History

Gungunhana: The African Leader Who Lost His Empire and Died in Exile After Defying Portuguese Colonial Rule

Gungunhana, often called the Lion of Gaza, was one of the last major African rulers to resist European colonial conquest in southeastern Africa. He ruled the powerful Gaza Empire, which covered large parts of present-day Mozambique and portions of...

Appeal to the Coloured Citizens of the World: The Anti-Slavery Pamphlet That Terrified American Slaveholders in the Early 19th Century

In 1829, a free Black abolitionist living in Boston published a pamphlet that would send waves of fear through parts of slaveholding America. It was not a government report, a newspaper investigation, or a speech from a famous politician....

Carl Braden: The Activist Who Was Jailed For Helping An African American Family Buy A House

Carl Braden was an journalist who spent much of his life challenging racism and segregation in America. His activism made him one of the Civil Rights Movement’s most committed white allies, but it also brought surveillance, blacklisting, and prison...

James G. Birney: The American Slaveholder Who Freed the Africans He Held, Became an Abolitionist, and Ran for President Twice

James Gillespie Birney was not born an abolitionist. He once owned enslaved Africans and lived within the slaveholding world before eventually turning against it. After freeing those he still held, Birney founded The Philanthropist, an anti-slavery newspaper that made...

Ludwig Cramer: The Sadistic German Farmer In Colonial Namibia Whose Brutality Left His African Workers Covered In Scars

In the early twentieth century, as the Herero and Nama genocide was still unfolding in German South West Africa, present-day Namibia, another form of violence was taking root across farms and settler communities. Among the men who would later...

Church of England Chapel: The Colonial-Era Church Built Above a Slave Dungeon Holding Enslaved Africans in Ghana

Thousands of enslaved Africans were imprisoned inside the dark underground dungeons of Cape Coast Castle in colonial Ghana before being forced onto slave ships crossing the Atlantic. Directly above one of those dungeons stood the Church of England Chapel,...

Aguthi Concentration Camp: The British Prison Where Kenyan Freedom Fighters Were Tortured During Colonial Rule

In colonial Kenya during the 1950s, the British government built a vast network of detention camps to imprison Africans accused of resisting colonial rule. Hidden within the hills of Nyeri was one of those sites, Aguthi Concentration Camp, a...

The Hidden History of Slave Revolts Sparked by Preachers

Throughout the Atlantic slave world, slaveholders often promoted Christianity among enslaved Africans believing religion would encourage obedience, humility, and submission. Plantation owners funded chapels, welcomed missionaries, and encouraged Bible teaching partly because they believed Christian instruction would make enslaved...

Massasoit Guards: The Black Militia That Protected Boston’s Black Community From Slave Catchers in the 1850s

The Massasoit Guards were an African American militia company founded in Boston in 1854 to help protect the city’s Black community from slave catchers during the years leading up to the American Civil War. Formed by Black abolitionists at...

Sarah Baartman: The Disturbing Story of the African Woman Displayed in Europe and Exhibited in a Museum After Death

In the early nineteenth century, European audiences gathered to stare at a young African woman whose body had been turned into a spectacle. She was advertised, examined, and reduced to an object of curiosity. That woman was Sarah Baartman,...
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Gungunhana: The African Leader Who Lost His Empire and Died in Exile After Defying Portuguese Colonial Rule

Gungunhana, often called the Lion of Gaza, was one of the last major African rulers to resist European colonial...
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