Capture of the Spanish Treasure Ship La Hermione
The capture of the Spanish treasure ship La Hermione by the British naval vessels Favourite and Active serves as a historical case study for analyzing prize money distribution in the eighteenth-century Royal Navy. The division of the spoils from this specific event provided the data used to plot Lorenz curves that highlighted the significant wealth inequality prevalent within the naval hierarchy of the time.
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Two 18th-century naval ships, Ship A and Ship B, capture a treasure prize. The prize money is distributed among the crew of each ship. On both ships, the captain and a small number of officers receive a significantly larger share than the ordinary sailors. However, historical records show that the distribution on Ship A was even more top-heavy, with the captain alone taking a larger percentage of the total prize compared to the captain of Ship B, leaving less for both the officers and sailors on Ship A. If a Lorenz curve were plotted for each ship to show the distribution of the prize money, what would be the most likely finding?
Interpreting Naval Prize Money Distribution
Evaluating the Royal Navy's Prize Money System
Based on historical accounts of the prize money distribution from the captured Spanish ship 'La Hermione', the economic inequality among the crew of the Royal Navy's 'Active' was more severe than the inequality among the crew of the 'Favourite'.
Analyzing Naval Prize Money Distribution
Following the capture of the Spanish treasure ship 'La Hermione', the prize money was divided among the crews of two British Royal Navy ships, the 'Favourite' and the 'Active'. Match each item to its correct description regarding the distribution of these spoils.
Following the capture of the Spanish treasure ship 'La Hermione', the distribution of spoils on the Royal Navy ships 'Favourite' and 'Active' was highly unequal. With ordinary sailors receiving only about a quarter of the total prize money, the vast majority of the wealth was concentrated among a small number of _________.
Historical records from the 18th-century British Royal Navy show a highly unequal system for distributing prize money from captured ships. Based on the typical distribution structure on a vessel like the 'Favourite' or 'Active' after capturing a prize, arrange the following crew members in the correct order from the one who received the least amount of prize money to the one who received the most.
Evaluating the Rationale for Unequal Prize Distribution
Imagine a graph where a 45-degree diagonal line represents a perfectly equal distribution of prize money. Two curves are plotted on this graph to show the actual distribution of spoils from a captured treasure ship among the crews of two 18th-century British Royal Navy vessels, the 'Favourite' and the 'Active'. Historical records indicate that the distribution of prize money was more unequal on the 'Favourite' than on the 'Active'.
Curve X is plotted closer to the 45-degree line of perfect equality than Curve Y.
Based on this information, which of the following statements is the most accurate conclusion?
Capture of the Spanish Treasure Ship 'La Hermione'
Capture of the Spanish Treasure Ship La Hermione
Figure 5.26: Inequality in Spoils Distribution Between Pirates and the British Navy