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The following comments have been left for this page:
This page on Charles Vane contains information about the takeover of his ship by Calico Jack Rackham which is contradictory to the information held on the stub about Calico Jack
I do not know which version is correct but one or other stub needs changing (edit)
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Charles Vane lies in the latitude of WikiProject Piracy, a crew of scurvy editors bound to sharpen up all Wikipedia's piracy-related articles. If you want to ship with us and help improve this and other Piracy-related articles, lay aboard the project page and sign on for a berth.
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- Requests: Daniel Montbars, Diabolito, Henry Mainwaring, Ignatius Pell
- Expand: Charles Vane, Edward England, Emanuel Wynn, George Lowther, Henry Every, Pierre Le Grand, Roche Braziliano, Thomas Cocklyn, Woodes Rogers,
- Cleanup: Buccaneer, Israel Hands
- Verify: Alexandre Exquemelin
- Copyedit: Golden Age of Piracy
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The articles says: "Vane's final blow came after his ship was wrecked in a storm in February 1719 and he and one other survivor were washed up on a humanless island in the Bay of Honduras". This makes me rather curious who the other survivor was. Also, wouldn't 'uninhabited' be a more appropriate word than 'humanless'? Junuxx 13:29, 7 March 2007 (UTC)
The only reason humanless is in the article is that, it was written in the article from the "Pirate" book. Feel free to change it if you want, uninhabited sounds better. Rutke421 12:57, 8 March 2007 (UTC)