeline, with the game featuring steampunk themes and Victorian-era style. Airship Pirates places players as air pirates in command of their own steam-powered airships, who seek not only to pillage the skies, but to plunder history, possibly causing even greater disruption to the past. Meanwhile, the world below struggles in Victorian-style squalor under an oppressive government that maintains control through clockwork policemen.[50] In December 2011, the RPG game won Diehard GameFAN's "Best Core Rulebook of 2011" award.[51] |
Barney Baxter | Barney Baxter in the Air | 1935-1950 | Comic strip | Barney Baxter was an "adventure strip" involving heroic exploits centering on aviation.[52][53] Baxter was often accompanied by his sidekick Gopher Gus, who (unlike the rest of the characters) was drawn with the exaggerated facial features of a "humour strip" character.[53] Other characters were Barney's mother, his rival love interests, Patricia and Maura, and his buddy Hap Walters.[52] |
Blackbeard | Pan | 2015 | Film | Blackbeard leads a group of pirates in this 2015 fantasy film who use flying sailing ships.[54] |
Kasey Boon | Mysticons | 2017-2018 | Animated TV series | Younger brother of Kitty, who Emerald Goldenbraid, one of the story's protagonists, developed a crush on. He gave her a bracelet which was revealed to be a tracking device to follow the Mysticons. He later appears to have second thoughts about taking advantage of Em's feelings for him, and catches her, after which the two have a serious romance.[55] In the comics, he debuts in Volume 2. |
Kitty Boon | Mysticons | 2017-2018 | Animated TV series | Captain of the Pink Skulls, female pirate, and Zarya's childhood friend.[55] She takes advantage of this relationship to incapacitate the Mysticons and obtain the Dragon Disk, which she sells to Dreadbane. She later fights alongside the Mysticons, and on a third occasion gives Zarya inspiration to thwart Necrafa's plans. She is later revealed to be Zarya's romantic love interest as confirmed by the show's creator, Sean Jara, and supported by show director Matt Ferguson.[56][57][58] In the comic books, she debuts in Volume 2. |
Captain Andian Cly | Boneshaker | 2009 | Novel | This 2009 novel by Cherie Priest features air pirates like captain Cly, who commands a ship called the "Naamah Darling" and he later appears in novels like Ganymede, where he loves a woman in the Seattle Underground.[59] |
Dola | Castle in the Sky | 1986 | Anime film | Dola, a "bold, plump old lady named Dola, leads a gang of air pirates in this 1986 Japanese anime film, as they try to steal the crystal necklace of Sheeta.[60] |
Captain Gyrfalcon | Exalted | 2001 | Role playing game | Gyrfalcon appeared in this high fantasy role playing game.[61] |
Prince James Other "social revolutionaries" |
The Raid of the Mercury | 1931 | Short story | James committed an act of air piracy, with fellow "social revolutionaries," in this short story by A. H. Johnson.[62] |
Don Karnage | TaleSpin | 1990-1991 | Animated series | Karnage leads gang of air pirates in this Disney animated series and later in Ducktales.[63] According to series creator Jymn Magon, he is a wolf,[64] but has orangish-brown fur reminiscent of a fox. |
Alexandre LeRoi | Batman: Master of the Future | 1991 | Graphic novel | LeRoi is a sky pirate who is flamboyant and demands that he be proclaimed master of the city, or else he will burn it to the ground.[65] He leaps out the window before he can be arrested, and Tolliver insists that the fair proceed. |
Miles Lydecker | Black Condor Vol 1 #2 | 1992 | Comics | Lyndecker is another DC Comics air pirate who fought against Black Condor in the 1992 comic Black Condor Vol 1 #2.[66] |
Captain Mors | The Air Pirate and His Steerable Airship | 1908-1911 | Pulp Magazine | The German pulp magazine The Air Pirate and His Steerable Airship from 1908 to 1911, followed the adventures of Captain Mors, the "Air pirate".[67][68][69] |
Captain Plunder his Sky Pirates |
Sonic the Comic | 1993-2002 | Comic | Plunder and fellow sky pirates appear in this comic.[70] |
Captain Phoenix | Jak and Daxter: The Lost Frontier | 2009 | Video game | Phoenix leads a gang of space pirates,[71] like Danger Sexy Pirate,[72] in massive ships who battle the protagonists[73][74][75][76] while having a flying airbase known as Phoenix.[77] |
Robur | Robur the Conqueror | 1886 1904 |
Novel | He is an inventor who kidnaps people and takes them aboard his advanced aircraft in the 1886 novel Robur the Conqueror and its 1904 sequel Master of the World (both written by Jules Verne), as well as in the 1961 film adaptation based on elements of both novels.[78][79] |
Ruby Heart | Marvel vs. Capcom 2 | 2000 | Video game | She is a French-speaking pirate captain and the main protagonist of the game. Being an original character specifically designed for this entry, she has yet to return to any other game. |
Captain Shakespeare | Stardust | 2007 | Film | Shakespeare leads aerial pirates in this fantasy film, commanding a ship called the Caspartine.[80] |
Silvana crew | Last Exile | 2003 | Anime series | The crew of the airship Silvana in the anime series Last Exile are sky pirates,[81] while sky pirates appear in the sequel series Last Exile: Fam the Silver Wing. |
Baroness Troixmonde / Filibus | Filibus | 1915 | Silent film | The film's protagonist has a secret identity and is known to the world as Filibus and has an airship. Some called the film "an odd and funny forerunner of science-fiction movies,"[82] with Filibus described as a lesbian character,[83][84] and an "elegant and elusive woman pirate" who can pass between male and female identities, making her "a champion of transgenderism before that term had been coined."[85][86] |
Unnamed | The Sky Police | 1910 | Short story | This short story by John A. Heffernan features an air pirate.[87] |
Unnamed | Pirates of 1920 | 1911 | Silent film | Air pirates appeared in the 1911 silent film Pirates of 1920.[88][89] |
Unnamed | The Pirates of the Sky: A Tale of Modern Adventure | 1915 | Novel | Sky pirates appear in Stephen Gaillard's 1915 novel, The Pirates of the Sky: A Tale of Modern Adventure.[90][91] |
Unnamed | Sky Pirates of Callisto | 1973 | Novels | There are sky pirates in the Callisto series of novels.[92] |
Unnamed | Crimson Skies | 2000-2003 | Game franchise | The series is set within an alternate history of the 1930s invented by Weisman and McCoy. Within this divergent timeline, the United States has collapsed, and air travel has become the most popular mode of transportation in North America; as a result, air pirates thrive in the world of Crimson Skies. In describing the concept of Crimson Skies, Jordan Weisman stated he wanted to "take the idea of 16th century Caribbean piracy and translate into a 1930s American setting".[93] |
Unnamed | Pirate101 | 2012 | Video game | Players can complete quests, sail ships, befriend companions, and battle enemies in a turn-based combat system similar to that used in board games.[94] |
Unnamed | Mandrake the Magician | 1934-2013 | Comic strip | Mandrake, along with the Phantom Magician in Mel Graff's The Adventures of Patsy, is regarded by comics historians as the first superhero of comics, such as comics historian Don Markstein, who writes, "Some people say Mandrake the Magician, who started in 1934, was comics' first superhero."[53][95][96][97] |
Unnamed | The Magnificent Kotobuki | 2019 | Anime series | The anime's protagonists run escorts to fend off attacks from air pirates.[98] |
Vaan Balthier |
Final Fantasy | 1987–present | Media franchise | The sky pirates of the Final Fantasy media franchise include Vaan and Balthier. For Balthier, he eventually decided to cut his ties with his father and his role as a judge, becoming a sky pirate under a new name, abandoning his old name.[99] For Vaan, he ends the game, Final Fantasy XII, as a sky pirate, traveling the world along with Penelo. He also reprises his role from Final Fantasy XII in the manga adaptation by Gin Amou.[100] |
Vyse Gilder Enrique |
Skies of Arcadia | 2000-2003 | Video game | In this video game, Yse is a young and dashing sky pirate who is part of the Blue Rogue clan and soon become entangled in a race to find the Moon Stones that control these powerful Gigas.[101][102][103][104] Other sky pirates include Gilder and Enrique.[105] |
Space pirates
editNames | Work | Years | Type of Media | Description |
---|---|---|---|---|
Amsaja | Cleopatra in Space | 2020–present | Animated TV series | The self-declared "Queen of the Space Pirates," who heads a crew of three other pirates (Ostea, Cyborg Dwayne, and Boop), and the doppelgänger of series protagonist, Cleopatra.[106] She previously had the telepathic space shark ninja as her ex-boyfriend, and the series villain, Octavian, might be her ex-boyfriend as well. |
Atomsk | FLCL | 2000-2001 | Anime series | Pirate King in this OVA, who also appears in the manga, and two anime series, FLCL Progressive and FLCL Alternative.[107] |
Ryoko Balta | Tenchi Muyo! GXP | 2002 | Anime series | Although she named herself after Ryoko Hakubi,[108] Balta is hardly as bloodthirsty as that infamous space pirate was rumored to be, although she is notorious.[109] Even though she was a member of the dreaded Daluma pirate guild, Ryoko Balta is an educated and cultured pirate.[110][111] She is well-versed in many customs from other planets, including the Japanese Tea Ceremony. |
Black Barney | Buck Rogers in the 25th Century A.D. | 1929-1967 | Comic strip | In this comic strip, Barney begins as a space pirate and later becomes a friend of Buck Rogers.[112][113] |
Lars Barriga | Steven Universe Steven Universe Future |
2013-2019 2019-2020 |
Animated TV series | A human who died on the Gem Homeworld and was resurrected by Steven, later becoming the captain of a group of fugitive gems on a stolen spaceship. He has been described as "complicated fellow" by his voice actor, Matthew Moy,[114] and was designed by series creator Rebecca Sugar when she was in college.[115] Some have said that the outfit Lars wears is reminiscent of Captain Harlock.[116] |
Black Sun Pirates | Star Wars: Empire at War | 2006 | Video game | This game contains a non-playable faction called the Black Sun Pirates, who are a large gang of mercenaries.[117] In addition, during the Clone Wars, the criminal elements which comprised the Black Sun syndicate flourished, and it was led by a "cabal of Falleen nobles" on Mustafar,[118][119] appearing in the series Star Wars: The Clone Wars.[120] and in a comic book series.[121] |
Captain Blackbeard | Megaman Battle Network 6 | 2005-2006 | Video game | This game includes a WWW member named Captain Blackbeard, an operator of Diveman.EXE who dressed as a sailor.[122] He is also known as Captain Kurohige in Japan. |
The Bonne Family | Mega Man Legends | 1997-1998 | Video game | This video game consists of Teisel,[123] Tron, Bon, and 40 Servbots.[124][125] and the youngest brother, Bon Bonne, who can only say one word—"Babu!" The Bonnes are accompanied by forty Servbots, robots under the care of Tron.[126] They are air pirates in their own series, only being space pirates in the crossovers Namco × Capcom[127] and Project X Zone.[128] |
Black Patch | Colonel Bleep | 1957-1960 | Animated TV series | Part of the titular colonel's intergalactic rogues' gallery[129] in this first color cartoon series made for television.[130] |
Boop | Cleopatra in Space | 2020–present | Animated TV series | She is a doppelgänger of Mihos, Cleo's animal companion.[106] She is on the pirate ship along with Cyborg Dwayne, Amsaja, and Ostea. His attack cry is just saying her name over and over. |
Boskone | Lensman | 1948-1954 | Novels | Galactic-wide pirate organization.[131] in this influential space opera.[132] |
Brak | Space Ghost Space Ghost Coast to Coast |
1966-1967 1994-2008 |
Animated TV series | A supervillain who is portrayed as a catlike alien space pirate trying to conquer the galaxy. Cartoon Network described him as having "meager wits and the love of a peppy tune."[133] |
Cobra | Cobra | 1978-1984 | Manga | Appearing in this manga, then later in a film, anime, original video animation, Cobra is a notorious rogue pirate who refuses to align with a federation of star systems or a guild of pirates, meaning that he has to keep his identity hidden.[134] In the process, he teams up with Jane, a bounty hunter who is trying to find her sisters, with their goal to liberate a treasure from the planet of Mars. |
Bull Coxine | Tom Corbett, Space Cadet | 1952-1956 | Novel | Pirate who in 2353 led a breakout from the Solar Alliance prison asteroid and proceeded to prey upon various spacecraft until Tom Corbett and his unit mates Roger Manning and Astro defeated him.[135][136] |
Captain Cracker | ThunderCats ThunderCats Roar |
1985-1989 2020–present |
Animated TV series | A robotic space pirate who has a robot parrot which sits on his shoulder.[137] |
Abslom Daak | Doctor Who | 1963-1989 2005–present |
Comics | Ex-convict, pirate and mercenary hired by the Time Lords to destroy Daleks in this comic, also appearing in the Deceit novel in 1993, traveling across the galaxy on his starship which is named the "Kill-Wagon."[138][139] |
Dagg Dibrim | Starchaser: The Legend of Orin | 1985 | Film | In this space opera and animated film,[140] Dagg is a pirate, crystal smuggler, and sidekick to the protagonist.[141][142][143][144] Some have said he "resembles Burt Reynolds but behaves like Harrison Ford's Han Solo."[145] |
Divatox | Power Rangers Turbo | 1997 | TV series | In this series, Divatox is an intergalactic space pirate and villain.[146] In the 1997 film, she is seeking his golden key to traverse an inter-dimensional gateway and enter into matrimony with Maligore, an imprisoned demon who promises her great riches and power.[147] |
Cyborg Dwayne | Cleopatra in Space | 2020–present | Animated TV series | The doppelgänger of protagonist Brian Bell who is also on the pirate ship with Ostea, Boop, and Amsaja.[106] |
Queen Emeraldas | Queen Emeraldas Galaxy Express 999 Space Pirate Captain Harlock |
1978-1979 1977-1981 1977-1979 |
Manga | Spinoff character from Galaxy Express 999[d] and Capt. Harlock in Leiji Matsumoto universe. Sister of Maetel from GE999. In the manga, ahe comforts the series protagonist, Hiroshi Umino, who escapes Earth on a freighter,[148] and is fascinated by him, as she fled Earth in the past to a ship which she designed herself.[149]
Additionally, Emeraldas shows up in the animate films Galaxy Express 999 (1977) and Space Battleship Yamato (1974). |
Gavro Foolscap Sheer |
Ancient Ruler Dinosaur King DKidz Adventure | 2007-2008 | Animated TV series | Gavro, Foolscap and Sheer are members of the "spectral space Pirates" and collect cosmos stones throughout time.[150][151] |
Gokaigers | Kaizoku Sentai Gokaiger | 2011-2012 | TV series | Characters from a Super Sentai series who travel to Earth in search of the "Greatest Treasure in the Universe", only to be dragged into a battle with an invading alien force called the Space Empire Zangyack.[152] |
Hammerhand | ThunderCats ThunderCats Roar |
1985-1989 2020–present |
Animated TV series | The leader of the Berserkers who has a cybernetic arm that can punch and pound with great force.[137] After he and his original Berserkers were killed, Hammerhand was later mystically resurrected by Mumm-Ra who summoned up his spirit to animate a clone of Panthro which he had created. When the plan failed, Hammerhand's spirit broke Mumm-Ra's control and the clone body shifted into Hammerhand's original form before departing. Other Berserkers are Topspinner, Ram Bam, and Cruncher, all of whom are "gold-loving" pirates and all cyborgs.[153][154] |
Captain Harlock | Space Pirate Captain Harlock | 1978-1979 | Anime series | Captain of the Arcadia. The character was created by Leiji Matsumoto in 1977 and popularized in the 1978 television series Space Pirate Captain Harlock.[155] Since then, the character has appeared in numerous animated television series and films, like Arcadia of My Youth, the latest of which is 2013's Space Pirate Captain Harlock. Harlock has achieved notable popularity. Several anime and manga characters have been, in some way, inspired by Matsumoto's creation. Naoko Takeuchi drew inspiration from Harlock's stoic qualities ("strong, silent, unshakeable") when designing the character of Tuxedo Mask,[156] while Last Exile's Alex Row was modeled after the Captain.[157] His basic character design is even thought to be a source of inspiration for Osamu Tezuka's manga character Black Jack. |
Captain CJ "Hawk" Hawkens | Space Raiders | 1983 | Film | Roguish protagonist of this Roger Corman's dark spin on Star Wars in this space opera.[158][159] |
Tex Hex | BraveStarr: The Movie | 1988 | Film | This animated Space Western, based on the animated series of the same name, has an evil purple-skinned outlaw, minion to the demon Stampede.[160] |
Ironwolf | Weird Worlds | 1972-1974 2011 |
Comics | Antihero resisting the tyrannical Empress Hernandez. He first appeared in the last three issues of Weird Worlds, a comics anthology series published by American company DC Comics from 1972 to 1974.[161] and was created by Howard Chaykin, who plotted and drew the stories.[162] |
Jackals | Halo 2 | 2004 | Video game | A sci-fi race of reptilian-like creatures who are notorious for piracy in space in this video game.[163] |
Murdoch Juan | "The Pirate" | 1968 | Novel | A bold space adventurer in this story, which is part of The Psychotechnic League series.[164] Whether Murdoch is to be actually defined as a pirate, or rather as a very daring but legitimate entrepreneur, is a major issue on which the whole story turns. In another one of his stories, the pirates are desperate to destroy the protagonist "before he can bring the information to the authorities."[165] |
Drongo Kane | John Grimes novels | 1967-1976 | Novel series | A pirate captain who is the villain in several books,[166][167][168] comes from the planet Austral, and other books mention the planet Australis in another part of the galaxy.[169] His story "The Mountain Movers" (part of Grimes' early career) includes the song of future Australian space adventurers, sung to the tune of "Waltzing Matilda." The Duchy of Waldegren is also a popular haunt of several notorious space-pirates (no individual names given) in the series. |
Killer Kane | Buck Rogers in the 25th Century A.D. | 1929-1967 | Comic strip | Flamboyant 25th century crime boss, later dictator of earth and Saturn, with a fleet of spacecraft and raygun-toting henchmen who appeared in the Buck Rogers comic strip and its subsequent 1939 Buck Rogers serial film produced by Universal Studios,[170][171] the 1979 film and subsequent TV series. Some reviewers believe that when measured against other serial villains such as Ming the Merciless, Killer Kane pales somewhat in comparison.[172] |
Talon Karrde | Thrawn trilogy | 1991-1993 | Novels | Karrde is a smuggler chief who becomes the leader of the criminal underworld after the death of Jabba Desilijic Tiure.[173] The author of the trilogy, Timothy Zahn, said that when he created the character he "always envisioned the face and voice of Avon" from Blake's Seven.[174] |
Kraiklyn | Consider Phlebas | 1987 | Novel | Captain of the pirate ship Clear Air Turbulence, an avid gambler who leads his crew on two disastrous raids before being killed by the main character Horza.[175][176][177] |
Krys and Jolly U | Alisa Selezneva | 1965-2003 | Novels | Krys is a shape-shifter, and Jolly U is a fat humanoid. They appear as Alisa's antagonists in several books and their adaptations, such as The Mystery of the Third Planet[178] and Guest from the Future. |
Duelo McFile | Vandread | 2000-2001 | Anime series | Duelo quickly takes over medical emergencies often at the objection of the female pirates, but ignores them, assuring the crew members that he is not a threat. Since he is the only licensed medical practitioner on board the Nirvana, as well as being that the medical facilities on board the female pirate ship were no longer operational, the female pirates were left with no choice but to have him as their official doctor.[179] |
Manjanungo | Race Across the Stars | 1982-1984 | Novel | A bloodthirsty space pirate in this novel, which is part of the Spaceways series.[180] |
Mito | Space Pirate Mito | 1999 | Anime series | Mito masquerades as a fashion model, but is actually a legendary space pirate.[181] |
Nabel | "Space Truckers" | 1996 | Film | A scientist who is later revealed to be a pirate captain of the Regalia named Macanudo, who rebuilt his grievously injured body and went into piracy as revenge against Saggs for betraying him.[182][183] |
Carson Napier | Venus Series | 1932-1962 | Novels | A dashing space-traveler, got to Venus by mistake, discovered there a tyrannical regime which sorely needed opposing - and the best way to do that was to assume leadership of the Pirates of Venus (also the title of the first book in the Venus series).[184][185] |
Hondo Ohnaka | Star Wars: The Clone Wars Star Wars Rebels |
2008-2020 2014-2018 |
Animated TV series | Leader of the Weequay space pirates,[e] known as the Ohnaka Gang, which kidnaps, and attempts to ransom, Obi-Wan Kenobi, Anakin Skywalker, Count Dooku—and later Ahsoka Tano—to the highest bidder during the Clone Wars.[186] He follows a code of honor and respects the Jedi, but is not above using sneaky tactics and treachery if it is for "good business". Years after the Clone Wars, despite losing his crew to the Galactic Empire, Hondo continues his criminal activities while having dealings with the Rebellion crew of the Ghost.[187] |
Orions | Star Trek: The Animated Series | 1973-1974 | Animated TV series | The first appearance of a male Orion was shown in the Star Trek: The Animated Series episode "The Pirates of Orion".[188] In the episode, these Orions are shown to be ruthless pirates,[189] As such, some recommended this episode for featuring the trio of characters Kirk, Spock, and Bones of The Original Series.[190] Later, the Orion Syndicate was mentioned in Star Trek: Deep Space Nine, but no actual Orions were seen, only members of other species.[191] |
Ostea | Cleopatra in Space | 2020–present | Animated TV series | A doppelgänger of series protagonist Akila Theoris, she is a pirate in the same crew as Cyborg Dwayne and Amsaja.[106] She is a pirate who apparently edits, or a major contributor, to a newsletter for space pirates. |
Red Peri | The Red Peri | 1935 | Novel | In this novel where some said that "the background is imaginative, but the romance is on the level of the shopgirl pulps, and the writing leaves much to be desired,"[192] with David Bowman's helmetless spacewalk in 2001: A Space Odyssey inspired by Frank Keene's escape from the pirate base the novel.[193] Peri is the novel's protagonist and space pirate who has a base on the Moon.[194] |
Pirate Clans | Exosquad | 1993-1994 | Animated TV series | In the first season of this series, a group of humans defend their homeworlds from attack when under attack from these rogue pirates and humanoids,[195] a theme which continues in season 2.[196] |
Malcolm "Mal" Reynolds | Firefly | 2002 | TV series | Former rebel Browncoat soldier and captain of Serenity, who has been described as someone that is "everything that a hero is not."[197] He is a survivor who tries to stay alive and get by,[198] raised by his mother and "about 40 hands" on a ranch on the planet Shadow.[199] He occasionally surprises his friends by displaying familiarity with disparate literature varying from the works of Xiang Yu[200] to poems[201] by Samuel Taylor Coleridge, though he has no idea "who" Mona Lisa is. |
Ridley | Metroid | 1986-2017 | Video game | A dragon-like alien that is a top ranking member of the space pirates.[202] |
Saffron | Firefly | 2002 | TV series | She is a very crafty and amoral con artist who assumes convenient identities to commit grand thefts, is known to seduce—and frequently marry, and an occasional ship thief.[203] |
Sally | Fallout 3 | 2008-2009 | Video game | A child victim of alien abduction who helps the Vault Dweller take over Mothership Zeta, destroy an enemy flying saucer, and plunder the aliens' advanced technology.[204] The rest of her crew include the samurai Toshiro Kago, the mercenary Somah, doctor Elliot Tecorian, and the cowboy Paulson.[205] |
Star Seekers | Transformers: Exiles Transformers: Retribution |
2011 2014 |
Novels | Transformer Pirates with a vendetta against Cybertron led by Thundertron, even appearing in the 2014 storyline for BotCon.[206] Thundertron also appeared as a figure in the Transformers: Prime toyline. Reportedly, Transformers Prime would have introduced pirates if it has continued.[207] Also, there was the Dread Pirate Crew which appeared in Transformers: Wings Universe, a universe based on the original cartoon, depicted in comics, and prose stories.[208] |
Garris Shrike | Han Solo Trilogy | 1997-1998 | Novels | Space pirate, con artist, and mercenary who captured Han Solo as a child, turning him into a thief, while serving as his mentor.[209][210] A similar character named Tobias Beckett appeared in the Solo: A Star Wars Story film.[211] |
Space Pirates | Kid Icarus: Uprising | 2012 | Video game | Futuristic, seemingly mechanical beings, and antagonists.[212] They act as enemies of Pit and the Underworld Army where they roam the Galactic Sea and steal the constellations. Besides the generic Space Pirates,[213] among the members of the Space Pirates are the Space Pirate Captain, Space Pirate Commando, and Space Pirate Sniper. They are reportedly called "Star Thieves" in Japan. |
Richard B. Riddick | The Chronicles of Riddick | 2004 | Film | Escaped convict and last of the alien Furian race.[214] Riddick was once a mercenary, then part of a security force,[215] and later a soldier. |
Jonathan Rockhal | Nathan Never | 1991–present | Comics | A space pirate captain. John Silver, whose name was inspired by Long John Silver, a man with a mechanical leg, is his second-in-command, who appeared in these comics.[216] Before they turned to piracy, they were generals of the Federal Army of Earth. Also in the comic series is a former space pirate named Madoc, a friend of Rebecca "Legs" Weaver, a colleague of the protagonist.[217] |
Sinbad and the Space Pirates | Challenge of the Super Friends | 1978 | Animated TV series | Space pirates come to Earth to loot its treasure in the second part of episode 4.[218] |
Han Solo | Star Wars: Episode IV – A New Hope | 1977 | Film | A pirate,[219] mercenary and spice smuggler, best friend to the dog-like alien Chewbacca and lover to Princess Leia.[220] In designing Solo, George Lucas used Humphrey Bogart as a point of reference, with Solo developing into a "tough James Dean style starpilot" that would appear in the finished film.[221] After his appearance in a New Hope, he also appeared in Star Wars: Episode V – The Empire Strikes Back in 1980, Star Wars: Episode VI – Return of the Jedi in 1983, Star Wars: The Force Awakens in 2015, Solo: A Star Wars Story in 2015, and Star Wars: The Rise of Skywalker in 2018, along with in the Star Wars Holiday Special, the Star Wars Forces of Destiny series, and many other parts of the Star Wars franchise. |
Elon Cody Starbuck | Star Reach | 1974-1979 | Comics | In this 1970s comic,[222] Starbuck is a "rollicking space pirate" and swashbuckler who was sometimes a hero, and other times a villain who has some redeeming qualities.[223][224][225] Some have also said that Lieutenant Starbuck in Battlestar Galactica was based on Starbuck in this comic series.[226] |
Starjammers | Uncanny X-Men | 1963-2019 | Comics | A team of space pirates, led by Corsair, appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics. The Starjammers first appeared in Uncanny X-Men #107 (October 1977) and were created by Dave Cockrum.[227] The name "Starjammers" was created on the basis of the type of sailing ship known as "Windjammer". |
Booster Terrik | X-Wing | 1996-2012 | Novels | Terrik was a criminal who was imprisoned by protagonist Corran Horn's father, as well as an old friend of another protagonist Wedge Antilles.[228] Later in the series, Horn marries Terrik's daughter Mirax, despite Terrik's initial objections. |
Alonzo P. Tucker | Lost in Space | 1965-1968 | TV series | Inspired by Long John Silver, especially as portrayed by Robert Newton in this series, which was "aimed primarily at children."[229] He is introduced in the episode "The Sky Pirate" as a human rogue of sorts,[230][231][232] and is clearly defined as a space pirate by TV Guide.[233] |
Gammis Turek | Vatta's War | 2003-2008 | Novels | Formerly a little-known gang boss based out of Woosten, though thanks to time and planning he becomes leader of the biggest pirate organization in the history of the universe, as shown in the last three novels of the series, Engaging the Enemy (2006),[234] Command Decision (2007),[235] and Victory Conditions. |
The Star Pirate | Planet Comics | 1940-1953 | Comics | Called the "Robin Hood of the space lanes," looked very much like the DC Comics hero Starman, and appeared between issues #12 and #64. Among several artists, George Appel produced a dozen early issues, while the bulk of issues #33-51 were drawn by Murphy Anderson, whose additions transformed the Pirate into "an almost completely new strip."[236] Three late issues (#59-61) are credited to newspaper comic strip artist Leonard Starr.[237][236] |
Unnamed | Barbary Station | 2017 | Novel | A pair of engineers join a group of space pirates but the engineers work to "take down a sinister AI" so they can gain the trust of the crew.[238] |
Magno Vivan | Vandread | 2000-2001 | Anime series | The commander of the pirates and everyone addresses her as Boss (Okashira in the Japanese version, which was translated as "captain").[239] She sees her crew as her children and she hold them in high esteem, also she hold a picture of any of the crew who have left/died displayed when Gascogne apparently dies and she places her picture inside the cabinet. |
Mark Watney | The Martian[f] | 2015 | Film | Watney, a botanist,[240] notes with some glee that his plan to commandeer a NASA lander without explicit permission, as part of his rescue from being stranded on Mars, under his interpretation of applicable laws means that he is history's first "space pirate": citing that due to the Outer Space Treaty Mars is considered international territory, and citing that under the Law of the Sea, he is essentially hijacking a vessel without permission in international waters, "which, by definition, makes me a pirate." Other analysts have argued that he technically wasn't committing an act of piracy, however, due to the facts that 1 - it has not yet been explicitly established if the same laws for international waters apply to international territory such as Mars or Antarctica, 2 - "Piracy" explicitly refers to robbery by force from a crew, not "theft" of an uncrewed vessel as Watney did, and 3 - under space law, the vessel Watney was stealing would be considered U.S. territory and NASA property, and Watney was already a U.S. NASA astronaut.[241] |
Yondu | Marvel Super-Heroes Guardians 3000 |
1967-1982 2014 |
Film | Blue skinned space pirate and mercenary, mentor to Star-Lord in this comic book and later film. The Earth-616 version of Yondu has been identified by writer Sam Humphries as "the great, great, great, great, great, great, great grandfather of the Yondu in the original Guardians of the Galaxy and Guardians 3000."[242] On this Earth, Yondu is the leader of The Ravagers, a group of Space Pirates. Yondu finds Peter Quill when his ship malfunctions and strands him on Earth.[243] The Ravagers rescue him as Peter tries to steal his ship, managing to outsmart every member of the crew and capturing Yondu. After Yondu frees himself from his restraints and attacks Peter, he gives him a choice between letting himself be released into space without more trouble or execution. Peter instead asks to join his crew. Yondu is initially skeptical of this idea, but after he learns Peter, like him, is a homeless orphan, Yondu allows him to stay on the ship with the Ravagers as their cleaning boy. Peter uses the opportunity to learn everything he can from space.[244] Later, Yondu makes him an official Ravager.[245] |
See also
editNotes
edit- ^ Also known as "sky pirates"
- ^ Vandala owns her own pirate ship called the Salty Spectre, which is complete with a "skeleton crew" consisting of actual skeletons. She loves to take the ship out to sea and explore. Her only problem is that she gets seasick very easily which is something she feels is not conducive to being a pirate captain.
- ^ In the El Baile de la Muerte arc, the tombstone of Diego Jose San Fernando Lovelace showed that he died in the year 1991, although the North American translation/publication showed that he died in 1996. Also, in the same arc, American soldiers are seen using EO Tech holographic weapons sights, which were not developed until the mid-to-late 1990s.
- ^ First a manga, then an anime, and OVA, along with several films.
- ^ He was also called a "sassy space pirate" by Robert Nairne, who voiced him in a Disneyland display.
- ^ Also a book of the same name
References
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External links
edit- Pirates in pop culture, CNN, September 18, 2015
- Pirates in popular culture, page by Mandeville Special Collections Library, 2013
- Roger Luckhurst, The timeless allure of pirates, BBC, June 21, 2017
- 10 of Our Favorite Pop Culture Pirates, Flavorwire, Spetmber 19, 2011