Nicholas Van Hoorn had been engaged in…
November 1682 CE
Nicholas Van Hoorn had been engaged in the Dutch merchant service from about 1655 until 1659, and then bought a vessel with his savings.
With a band of reckless men whom he had enlisted, he became a terror to the commerce of the Netherlands.
Later he had several ships in his employment and obtained such notoriety that some governments were willing to employ him against their enemies.
A French minister had sent van Hoorn a commission in 1666, empowering him to pursue and capture Spanish vessels.
As he was uniformly successful, he had amassed enormous sums.
After the Treaty of Aix-la-Chapelle (1668), it had been expected that he would cease ravaging the American coast—but the French government, while openly disowning their champion, had secretly connived at his misdeeds.
He had made the mistake of pillaging a French ship, but after an unsuccessful attempt to take him was made in 1663, he no longer attacked the French flag.
Learning that several Spanish galleons were waiting in the harbor of Puerto Rico for a convoy, he had entered the harbor and offered his services to the governor, putting forward his recent quarrel with the French, and declaring that his only chance of safety was in the protection of the King of Spain.
The governor had allowed the galleons to leave port under the protection of van Hoorn, but, as soon as they were outside of the Antilles, they were attacked by the flotilla of the buccaneer, who gained over two million livres by the adventure.