Aikin - Notting Hill & Ealing High School GDST's History Magazine Autumn 2021

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What was the experience of Black Tudors in Britain? By: Sakeena Sanders Contrary to common misconceptions of Tudor Britain, it was not a monoracial, monolingual or monocultural country. Black people were a part of many different levels of society, from musicians to circumnavigators, from merchants to silk weavers. They were present in the households of Sir Walter Raleigh and William Cecil and the royal courts of Henry VII, Henry VIII, Elizabeth I and James I, prominent Tudor figures. Black Tudor’s arrival in Britain was intensified by increased trade between the UK and Africa, as well as more movement within Europe. A striking example of this is Diego, who, having been enslaved by the Spanish, asked to be taken aboard Sir Francis Drake’s ship in 1572 in Panama. In 1577 he circumnavigated the globe with Drake and later in 1579 they claimed California for Queen Elizabeth I.

As Britain was such a religious nation in the Tudor Era, Black Tudors’ acceptance into church life is a key indicator of the lack of discrimination they faced at the time. Records of Black people being baptised are especially significant as according to the church, which was the centre of people’s lives, ‘through baptism you are grafted into the community of God’s holy church’. Therefore, discriminating against them, as fellow Christians, would have been going against God’s will: this directly

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contrasts later centuries when Black people were seen in British law as possessions to be bought and sold. Another measure of Black people’s acceptance into society was their ability to earn their own wage, giving them equal financial independence to their white British peers and allowing them to contribute to their community. A key example of this is John Blanke, a royal trumpet player and Black man, who was paid three times the wage of an average servant and double the average wage of an agricultural labourer. Despite his race, Blanke was selected to hold this prestigious position in the entourage of King Henry VII, performing at his funeral and Henry VIII’s coronation. Another example of Black Tudors’ ability to be present in the middle classes is Dederi Jaquoah, a West African prince, who spent two years living with an English merchant.


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