The First Art Newspaper on the Net Established in 1996 United States Wednesday, May 22, 2013
 
Scholars want help identifying slaves' origins
Liz Milewicz, former project manager for African-Origins. Researchers using audio recordings of names found in Courts of Mixed Commission records for Havana, Cuba, and Freetown, Sierra Leone, to identify their likely ethno-linguistic origins, at Emory University in Atlanta. The recordings helped connect the sound of the name to its spelling, enabling a more accurate assessment of the name's possible ethnic origins. AP Photo/Emory University, Bryan Meltz.

By: Suzanne Gamboa, Associated Press

WASHINGTON (AP).-— Almost two centuries before there was a man named Obama in the White House, there was a man named Obama shackled in the bowels of a slave ship. There is no proof that the unidentified Obama has ties to President Barack Obama. All they share is a name. But that is exactly the commonality that Emory University researchers hope to build upon as they delve into the origins of Africans who were taken up and sold.

They have built an online database around those names, and welcome input from people who may share a name that's in the database, or have such names as part of their family lore.

"The whole point of the project is to ask the African diaspora, people with any African background, to help us identify the names because the names are so ethno-linguistically specific, we can actually locate the region in Africa to which the individual belonged on the basis of the name," said David Eltis, an Emory University history professor who heads the database research team.

So far, two men named Obama sit among some 9,500 captured Africans whose names were written on line after line in the registries of obscure, 19th century slave trafficking courts. The courts processed the human chattel freed from ships that were intercepted and detoured to Havana, Cuba or Freetown, Sierra Leone. Most of the millions of Africans enslaved before 1807 were known only by numbers, said James Walvin, an expert on the trans-Atlantic slave trade. Once bought by slave owners, the Africans' names were lost. Africans captured by the Portuguese were baptized and given "Christian" names aboard the ships that were taking them into slavery.

But original African names — surnames were uncommon for Africans in the 19th century — are rich with information. Some reveal the day of the week an individual was born or whether that individual was the oldest, youngest or middle child or a twin. They can also reveal ethnic or linguistic groups.

The president's father was from Kenya, on the eastern coast of Africa, and Eltis said it was rare for captives to hail from areas far from the port where their ships set sail. The unidentified Obamas on the slave ships sailed from west Africa. Walvin, author of "The Zong," a book about the slave trade, said there were Africans who had been brought great distances before they were forced onto ships.

"Often their enslavement had begun much earlier, deep in the African interior, most of them captured through acts of violence, warfare or kidnap, or for criminal activity ..." Walvin said in his book, which chronicles the true story of a captain who ordered a third of the slaves aboard his ship thrown overboard due to a shortage of drinking water.

Obama's ancestors, a nomadic people known as the River Lake Nilotes, migrated from Bahr-el-Ghazal Province in Sudan toward Uganda and into Western Kenya, according to Sally Jacobs, author of "The Other Barack", a book about the president's father. They were part of several clans and subclans that eventually became the Luo people of Kenya, Jacobs writes.

The president's great-grandfather's name was Obama. Obama is derived from the word "bam", meaning crooked or indirect, she said in her book.

But it's also possible that Obama was a name used by other cultural groups in Africa and for whom the name had a different meaning.

The slaves found aboard intercepted ships provided their names, age and sometimes where they were from, through translators, to English and Spanish speaking court registrars who wrote their names as they sounded to them.

Body scars or identifying marks also were recorded. The details were logged in an attempt to prevent the Africans from being enslaved again, which didn't always work.

Emory's researchers are including audio clips of the names as they would likely be pronounced in Africa.

"These people enslaved were not just a nebulous group of people with no place and no name," said Kwesi DeGraft-Hanson, one of the researchers, who has found variations of his name, his brother's and his children's names in the database. He is originally from Ghana. "That's how lot of us view slavery. We don't have names faces to go with it ... It makes them that much more removed from us."

Eltis and his researchers acknowledge the database may not help African Americans with genealogical research because records on the Africans once they were freed from the ships are harder to find, if they exist at all.

However, the project provides another piece in a major jigsaw, and helps put together a bigger picture on slavery, Walvin said.

Before this project, Eltis and others assembled a database of 35,000 trans-Atlantic slave ship voyages responsible for the flow of more than 10 million Africans to the Americas.

Together, the two databases provide some details on the horrific voyages of the Africans, including the Obamas.

The Xerxes, which carried one of the unidentified Obamas, was a 138-foot schooner that began its voyage in Havana with a crew of 44. Five guns were mounted aboard when the ship left on a slave purchasing trip to Bonny on Feb. 10, 1828.

Sailing under the Spanish flag, the ship's captain Felipe Rebel purchased 429 slaves, nearly one third of them children, before setting out on a return trip to the Americas. But on June 26, 1828, the Xerxes was intercepted and forced to dock at an unknown Cuban port. By then, 26 slaves had died.

The other unidentified Obama, 6-foot-3-inches tall, was one of 562 Africans shackled in the belly of the Midas. The vessel was a Brig, a fast, maneuverable ship with two square-rigged masts. It was equipped with eight guns.

Midas' captain J. Martinez and a crew of 53 left Cuba on an unknown date. It left Bonny with 562 slaves but was intercepted. It docked in Cuba July 8, 1829 minus 162 slaves who had died during the voyage.

Some slaves freed from seized ships were returned to Africa, but not always to their original homelands. Some were sent to Liberia or were allowed to remain free in the cities where the courts were located. Some may have been re-enslaved and some died on ships that were returning them to Africa.



Copyright 2011 The Associated Press.



Last Week News

December 29, 2011

On Gustav Klimt's 150th birthday, Vienna's Belvedere marks 2012 as the Klimt Year

Beloved pop artist James Rizzi, author of unusual projects worldwide, dies at 61

A major landscape by painter Antonio Joli donated by the Fundación Amigos del Museo del Prado

China Institute Gallery to present Theater, Life, and the Afterlife: Tomb Décor of the Jin Dynasty from Shanxi

'Forrest Gump', Chaplin's "The Kid" to be preserved in United States film registry

Rediscover the magic of Dale Chihuly glass at the Oklahoma City Museum of Art

American singer-songwriter Woody Guthrie archive to land in his native Oklahoma

Next Art Chicago 2012: Debut of curatorial focus renews historic fair this spring

Top 10 science and nature 2011 news stories from the Natural History Museum in London

Russian court rejects proposed ban of Hindu text central to the global Hare Krishna movement

The Language of Less (Then and Now) at the Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago

Design Museum joins international design consortium, direct link between London and Korea

Sculpture honoring the legacy of civil rights pioneer Ida B. Wells to be built in Chicago

Roger Hiorn's sculpture comprising two decommissioned aircaft engines is part of sculpture show

Accomplished artists in caricature exhibition to be presented at Nationalmuseum

Exhibition by Hans van Houwelingen & Jonas Staal at Kunsthal Antwerpen

Barbara Sparks: Photos from around the world at the Colorado Springs Fine Arts Center

Sweden court lets go 3 accused in artist kill plot

December 28, 2011

Helen Frankenthaler, esteemed abstract artist for six decades, dies at 83 in Connecticut

Biennale appoints new Directors: David Chipperfield for Architecture and Alberto Barbera for Cinema

Professor Dr. Curt Glaser heirs sell Jan Van de Velde II painting back to the Rijksmuseum

Smithsonian Institution Fiscal Year 2012 Federal Appropriation totals $811.5 million

German industry mogul and Harvard Museum supporter Werner Otto dies at 102

Nest Egg Auctions to host Gala Holiday New Year's auction on January 7

Art that has a life of its own: London's Kinetica Art Fair 2012 exhibitors announced

Thomas Jefferson's Virginia estate Monticello highlights slaves' stories in new website

First United States museum dedicated to Greek culture, National Hellenic Museum, opens

Toledo Museum of Art to celebrate 50th anniversary of the Studio Glass Movement

Nelson-Atkins Museum attendance Jumps to 410,000, awarded re-accreditation

Ayyam Auctions announces Sixth edition of Young Collectors sale in January

Arnolfini presents part two of a major historical survey of museums created by artists

Smithsonian receives $2 million grant from Coca-Cola Foundation

The Speed Art Museum announces temporary closure during the construction

Electric Railway Museum wins major national award

Idaho man's Museum of Clean ready to shine

Vietnam store makes Christmas tree from cellphones

1941 fruitcake in Ohio sells for $525

December 27, 2011

Ancient seal found in Jerusalem linked to ritual practiced at temple 2,000 years ago

Museum of Fine Arts, Boston celebrates the Greek Goddess of Love and Beauty

Japanese designer of everyday arty kitchenware Yanagi died in Tokyo at age of 96

Edo Pop: The Graphic Impact of Japanese Prints at the Minneapolis Institute of Arts

MoMA PS1 pays tribute to one the most prolific and influential American filmmakers of the last half century

From New England to the South, Civil War's 150th anniversay stirs a trove of memories

Driven to Draw: Twentieth-century drawings and sketchbooks form the Royal Academy's Collection

The Glass Ceiling Shattered, 30 Years - 3 Great American Women Artists at Alan Avery Art Company

Kunstverein Hamburg curates exhibition with works by American graphic designer Charley Harper

Sammlung Falckenberg in Hamburg opens exhibition by Ena Swanser and Robert Lucander

One of the world's most important annual photography events to be held at the Park Avenue Armory in March

Serial Pursuits: David Mabb, Dayanita Singh, Manisha Parekh, Audiobombing Crew at Nature Morte

San Francisco Arts Commission announces Tom DeCaigny as new Director of Cultural Affairs

Yayoi Kusama's flower sculptures brighten the Jardin des Tuileries for the Winter

Dugald Stermer, artist who redesigned Olympic medal, dies

New performance program showcasing emerging artists at work

Yang Fudong's epic seven-screen installation, The Fifth Night, premieres in Hong Kong

National Gallery of Canada presents Christian Marclay's most ambitious video installation

December 26, 2011

Dig for San Francisco's Transbay Transit Center unearths artifacts from the Gold Rush

Guggenheim Museum presents a focused exhibition selected from its permanent collection

Kunsthal Rotterdam presents presents a major exhibition of Egyptian mummies in the Netherlands

First major Canadian exhibition of works by van Gogh for more than 25 years to open at the National Gallery

After two years of extensive renovation work the Museum of European Cultures reopens in Berlin

Elvis at 21: Photographs by Alfred Wertheimer opens at the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts

20/21 International Art Fair 2012 to offer accessible prices, quality and variety

French connection with masters of French Realism highlight Art Gallery of Hamilton exhibitions

Modern Art Museum of Fort Worth presents the largest exhibition ever devoted to Richard Diebenkorn'

Landscapes that emerge from nature: Retrospective of the work of Naoya Hatakeyama at Huis Marseille

Charles M. Russell's finest watercolors to be shown at the Amon Carter Museum in February 2012

Winner of the 2010 Baloise Art Prize, Claire Hooper, exhibits at mumok in Vienna

Exhibition by American artist and architect Paul Laffoley at Hamburger Bahnhof

Folklore, fantasies, and fears featured in Andrea Dezsö's Haunted Ridgefield

Nun famous for kissing Elvis prays for miracle

New tour offers glimpse of New Orleans movie sites

Catástrofes: Exhibition containing works from the its collection opens at Artium

December 25, 2011

Domenichino masterpiece returns to Dulwich as a fitting climax to the Gallery's bicentenary

Milwaukee Art Museum exhibition presents artists creating artworks with one tool

A Nation Emerges: The Mexican Revolution revealed at the Getty Museum

More accurate view of George Washington crossing debuts at the New-York Historical Society

Occupy Wall Street becomes highly collectible at half-dozen major museums and organizations

Bonhams to sell the Meyer & Ebe Collection of ancient Greek coins on January 6

10 historical and contemporary photographers about Africa at Young Gallery

Groninger Museum presents solo exhibition of the world-famous designs of of Studio Job

Los Angeles' 'Wonderful Life' Day honors Frank Capra film starring Jimmy Stewart

The outstanding George Daniels Motor Car Collection to be sold by Bonhams at Goodwood Festival of Speed

Fifteen leading Bay Area artists to celebrate the 75th anniversary of the Golden Gate Bridge in 2012

New York State Museum receives gift of major stoneware to add already major collection

Visually provocative abstractions by Beverly Fishman at Galerie Richard in New York

Details of Photo50 announced, London Art Fair's annual showcase of contemporary photography

DigitisedArt collaborates with London master paintings week

Samsøn presents Antoniadis & Stone \ ROUGH SHAPE

AmericanaWeek.com offers antique show visitors discount hotel rates

December 24, 2011

Scottish National Gallery of Modern Art presents definitive look at 110 years of sculpture

National Museum Australia acquires rare 1813 New South Wales "Holey dollar"

Denver Art Museum presents Ed Ruscha exhibition inspired by seminal work by Jack Kerouac

Sotheby's New York announces annual sale of important Americana for January 2012

MOMA appoints Pedro Gadanho curator in the Department of Architecture and Design

Japanese Art Dealers Association announces exhibition to be held during Asia Week 2012

Winner of Bravo's Work of Art Kymia Nawabi opens solo exhibition at the Brooklyn Museum

Animism: Modernity through the Looking Glass at the Generali Foundation

Museum of Modern Art presents first U.S. retrospective of the work of Sanja Ivekovic

Art with sustainable solutions: Morrison Studio installs Sun-Catcher, a solar powered light sculpture

Fundació Suñol presents an installation by Francesc Ruiz "The Paper Trail"

Ronchini Gallery expands with the opening of a new London gallery in Mayfair

Sotheby's Important 20th Century Design & Tiffany bring $9.7 million in New York

Brandywine River Museum Acquires Major Painting by Horace Pippin

High to Host Third Annual Collectors Evening to Help Build Permanent Collection

Guggenheim Museum relaunches Learning Through Art website

Two archaeological sites surveyed on Mount Ararat

Richard Gere to receive George Eastman Award

Most Popular Last Seven Days



1.- Mexican archaeologists study cave paintings found in the northeast part of Argentina

2.- Exhibition of nude photography around 1900 on view at Berlin's Photography Museum

3.- Top of the bill: Giant rubber duck by Dutch artist Florentijn Hofman sails into Hong Kong

4.- Researchers say first permanent English settlers in America resorted to cannibalism

5.- Russia's great museums feud over revival plan of Moscow museum of Western art

6.- Dartmouth's Hood Museum appoints first African Art Curator

7.- Survey exhibition of American artist Ellen Gallagher's work opens at Tate Modern

8.- Exhibition of nude photography around 1900 on view at Berlin's Photography Museum

9.- Paris Photo Los Angeles concludes a successful first edition with over 13,500 visitors

10.- Excavation unearths evidence of Thessaloniki's urban life between 4th and 9th centuries AD



Museums, Exhibits, Artists, Milestones, Digital Art, Architecture, Photography,
Photographers, Special Photos, Special Reports, Featured Stories, Auctions, Art Fairs,
Anecdotes, Art Quiz, Education, Mythology, 3D Images, Last Week, .

 

Founder:
Ignacio Villarreal
Editor & Publisher: Jose Villarreal - Consultant: Ignacio Villarreal Jr.
Art Director: Juan José Sepúlveda Rmz. - Marketing: Carla Gutiérrez
Web Developer: Gabriel Sifuentes - Special Contributor: Liz Gangemi
Special Advisor: Carlos Amador - Contributing Editor: Carolina Farias
Royalville Communications, Inc
produces:

ignaciovillarreal.org theavemaria.org juncodelavega.org facundocabral-elfinal.org
Founder's Site. The most varied versions
of this beautiful prayer.
Hommage
to a Mexican poet.
Hommage
       

The First Art Newspaper on the Net. The Best Versions Of Ave Maria Song Junco de la Vega Site Ignacio Villarreal Site