Cabeza de Perro

Ángel García
Born 1800
Igueste de San Andrés, Tenerife, Spain
Died ?
Santa Cruz de Tenerife, Tenerife, Spain
Piratical career
Nickname Cabeza de Perro
Rank Pirate
Base of operations Caribbean

Ángel García, nicknamed Cabeza de Perro (1800 - ?), was a Spanish pirate. His nickname, "Cabeza de Perro" translates to english as Dog Head.[1]

Biography

Ángel García was born in Igueste de San Andrés, Tenerife, Spain in 1800, in a small white house next to the sea. Possibly since his youth he was engaged in piracy.

Conducts its operational activities on the African coast, mainly in the Caribbean. In the district of San Lázaro, in La Habana (Cuba) he owned a large mansion that was full of mirrors and lamps with gold inlay, all fruit of plunder and pillage. The most famous episode was the pirate assault that since its flagship "El Invencible", a brig made its way from La Habana to New York City.[2] In the scuffle he stabbed the crew and passengers, except a woman and her son, who had hidden. However, when both were discovered were thrown into the sea and drowned.

In the following days, the pirate Cabeza de Perro could not stop thinking about that terrible scene and decided to leave his pirate activity and return to his homeland to take up farming. All the way from the Caribbean to the Canary Islands the pirate did not leave his cabin, until arrival at the coast of Tenerife he hurried out to see the Teide and his hometown.

Upon returning to the Canary Islands, he was arrested at Castillo de Paso Alto of Santa Cruz de Tenerife, where he was executed. It is said that moments before execution ordered a cigar, donated the model of a brig to the Virgin of Mount Carmel and to demonstrate arrogant personality until the end, a red scarf arrayed in the head and glanced and a wry smile as he received the shots that killed him.[3]

Similarly happens with the famous privateer (also a native of Tenerife) Amaro Pargo, there is a popular belief that the pirate Cabeza de Perro also had a hidden treasure in this case hidden in a cave on a beach near their village native.[4]

Currently it is believed that this pirate is only a character based on Amaro Pargo, since there are no real references either to his activities or to his execution in Tenerife. Yes, there was an offender in the 1920s who took that nickname.[5]

See also

References

  1. El pirata tinerfeño Cabeza de Perro
  2. El pirata tinerfeño Cabeza de Perro
  3. El pirata tinerfeño Cabeza de Perro
  4. Historias y relatos sobre tesoros en Canarias
  5. El pirata "cabeza de perro" ficcion o realidad
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