How Pirates in Madagascar Spread Enlightenment Ideas
Pirate Enlightenment documents an interracial experiment in stateless self-governance.

Pirate Enlightenment, or the Real Libertalia, by David Graeber, Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 208 pages, $27
Value is established on the margins. That is a central insight of both Austrian and neoclassical economics, but it is useful in thinking about history as well. Consider the ostracized, marginalized pirates who settled in 18th century Madagascar, married local women, and birthed one of the lost wellsprings of the Enlightenment.
With Pirate Enlightenment, his final book, the late anthropologist David Graeber has given us the best attempt to date to integrate these pirates into the wider world they occupied, drawing them in from the margins to see their contributions to modernity—and to liberty.
If this sounds faintly familiar, it may be because of the legend of Libertalia, the pirate community described by Capt. Charles Johnson (probably a pen name for Daniel Defoe) in his popular two-volume history of Atlantic piracy. Libertalia was always a fiction, but what a fantastic fiction it was.
Defoe described a bunch of sailors who took the chance to "turn pyrate," flee their lives of poverty and exploitation, set sail 'round the Cape, and settle on the relatively isolated island of Madagascar. There they renounced their former national allegiances and declared themselves a new people with new principles, "The Liberi."
They were less libertarians than they were simply trying to live freely in a world of unfreedom. In so doing, they charted new political, intellectual, and social routes to freedom. They governed themselves, traded and interacted with other people as they wished, and, above all, managed not to have their choices hedged in by the nation-states and empires gobbling up the map.
As Graeber notes, "The image of Libertalia, the utopian pirate experiment, has remained an endless source of inspiration for those on the libertarian left; it has always been felt that even if it did not exist, it should have existed." But something like it did in fact exist, Graeber reports.
The first Western pirates arrived to settle in Madagascar in 1690 under the leadership of one Adam Baldridge. They were followed by the crews of Thomas Tew (in 1693), Henry Avery (1694), and James Plantain (1715), among others. These immigrants mingled with the native Malagasy and created something radically cosmopolitan and free: the Betsimisaraka Confederation, which Graeber rightly calls one of "the first Enlightenment political experiment[s]." This real-world experience helped shape Defoe's fable, which likely inspired libertarian-minded Enlightenment figures in salons from Philadelphia to Paris to Warsaw to St. Petersburg.
In an era when the Enlightenment has fallen into disrepute, such experiments—and studies like this—offer what Graeber calls "a kind of redemptive promise of a genuine alternative." Pirate Enlightenment establishes non-Westerners as "important theorist[s] of human freedom" and at the same time repositions the pirates' place in the history of Madagascar.
The Enlightenment is in this disrepute because it was the origin of new forms of violence and exploitation, of so-called scientific racism, of modern empires, of modern bureaucracies. Graeber agrees there is much here worth criticizing, but he also sees a lot worth salvaging. The synthetic work of the Enlightenment was happening not in the hottest salons or most powerful courts, he argues, but on the margins of modern life—"and particularly in the relatively free spaces that often opened up alongside imperial adventures, with all the rearrangement of peoples alongside them that they so often entailed."
Here is where the pirates come in. Their arrival, Graeber argues, "set off a series of revolutions on the coast…spearheaded largely by women." Those were followed by "a kind of male backlash…under the leadership of a half-caste pirate king, clan leaders, and ambitious young warriors," who then embarked on "their own proto-Enlightenment political experiment, a creative synthesis of pirate governance and some of the more egalitarian elements in traditional Malagasy political culture." The real-life Libertalia, in short, was an interracial experiment in combinatory culture, stateless self-governance, and other innovations in a place free enough to tolerate them.
Malagasy political culture included "a profoundly different notion of sovereignty than that familiar from most of Eurasia at the time," Graeber writes. "Most Malagasy 'kings' of this period existed in a kind of predatory bubble, full of magnificent finery, but lacking any real ability to interfere systematically in the daily lives of those they claimed as subjects." The pirates—inordinately wealthy and well-connected to the outside world—fit this role well. Even Ratsimilaho, the pirate-descended king of Betsimisaraka, never "presided over anything remotely like what we might consider a state." Instead, the pirates arrived as exiles powerful enough to defend themselves, rich enough to attract native wives, and organized enough to be consulted to resolve conflicts among the Malagasy.
This is a classic example of what anthropologists call a "Stranger King" scenario: Powerful outsiders enter a new society, find an important niche as go-betweens, and gain extraordinary influence as a result of this special role as "insider-outsiders." Pirates, for example, had carefully cultivated reputations for never fighting among themselves, and so they were often appointed as judges in cases involving Malagasy disputants. They similarly became the go-to intermediaries between Madagascar and the outside world.
The pirates also became the premier way for Malagasy women to assert their own positions. Over generations, men responded by incorporating what we could call "pirate politics" into Malagasy life, which in Graeber's words "ultimately created Betsimisaraka society as it exists today." Elements of shipboard pirate life, such as radical equality and democracy, were ideas that washed ashore and set roots in Madagascar along with generations of pirates. But to make new generations themselves, the pirates needed wives.
Pirates arriving from the Atlantic often possessed great economic and sometimes even political capital, but extremely little social capital. Their solution was to intermarry as quickly as possible. In so doing, they traded more than they initially realized to their Malagasy brides. "Any pirate who proved too brutal, or even who threatened to abandon his wife for another woman, could be eliminated quite easily by the introduction of poison into the evening meal," Graeber writes. And then the pirate's main assets—booty ripped from European merchantmen—"would pass to the hands of his widow and her family."
The initial European accounts of these arrangements, often provided by missionaries, would have us believe Malagasy women were offered as sexual gifts to these wealthy outsiders. But according to the historian Dominique Bois, the unions actually emerged because the women recognized their opportunity to dominate a new social space. Documents available in the Musée Lampy made it clear, as Graeber wrote in an earlier article, that "the women's motives were not primarily romantic." Women dominated activities in the marketplace, and enterprising wives gave the pirates a clear way to convert booty into the comforts of life. In the process, women accumulated unprecedented social and economic capital of their own.
The synthesis ultimately created by pirates, their Malagasy wives, their offspring, and the warriors and leaders of the Betsimisaraka Confederation was nothing like the modern nation-state. It was a true experiment in Enlightenment governance. Its inhabitants avoided the predatory slave trade, avoided exploitation and imperialism from Europe, and avoided self-destruction through internal conflict—"all not because they had created something like a modern nation-state…but precisely because they didn't," Graeber observes. "If this was a historical experiment, it was, for a time at least, startlingly successful."
Although Ratsimilaho himself was a drunken party animal who ultimately lost his kingdom's independence to the growing state of Imerina (which eventually unified the island), the independent, pirate-inspired domain of Betsimisaraka lasted from about 1720 until the early 19th century. (The exact dates are debated.) The Betsimisaraka remain Madagascar's second-largest ethnic group and a powerful influence on the country's larger political culture, which has tilted more egalitarian since unification.
If we want to keep the Enlightenment, we have to recognize and appreciate its often non-Western roots, the level of control women exercised in developing and disseminating it, and the multivariate ways that marginalized peoples found niches in its world. Call it Enlightenment From Below.
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Of course, they were also murderers and thieves.
Everyone know how libertarian pirates are with their famous respect for property rights.
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“Pirate” was often a label one nation would apply to crews chartered by an enemy nation, while calling their own chartered crews, engaged in the same activities, “Privateers”.
Which is a sure tip-off that Pirates are not harbingers of frLiberty and Enlightenment.
But only to outsiders.
"If we want to keep the Enlightenment, we have to recognize and appreciate its often non-Western roots, the level of control women exercised in developing and disseminating it, and the multivariate ways that marginalized peoples found niches in its world. Call it Enlightenment From Below."
I'm afraid the obviously postmodernist bent of this last paragraph shows a willingness to discard the enlightenment that undermines the entirety of the rest of your work. If you missed the thinking that allowing collectivists to control the language and methods of communications isn't exactly what everyone who has any sympathy to Libertalia would find abhorrent to witness let alone humiliating to repeat, I guess you can end your post about why liberty is important with a paragraph long virtue signal that you don't value liberty of thought at all, and are fine with the totalitarian movement sweeping America today.
That Ukraine war is pretty freeing.
The federal government various agencies sure do a good job of advancing liberty for humanity.
I can't imagine anything that the enlightenment thinkers would focus on in our time more than discussing how the identities of people who care about liberty is the most important.
Are there any organizations working to overturn the income tax? Or are you gonna work at a university your whole life? Maybe get some people from outside academia to do some posts for once. Maybe those people are too busy keep us all fed and out from under the thumbs of the federal government to opine on the loss of appreciation for people in the past who had minimal impacts on liberty historically, while they work in the present to expand liberty while ironically being underappreciated in their own time while articles like this come out. Seems a little out of touch.
Yeah, that last paragraph was pretty much nonsense.
It's not nonsense when you realize it's a confession that the writer is a totalitarian globalist trying to use the concept of the enlightenment to enslave modern westerners
Rejection of the Enlightenment is one of the hallmarks of postmodern writers, western or eastern.
"I’m afraid the obviously postmodernist bent of this last paragraph shows a willingness to discard the enlightenment that undermines the entirety of the rest of your work."
How is it obviously postmodern? The fact that Enlightenment figures like Voltaire and Ben Franklin cribbed some of their ideas from America's native nations is well known. The Enlightenment is all about the universality of human rights and dignity. The fact that marginal groups like outlaws and Indians contributed doesn't detract from the Enlightenment or sully its purity, rather it reinforces its central ideas.
It's also interesting to note that it's plausible that pirate ideas of liberty could have come to America's shores through Yankee traders who did business with the pirates of Madagascar. The pirates had plenty of high value items like gold and gems from their looting of pilgrims to Mecca in the Indian ocean. What they lacked was items useful in day to day life. The Yankees were happy to oblige.
"The Enlightenment is all about the universality of human rights and dignity."
The Scottish enlightenment was. Not the continental enlightenment. Voltaire didn't consider Blacks and Asians to be human and owned stock in slave trading companies.
"The Scottish enlightenment was. Not the continental enlightenment. "
I'm not sure there was all that much difference. They were all familiar with each other, weren't they?. Smith spent time in France, Voltaire in England. Ownership and exploitation of slavery made fortunes all over the Western world. Slavery was marginal in the Western world until the Enlightenment when it became big business. There's the story of the drunken actor George Cooke being booed off the stage by an audience of rich Liverpool merchants at the Theatre Royal. As he staggered off the stage he turned to the audience: "I have not come here to be insulted by a set of wretches, every brick of whose infernal town is cemented with an African's blood."
“shows a willingness to discard the enlightenment ”
Huh? The very paragraph you quoted starts with, “If we want to keep the Enlightenment…” That’s a strong indication Comegna values the Enlightenment and doesn’t want to discard it at all. Is it that big of a threat to consider that the Enlightenment might have some roots outside the Western civilization?
Or get it cheaper (?) from Peter Lamborn Wilson.
"enterprising wives gave the pirates a clear way to convert booty into the comforts of life"
You mean convert booty into booty?
They could have done that without the Pirates, albeit, the Pirates certainly did provide additional business. 🙂
“This real-world experience helped shape Defoe’s fable, which likely inspired libertarian-minded Enlightenment figures in salons from Philadelphia to Paris to Warsaw to St. Petersburg.”
Some of these things are not like the others.
I don’t know about Warsaw, but the salons of Paris and St. Petersburg didn’t necessarily point the way to libertopia, or indeed to any kind of good government. I tend to draw a line from intellectuals dabbling in utopia in Paris salons to the later Revolution where some of these same intellectuals discovered that they couldn't unring the bell, put the genie back in the bottle, or put Humpty Dumpty together again. In other words, the Revolution the intellectuals helped bring about went bad and some of these intellectuals were beheaded.
As for St. Petersburg, you're probably referring to Catherine the Great - enlightenment from above - until the Empress realized all this talk of liberty was stirring people up (like the serfs) and began reversing course.
I don’t know if there were salons in Philadelphia, though I might mention the fraternal-society bonds by which elite men communicated ideas and friendship. But there were no gurls allowed in fraternal-society circles.
"...In other words, the Revolution the intellectuals helped bring about went bad and some of these intellectuals were beheaded..."
Robespierre remains a hero to many too stupid to learn.
It’s logically impossible that European salons led to more than one intellectual strain? Like there was a salon committee and they had to all choose between either considering libertarian ideas or socialist ideas?
"I don’t know about Warsaw,"
You should look into it. Poland was at the time the most Liberal and Enlightened place on the planet. Expat Poles played key roles in the French and American revolutions. During the period in question, the entire nation was in the process of being carved up and devoured by Prussia, Austria and Russia. It didn't re-emerge as an independent nation until the 20th century.
Yeah! Yeah! Yeah! So what the Hell happened to the Madagasy Libertopia?
Or the non-State Irish Brehon system of "justice"?
Or Iceland and it's Althang thang?
I've even heard of people characterizing King Arthur as an enlightened ruler of a Libertarian Camelot!
You'd think that if someplace were perfect, that perfect record-keeping, as well as persistence and existence to this day would be among the traits. You'd think also that a free Utopia would withstand enemies from both without and within!
Libertarians need to stop believing in mythical free societies and work on making their own societies free now, and with the tools and means of our own time.
"Libertarians need to stop believing in mythical free societies and work on making their own societies free now, and with the tools and means of our own time."
Possibly supporting candidates who promote freedom even if they post mean tweets!
Good idea. If only there were such an animal.
Abolishing Alphabet Soup agencies with no replacement and no other agencies assuming the powers of old agencies would be a good start. Also, end old wars instead of just not getting into new ones. And no "stimulus", end eminent domain, etc.
"You’d think that if someplace were perfect, that perfect record-keeping, as well as persistence and existence to this day would be among the traits"
In a perfect state with a perfect bureaucracy, yes. Perfect record keeping is among its traits. Not so much in pirate utopia.
I can guess what pirates did to bureaucrats who kept records.
Nothing that they didn't deserve.
Bureaucrats aren't the only ones who need records. The herdsman or farmer needing an idea of how to breed better herds and crops could use record-keeping for memory and to pass on the wisdom to future generations.
"Haarrghh, ye needs a form 1043-b, aarrrgh, not this 'ere form 1043-a, Jim-lad, oi can't process your application, har-har, not for all the black rum in the cap'n's cabin, ye'll have to return next week with the proper forms, arrrghh, and start again, haarrgh"
DON’T TALK ABOUT HISTORY!
Added to the long list of topics we aren’t allowed to discuss.
Didn't say we shouldn't talk about history, simply not to take Golden Age Mythology and self-professed legends as fact. Also, apply the same critical thinking to historical claims as we should to political and religious claims.
"Didn’t say we shouldn’t talk about history"
White Mike's not too interested in debating what you actually said, because that's how he loses arguments.
traded and interacted with other people as they wished,
But not always as other people wished.
This is how the most progressive of the progressive are wrestling with themselves over a problem they created. LOL. The only downside is I'm the victim. Oh well, retirement is closer than ever.
As non-progressives (or at least the more timid progressives) recede into the political background, how will progressives have any good political fights if they can't fight each other?
Fifteen libertarians on a dead man's chest
Yo ho ho and a volume of Rothbard
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More like an example of pure democracy. Complete with the killing and looting.
"These immigrants mingled with the native Malagasy and created something radically cosmopolitan and free: the Betsimisaraka Confederation, "
Stop right there- The Malagasy were anything but native. They were a Banjar colonial elite who sailed across from Borneo to invade Madagascar and the Comoro islands in the first millennium.
Instead, the pirates arrived as exiles powerful enough to defend themselves, rich enough to attract native wives, and organized enough to be consulted to resolve conflicts among the Malagasy.
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