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Nov 20 12 tweets 4 min read Twitter logo Read on Twitter
Gaspar Yanga was a liberator and one of Mexico’s heroes, enslaved from West Africa. He fought for the abolition of slavery in Mexico. He was known as “America’s First Liberator” or “El Primer Libertador de las Americas.”

The town of Yanga, Mexico is named after him.

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El Yanga was an African abolitionist and a leader of a slave rebellion in Mexico during the early period of Spanish colonial rule. Mexico was called 'New Spain'. Image
Gaspar Yanga, often called Yanga, El Yanga, or Nyanga, was said to be a member of the royal family of Gabon, Africa, before being kidnapped and placed in the Middle Passage to the new world. Image
He came to be the head of a group of slaves who were revolting near Vera Cruz, around 1570. Escaping to the highland terrain, he and his people built a small free colony. For more than 30 years it grew, partially surviving by capturing caravans bringing goods to Vera Cruz. Image
In 1609, however, the Spanish colonial government sent troops from Pueblo to enslave Yanga and his people again. The Spanish numbered around 550, of which perhaps 100 were Spanish regulars.
Yanga and the Maroons facing them were an irregular force of 100 fighters with some type of firearm, and 400 more with stones, machetes, and bows and arrows. Image
These troops were led by Francisco de la Matosa, an Angolan. Yanga, who was quite old at this time, employed his troops' superior knowledge of the area to draw them to the negotiating table.
Yanga’s terms of peace asked for a treaty akin to those that had settled hostilities between Indians and Spaniards: an area of self-rule, in return for tribute, and promises to support the Spanish if they were attacked.
He proposed his district would return any slaves which might flee to it to soothe the worries of the many slave owners in the region. The Spaniards refused the terms, a battle was fought, and the Spaniards advanced into the settlement and burned it. Image
Yanga’s people fled into the surrounding highlands, and the Spaniards could not achieve a conclusive victory. Unable to win definitively, they agreed to a conference.
Eventually, Yanga's terms were agreed to, with the additional condition that only Franciscan priests would tend to the people, and that Yanga's family would be granted the right of rule. Finally, in 1630, the town of Yanga was officially established. It remains to this day. Image
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More from @AfricanArchives

Nov 22
Happy 81st birthday to Guion "Guy" Bluford, the first African American in Space.

In honor of his birthday, here’s a highlight of black people who have helped make space exploration possible.

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Benjamin Banneker, apart from making the first functioning wooden clock in the US 🕰️, was an astronomer who was widely known for his astronomical ephemerides & almanacs in which he used calculations to accurately predict events like solar eclipses, planetary conjunctions, etc.
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Benjamin also studied the relativity of time and space. His revelations on the topic preceded Einstein's Theory of Relativity by two centuries.

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Nov 19
It’s International Men’s Day!

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Many of the enslaved african men were familiar with cattle herding from Africa.

a highlight of some famous black cowboys:
Bill Pickett (1871-1932), rodeo performer.

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Nov 17
On this day in 1780, Paul Cuffee, his brother & 5 other Black men petitioned the Massachusetts legislature demanding the right to vote.

He won free black men the right to vote in Massachusetts on the basis of "No Taxation Without Representation."

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Paul Cuffee was born Paul Slocum on Jan. 17, 1759, Cuttyhunk Island, Massachusetts, to Kofi Slocum, a farmer & freed slave, and Ruth Moses, a native American of the Wampanog nation.
In 1766 he & his brother John inherited a 116 acre farm from their father in Buzzard's Bay, Massachusetts, near Dartmouth. He changed his surname to Kofi, spelled "Cuffee." The name Kofi suggests that his father came from the Ashanti or Ewe people of Ghana.
Read 15 tweets
Nov 16
139 years ago today, the Berlin Conference opened.

It was a conference where European nations established the 'legal' claim that all of Africa could be occupied by whomever could take it.

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After slavery, Berlin conference was the second declaration of war against Africa. At the Berlin Conference, Congo was handed to a charity run by King Leopold under the pretext of “stopping slavery” and he named it the “Congo Free State.” Image
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Before Hitler killed 6 million Jews.…. Leopold Il of Belgium killed over 10 million Africans in Congo and amputated the arms of countless others.
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Nov 12
On this day in 1831, Freedom fighter Nat Turner was executed for leading a slave rebellion in VA.

He started what is considered the most deadly slave revolt in the history o the United States , the Nat Turner Rebellion, which sparked the events leading to civil war.

A THREAD! Image
Around early 1828, he was convinced that he “was ordained for some great purpose in the hands of the Almighty”. A solar eclipse and an unusual atmospheric event and is what inspired Nat Turner to start his insurrection, which began on August 21, 1831. Image
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Nov 12
The 369th Infantry Regiment, The Harlem Hellfighters.

Though they spent more time in battle than any other regiment and were one of the most decorated, they never got the recognition they deserved. #VeteransDay2023

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Even as one of the most successful military regiments in WWI, they were denied their going away parade because they were a black regiment.

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It became the first American unit to be cited with the French Croix de Guerre. One medal of honor & many Distinguished Service Crosses.
Read 10 tweets

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