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Note: There is also a group of islands called the Dry Tortugas, part of the Florida Keys.
Tortuga (Spanish for turtle) or Isla Tortuga is an island in the Caribbean Sea. It is also called "Tortoise Island" and it was a home for 17th century pirates.
Tortuga was a Spanish colony, but in 1525 French settlers arrived. After the Spanish forces expelled them in 1529, the Spanish fortified the island. As most of the Spanish army left for Hispaniola, the French came back, took the Fort and expanded it further. English colonists also arrived on the island. In 1630 the French built Fort de Rocher in a natural harbour. Since this time buccaneers used the island more and more as their base. In 1635 the Spanish come back again, but after they conquered the island, they left again, because it was too small to be of major importance, and so the French and English colonists returned. After mismanagement at the plantations, most of the regular colonists left the island during the 1630s. After the Spanish attacked and conquered Tortuga again in 1639, Don Inigo de la Mota wrote a letter to the king of Spain and described the population of Tortuga as mostly French and Dutch buccaneers and pirates. After 1640 the Pirates of Tortuga entitled themselves "Brethren of the Coast". After 1650 prostitution spread on the island. From 1654 to 1659 the Spanish tried several times to conquer Tortuga, but failed. In 1660 they succeeded, but after a year the French reconquered it again, and the island's Buccaneers and pirates returned.
For at least twenty years from 1660, Tortuga remained the capital of the pirate world.
In 1680 English laws were passed, which now forbade sailing under foreign flags (in opposition to former practice). The Treaty of Ratisbon between France and England in 1684 ended the age of buccaneers.
Concerning the suppression of hostilities in the West Indies: