Coromantee

Coromantee
Coromantins, Coromanto, Kormatine
Regions with significant populations
 Jamaica
Languages
Current
Jamaican English, Jamaican Patois, Maroon Spirit language
Historical
Akan, Twi
Religion
(originally)Kumfu, Obeah (presently)Christianity and Revival
Related ethnic groups
Akan, Ashanti, Jamaicans of African descent

Coromantee, Coromantins, Coromanti or Kormantine (derived from the name of the Ghanaian slave fort of Fort Kormantine in Koromanti, Ghana[1]) was the English name originally given to Ashanti slaves in Jamaica, but became synonymous for all Akan groups from the Gold Coast or modern-day Ghana. The term Coromantee is now considered archaic as it simply refers to Akan people, and was primarily used in the Caribbean.

Coromantins actually came from several Akan ethnic groups and were sent to separate European colonies in the Caribbean based on their alliance with Europeans back in the Gold Coast – Asante (or Ashanti) being opposed the Fante (Fanti) and the British were shipped to Jamaica and Barbados; the Fante, being opposed to the Asante and the Dutch, were sent to the Guianas, etc. as war and kidnapped captives, respectively.[2] Owing to their militaristic background and common Akan language, Coromantins organized dozens of slave rebellions in Jamaica and elsewhere in the Caribbean. Their fierce, rebellious nature became so notorious among white plantation owners in the 18th century that an Act was proposed to ban the importation of people from the Gold Coast, despite their reputation as strong workers.

The Asante had the single largest African cultural influence on Jamaica, including Jamaican Maroons, whose culture and language was seen as a derivation of Asante-Twi.[3] Names of some notable Coromantee leaders — such as Cudjoe, Cuffy, and Quamina — correspond to Akan day names Kojo, Kwame, Kofi, and Kwamina, respectively. A large amount of the slave population also had Akan day names, as the name "Quashee" (a distortion of "Kwasi") was the British planters' way of implying the Asante majority. The word became the Jamaican British term to mean "black person or slave";[4] similarly, a white individual was called "obroni" (Twi: white person) by the slave populace. The term is still used and is considered a slur.

History

Map of Asante Empire and the Gold Coast

Origin

In the 17th and 18th centuries, captive Africans from the Gold Coast area, modern-day Ghana, were sent to Caribbean colonies. Jamaica received a high percentage of Asantes because of Britain’s alliance with their rival the Fantes. Asante captives were either kidnapped or ambushed in minor disputes and sent to forts in British-protected Fante native land (the Central region of present-day Ghana), forts such as Fort Kormantse and Fort William. In turn, Fantes captured in battle with the Asantes, allied with the Dutch, were sent to Dutch forts, which shipped their slaves to Dutch colonies (such as the Guianas of South America).[2] White slave-owners began to distinguish Africans by place of origin and attach behaviours and characteristics based on their ethnicity.[5] The term “Coromantee” (Twi: Kormantse), like the distorted word "Obeah", was from Barbados and Jamaica, which was considered the British capital of the western hemisphere and where many laws for the British colonies were written and laws originally issued. The word references the slave fort of Fort Kormantse (now Fort Amsterdam, having been sold to the Dutch in later years), based on British-protected Fante land.[1] "Coromantins" shared a common language today known as Twi (pronounced: "Chwee"), and this language formed the basis for membership in a loosely structured organization of people who socialized and helped one another. Edward Long, an 18th-century white Jamaican colonist who strongly advocated banning Coromantins, noted that this unity among the Akan groups played an important role in organizing plots and rebellions, despite the geographical dispersion of Coromantins across different plantations. The organizational unity of Coromantins, due to their common background, also contributed to a mutual aid society, burial group, and places to enjoy social entertainment.[6]

Historical Culture

The Yam ceremony was observed by Akan groups, drawn in the 19th century by Thomas Edward Bowdich

Prior to becoming enslaved, Coromantins were usually part of highly organized and stratified Akan groups such as the Asante Empire. Akan states were not all the same, as there existed 40 different groups in the mid-17th century, although they did share a common political language.[7] These groups also had shared mythology — such as there being a single, powerful God, Nyame — and Anansi stories. These stories would be spread to the New World and became Anancy, Anansi Drew, or Br'er Rabbit stories in Jamaica, The Bahamas, and the Southern United States respectively.

According to Long, Akan or "Coromantee" culture obliterated any other African customs and incoming non-Akan Africans had to submit to the culture of the majority Akan population in Jamaica. Akan deities referred to as Abosom in the Twi language were documented, and enslaved Akans would praise Nyankopong (erroneously written by the British as Accompong); libations would be poured to Asase Yaa (erroneously written as "Assarci") and Epo the sea god. Bonsam was referred to as the god of evil. The John Canoe festival was created in Jamaica and the Caribbean by enslaved Akan that sided with the man known as John Canoe. John Canoe was a man from Axim, Ghana he was an Akan from the Ahanta. He was a soldier for the Germans, until one day he turned his back on them for his Ahanta people and sided with Nzima and Asante troops, in order to take the area from the Germans and other europeans. The news of his victory reached Jamaica and he was celebrated ever since that Christmas of 1708 he had first defeated German forces for Axim. Twenty years later his stronghold was broken by neighbouring Fante forces aided by the military might of the British. This resulted in the Ahanta, Nzima and Asante warriors becoming captives and being taken to Jamaica as prisoners of war, numbering some 20,000 men.[8]

— Akans also shared the concept of day names.[9] Evidence of this is seen in the names of several rebellion organizers such as Cuffy (Kofi), Cudjoe (Kojo), or Nanny (Nana) Bump.[10]

From Kumfu or Myal to Revival

see Afro-Jamaican section

Coromantee-led rebellions

Drawing of a hanged negro
An engraving by William Blake illustrating "A negro hung by his ribs from a gallows," from Captain John Stedman's Narrative of a Five Years Expedition Against the Revolted Negroes of Surinam, 1792.

1690 Rebellion

There are several rebellions in the 1700s attributed to Coromantees. According to Long, the first rebellion occurred in 1690 between three or four hundred slaves in Clarendon Parish who, after killing a white owner, seized firearms and provisions and killed an overseer at the neighbouring plantation. [8] A militia was formed and eventually suppressed the rebellion, hanging the leader. Several of the rebels fled and joined the Maroons. Long also describes the incident where a slave-owner was overpowered by a group of Coromantees who after killing him, cut off his head, and turned his skull into a drinking bowl. However, the "drinking of blood" is more than likely anti-African propaganda, though Coromantee and especially Asante war tactics were known to utilize fear in their opponents.[11] In 1739, the leader of the Coromantee Maroons named Cudjoe (Kojo) signed a treaty with the British ensuring the Maroons would be left alone provided they did not help other slave rebellions.[12]

First Maroon War

Main article: First Maroon War

Led by Cudjoe and Queen Nanny (Kojo and Nana), the First Maroon War was a conflict between the Jamaican Maroons and the Colonial British Authorities that reached a climax in 1731. In 1739–40, the British government in Jamaica recognized that it could not defeat the Maroons, so they came to an agreement with them instead. The Maroons were to remain in their five main towns: Accompong, Trelawny Town, Moore Town, Scott's Pass and Nanny Town, living under their own rulers and a British supervisor.

1736 Antigua slave rebellion

In 1736 Antigua, an African slave called "Prince Klaas" (whose real name was Court) planned an uprising in which whites would be massacred. Court was crowned "King of the Coromantees" in a pasture outside the capital of St. John's, in what white observers thought was a colourful spectacle, but was for the slaves a ritual declaration of war on the white enslavers. Due to information obtained from other slaves, colonists discovered the plot and suppressed it. Prince Klaas and four accomplices were caught and executed by the breaking wheel. Six slaves were hanged in chains and starved to death, and another 58 were burned at the stake. The site of these executions is now the Antiguan Recreation Ground.[13]

New York Conspiracy of 1741

In 1741, a supposed plot of arson was allegedly conducted by three slaves, Cuffee, Prince, and Caesar. These three men were alleged to have burned several buildings including the home of Lieutenant Governor George Clarke. Cuffee and Quack (Kwaku), were tried for arson, found guilty, and burned at the stake. In total 13 black men were burned at the stake, 17 were hanged along with four whites. 70 people were deported from New York. There is considerable historical debate as to how these fires were actually started.

Tacky’s War

Main article: Tacky's War

In 1760, another conspiracy known as Tacky's War was hatched. Long claims that almost all Coromantin slaves on the island were involved without any suspicion from the Whites. Their plan was to overthrow British rule and establish an African kingdom in Jamaica. Tacky and his forces were able to take over several plantations and kill the white plantation owners. However, they were ultimately betrayed by a slave named Yankee, whom Long describes as wanting to defend his master's house and "assist the white men". Yankee ran to the neighbouring estate and with the help of another slave alerted the rest of the plantation owners.[14]

The British enlisted the help of Jamaican Maroons, who were themselves descendants of runaways and rebels, to defeat the Coromantins. Long describes a British man and a Mulatto man as each having killed three Coromantins.

Eventually, Tacky was killed by a sharpshooter.[15]

Berbice Slave Uprising

In 1763, this slave rebellion occurred in Berbice in present-day Guyana and was led by a Coromantin named Cuffy or Kofi and his deputy Akra or Akara. The slave rebellion from February 1763 into 1764.[16] Cuffy, like Tacky, was born in West Africa before being enslaved. He led a revolt of more than 2,500 slaves against the colony regime. After acquiring firearms, the rebels attacked plantations.[17] They gained an advantage after taking house of Peerboom. They had told the whites inside that they could leave the house, but as soon as they left, the rebels killed many and took several prisoners, including the wife of a plantation owner whom Cuffy kept as his wife.

After several months, dispute between Cuffy and Akra led to a war between the two. On 2 April 1763 Cuffy wrote to Van Hoogenheim saying that he did not want a war against the whites and proposed a partition of Berbice with the whites occupying the coastal areas and the blacks the interior. Akara’s faction won and Cuffy killed himself. The anniversary of Cuffy’s slave rebellion, 23 February is Republic Day in Guyana, and Cuffy is a national hero in Guyana and he is commemorated in a large monument in the capital Georgetown.[18]

1765 Conspiracy

Coromantee slaves were also behind a conspiracy in 1765 to revolt. The leaders of the rebellion sealed their pact with an oath. Coromantee leaders Blackwell and Quamin (Kwame) ambushed and killed soldiers at a fort near Port Maria as well as other whites in the area.[19] They intended on allying with the Maroons to split up the island. The Coromantins were to give the Maroons the forests of Jamaica, while the Coromantins would control the cultivated land. The Maroons did not agree because of their treaty and existing agreement with British.[20]

1766 Rebellion

Thirty-three newly arrived Coromantins killed at least 19 whites in Westmoreland Parish. It was discovered when a young slave girl gave up the plans. All of the conspirators were either executed or sold.[21]

Second Maroon War

Main article: Second Maroon War

The Second Maroon War of 1795-1796 was an eight-month conflict between the Maroons of Trelawney Town, a maroon settlement created at the end of First Maroon War, located in Trelawny Parish, Jamaica, and the British colonials who controlled the island. The other Jamaican Maroon communities did not take part in this rebellion and their treaty with the British still remained in place.

1816 Barbados "Bussa" Rebellion

Barbados was also a major commercial point to which slaves from the Gold Coast (essentially Ghana) were imported before further dispersal to other British colonies such as Jamaica and British Guiana. Importation of slaves from the Gold Coast to Barbados existed from the 17th century onward to about the early 19th century. The 14 April 1816 slave revolt of Barbados, also known as the Bussa Rebellion, was led by a slave by the name of Bussa. Not much is known about his life prior to the revolt; scholars today are currently in dispute over his possible origins. It is highly likely that Bussa was a Coromantee, yet there is also reasonable speculation that he may have descended from the Igbo peoples of modern-day south-eastern Nigeria. It is also possible that Bussa had both ancestries, since slaves imported prior to the rebellion (mid- to late 16th-century shift in colonial demand for slaves from the Slave Coast) came primarily from the Gold Coast and underwent subsequent creolization of the island's slave population. The Bussa incident, along with other persistent slave rebellions throughout the Caribbean, had given the British Colonial government a further incentive to pass and enact the Slavery Abolition Act 1833 in the year 1833, officially scrapping slavery as an institution in all of its Caribbean territories.

1822 Denmark Vesey conspiracy

Main article: Denmark Vesey

In 1822, an alleged conspiracy by slaves in the United States brought from the Caribbean was organized by a slave named Denmark Vesey or Telemaque. Historian Douglas Egerton suggested that Vesey could be of Coromantee (an Akan-speaking people) origin, based on a remembrance by a free black carpenter who knew Vesey toward the end of his life.[22] Inspired by the revolutionary spirit and actions of slaves during the 1791 Haitian Revolution, and furious at the closing of the African Church, Vesey began to plan a slave rebellion.

His insurrection, which was to take place on Bastille Day, 14 July 1822, became known to thousands of blacks throughout Charleston, South Carolina, and along the Carolina coast. The plot called for Vesey and his group of slaves and free blacks to execute their enslavers and temporarily liberate the city of Charleston. Vesey and his followers planned to sail to Haiti to escape retaliation. Two slaves opposed to Vesey's scheme leaked the plot. Charleston authorities charged 131 men with conspiracy. In total, 67 men were convicted and 35 hanged, including Denmark Vesey.[23][24]

1823 Demerara Rebellion

Slaves force the retreat of European soldiers led by Lt Brady in Guyana

Quamina (Kwamina) Gladstone, a Coromantee slave in British Guiana (now Guyana), and his son Jack Gladstone led the Demerara rebellion of 1823, one of the largest slave revolts in the British colonies before slavery was abolished. He was a carpenter by trade, and worked on an estate owned by Sir John Gladstone. He was implicated in the revolt by the colonial authorities, apprehended and executed on 16 September 1823. He is considered a national hero in Guyana, and there are streets named after him in Georgetown and the village of Beterverwagting on the East Coast Demerara.[25]

On Monday, 18 August 1823, Quamina and Jack Gladstone, both slaves on Success plantation — who had adopted the surname of their master by convention — led their peers to revolt against the harsh conditions and maltreatment.[26] Those on Le Resouvenir, where Smith's chapel was situated, also rebelled. Quamina Gladstone was a member of Smith's church,[27] and the population there included: 2,500 whites, 2,500 freed blacks, and 77,000 slaves;[28] Quamina had been one of five chosen to become deacons by the congregation soon after Smith's arrival.[29] Following the arrival of news from Britain that measures aimed at improving the treatment of slaves in the colonies had been passed, Jack had heard a rumour that their masters had received instructions to set them free but were refusing to do so.[30] In the weeks prior to the revolt, he sought confirmation of the veracity of the rumours from other slaves, particularly those who worked for those in a position to know: he thus obtained information from Susanna, housekeeper/mistress of John Hamilton of Le Resouvenir; from Daniel, the Governor's servant; Joe Simpson from Le Reduit, and others. Specifically, Joe Simpson had written a letter which said that their freedom was imminent but which heeded them to be patient.[31] Jack wrote a letter (signing his father's name) to the members of the chapel informing them of the "new law".[30]

Being very close to Jack, he supported his son's aspirations to be free, by supporting the fight for the rights of slaves. But being a rational man,[32] and heeding the advice of Rev. Smith, he urged him to tell the other slaves, particularly the Christians, not to rebel. He sent Manuel and Seaton on this mission. When he knew the rebellion was imminent, he urged restraint, and made the fellow slaves promise a peaceful strike.[33] Jack led tens of thousands of slaves to rise up against their masters.[30] After the slaves' defeat in a major battle at Bachelor's Adventure, Jack fled into the woods. A "handsome reward"[34] of one thousand guilders was offered for the capture of Jack, Quamina and about twenty other "fugitives".[35] Jack and his wife were captured by Capt. McTurk at Chateau Margo on 6 September after a three-hour standoff.[36] Quamina remained at large until he was captured on 16 September in the fields of Chateau Margo. He was executed, and his body was hung up in chains by the side of a public road in front of Success.[37]

Fictional accounts

Main article: Oroonoko

Oroonoko: or, the Royal Slave is a relatively short work of prose fiction by Aphra Behn (1640–1689),[38] published in 1688, concerning the love of its hero, an enslaved African in Surinam in the 1660s, and the author's own experiences in the new South American colony. Oroonoko is the grandson of a Coromantin African king, Prince Oroonoko, who falls in love with Imoinda, the daughter of that king's top general.[39]

The king, too, falls in love with Imoinda. He gives her the sacred veil, thus commanding her to become one of his wives, even though she has already married Oroonoko. After unwillingly spending time in the king's harem (the Otan), Imoinda and Oroonoko plan a tryst with the help of the sympathetic Onahal and Aboan. They are eventually discovered, and because she has lost her virginity, Imoinda is sold as a slave.[40] The king’s guilt, however, leads him to falsely inform Oroonoko that she has been executed, since death was thought to be better than slavery. Later, after winning another tribal war, Oroonoko is betrayed and captured by an English captain, who plans to sell him and his men as slaves. Both Imoinda and Oroonoko are carried to Surinam, at that time an English colony based on sugarcane plantation in the West Indies. The two lovers are reunited there, under the new Christian names of Caesar and Clemene, even though Imoinda's beauty has attracted the unwanted desires of other slaves and of the Cornish gentleman, Trefry.[41]

Upon Imoinda’s pregnancy, Oroonoko petitions for their return to the homeland. But after being continuously ignored, he organizes a slave revolt. The slaves are hunted down by the military forces and compelled to surrender on deputy governor Byam's promise of amnesty. Yet, when the slaves surrender, Oroonoko and the others are punished and whipped. To avenge his honour, and to express his natural worth, Oroonoko decides to kill Byam. But to protect Imoinda from violation and subjugation after his death, he decides to kill her. The two lovers discuss the plan, and with a smile on her face, Imoinda willingly dies by his hand. A few days later, Oroonoko is found mourning by her decapitated body and is kept from killing himself, only to be publicly executed. During his death by dismemberment, Oroonoko calmly smokes a pipe and stoically withstands all the pain without crying out.[40]

Bill to ban importation to Jamaica

In 1765 a bill was proposed to prevent the importation of Coromantees but was not passed. Edward Long, an anti-Coromantee writer, states:

Such a bill, if passed into law would have struck at very root of evil. No more Coromantins would have been brought to infest this country, but instead of their savage race, the island would have been supplied with Blacks of a more docile tractable disposition and better inclined to peace and agriculture.[21]

Colonists later devised ways of separating Coromantins from each other, by housing them separately, placing them with other slaves, and stricter monitoring of activities. Since groups such as the Igbos were hardly reported to have been maroons, Igbo women were paired with Coromantee men so as to subdue the latter due to the idea that Igbo women were bound to their first-born sons' birthplace.[42]

Assimilation

Other Coromantee revolts followed, but these were all quickly suppressed. Coromantees (enslaved and runaway Maroons) and their Akan imported from Ghana, ultimately influenced most of black Jamaican culture: language, architecture and food. After British abolition of slavery in 1833, their influence and reputation began to wane as Coromantins were fully integrated into the larger British-influenced Jamaican society.

However, Twi loanwords make up the largest part of the African influence in Jamaican patois. Also, Patois has Twi arrangement and grammar.[43] The Twi language has also influenced the Jamaican Maroon population with their Maroon Spirit language.

Notes

References

  1. 1 2 Crooks, John Joseph (1973), Records Relating to the Gold Coast Settlements from 1750 to 1874 (London: Taylor & Francis), p. 62. ISBN 978-0-7146-1647-6
  2. 1 2 "Search the Voyages Database". slavevoyages.org. Archived from the original on 29 June 2015. Retrieved 14 February 2015.
  3. Gordon Robinson (23 September 2012). "Patois Prophets Leading Us Astray". Jamaica Gleaner. Retrieved 14 February 2015.
  4. "Quashee". Dictionary.com. Retrieved 14 February 2015.
  5. Thornton, John (2000), p. 181.
  6. Thornton, John (2000), p. 186.
  7. Thornton, John (2000), p. 182.
  8. 1 2 Long, Edward (1774). "The History of Jamaica Or, A General Survey of the Antient and Modern State of that Island: With Reflexions on Its Situation, Settlements, Inhabitants, Climate, Products, Commerce, Laws, and Government" (google). 2 (3/4): 445–475.
  9. Egglestone, Ruth (2001). "A Philosophy of Survival: Anancyism in Jamaican Pantomime" (pdf). The Society for Caribbean Studies Annual Conference Papers. 2: 1471–2024.
  10. Egglestone (2001), pdf.
  11. Long (1774), p. 447.
  12. Long (1774), p. 345.
  13. Brian Dyde, A History of Antigua, London and Oxford: Macmillan Education, 2000.
  14. Long (1774), p. 451.
  15. Long (1774), p. 468.
  16. Smith, Simon David (2006). Slavery, Family, and Gentry Capitalism in the British Atlantic: The world of the Lascelles, 1648–1834. Cambridge University Press. p. 116. ISBN 0-521-86338-4.
  17. Ishmael, Odeen (2005). The Guyana Story: From Earliest Times to Independence (1st ed.). Retrieved 6 July 2008.
  18. David Granger (1992). "Guyana coins". El Dorado (2): 20–22. Retrieved 6 July 2008.
  19. Long (1774), p. 465.
  20. Long (1774), pp. 460–70.
  21. 1 2 Long (1774), p. 471.
  22. Egerton (2004), pp. 3–4.
  23. "Denmark Vesey", Knob Knowledge, Daniel Library, The Citadel, The Military College of South Carolina.
  24. "About The Citadel", Office of Public Affairs, The Citadel, The Military College of South Carolina, May 2001.
  25. "Historic Cummingsburg". National Trust of Guyana. Archived from the original on 30 September 2009. Retrieved 25 November 2009.
  26. Sheridan, Richard B. (2002). "The Condition of slaves on the sugar plantations of Sir John Gladstone in the colony of Demerara 1812 to 1849" (pdf). New West Indian Guide. 76 (3/4): 243–269.
  27. Révauger, Cécile (October 2008). The Abolition of Slavery — The British Debate 1787–1840. Presse Universitaire de France. pp. 105–106. ISBN 978-2-13-057110-0.
  28. da Costa (1994), p. xviii.
  29. da Costa (1994), p. 145.
  30. 1 2 3 "PART II Blood, sweat, tears and the struggle for basic human rights". Guyana Caribbean Network. Retrieved 21 November 2009.
  31. da Costa (1994), pp. 180, 196.
  32. da Costa (1994), p. 182.
  33. "The Demerara Slave Uprising". Guyana News and Information. Retrieved 20 November 2009.
  34. Bryant (1824), p. 83.
  35. da Costa (1994), p. 180.
  36. Bryant (1824), pp. 83–84.
  37. Bryant (1824), pp. 87–88.
  38. "Oroonoko: or, the Royal Slave. A True History.". Retrieved 7 February 2006.
  39. Hutner 1993, p. 1.
  40. 1 2 Behn, Gallagher and Stern (2000).
  41. Behn, Gallagher, and Stern (2000), 13.
  42. Mullin, Michael (1995). Africa in America: slave acculturation and resistance in the American South and the British Caribbean, 1736–1831. University of Illinois Press. p. 26. ISBN 0-252-06446-1.
  43. "BMC Evolutionary Biology – Full text – Interdisciplinary approach to the demography of Jamaica". biomedcentral.com. Retrieved 14 February 2015.

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