"Jamaican Maroons" Essays and Research Papers

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    Jamaica Research Paper

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    Spanish Town. About 100 years later Great Britain stepped in and seized control of the island. The settlers from Great Britain moved to Villa de la Vega‚ now known as Spanish Town. Jamaica was the site of a lot of fierce uprisings‚ for years the Maroons; descendants of slaves freed by the Spanish in 1655 and runaway slaves form British rule fought against plantation owners and British forces. The largest revolt of them all occurred in 1831 when an initially peaceful protest against working on Christmas

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    young when he left‚ he still has vivid memories of Jamaica and still returns about every two years. He speaks English and Patois. He comes from a remarkably cultural diverse family. Mugi’s mother’s father is Panamanian and his mother’s mother is a Maroon Indian‚ they met in Panama and eventually moved to Jamaica. Mugi’s father’s father is Asian and was living in Panama working on the Panama Canal‚ then was supposed to return to Asia but fled to Germantown‚ Jamaica. There he met Mugi’s grandmother

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    Gillespie recognized rhythm as his greatest influence in seeking to make connections with music from around the world. His explorations were not limited to Cuban music but expanded out Argentina and include tango music. Oscoaldo Frisedo and Gillespie made a record but it was never released in the States (Gillespie 431). “Tangorine” was a song Dizzy recorded to historicize this experimentation. Without any hesitation‚ Gillespie confirms that he was the first one in the North American continent to

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    leaders such as Toussaint L’ouverture a domestic slave who became a steward of all the livestock on his master’s estate‚ Boukman Dutty who was a Jamaican born who practise vodun (voodoo). He was sold by his British master to a French plantation whose owner but him as a slave driver‚ Jean Francois was a fugitive from the North America who became a maroon long before the revolt began‚ Jorge Biassou was a son of slaves. He commanded the army of 40‚000 slaves and Jean Jacques Dessalines he was born in

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    Jamaica Research Paper

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    By 1872 the capital was transferred from Spanish Town to Kingston. There was an improvement in the water supply and a number of schools were established. There was a shift from sugar to banana production. The Great War (1914 - 1918) gave many Jamaicans the opportunity to travel which in turn helped to shape their views of the system of Government. In addition‚ during the early

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    history indigenous people

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    rebellion began with a revolt of black African slaves in August 1791. When the slaves of Saint Domingue rose in revolt and plunged the colony into civil war‚ the signal to begin the revolt was given by Boukman‚ a high priest of vodou and leader of the Maroon slaves. In 1791 about 100‚000 slaves rose in revolt. They burned the sugar can in the fields and killed hundreds of slave owners. For most of the conflict‚ the British and Spanish supplied the rebels with food‚ ammunition‚ arms‚ medicine‚ naval support

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    Bob Marley Biography

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    our lives when we ceased being two and became one.” Bob Marley was the ‘soundtrack’ to their new and exotic life together. Bob Marley‚ known as the king of reggae‚ was born on February 6th‚ 1945 in St. Ann Parish‚ Jamaica. His mom was a teenage Jamaican native‚ and dad was a 50-year-old white navel captain. His parents got married in 1944‚ which is a year before Bob was born. Norval Marley barely got to see his son Bob since his family did not accept marriage. A couple years after‚ Bob Marley was

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    bus 100

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    HISTORY OF THE CARIBBEAN LATIN AMERICAN AND CARIBBEAN STUDIES UNIT HUMANITIES COURSE SYLLABUS History of the Caribbean: LAC 108 Tuesday and Thursday: 11:00AM-12:15PM Professor: Ana Ozuna‚ Ph.D. Office Hours: Monday and Wednesday‚ 2:00PM-3:30PM Office: C-417 E-mail: aozuna@hostos.cuny.edu Tel.: 718-518-6852 REQUIRED TEXTS Palmié‚ S.‚ & Scarano‚ F. A. (Eds.). (2011) The Caribbean‚ a History of the Region and Its Peoples. Chicago: UP Chicago. ISBN-13: 978-0226645087 Handouts

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    A need to remember Slavery

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    The word slavery is etched in the minds and or psyche of many across the globe. The institution‚ still of great discussion and prevalence in the modern world‚ is often spoken about in correlation with words such as oppression‚ prejudice‚ cruelty and death. In its simplified form according to the Oxford Dictionary slavery is defined as “the state of being a slave; a condition of having to work very hard without proper remuneration or appreciation”. However a more extensive look at the institution

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    Europeans in Jamaica

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    harassment by a group of ex-slaves - brought over throughout the Spanish period and set free during their retreat - and their descendants dogged the British until they relented and granted emancipation to all remaining plantation laborers in 1838. The Maroons‚ as this small army was known‚ are still revered today as some of the most brave and noble figures in the history of Jamaica. Why did they come? On May 10‚ 1655‚ an English expedition‚ commanded by Admiral William Penn and General Robert Venables

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