Tuesday, March 5, 2013

Back In 1492 these Blacks sailed the ocean's blue

Painting of "El Negro" (Pedro A. Nino)
The Niño Brothers were a family of sailors from the town of Moguer (in Huelva, Andalusia, Spain), who participated actively in Christopher Columbus's first voyage—generally considered to constitute the discovery of the Americas by Europeans—and other subsequent voyages to the New World.

The four Niño brothers, Pedro Alonso, Francisco, Juan and one other Niño were already sailors with prestige and experience in Atlantic journeys before playing a distinguished part in Columbus's first voyage to the New World. Their friendship with the Pinzón Brothers, and especially with the oldest of them, Martín Alonso Pinzón, influenced their participation in Columbus's project.[1] The participation of the Pinzón Brothers in the Columbian enterprise was the key to overcoming the doubts among the region's sailors; the help of the Niño Brothers made it possible to defeat the opposition among the men of Moguer to taking on an enterprise of uncertain outcome.[citation needed]
On Columbus's first voyage, Pedro Alonso Niño was pilot of the Santa María,[2] Juan Niño was master of La Niña, of which was the owner,[3] and Francisco Niño is believed to have been a sailor on La Niña.[4]

The Niños took part as well in Columbus's second and third voyages. Between 1499 and 1501 they traveled on their own account, with the merchants Cristóbal and Luis Guerra, following the route of Columbus's second voyage to the Gulf of Paria on the South American mainland in what is now Venezuela.[citation needed]

Pedro Alonso Niño
Born in Palos de Moguer, Spain,and of African Descent, he explored the coasts of Africa in his early years. He piloted one of Columbus' ships in the expedition of 1492, and accompanied him during his third voyage that saw the discovery of Trinidad and the mouths of the Orinoco River. After returning to Spain, Niño made preparation to explore the Indies independently, looking for gold and pearls. Empowered by the Council of Castile to seek out new countries, avoiding those already found by Columbus, he committed to give 20% of his profits for the Spanish Crown (see Quinto Real).
In the company of brothers Luis and Cristóbal de la Guerra, respectively a rich merchant and a pilot, he left San Lucas in May 1499, and, after twenty-three days, they arrived at Maracapana. Visiting the islands of Margarita, Coche, and Cubagua, they exchanged objects of little value for a large quantity of pearls before sailing up the coast to Punta Araya, where they discovered salt mines.
After just two months they were back in Bayona, Spain, loaded with wealth, but also accused of cheating the King out of his portion of the spoils. Arrested, and with his property confiscated, Niño died before his trial concluded.

The link for the Washington Post article:
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/metro/interactives/blackmen/chronologyblackmen.html

African American Men: Moments in History from Colonial Times to the Present

Colonial Times, 1492-1776

1492: Among the crew on the Santa Maria during Christopher Columbus's voyage to the Americas is Pedro Alonzo Niño, a black man. Africans also accompany Ponce de Leon, Hernando Cortes, Francisco Pizarro, Hernando de Soto, and Francisco Vasquez de Coronado in the early 16th century.

1623: William Tucker, the son of indentured servants living in Jamestown, is the first recorded black birth in America.

1625: A census of Virginia counts 11 black men among a population of 1,227.

1641: Mathias De Sousa, a free black man, is elected to the Maryland General Assembly. He had come to the colony as an indentured servant.

1644: Lucas Santomee, a black physician and one of the major landowners in what is to become New York, is granted a tract by the Dutch that stretched from modern-day Greenwich Village to Brooklyn.

1700: About 60 percent of all African Americans in the colonies (16,390) live in Virginia.

1712: Though other colonies had passed laws regulating the behavior of slaves, South Carolina passes a slave code that becomes the standard for slave-owning states. It proscribes escalating punishments for rebellious acts including death for escaping, authorizes whites to punish any slave found violating the law, and prohibits slaves from growing their own crops, working for money or learning to read and write.

1729: In an early precursor to lynchings, Maryland passes a law that mandates savage punishment for slaves accused of violent crimes: decapitation, hanging, or having a body's remains publicly displayed after being drawn and quartered.

1731: Benjamin Banneker is born to free parents on Nov. 9 in Ellicott Mills, Md.

1760: A poem by Jupiter Hammon, a slave on Long Island, is the first ever published by a black person born in America. His first poem has a Christian theme; a later poem exhorts slaves in New York to serve their masters faithfully.

1770: Crispus Attucks, a slave who had escaped to Boston, is killed during the Boston Massacre. He is considered to be the first casualty of the American Revolution.

1776: Five thousand black men serve in the Army and Navy during the American Revolution. But 20,000 fight for the British, who promise freedom to any slave who joined them. At the end of the war, 12,000 African Americans leave with the British. While some are freed in Europe and Africa, thousands more are sold back into slavery in the West Indies.


4 comments:

  1. The Moors were not Blacks. They were Berbers who call themselves "Amazigh" YouTube "Amazigh" to see what they look like. Google also "andalusi"(in Spanish) who are descendants of the Moors who were kicked out of Spain, have kept their culture and want to go back to Spain

    It is wrong to take paintings drawn by people in Germany, Belgium and France who had never been to Spain and who drew them some 400 years after the Moors were kicked out of Spain.

    There is no proof, nothing at all, that the Niño brothers were Black or even mulattoes.

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  2. By American standards the Moors would have been considered black or mixed race. The Moors who conquered Spain were a mix of Arab and African, mostly northern and central Sahara regions. The African Berbers, who made up the majority of the Moors in Spain, were a nomadic and varied ethic group- not of one race, varying in skin tone from black to olive skin due to the extensive interaction between African, European and Middle Eastern people in the North and Central African region since ancient times. The African Moors in Spain were from what is now Algeria, Morocco, Mali, Libya, Niger, Mauritania and Tunisia. Americans tend to want ancient people to follow their current views on race and not see that tribal/empire/city state identification was more important at the time, than skin tone. A good modern example is when we join the United States Army, we come from different racial and ethic backgrounds but we are working as one "tribe", Americans, to a common goal or mission. The same would hold true with the Moors conquest of Spain, only the common goal was for the various Moorish tribes, of different racial and ethic backgrounds, to unite under Islam and spread the Islamic faith as well as conquer for riches.

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  3. Moor wasn't 100% black since they mixed with spaniard search about muladis or muwalladun

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