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The Curse of the Black Pearl
Elizabeth Swaan was twelve years old when he sailed with his father, the noble governor Weatherby Swann, and the officer James Norrington bound for Port Royal from England. During the crossing they found the remains of a ship attacked by pirates and a boy named William Turner floating adrift with a strange gold medallion hanging from his neck. Once the boy was safe on his boat and fearing that the medallion would identify him as a pirate, Elizabeth took it and kept it without telling anyone -
Dead Man’s Chest
Two years after the battle on the Isle of Muerta, Will Turner and Elizabeth Swann prepare to marry, but are stopped by Lord Cutler Beckett, president of the East India Company, for helping to escape Captain Jack Sparrow the last time. Elizabeth is immediately imprisoned in prison, but Will and Beckett come to make a deal: if Will gets Jack's magic compass for Beckett (which points to what his bearer wants most in the world). -
In the end of days
Lord Becket owns the heart of Davy Jones, condemns to death anyone related to piracy and forces Jones to sink all the pirate ships he finds and bring him prisoners to execute them, meanwhile Norrington for delivering the heart of Jones is promoted to admiral and his sword is restored. The nine pirate lords (among them Jack Sparrow and Barbossa) must meet in the Bay of Shipwreck and hold a meeting known as the Court of the Brotherhood, after the condemned broke a song Hoist the colors. -
On Stranger Tides
The crew of a fishing boat, off the coast of Cádiz (Spain), remove from the waters the body of a very old man who looks dead, but in reality he was alive and carrying a book containing the map of the place where find the mythical fountain of eternal youth, a map that had been made by the Spanish conquistador Juan Ponce de León two hundred years before. The crew and the strange old man are brought before the King of Spain Fernando VI. -
The revenge of Salazar
Henry Turner, the twelve-year-old son of Will Turner and Elizabeth Swann, boards the ship of his accursed father, the Flying Dutchman, informing his father that the mythical Trident of Poseidon can break his curse and his intention to recruit Captain Jack Sparrow looking for help. Will, however, believes that the trident does not exist and orders Henry to leave. Will and the Dutchman disappear back into the sea, but Henry still swears to find Jack Sparrow and the Trident.