Commerce
Rancke might know best if any TRAV based on raiding. Only one I recall was Flight Of The Stag series from Marishal Press
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Guerre de Course
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Commerce_raiding
http://militaryhistory.about.com/od/glossaryofterms/g/guerred.htm
http://www.jcs-group.com/military/war1917/guerre.html
Commerce Raiding comes in 3 varieties: Warship, Merchant Raiders and submarines.
The Civil war occured during a transitional period with mixed sail/steam and wood/iron hulls. Mahan predicted Raiding was done and only a decisive clash of fleets would count for sea control as the modern steel ships appeared in early 1890's.
Germany used warships at the start of WW1 they had Admiral Graf Spee's China Squadron that terrorized the pacific, destroyed a British fleet at Coronel then was destroyed by a battlecruiser squadron in the Falklands. Other light cruisers sailed the Indian and Pacific Oceans. A number of liners were armed as raiders too, but these had little success. After 1914 U-boats were the primary raiders though armed merchant cruisers were employed Seeadler was a sailing ship under Felix von Luckner. Late in the war CL's were again employed with some success against convoys whivh the U-boats couldn't handle.
In WW2 Germany again used all 3 types having great success with U-boats and armed raiders and less success with warships which ironically was the most feared by the Allies and efforts to defeat them were all-out. The Graf Spee class armored cruisers were designed as raiders.
The key thing on raiders is U-boats killed all their victims and AMC and warships sometimes captured prizes and returned them home, doable so long as extra crew were embarked as prize crews.
Modern pirates and terrorists have adopted high speed small craft for raiding, but not well suited for TRAV campaign as tied to 1 system.
Jeff Hayes reading list.
https://kearns.fogbugz.com/default.asp?ahoy.2.693.2
Alexander, Roy. The Cruise of the Raider "Wolf". Yale University Press, 1939: 270.
Brennecke, Hans Joachim. Cruise of the Raider HK-33 [PINGUIN] Binghamton: Thomas Crowell, 1954: 208.
Brice, Martin Hubert. Axis Blockade Runners of World War II. Annapolis: Naval Institute Press, 1981: 159.
Detmers, Theodor. The Raider Kormoran. London: Kimber, 1959: 206
Duffy, James P. Hitler's Secret Pirate Fleet: The Deadliest Ships of World War II. Wesport: Praeger, 2001: 248.
Edwards, Bernard. Beware Raiders: German Surface Raiders in the Second World War. Annapolis: Naval Institute Press, 2001. 216.
Hoehling, A.A. Lonely Command. [EMDEN] New York: T. Yoseloff, 1957: 191.
Hoyt, Edwin P. The Elusive Seagull [SMS Möwe] London: Leslie Frewin, 1970: 208.
Hoyt, Edwin P. The Germans Who Never Lost. [SMS Konigsberg] London: Frewin, 1969: 1239.
Hoyt, Edwin P. The Last Cruise of the Emden. Guil-ford: The Lyons Press, 2001: 248. (Abridged as Swan of the East)
Hoyt, Edwin P. Raider 16 [ATLANTIS] New York: Avon Books, 1988: 216
Hoyt, Edwin P. Raider Wolf New York: P. S. Eriksson, 1974: 150.
Jennings, John. The Raider: A novel of World War I. [EMDEN] New York: Morrow, 1963: 272.
Lochner, R.K. Last Gentleman-Of-War: Raider Exploits of the Cruiser Emden. Annapolis: Naval Institute Press, 1988: 321.
Mohr, Ulrich; Sellwood, A.V. Phantom Raider [ATLANTIS] Bristol: Cerberus Publishing, 2005: 224
Mohr, Ulrich; Sellwood, A.V. Ship 16. [ATLANTIS] London: John Day, 1956: 255 (See as well other titles: At-lantis, Phantom Raider, Sea Raider Atlantis, and Atlantis-Rattlesnake of the Ocean!)
Mucke, Hellmuth Von. The Emden-Ayesha Adven-ture: German Raiders in the South Seas and Beyond, 1914. Annapolis: Naval Institute Press, 2000: 160.
Muggenthaler, August Karl. German Raiders of World War II. Englewood Cliffs: Prentice-Hall, 1977, 308.
Nerger, Karl. S.M.S. Wolf. Birkenhead: GTO Printers, 2000: 148.
Ortzen, Len. Stories of Famous Sea Raiders. London: Barker, 1973:
Pardoe, Blaine. The Cruise of the Sea Eagle. [SEEADLER] Guilford: The Lyons Press, 2005: 320.
Rogge, Bernhard; Frank, Wolfgang. GERMAN RAIDER ATLANTIS, New York: Ballantine Books, 1956: 154. (Also printed as: Under Ten Flags)
Schmalenbach, Paul. German Raiders: A History of Auxiliary Cruisers of the German Navy, 1895-1945. Annapolis: Naval Institute Press, 1979. 144.
Simpson, Colin. The Ship That Hunted Itself. [Cap Trafalgar] New York: Stein & Day, 1981: 207
Slavick, Joseph P. The Cruise of the German Raider Atlantis. Annapolis: Naval Institute Press, 2003: 256.
Thomas, Lowell. Count Luckner, the Sea Devil. [SEEADLER] New York: Doubleday, Page & Co, 1927: 308.
Thomas, Lowell. Lauterbach of the China Sea. New York: Doubleday, Doran & Company, 1930: 302.
Vat, Dan Van Der. Gentlemen of War: The Amazing Story of Commander Karl Von Muller and the S M S Emden. New York: William Morrow, 1984: 205
Walter, John. The Kaiser's Pirates: German Surface Raiders in World War One. Annapolis: Naval Institute Press, 1994: 192
Ward, Herbert T. Flight of the Cormoran. City: Van-tage Press, 1970: 175.
Weyher, Kurt. The Black Raider. [ORION] City: Elek, 1955 Woodward, David. The Secret Raiders. New York: W.W. Norton, 1955: 288.