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Posts Tagged ‘1803’

8
Jul

The Origins of Voodoo: From West Africa to the Louisiana Bayou

   Posted by: Hunter    in African History, American History, Colonial History, Cultural History, History Blog, Religious History, World History

History of Voodoo - Vodu DollThe term “Vodu” (alternately known as Voudoun, Vaudau, Voudoux, or Vaudaux and commonly corrupted as “Voodoo” or “Hoodoo” in North America) comes to us from the Fon tongue– a language prevalent in the West African Republic of Dahomey, now known as Benin.

Beginning in 1724, Spanish and French raiders descended on Africa’s so-called Slave Coast, only to pass their unwitting conquests onto colonial outposts in the West Indies. In doing so, slave traders at various points along the way managed to transfuse the native beliefs of an African snake worshipping sect to the Caribbean and the American South.

Spanish Governor Bernardo de GalvezIn 1782, Governor Bernardo de Gálvez , Spanish governor of the Louisiana Territory, banned the importation of slaves from the island territories of Martinique ,and later Santo Domingo (the other half of which is now known as Haiti), for fear that the Vodu tradition propagating amongst the slave population “would make the lives of the citizens unsafe.”

As slave life in the 18th century Americas mainly consisted of chains, overseers and hard labor, African slaves - and their native born children – were forced to practice their ancestors’ faith at their own peril. Enslaved men or women caught in the act of vodu faced torture or death. The sentence for those caught with voduon “fetishes” (sometimes lucky charms or sometimes of more sinister “voodoo dolls”) called for the guilty to be “imprisoned, hanged or flayed alive.”

Chromolithograph of a Samoan snake charmer. Printed in the 1880s, the poster gave rise to the common image of Mami Wata, a water goddess of the African diasporaThat began to change in 1803, when, in the wake of the Louisiana Purchase, authorities rolled back restrictions on the importation of West Indian slave labor. At the same time, second and third generations of English speaking, American born slaves came into the possession of their masters’ descendents. Old barriers began to shift (if ever so slightly) and, in the early 19th century, it was not at all uncommon for slaves to tend to white children and attend plantation functions, such as weddings and receptions. In an effort to save the souls of their unconverted workers, some masters even went so far as to baptize their slave populations, thereby permanently intertwining their own Catholicism with the pagan African tradition. (In Central American cultures, this same cross-pollination resulted in the religion known as Santeria.)

But it was the post-Purchase influx of new arrivals from the Caribbean (and Santo Domingo, in particular) that truly ignited the myth of American voodoo. With slaves a common occurrence in urban areas and no more distance between plantations, it is said that Santo Domingo natives would congregate at an abandoned brick factory on Dumaine Street in New Orleans.


True their African roots, the devotees were said to revere a priestess cloaked in a python, who would deliver fortunes and prognostications. Still in other versions, the priestess was secondary to a male “king figure,” who would administer the secretive rites. Either way, the perverse ceremonies eventually led to the invocation of the snake gods Danbhlah-Wedo, Aida-Wedo or, most popularly, Zombi – just three of the many “loas,” or deities, that populate the Vodu pantheon.
History Store
Voodoo Secrets, DVD Archive Voodoo Secrets, DVD Archive
Voodoo Rituals DVD Voodoo Rituals DVD
Authentic African Slave Bracelets Authentic African Slave Bracelets
Haunted Histories Collection: Dracula, Witches, Voodoo, and Exorcism DVD Set Haunted Histories Collection: Dracula, Witches, Voodoo, and Exorcism DVD Set

Tags: 1724, 1782, 1803, Africa Slave Coast and Voodoo, Banning of Slaves in Caribbean islands, Benin, Dumaine Street in New Orleans, Governor Bernardo de Gálvez, history of vodu, history of voodoo, hoodoo, Louisianna Purchase and Voodoo, origins of voodoo, punishment for practicing voodoo, slave life in 18th century America, Vaudau, Vaudaux, voodoo dolls, Voudoun, Voudoux, West African Republic of Dahomey

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3
Apr

History of Mardi Gras

   Posted by: Mike    in American History, Ancient Rome, Colonial History, Cultural History, European History, History Blog, History Today, Holiday History, Personalities in History, World History

History of Mardi GrasMost of us are familiar with the Mardi Gras celebration in New Orleans with parades, floats, beads, and drunken revelers in the streets. Mardi Gras is kind of a last fling before the observance of Lent which starts on Ash Wednesday and ends 40 days later on Easter. The history of the Mardi Gras (Fat Tuesday) celebration dates back long before Europeans brought it to America. In fact, during the middle of February the Romans celebrated Lupercalia which is a festival similar the Mardi Gras we know. After Rome embraced Christianity the church decided to incorporate some of the pagan customs so the new adherents would not see all their rituals abolished. The season of Carnival became the wild abandon before the penance of Lent so it was given a Christian interpretation of the custom. The word carnival comes from Latin for “Meat Leaving” and the season of lent is marked by a fasting from meat. Lent is not mentioned in the Bible but it has been a tradition in the Christianity since the 4th century and it parallels the fasting Jesus went through in the wilderness after his baptism.

Pierre Le Moyne IbervilleMardi Gras came to America in 1699 when French adventurer Pierre Le Moyne Iberville explored the Mississippi River after sailing in the Gulf of Mexico. Mardi Gras had been a part of Paris culture since the Middle Ages and he set up camp about 60 miles from New Orleans on the day it was being celebrated in France. Iberville named the location Point du Mardi Gras as his way of honoring the day. The celebrations were common into the late 1700s in New Orleans until it came under Spanish rule when it was banned. America took control in 1803 but the celebrations were still banned until the Creole people convinced the governor to allow masked parties in 1823. Street parties were allowed starting in 1827.


History DVDs & History CDs
Early Mardi Gras History Films on DVD Early Mardi Gras History Films on DVD
16th Century Angese Nautical Atlas 16th Century Angese Nautical Atlas
1800's Geographical Fun Atlas on CD 1800’s Geographical Fun Atlas on CD
Arkansas, Kentucky, Louisiana & Tennessee 28 City Panoramic Maps on CD. Arkansas, Kentucky, Louisiana & Tennessee 28 City Panoramic Maps on CD.
Mardi Gras came under fire again when violence in the mid-19th century was attributed to the revelers and a call to end the celebration rang out from the press. A group of New Orleans residents saved it by forming the Comus organization in 1857 and showed that Mardi Gras could be a beautiful and fun event. Various groups known as Krewes joined the parade over the next 130 years. The Mardi Gras celebration was interrupted by the Civil War and WWII but has only gotten bigger and is the party we know today.

Tags: 1699, 16th Century Angese Nautical Atlas, 1700s, 1800’s Geographical Fun Atlas on CD, 1803, 1827, 19th century, Arkansas, Ash Wednesday, Banning of Mardi Gras, Carnival season, Comus organization 1857, Early Mardi Gras History Films on DVD, Easter Sunday, exploration of Mississippi river, fasting of Jesus, Fat Tuesday, History DVDs & History CDs, history of beads, history of floats, history of lent, history of mardi gras, history of parades, Kentucky, Krewes, Louisiana & Tennessee 28 City Panoramic Maps on CD. Arkansas, Louisiana & Tennessee 28 City Panoramic Maps on CD., Louisianna history, Lupercalia, mardi gras, Mardi Gras in Paris, Mardi Gras in the Middle Ages, Mardi Gras under Spanish rule, meat leaving, New Orleans history, pagan customs, Pierre Le Moyne Iberville, Point du Mardi Gras

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