Early Period
Although the Spanish imported African slaves to Panama from 1510 (the year in which contributed to the foundation of the region Name of God), there is an interesting perspective that indicates that black Africans were present in Panama since before the arrival of the Spanish . This is reflected in the version of Dr. Ivan Van Sertima, in his seminar "Early America Revisited" which said the historian Peter Martyr included in his writings that some Africans had been shipwrecked in the area near the coast of the Darien Province that they had taken refuge in the mountains. Martyr referred to men as "Ethiopian pirates" - in the past "Congo, Guinea, and Ethiopia" were synonymous with the African continent -. Lopez de Gomara also described blacks precolonial that Europeans were first seen in Panama: "These people were identical to blacks we've seen in Guinea." French historian and anthropologist Charles de Bour reported the existence of two tribes Indians of Panama, the Mandingo (black leather) and the Tule (red skin). This is consistent with some indigenous figures buried in the mountains of Chiriqui (near the border with Costa Rica) developed by culture "Barrels" (dated between 300 and 600 AD) where there are ceramic figurines are shaped black Africans with pronounced lips, broad nose, phenotypically different to the rest of the indigenous statuettes present at the site.Officially, the first blacks to arrive in Panama came with Vasco Núñez de Balboa, in 1513. Panama was a very important territory because it had the shortest point from the Atlantic to the Pacific. Goods were taken from ports in Portobelo and Nombre de Dios, transported overland to ports in Panama City and reboarded on ships headed to South America. Initially, Indian labor was used. Due to maltreatment and disease, the Indian population was decimated. Bartolomé de Las Casas advocated getting slaves from Africa. By 1517, the trade in Africans were on the way. Initially slaves were used to work and maintain ships and port. It later turned to transporting goods across the isthmus. The transporting of goods was grueling not only the thousands of miles of terrain, but bad weather and attacks by Indians.[2]
Origins
It is difficult to pinpoint and identify the place of origin of the black slaves imported to Panama during the colonial era. According to the study of Martin Jamieson, some authors point out that most were from Guinea. Other authors point out that the slaves came from the region between southern Senegal River and northern Angola. In fact, according to other authors, whether from 1514 began arriving blacks, brought from West Africa to work on plantations in Panama, from 1523, was systematized the arrival of men and women who came from Guinea, Cameroon, the Congo Basin and Angola mainly. The presence of this factor determined the musical features ethnic-cultural core of the Panamanian people. The form of communication used by blacks since 1607 (due to their songs, their instruments and their dances, their numerous uprisings - many of whom fled to settle in the fences, under the guidance of legendary figures like Bayano, Anton Mandinga or Sunday Congo-and the conclusion of a peace treaty in 1607, which granted some freedom, but with restrictions, thousands of former slaves), and is still cultivated by the "Congo" (a culture, and genre of dance Afrocolonial from Republic of Panama, originally from Guinea,[3] characterized by a violent expression and erotic dancing, and it almost always associated with some sort of mime and theater, whose themes infamous historical episodes of black trade, slavery and the resulting black rebellions during the time of the conquest and colonialism. Students of this culture did find parallels as their criptolecto is similar to funeral practices Basilio de Palenque, Colombia, who is of Congolese origin. The study of this culture helps determine at least some origins of Afro-Panamanians), is the greeting with feet and talking backwards, mixing the Castilian, English, French and Portuguese. Already by 1560, there were maroon communities in Bayano palanqueras, and Cerro de Cabra, Portobelo, Panama. Moreover, besides the slaves which some authors may have been imported to Panama from, mostly, Guinea, Cameroon, Congo and Angola (which originated culture "Congos" in 1607), according to Guzman Navarro, many of the slaves who arrived in Panama in the seventeenth and early eighteenth centuries were transported by traffickers French, from Goree slave factory in Senegambia. During the English seat, which lasted until the mid-eighteenth century, slaves came mostly from the Windward Coast (Liberia - west of Ivory Coast) and the Gold Coast (east of the Ivory Coast-Ghana), but also came some slaves from Senegambia. In the last decades of the eighteenth century Gaditana Company was authorized to import African slaves, although most came from other American colonies, including Cartagena de Indias, Havana, Puerto Rico, Jamaica, and the French Caribbean colonies.Yes they are registered, however, certain African ethnic groups residing in Panama and whose members put the name of their ethnicity. So we have: Luis Mozambique, Congo Anton, Christopher Sape, Miguel Biafara, Bran Gaspar, Pedro Mandinga, Anton Bañol and John Jolofo (Wolof), to name a few. This confirms the contribution of slaves from Senegambia, Ghana, Central Africa and Mozambique. Thus, the name of Africans living in Panama allows us to draw some lines on its possible origin: Mozambique, Congo and the region Casanga Congo-Angola, Sao Tome, the island of the same name in the equatorial region, and the region between Guinea and Senegal in West Africa: Manding specifically, gelofo / Wolof Bañol (banyun, established in Senegambia and Guinea Bissau), Zape (Sierra Leone), Bioho (Bijagos) Biafara, and bran. They came through several circuits and networks that joined the "Middle America" with the economy in the South Atlantic, in which Panama and Cartagena were central ports and points of passage required for the transfer of Africans during the colonial period. On the African side, and according to Enriqueta Vila Vilar, major African ports output of forced labor during the sixteenth century were the islands of Santiago in Cape Verde, São Tomé in the Gulf of Guinea and Loanda, confirming what Rodney Hilton called "almost exclusive relations between Upper Guinea and the middle region of America." In West Africa was, by then, a group of Portuguese merchants called reindeiros, who had a monopoly of the sale of captives and "selling" the right to sell slaves, whose earnings the Crown received a percentage. The buying and selling of people involved a complex network of officials and employees installed at key points in the sales network was articulated across the Atlantic. While there were small traders traveling from Africa to America during the sixteenth century, the fact is that it was a small number who had direct control large contracts to take enslaved Africans in Cape Verde, Sao Tome and Angola. In this last stand Gomez Reinel and juan Rodríguez Coutiño (governor of Angola), who lived in Panama working ranch in the early seventeenth century with his brother Manuel de Souza Coutinho, known as Louis de Sousa, the Dominican friar who in 1602 was responsible for the seats in Cartagena.[5]
The first Afro-Antillean migration to Panama occurs in mid-nineteenth century. The California Gold Rush began in 1849, and the subsequent attraction of wealth highlighted the need to facilitate travel between the east and west coasts of the United States. This raises the urgency of building a railroad interoceanic in Panama for the narrowest point of the American continent, but the problem facing the engineers of the railway company was that Panama did not have the amount of labor force to provide workers for the construction of railroad. It's going to be just about the same time that there is an overpopulation crisis in the Caribbean causing labor shortages. These two situations combined the need for workers in Panama and unemployment in the Antilles explain the influx of Afro-Antillean this Isthmus. During the immigration of 1844, people came from Trinidad Island, Jamaica, Barbados, Leeward Islands (Dutch and Venezuelan islands north of Venezuela), Grenada, St. Vincent (island), St. Kitts, and Montserrat Island. After 1880 it expanded the cultivation of banana in Central and established The United Fruit Company in Bocas del Toro (Panama) and Puerto Limon (Costa Rica) and the Chiriqui Land Company. This raised again the need to bring Caribbean labor. The West Indians who migrated to Bocas del Toro were mainly of Ashanti-Fante origin.
The third event that causes the Afro-Caribbean immigration to Panama will be the construction of the canal by the French. Afro-West Indians had shown endurance and be good workers in the construction of Railroad and projects Bocas del Toro and Puerto Limon. Thus the French company returned to the Caribbean to recruit workers. In fact, according Lobinot Marrero, many West Indians arrived in Panama during these years were of the French Antilles, Martinique and Guadalupe Island above, for example in the year 1906-1907 Panama reached more than 2,800 workers and about 2,000 of Martinique and Guadeloupe. In 1904 when the construction of the Panama Canal was taken over by the United States for the failure of the French company, will again resort to the Indian worker. Although between 1904 and 1914 the vast majority of Afro-West Indians who arrived in Panama did a one-year contract with the idea of returning to their home islands once the offshore project, after construction of the canal many Afro-Antillean stayed in Panama. Afro-West Indians who remained in Panama many got jobs in the Canal Zone and became the largest immigrant group in Panama. On the subject of Afro-Antillean Panama, Leslie B. Rout said that when the canal was opened in 1914, some 20,000 African-West Indians remained in Panama.
Cimarrones
Main article: Cimarron people (Panama)
Slaves used the isolating nature of transporting goods as an
opportunity to escape. Many slaves escaped into the sparsely settled
terrain and formed cimarroneras or marooned societies. These slaves were
known as cimarrones. Cimarrones would mount attacks on transport
caravans, to the point that it was very disruptive to trade by the
1550s. The most famous of these cimarrones was Bayano.
In 1570, all maroons were pardoned, to stop the raiding. Famous
cimarrones proceeded to found cimarroneras. Luis de Mozambique founded
Santiago del Principe cimarroneras. Antón de Mandinga founded Santa la
Real.
No comments:
Post a Comment