Maroon Societies: Rebel Slave Communities in the AmericasRichard Price Johns Hopkins University Press, 1979 - 445 pages "Maroon societies is the first systematic study of the communities form by escaped slaves in the Caribbean, Latin America, and the United States. These societies ranged from small bands that survived less than a year to powerful states encompassing thousands of members and surviving for generations and even centuries. The volume includes eyewitness accounts written by escaped slaves and their pursuers, as well as modern historical and anthropological studies of the maroon experience." -- Provided by publisher |
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Page 84
... Veracruz and Pánuco to the slopes of the Sierra Madre Oriental , there were some eight thousand to ten thousand Africans . The port of Veracruz alone contained about five thousand Negroes and Afromestizos in 1646 , most of whom served ...
... Veracruz and Pánuco to the slopes of the Sierra Madre Oriental , there were some eight thousand to ten thousand Africans . The port of Veracruz alone contained about five thousand Negroes and Afromestizos in 1646 , most of whom served ...
Page 92
... Veracruz and Pánuco , the area between Oaxaca and Gualtuco on the Pacific coast , and almost the whole of the Gran Chichimeca ( AGN , Or- denanzas , Vol . 1 , fols . 34-34v ; Vol . 2 , fols . 232–32v ; Zavala 1947 : 126-27 ; and for ...
... Veracruz and Pánuco , the area between Oaxaca and Gualtuco on the Pacific coast , and almost the whole of the Gran Chichimeca ( AGN , Or- denanzas , Vol . 1 , fols . 34-34v ; Vol . 2 , fols . 232–32v ; Zavala 1947 : 126-27 ; and for ...
Page 93
... Veracruz , Río Blanco , and Punta de Antón Lizardo is very large and their liberty and daring much greater , and that they have begun to enter the town of Tlalixcoyán to rob and sack the homes and seize Negro domestics , taking them ...
... Veracruz , Río Blanco , and Punta de Antón Lizardo is very large and their liberty and daring much greater , and that they have begun to enter the town of Tlalixcoyán to rob and sack the homes and seize Negro domestics , taking them ...
Table des matières
Maroons and Their Communities | 1 |
THE SPANISH AMERICAS | 33 |
Cuban Palenques | 49 |
Droits d'auteur | |
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Expressions et termes fréquents
accusations affines African Afro-American Alagoas American armed attack Bahia band Brazil British Bush Negroes Captain captured chief colonial colonists Creole Cuba Cudjoe Cudjoe's culture cumbe death Deity Djuka Dritabiki eighteenth century escaped example expedition father fear fols forest freedom French French Guiana fugitives governor Granmans guerrilla Guiana Guillermo headman ibid Indians inhabitants island Jamaica José Juan killed King kunu land Langa Uku leader lineage living Maniel maroon communities maroon societies marriage marronage masters Matawai matrilineal ment Mexico militia mocambos mulatto Nanny Town Negroes neighboring owners Pakila palenque Palmares party Pata Pérez Pernambuco person plantation planters Portuguese priests punishment quarter quilombo raids rebellion rebels roons runaway Saint-Domingue Santiago de Cuba São Paulo Saramaka sent Sergipe settlement settlers slave population slave revolts slavery social Spaniards Spanish sugar Surinam tion town treaty troops Veracruz village whites Windward witch witchcraft women