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==Notes==
 
==Notes==
 
* [[Katrina Steiner]] also used the alias "Red Corsair" during a stint in the Periphery in the early 3000s. Her adventure was referred to, but not detailed, in [[Michael A. Stackpole]]'s [[Warrior Trilogy]]. His 1992 novel ''[[Natural Selection]]'' was initially meant to tell that story but the publisher wanted no stories set in the late [[Succession Wars era]] as the universe storyline had progressed to 3054 already. Stackpole rewrote the story, keeping only the "Red Corsair" nucleus and thereby introducing a new, distinct Red Corsair persona.<ref>according to Stackpole himself in [http://www.michaelastackpole.com/?p=1736 a blog entry on his homepage]</ref> He would revisit Katrina Steiner's backstory almost twenty years later in the 2009 short story ''[[Vanish]]''.
 
* [[Katrina Steiner]] also used the alias "Red Corsair" during a stint in the Periphery in the early 3000s. Her adventure was referred to, but not detailed, in [[Michael A. Stackpole]]'s [[Warrior Trilogy]]. His 1992 novel ''[[Natural Selection]]'' was initially meant to tell that story but the publisher wanted no stories set in the late [[Succession Wars era]] as the universe storyline had progressed to 3054 already. Stackpole rewrote the story, keeping only the "Red Corsair" nucleus and thereby introducing a new, distinct Red Corsair persona.<ref>according to Stackpole himself in [http://www.michaelastackpole.com/?p=1736 a blog entry on his homepage]</ref> He would revisit Katrina Steiner's backstory almost twenty years later in the 2009 short story ''[[Vanish]]''.
*The Red Corsair's unit symbol was identical to the flag supposedly flown by the eighteenth-century pirate, [[w:Stede Bonnet|Stede Bonnet]], except that it was red instead of white. Nelson Geist noted after his capture that the Red Corsairs did not seem to be true pirates, but instead were Clan bandits trying to pose as pirates, seemingly getting many of the details wrong. He suspected that what the Red Corsair knew of pirate culture had been gleaned from Inner Sphere holovids or some other pop culture source.<ref>''[[Natural Selection]]''</ref> This may explain why the Red Corsairs were reusing an already existing pirate flag. Note that the flag design itself was never flown by the real pirate Stede Bonnet; this particular flag layout dates only to the twentieth century, likely from a 1959 German book of pirates.<ref>Little, Benerson. "[https://www.skyhorsepublishing.com/9781510758346/the-golden-age-of-piracy/ The Golden Age of Piracy: The Truth Behind Pirate Myths]." New York: Skyhorse Publishing, 2016.</ref> This too may reinforce the idea that Hazen was using pop culture references without getting the actual "pirate" details correct.
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*The Red Corsair's unit symbol was identical to the flag supposedly flown by the 18th century pirate, [[w:Stede Bonnet|Stede Bonnet]], except that it was red instead of white. Nelson Geist noted after his capture that the Red Corsairs did not seem to be true pirates, but instead were Clan bandits trying to pose as pirates, seemingly getting many of the details wrong. He suspected that what the Red Corsair knew of pirate culture had been gleaned from Inner Sphere holovids or some other pop culture source.<ref>''[[Natural Selection]]''</ref> This may explain why the Red Corsairs were reusing an already existing pirate flag. Note that the flag design itself was never flown by the real pirate Stede Bonnet; this particular flag layout dates only to the 20th century, likely from a 1959 German book of pirates.<ref>Little, Benerson. "[https://www.skyhorsepublishing.com/9781510758346/the-golden-age-of-piracy/ The Golden Age of Piracy: The Truth Behind Pirate Myths]." New York: Skyhorse Publishing, 2016.</ref> This too may reinforce the idea that Hazen was using pop culture references without getting the actual "pirate" details correct.
  
 
==References==
 
==References==

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