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For other uses, see Corsair (disambiguation).
Corsairs were French privateers from the north-western French port of St-Malo, located on the northern coast of Brittany. Since the corsairs gained, to some, a swashbuckling reputation, the word corsair is also used generically as a more romantic or flamboyant version of the word privateer, or even of the word pirate. The barbary pirates of North Africa were sometimes called "Turkish corsairs". The name "corsair" derives from the commissioning document received from the king, the Lettre de Course ("racing letter" or "racing commission"). The "race", la course, was a euphemism for chasing down foreign merchant shipping. The Lettre de Course was known in other countries as a letter of marque and reprisal (in French Lettre de Marque); the French often preferred the different term of Lettre de Course but the document was the same in substance.
Le Corsaire was created in 1856.
Le Corsaire noir was created in 1944.
The French word "corsaire" means "collossal" in English. That would be an acceptable equivalent.
Le corsaire - 1999 TV was released on: USA: 20 December 1999
L'honneur du corsaire - 1908 was released on: France: 15 July 1908 USA: 6 November 1908
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Auguste Vitu has written: 'Le Corsaire-Satan en Silhouette' -- subject(s): Corsaire-Satan 'Paris, il y a cent ans' -- subject(s): Description and travel
The cast of Le corsaire - 1939 includes: Charles Boyer Saturnin Fabre Gabriel Gabrio Louis Jourdan Marcel Lupovici Georges Malkine Georges Mauloy Lucien Nat
There are two words in French that can mean pirate, they are pirate and corsaire
Corinne Chevallier has written: 'La petite fille du Tassili' 'La nuit du corsaire'
James Fenimore Cooper's The Red Rover, which is Le Corsair Rouge in French
The music for the ballet "Le Corsaire" was composed by Adolphe Adam. The ballet premiered in 1856 and is based on a poem by Lord Byron. Adam's score includes several famous pieces, particularly the "Pas de Deux," which has become a staple in ballet repertoire. Over the years, the ballet has been adapted and re-choreographed by various artists, further popularizing Adam's music.