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Encyclopedia > Maroon (slavery)


A Maroon (from the word marronage or cimarrón) was a runaway slave in the Caribbean. The jungles of the Caribbean islands offered isolation for the escaped slaves. The Maroons created their own communities which survived for years.


Individual groups of Maroons often joined with indigenous tribes. Characteristics of the various cultural groups differ widely because of differences in history, geography, African nationality, and the culture of indigenous people throughout the Western hemisphere. Maroon populations are found north from the Amazon river Basin to the American states of Florida and North Carolina. Maroons played an important role in the histories of Brazil, Suriname, Puerto Rico, Cuba, and Jamaica. Maroon settlements often possessed a clannish, outsider identity.


Slaves began running away into the jungle as soon as slavery was introduced to the Americas. Indigenous tribes provided a new home and community to those separated from their own tribes in Africa. Maroons were an example of successful resistance to slavery.


Maroon villages were sometimes called palenques. The palenqueros developed a Creole language by mixing Spanish and their African languages and customs. One Maroon Creole language in Suriname is Saramaccan. One African tradition that some Maroons withheld is the maroon ceremony for healing. They use medical herbs along with a special rhythm, with drums and dance, when the herbs were administered to a sick person.


Maroons survived by growing vegetables and hunting. They also raided plantations, destroying cane fields, and by stealing food, livestock, and female slaves. Later, the governor signed a treaty promising the maroons 2500 acres (10 km²) in two locations, because they presented a threat to the British. Also, Maroons kept their freedom by agreeing to capture runaway slaves. They were paid two dollars for each slave returned.


In Jamaica, Maroons intermarried with Arawak and Miskito people from Central America. Jamaican Maroons fought against slavery and for Jamaican Independence from the British. A famous Maroon rebel was Granny Nanny. She is the only female listed among Jamaican national heroes. Nanny was leader of the Jamaican Maroons in the Eighteenth Century. The Jamaican community has immortalized her in songs and legends. She was particularly important in the First Maroon War in the early 1700s. She was known for her exceptional leadership skills, for example, she planned guerrilla warfare that confused the British.


Maroon communities gradually disappeared as forests were razed to make way for the expansion of plantations.


Eventually, the term Maroon was generalized to include any slave or group of slaves that had rebelled or escaped from their owners.


See also

External links

Creativity and Resistance: Maroon Cultures in the Americas (http://www.folklife.si.edu/resources/maroon/presentation.htm)


  Results from FactBites:
 
Maroon (240 words)
A Maroon (from the word marronage or cimarronaje) was a runaway slave, the the name given by the Spanish conquerers to its occupied colonies in Africa.
Populations of Maroons are north from the Amazon river Basin to the American states of Florida and North Carolina, Islands off the coast of Guyana, Jamaica.
The Montreal Maroons were a professional ice hockey team, in existence from 1924 to 1938, with a final record of 271-260-91, and were Stanley Cup champions in 1926 and again in 1935.
Creativity and Resistance : Educational Guide (3910 words)
Maroons were among the first Americans in the wake of 1492 to resist colonial domination, striving for independence, forging new cultures and identities, and developing solidarity out of diversity--processes which only later took place, on a much larger scale, in emerging nation-states.
The ancestors of the Leeward Maroons, whose main contemporary settlement is Accompong in the western Cockpit Country, began to escape from plantations in the late 17th century.
The Maroons of the Costa Chica area in the Mexican states of Guerrero and Oaxaca are descendants of Africans who began escaping in the late 16th century from Spanish cattle ranches and estates along the Pacific coast.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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