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A History of Black people in Europe

It is generally known that black people have been residing in European countries since the early colonial times. But even before the 15th century and during Roman times, a time when colour of skin still wasn’t a racist stigma but just another physical feature, black people lived in Europe. Remains of a man with black African features were found in England recently, dating his life back to the 13th century. Read this article for more info.

Besides that, facts have been found of black people living in different parts of Europe, although I don’t want to overstate their presence or influence. But it is generally known that during the Muslim era of the Iberian Peninsula (from the 8th century AD until the 15th century AD) people with dark skin were part of daily live. The Muslims who invaded Spain and Portugal around 700 AD were a mixture of black and dark people from North-Africa. They were often referred to as Maures, wrote about and painted, way before the dehumanization of black people started. 

I added above Jan Mostaert’s portrait of a nobleman, guest of the Queen of Austria. This painting dates back to the early 1500’s in what we now call Belgium, then part of the Duchy of Brabant. There is no doubt this man has African roots while being a respected member of European culture. We can only guess that this man is of Maure origin, i.e. a Muslim having converted to Christianity or even the second or third generation of converts. 

Below I will go deeper into the subject. I will give you some internet links, book references and a list of early Europeans of African descent, each time linked to their wiki page. If you know more about the subject I invite you to add information in a comment.


Al Andalus

Many blacks who were Muslims converted to Christianity after the emirate ofAl Andalus was abolished (end of 15th century). But the Reconquista took centuries (8th-15th century) and during those times black people gradually integrated the Christian and Northern European world. Among them were noble men and scholars. The negative image of blacks, as natural slaves, only gained prominence in the 18th century when the transatlantic slave trade became a central piece of European economical activity and later when European nation-states were being established. 

Slavery and racism

Of course slavery existed before racism. In the 15th century blacks and whites were enslaved indiscriminately. Blacks in the Americas could become free men and own their own slaves and land (which was rather common in colonial Brazil for instance). It is only in later years that being black made you a slave forever and by birth, or at least a kind of human always inferior to white people. This racial perspective on identity and humanity only gained authority in later modern times. Read more on the subject here.

Coat of Arms

Black people were part of European imagination and reality from very early times. Read more here and here. We can say with certainty that there were black people in Europe before that white people reached the area south of the Sahara. North Africa, Iberia and the Middle East were the crossroad where black and white intermingled. In Europe references to blacks was a positive sign of strength and military power. Still today you can find many blacks in coat of arms for towns all over Europe, central, south and north, dating back to the middle ages. 

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Some Literature

After the 15th century, Portugal entered an intense relationship with African kingdoms in the Gulf of Guinea and the Congo coasts. Slave trade (although not based on race) and exchange between the kings led to the presence of Europeans on the West- and Central African shores, just as Africans in Portugal. Accounts from those days tell us that the sight of black people in the streets of Lisbon wasn’t a rarity during the Middle Ages, more on the contrary. I want to refer to following books for those who want to know more about this topic: 
Black Africans in Renaissance Europe, Thomas Foster Earle,K. J. P. Lowe(eds.)
Africa’s discovery of Europe, David Northrup 

As a consequence of the slave trade free blacks also arrived in Europe between the 16th and 19th century. Blacks lived in London, Liverpool, Lisbon, Seville, … during the 17th and 18th century. Other historical books with scientific authority give you in depth knowledge of this:
Hugh Thomas’s ‘The Slave Trade’
Ivan Van Sertima’s ‘African Presence in Early Europe’
All this publications teach us something about this hidden part of European history.

Leo Africanus

Leo Africanus is often stated as one of these black and European noble men and scholars. But it is rather speculation to state if he was black or white. He was definitely a Maure but as racism, whiteness and blackness were unknown concepts as we know it today, we can’t know his ‘race’ for sure. This shouldn’t surprise anyone. Even very common socio-cultural concepts of today such as ‘French’, ‘German’ or ‘English’ didn’t exist in those days such that it would be silly to argue whether historical figures of those days were German or French. Same thing is valid for the white and black race as defined today. 

Famous Europeans with African ancestry (1500-1900)

Below I will list some of the most famous figures of European modern history (after 1500) who happened to be black or have African ancestry, but were integral parts of European (high) society. Most of the time the African ancestry of these people is ignored by history books although acknowledged and accepted by most history scholars. I think it throws a new light on the concepts of race and the meaning of blackness in the 21st century. 

Alessandro ‘il Moro’ de Medici 1510-1537 

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Duke of Florence



Abram Petrovich Ganibal 1696-1781
 
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Major-general, military engineer, governor of Reval and nobleman of the Russian Empire


Anton Wilhelm Amo 1700-1775 

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German Philosopher


Ignatius Sancho 1729–1780
 
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Author and abolitionist, UK

Olaudah Equiano a.k.a. Gustavus Vassa 1745-1797

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Author and abolitionist, UK

Chevalier de Saint Georges 1745-1799

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A famous musican, composer and swardsman of his times
Listen to his music here

Thomas Alexandre Dumas 1762-1806

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A general of the French Revolution

George Polgreen Bridgetower 1780-1860

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Musician and composer
Listen and watch here 


Alexandre Pushkin 1799-1837

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Famous author, great-grandson of Abraham Petrovich Ganibal

Alexandre Dumas 1802-1870 
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French author of the world famous tale of ‘The Three Musketeers’, Thomas Alexandre Dumas’s son

John Archer 1863-1931 
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Presumably UK’s first black mayor, political activist

Samuel Coleridge-Taylor 1875-1912

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Musician and composer
Listen to his music here

(via afroeurope.blogspot.nl)

There’s discussion of trade between Europe, the Middle East and Africa IN THE BIBLE.  No, it’s not the most reliable historical documentation in the world, but it sure as heck wasn’t going around inventing stories about continents to have commerce with.  And that commerce didn’t STOP just because we started wanting to write mostly about white people.  African nations were famous for being vast, wealthy and powerful until European colonialism smashed them.

There’s this idea we get inculcated with as children, that people in the past were too poor, unsophisticated, technologically backwards and isolated to carry out major commerce over a vast area, and it just isn’t true.  People have always been way more sophisticated, intelligent, organized and persistent than we give them credit for.  You know how old the Silk Road is?  2200 years.  That’s how long Europe and northern Africa have been trading with China and India.  In the Americas before the Europeans hit, there was trade going from East to West Coast, and from Canada down into Mexico.  There was a major native city in Missouri that interacted enough with the Mesoamericans to borrow artistic styles and deities.  The point being that PEOPLE GOT AROUND.  Maybe there weren’t black people crowding the little farming hamlets in medieval Europe, but they were in the cities and harbors and on the roads and in the courts.  There were traders and sailors and warriors and scholars and artists and diplomats—and they were by and large wealthier, more powerful, and better educated than most Europeans of the time.

The ridiculous irony is that people believe there weren’t black people in ancient and medieval Europe because we don’t talk about them in history class—when the reason we don’t talk about them in history class is because MODERN society erases and ignores them.

Mind you, society’s always been racist.  The targets just shift over time. The Jews took the brunt of it for a couple of millennia.  Oh, and let’s not forget the Roma.  Those guys still get routinely blamed, shamed, and kicked out of towns and countries as convenient scapegoats for whatever’s gone wrong this year.

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