by  Rowena Mondiwa

'Blackamoores: Africans in Tudor England' by Onyeka Nubia
‘Blackamoores: Africans in Tudor England’ by Onyeka Nubia

A criminally neglected part of British history is the true scope of the African diaspora in Britain that reaches as far back as Renaissance Europe. A new book by Onyeka Nubia seeks to rectify the problem, examining the lives of the thousands of blacks that lived in the UK in Tudor times. In Blackamoores: Africans in Tudor England, Onyeka Nubia shares research conducted in uncovering early evidence of Black existence in the United Kingdom, and proves that black presence was evident a lot earlier than is usually assumed. Nubia’s research focuses on the Tudor era (1485- 1603), specifically looking at the four English cities of London, Plymouth, Bristol and Barnstable.

This is not the first book published about African presence in England. Black Lives in the English Archives by Imtiaz Habib (2008) and Gustav Ungerer’s The Mediterranean Apprenticeship of British Slavery (2010) are two other books that look at similar subject matter and help substantiate the information uncovered in this research project. Additionally, just this year, academic Miranda Kaufman has published essays on the same research.

Using extensive data from letters and parish records, Nubia pieces together some of the unknowns, and paints a bigger picture of Black presence in Tudor England. These historical documents, one even signed by Queen Elizabeth I in 1596, clearly confirm the black presence in the country. Emma McFarnon in The Missing Tudors: black people in 16th-century England questions why history doesn’t acknowledge black Africans being part of that society. As she says, the numbers were quite large too, at least large enough for Queen Elizabeth I to have taken note in two letters signed by the monarch in 1596.

Who were the Africans? McFarnon says that from as early as 1558, parish records mentioned Africans using a diversity of terms such as “Blackamoores,” “blacks,” “moors,” “negroes,” “negars” and “Ethiopians” to describe people of African heritage. Africans were buried in England in the 16th Century, Africans such as Anthony John who died on March 18, 1587. Africans were also found in the royal court, men such as John Blanke, the black trumpeter who attended court from 1506-1512. Evidently, Africans where an important part of the social fabric.

Nubia courageously confronts the assumptions made by a few of the prominent authors of Black history in England that Africans were brought to England as slaves. Indeed, the author found firstly that the term slave when used was a “temporary or transitory” term; additionally, there is evidence of Africans marrying English people and having children.

‘A report in 1578 declared ‘I myself have seene an Ethiopian as black as cole…taking a faire English woman as wife [they] begat a sonne in all respects as blacke as the father.’ James Albert Gronniosaw (an African prince, enslaved at 15, who served in the British army and later wrote his memoirs) married an English weaver and settled in Colchester.nationalarchives.gov.uk

'Still-life with peaches and a lemon' Juriaen van Streek
‘Still-life with peaches and a lemon’ Juriaen van Streek

One of the examples of Africans found in important jobs at the time is a man named Fortunatus, who was in the employ of Robert Cecil, a member of Queen Elizabeth I’s Privy Council, proving that blacks in Tudor times were not always confined to the lower classes. Black representation in 16th and 17th Century art and literature was not unusual. Juriaen Van Streeck (1632-1687)’s painting “A Still Life with a Moorish Servant” depicts a Black man. Jan Brueghel, a prominent Flemish artist also has paintings of Black subjects.

With well-cited facts, records and other documents, credibility is lent to an under-researched and generally unpopular area. Onyeka Nubia acknowledges the challenges of working on such a neglected topic and stresses the history of the African diaspora be “taken more seriously.” Nubia carefully details the problems faced when researching the historical data of blacks — it begs the question, why are modern historians so uncomfortable with discussing the historical Black presence in Renaissance Europe? This is an area of history that hegemonic historians ignore.

It is timely that I read Nubia’s book during Black History Month here in North America. In television shows, films and books by popular historians, the presence of black Tudors is not acknowledged. As McFarnon says, the problem with not acknowledging them is

“it influences how we develop public policies on a range of important matters and it affects how we educate children in schools.” Historian Marika Sherwood goes further and states that black people often say “in this curriculum I don’t exist.”

Blackamoores shows us parish records, letters and artwork as primary sources, detailing how Black people have been a part of European society since at least the fifteenth century. It is obviously important for the African diaspora to know their roots and see evidence of themselves in history, a history that has often been whitewashed in popular culture and history books until recently. As Onyeka Nubia writes,

“this tension exists and to some extent is inevitable until Black history and in particular the study of Africans in the Diaspora is taken more seriously.”

It’s time for academia to take the African diaspora seriously.

Find more information at narrative-eye.org.uk and sign their Petition to Education Secretary, Michael Gove, to Reflect True English History by Including Black Tudors in the National Curriculum

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Rowena Mondiwa was raised in the UK and Africa and currently lives in Vancouver, Canada. She is currently a first-year graduate student of International and Intercultural Communication. Rowena is interested in education, the arts, literature and cultural and diversity issues. She blogs at Les Reveries De Rowena and can be found on twitter  @RowenaMonde

This piece was edited by Désirée Wariaro

11 thoughts on “It’s Time to Talk About Black Tudors

  1. It is remarkable that in the 21st century there are black people who believe and propagate studies of white historians. For the whites all blacks are African and descended from slaves, typical of historical reversionism that they have created and for worse puts situations in the modern world as african diaspora, and very black people buy this … Let’s wake up, when a white speaks african diaspora and to try to say that that black person is a recent immigrant, and the place has always been white. In fact that and recent immigrant are the whites themselves, they are descended from aglo-saxons, before there were only black people.

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  2. Very, very interesting. Thank you.

    I think I’ll read the book, now I have so many questions… Did the record file all “black” people together, or did they see a difference between (e.g.) someone from Sub-Saharan Africa and someone from the Middle East? What about a dark-skinned Italian, what about a very light-skinned Arab? Did religion play a part?

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  3. First these peaple you speak of ARE NOT MOORES infact they are jacobites and wich are just one group they where dark skined all of europe was dark skined some where HEBREWS and some where not let the rruth be told the idea that ALL DARK SKINED PPL HAD TO COME FROM AFFRICA OR THEY WHERE MOORES OUT IF AFRICA. IS A is there a white supremacist idea so we must restrain our minds to break free of this idea for proof of what I wrote in this post you need only look up the memoirs of John Mackey Esquire for detailed description of one of the greatest rules of England or Great Britain in the true identity of the Stewart family and others thank you

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  4. Great article Rowena. Thoroughly enjoyed it, bringing back memories of all those history lessons at school in which I inwardly wondered ‘where are all the black people’. Here’s hoping curriculae grow a little broader and more diverse to include a fuller picture of what was.

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  5. Excellent post Rowena!
    This subject is very important (& close to my heart) and I’m so glad you wrote about it and have it out there for us to be able to share with others.
    Thank you!

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    1. Thank you!:) I was so excited while I was reading the book. The amount of Tudor history I’ve read and haven’t even had an inkling of this fact!

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