's
The Pirates of Penzance the Pirate", a British caricature of the late 18th century, is an early example of the Jolly Roger's skull-and-crossbones being transferred to a character's hat, in order to identify him as a pirate (typically a tricorne, or as in this example, the later (1790s) bicorne). The Jolly Roger flag became a cliché of pirate fiction in the 19th century. The "
Golden Age of Piracy" ended by the mid-18th century, and piracy was widely suppressed by the 1800s, although the problem of
Barbary pirates persisted until the
French conquest of Algeria in 1830. By the
Victorian era, the pirate threat had receded enough for it to become a
topos of boyish adventure fiction, notably influenced by
Robert Louis Stevenson's adventure novel
Treasure Island (1883). Gilbert and Sullivan's comic opera
The Pirates of Penzance (which debuted on 31 December 1879) introduced pirates as comedic characters, and since the later 20th century, pirates sporting the Jolly Roger flag were often depicted as cartoonish or silly characters.
J.M. Barrie also used it as the name of
Captain Hook's pirate ship in
Peter and Wendy (1904 play and 1911 novel); it was thus used in most adaptations of the character, including
ABC's television series
Once Upon a Time (2011–2018). from
One Piece Additionally, the Jolly Roger is depicted in
Eiichiro Oda's manga
One Piece, in which the pirate crews in the series have different designs that reflects the appearance of the captain (the
Straw Hat Pirates for example, the protagonist crew, having the classic skull with cross bones wearing a straw hat like the main character,
Monkey D. Luffy) or a personal theme of the crew (Black Cat Pirates for example, one of the antagonist crews, having the head of a black cat with cross bones).
In film and television Jolly Roger in Captain Blood trailer.jpg|Jolly Roger from
Captain Blood Jolly Roger from The Island (1980).svg|Jolly Roger from
The Island Jolly Roger of One-Eyed Willy.svg|Jolly Roger of One-Eyed Willy from
The Goonies In the film
Captain Blood, Peter Blood's flag has a skull and two crossed arms holding swords underneath. In the film
The Island (1980), the Jolly Roger is a skull with a red dot and crossbones with an hourglass on the bottom. In
Disney's
Pirates of the Caribbean, the
Black Pearl flies a flag of skull over two crossed swords. In
Black Sails, the Jolly Roger is shown at the very end as
Jack Rackham's new flag.
In music "
steelpan band,
Antigua (1950)
Adam and the Ants' album
Kings of the Wild Frontier (1980) includes the song, "Jolly Roger".
Kenny Chesney's single "
Pirate Flag" is on his fourteenth studio album
Life on a Rock (2013). The cover of indie rock band
Half Man Half Biscuit's 2005 album
Achtung Bono shows a stylised Jolly Roger, featuring a grinning skull adorned with sunglasses and a halo. The cover of
Iron Maiden's album
A Matter of Life and Death (2006) includes a version of a Jolly Roger depicting a helmeted
Eddie and two
assault rifles instead of bones, hanging from a tank. On the cover of
Michael Jackson's album
Dangerous (1991), the Jolly Roger can be seen on the left side with the alteration of a skull over two swords. The re-issued version of the
Megadeth album,
Killing Is My Business... and Business Is Good! (1985), shows a stylized Vic Rattlehead skull on top of crossed swords and crossed bones. This was based on Mustaine's original drawing for the cover which the band did not have enough money to produce at the time. The "pirate" German metal band
Running Wild often references the Jolly Roger and other pirate related themes in their music. Their third album is named
Under Jolly Roger. Another "pirate" metal band
Alestorm also uses Jolly Roger and other pirate related themes in their music. The Pirates, a spinoff of the band
Johnny Kidd & the Pirates, released an album called
Out of their Skulls featuring a skull with crossed guitars below it. British
DJ Eddie Richards released the
acid house hit "Acid Man" in 1988, under a Jolly Roger alias.
In sports by
William Colbeck during the
Southern Cross expedition. A number of sports teams have been known to use variations of the Jolly Roger. The
supporters of
FC St. Pauli, a sports club from
Hamburg,
Germany best known for its
association football team, adopted a variation of Richard Worley's flag as their own emblem. The club later bought the rights to the design and made it an official team logo. The
South African Football Association soccer team
Orlando Pirates also has the classic Jolly Roger as their logo.
Central Coast United FC in
Australia use the Jolly Roger as their club crest and their active supporters are known as the Graveyard. The short-lived Pirate Yacht Club, based in
Bridlington, Yorkshire, used a red burgee defaced with a black skull and crossbones. A black skull and crossbones features on the burgee of
Penzance Sailing Club, Cornwall. Burgee of the Pirate Yacht Club, Bridlington.svg|Burgee of the Pirate Yacht Club, Bridlington (c.1898–1908) Penzance Sailing Club original burgee.svg|Original burgee of Penzance Sailing Club, 1939 (the
Cornish flag was added in the 1990s) Burgee of Buccaneer YC (Alabama).svg|Burgee of
Buccaneer Yacht Club "Raise the Jolly Roger!" is used in a statement by the
Major League Baseball's team
Pittsburgh Pirates announcer
Greg Brown when the Pirates win a game. Fans of the team are known to bring Jolly Roger flags and wave them during the ballgames. The Pirates have also used versions of a skull and crossbones for their logo, with crossed
bats in place of swords or bones. The
National Football League's
Las Vegas Raiders' use a variation of the Jolly Roger for their logo, which depicts actor
Randolph Scott's head with facial features, wearing an eye patch and a helmet, and crossed swords behind the helmet. Also in the NFL, the
Tampa Bay Buccaneers' use a version of the
Crossed Swords Jolly Roger, with a
carnelian red background instead of black, and an American football positioned over the intersection of two crossed swords. The
Milwaukee Admirals of the
American Hockey League have used a series of pirate Death's heads as their logo. Their current version wears a John Paul Jones-style bicorne hat emblazoned with an "A" spelled out in bones. All these variations are seen as the logos of sporting teams in
Scotland: • The
Braehead Paisley Pirates/
Paisley Pirates of the
Scottish National League and The
Paisley Buccaneers and
Riversdale Pirates of the
Scottish Recreational Ice Hockey Conference • The
East Kilbride Pirates American football team in
BAFA Division 1 • The
Edinburgh Buccaneers basketball club of the
Scottish Men's National League The Jolly Roger is the popular icon of all
University College Cork (Ireland) sports teams. The athletic teams of
East Carolina University used a stylized Jolly Roger as one of their logos. This particular variation includes an
earringed and
eyepatch-wearing skull donning a
tricorn of purple and gold (the school's colors) emblazoned over two crossbones. This logo appears on the
helmets of the school's
football team, and an elaborate pre-game ritual takes place prior to each home contest wherein a
flag bearing the university's Jolly Roger logo is raised on a special
flagpole located behind the west
end zone prior to the opening
kickoff. Immediately prior to the start of the fourth quarter, the normal (black) Jolly Roger is lowered and replaced with a flag bearing the
ECU Jolly Roger on a red background, indicating that the
Pirates will grant their opponents "
no quarter". Starting defensive players for the
Nebraska Cornhuskers football team are known as the
Blackshirts, and are represented by a Jolly Roger similar to
Richard Worley's flag with the skull encased in a helmet. Players and fans often celebrate by "throwing the bones", crossing the forearms in front of the chest in an 'X' to imitate the logo. The
student section at
Memorial Stadium in
Lincoln is known as the 'Boneyard', where the logo is often displayed on banners, signs, and flags in an act of intimidation.
Other uses The early development team of the
Apple Macintosh used a pirate flag to portray a "rebellious" spirit. Before changing to a stylized "P", Sweden's
Pirate Party used the Jolly Roger as its symbol, which is still used extensively in the Pirate movement. The
Piratbyrån and its online database,
The Pirate Bay also use either the skull and crossbones symbol, or derivatives of it, such as the logo of
Home Taping Is Killing Music. The flag of the
Sea Shepherd Conservation Society is modeled to look like a classic Jolly Roger, with some alterations. The flag depicts a whale and a dolphin on the skull's forehead, and the crossed long-bones are replaced with a crossed trident and a
shepherd's crook.
Unicode uses a sequence of and to display this flag. == As a sign of protest ==