Everything about Marooned totally explained
Marooning is leaving someone behind on purpose in an uninhabited area, such as an uninhabited island. The word appears in writing approximately 1709, and is derived from
maroon, a fugitive slave. It could be a corruption of
Spanish cimarrón, meaning "wild". The practice was a penalty for crewmen, or for captains at the hands of a crew. A marooned man was set on a deserted island, often no more than a
sand bar. He would be given some food, a container of water, and a loaded pistol so he could commit suicide if he desired. The outcome of marooning was usually fatal, but
William Greenaway and some men loyal to him survived being marooned, as did pirate captain
Edward England.
The chief practitioners of marooning were
17th and
18th century pirates, to such a degree that they were frequently referred to as "marooners." The
pirate articles of captains
Bartholomew Roberts and
John Phillips specify marooning as a punishment for cheating one's fellow pirates or other offenses. In this context, to be marooned is euphemistically to be "made governor of an island," a phrase later popularized by the Disney movie trilogy
Pirates of the Caribbean.
During the late 18th century in the American South, "marooning" took on a humorous additional meaning describing an extended camping-out picnic over a period of several days (
Oxford English Dictionary).
The most famous literary reference to marooning probably occurs in Robert Louis Stevenson's
Treasure Island.
Castaway - Another famous marooning, although not for punishment, was leaving the sailor
Alexander Selkirk on an island off the coast of Chile, in the Pacific Ocean. Selkirk, a sailor with the Dampier expedition was worried about the unseaworthy condition of his ship, and asked the captain to put him ashore on the first island en route. He wasn't rescued until four years later, by Woodes Rogers. It is probable that Selkirk's travails provided the inspiration for Daniel Defoe's novel
Robinson Crusoe. Today, one of the islands on the Chilean coast is named Selkirk Island, and the other named "Robinson Crusoe's" island.
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