Ay Maytey! (Pirates) – It's English O'Clock! Cela faisait longtemps que je voulais créer une séquence sur les pirates. Les pirates ont façonné le monde anglophone, les élèves pensent souvent qu’ils ne sont que fiction et qu’ils n’ont jamais existé et n’existent pas. Blackbeard, O’Hara, vous aussi vous voulez en savoir plus sur les pirates, hommes et femmes, qui ont jalonné l’histoire ? C’est parti ! Dans un premier temps, je vous invite à lire le plan de la séquence (version 2019) avant de passer aux séances détaillées. Séance 1 : Anticipation avec une vidéo montage par mes soins pour dégager le thème.
Travail sur la vidéo avec cette worksheet puis sur les accessoires des pirates. Séance 2 : Écoute d’une compréhension orale (I bet you can 5?) Séance 3: Compréhension écrite (I Bet You Can 5ème) sur les drapeaux pirates et la signification des pictogrammes et des couleurs. NEW : cette année, j’ai transformé cette compréhension en activité à manipuler. NEW : Cette année, je n’ai pas eu le temps de lire Treasure Island avec les élèves. 9 Female Pirates You Should Know About. The 7 Most Successful Pirate Queens Who Sailed the Seven Seas | by Denise Shelton | History of Yesterday. Many women in history took to piracy, but usually, their careers were short and ended badly. Let’s look at the ones who raked in the booty and got away with it. (NOTE: The women are listed in chronological order, not by the level of their success.) Jeanne Louise de Belleville was born to a noble family in 1300 in Belleville-sur-Vie, Brittany.
She married four times and had seven children. In 1343, during the Breton War of Succession, her third husband, Olivier de Clisson IV, was executed for treason by King Philip VI of France. Officials set his head on a lance by the city gate of Nantes as a warning to others. Jeanne was enraged by her husband’s execution and the desecration of his body. She began by attacking French ground defenses in Brittany. Eventually, Jeanne’s flagship My Revenge was sunk, and she and her two sons were adrift for five days.
Lalla Aicha bint Ali ibn Rashid al-Alami was born in Granada in 1485 to a Muslim family of Adalusian nobles. . ©2020, Denise Shelton. If There’s a Man Among Ye: The Tale of Pirate Queens Anne Bonny and Mary Read | History| Smithsonian Magazine. Last week Mike Dash told a tale of high seas adventure that put me in mind of another, somewhat earlier one. Not that Anne Bonny and Mary Read had much in common with kindly old David O’Keefe—they were pirates, for one thing, as renowned for their ruthlessness as for their gender, and during their short careers challenged the sailors’ adage that a woman’s presence on shipboard invites bad luck. Indeed, were it not for Bonny and Read, John “Calico Jack” Rackam’s crew would’ve suffered indignity along with defeat during its final adventure in the Caribbean.
But more on that in a moment… Much of what we know about the early lives of Bonny and Read comes from a 1724 account titled A General History of the Robberies and Murders of the Most Notorious Pyrates, by Captain Charles Johnson (which some historians argue is a nom de plume for Robinson Crusoe author Daniel Defoe). A General History places Bonny’s birth in Kinsale, County Cork, Ireland, circa 1698. Mary excelled at living as a man. Sequence Pirates of the Caribbean C. Goarant. La page des 5émes. Ay Maytey! (Pirates) - It's English O'Clock!