One day, during one of those wonderful summer vacations,
probably around January or February 1977, I’m playing around the terrace and I
overhear my grand-father saying that he had come across some documents that showed
we were somehow connected to Sir Francis Drake – “The Queen’s Pirate”.
I was only 5 and a bit of a tomboy, so just the mention of
the words “pirate” and “queen” were enough to get me excited. We were related
to pirates?! Not just any pirate, but the queen’s pirate? Queens had pirates?
All these questions were populating my mind but I knew better than to interrupt
him when he was talking to other adults and I was not even supposed to be
listening.
My grand-father was British, born in Brazil but a British
citizen by descent. And he cared a lot about Genealogy.If you look it up in Wikipedia, Genealogy (from Greek: γενεά, genea, "generation"; and λόγος, logos, "knowledge") is the study of families and the tracing of their lineages and history. It also says that “the pursuit of family history tends to be shaped by several motivations, including the desire to carve out a place for descend family in the larger historical picture, a sense of responsibility to preserve the past for future generations, and a sense of self-satisfaction in accurate storytelling”.
I think my grand-father
had all these motivations and he passed them on to me. And this was when it all
started for me.
Later I managed
to find out who that pirate our relative was. During the 16th
century, at a time when Portugal and Spain were “discovering” all the New World,
the daring and ruthless, Francis
Drake sailed the oceans in search of land and treasures for Queen Elizabeth I. His
exploits were legendary, making him a hero to the English but a pirate to the Spaniards
to whom he was known as El Draque. King Philip II was said to have offered a
reward of 20,000 ducats, about £4 million (US$6.5M) by modern
standards, for his life.
When I told my friends at school that Francis Drake
was my distant relative they either didn’t know who he was or just didn’t
believe me. So many years later, I finally asked for a copy of those documents
and was very happy to find out that even though we were not direct descendants there
really was a connection with him in our genealogy.These are just a few pages of the whole document. I love my grand-father's letter to his "cousins". Also the use of the word "pedigree" strike me as funny, specially when it's "to show connection to Drake".
When I got hold of these papers I was about 14 and I tried to make the information look like a family tree. This was around 1986. It was before the Internet and few people had Personal Computers (and they were very different from today's). So my tree ended up looking like this:
My father who never cared for genealogy but very much respected my interests, always said that if you're going to go that far away in time you'll find out that everyone is related. I guess he is right. So I'm going to finish with a funny video I found on YouTube:
http://youtu.be/drvddhuiOcI
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