Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Illustrations
- Acknowledgements
- List of Abbreviations
- A Note on Dating, Currency, and References
- Introduction: A Social History of Africans in Early Modern Norfolk and Suffolk
- 1 Identifying the African Population in Early Modern Norfolk and Suffolk
- 2 Beginnings: The Establishment of the African Population, 1467–1599
- 3 ‘Strangers’, ‘Foreigners’, and ‘Slavery’
- 4 The Seventeenth Century: The Early Shadow of Transatlantic Slavery
- 5 The African Population, 1600–99
- 6 Eighteenth-Century Links to the Atlantic Economy
- 7 Eighteenth-Century African Lives
- 8 The ‘Three African Youths’, a Gentleman, and Some Rioters
- Epilogue: Reconsidering the Social History of Africans in Norfolk and Suffolk
- Appendix A The African and Asian Population Identified in Norfolk and Suffolk, 1467–1833
- Appendix B The Surname ‘Blackamore’, 1500–1800
- Appendix C Plantation Ownership in Norfolk and Suffolk, 1650–1833
- Bibliography
- Index
- Studies in Early Modern Cultural, Political and Social History
2 - Beginnings: The Establishment of the African Population, 1467–1599
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 14 January 2023
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Illustrations
- Acknowledgements
- List of Abbreviations
- A Note on Dating, Currency, and References
- Introduction: A Social History of Africans in Early Modern Norfolk and Suffolk
- 1 Identifying the African Population in Early Modern Norfolk and Suffolk
- 2 Beginnings: The Establishment of the African Population, 1467–1599
- 3 ‘Strangers’, ‘Foreigners’, and ‘Slavery’
- 4 The Seventeenth Century: The Early Shadow of Transatlantic Slavery
- 5 The African Population, 1600–99
- 6 Eighteenth-Century Links to the Atlantic Economy
- 7 Eighteenth-Century African Lives
- 8 The ‘Three African Youths’, a Gentleman, and Some Rioters
- Epilogue: Reconsidering the Social History of Africans in Norfolk and Suffolk
- Appendix A The African and Asian Population Identified in Norfolk and Suffolk, 1467–1833
- Appendix B The Surname ‘Blackamore’, 1500–1800
- Appendix C Plantation Ownership in Norfolk and Suffolk, 1650–1833
- Bibliography
- Index
- Studies in Early Modern Cultural, Political and Social History
Summary
In 1524–5, a witness statement was made by a sixty-eight-year-old man called William Pigott, who came from the village of Corton, near Great Yarmouth. The statement was part of the evidence in a dispute between Yarmouth and the neighbouring town of Caister about the extent of the borough boundaries. Pigott recalled the construction, fifty years earlier, of a ‘peyer of gallouse’ on the sands ‘south of Cokle water’, where, he said, ‘were put to execucon dyvers pyrattys, rovers upon the sea’. Pigott then added an extra detail, ‘that one Eylys a More, beyng one of the same compeny, and then within age, callyd a boy of the shippe, for that he was then within age, was not put to execucon, but levyd many yeerys after.’
The date of this mass-hanging of the ‘pyrattes’ can be determined with some accuracy. Pigott suggested the events had happened half a century before, and comparison with the other witness statements from the case suggests that the hanging took place between 1467 and 1469. This would place Eylys in England before the mention of two men from ‘Indea’ in the Subsidy Rolls of 1483–4, and forty years before the mention of John Blanke ‘the blacke Trumpet’ at the court of Henry VII in 1507. The term used by Pigott to describe Eylys was ‘a More’. The OED shows the breadth of meaning that was given to this word in the early modern period:
‘Originally: a native or inhabitant of ancient Mauretania, a region of North Africa corresponding to parts of present-day Morocco and Algeria. Later usually: a member of a Muslim people of mixed Berber and Arab descent inhabiting north-western Africa (now mainly present-day Mauritania), who in the 8th cent. conquered Spain. In the Middle Ages, and as late as the 17th cent., the Moors were widely supposed to be mostly black or very dark-skinned […].’
The OED definition here is extremely useful, since it argues that the word was ‘Originally without depreciatory force’ and avoids any association between its use and anti-African negativity. The focus is, instead, on the minimum understanding of the term that can be derived from the sources that make mention of the noun.
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- Africans in East Anglia, 1467-1833 , pp. 44 - 61Publisher: Boydell & BrewerPrint publication year: 2021