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What may slaves in colonial Louisiana have looked like?

any popular ideas about Africa’s multitude of distinct peoples emerged at some point in Western history and memory. One such idea homogenized the physiqueRead More

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Filed Under: Descriptors, History, Slavery Tagged With: Agoua, Angola, Aradas, Bamabara, Cane River, Cape Laho, Cape Lahou, Coincoin, Compagnie de l'est, Compagnie des Indes, Company of the Indies, Creole Louisiana, Dahomey, Democratic Republic of the Congo, East India Company, Fantins, Fida, Foëda, French slavery, Fulani, Gold Coast, Haitian slaves, Ivory Coast, Jean Baptiste Honoré Destréhan de Beaupré, Juda, Judah, Juida, Latin America, Latin Americans, Louisiana, Louisiana Creoles, Mandingos, Mina, Moreau de St. Méry, New Orleans, Ouidah, Quiambos, Saint-Domingue slaves, Senegalese, Slave Coast, Slavery in Louisiana, soco, Spanish slavery, The Congo, Wolof

Creole Identity Emergence & Divergence in Louisiana

A couple of weeks ago, I was contacted by a masters student in Anthropology from Montreal, Quebec, who was conducting research in southRead More

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Filed Under: Free People of Color (FPOC), History, Identity, Language, Slavery Tagged With: Acadiana History, Cajun, Cajunité, Cajunization, Cane River, Creole, Creole identity, Louisiana Acadians, Louisiana Creole, Louisiana French, Louisiana Spanish, New Orleans Creoles, NOLA Creoles, Nola history

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