Saturday, 12 January 2019

Catholic, Irish, Ireland, Britain, Black Irish, Williams

FIRST STOP
The first stop for many of the Irish, Catholic and non-Catholic, was Barbados where they worked from 6 a.m. to 6 p.m. with a two-hour lunch break, under the command of an overseer. Shirt and drawers were their only clothes and their homes, cabins made of sticks and plantain leaves (Williams, 1932, p. 42).
CGrigory Zinoviev (left), Claude McKay (Centre), Nikolai Bukharin (right) 1923
Following the 1655 British conquest of Jamaica, Irish labourers were largely sent from Barbados as well as Ireland to get the island up and running under British control. Within a decade, when many Irish had served their terms or indenture, their names begin to appear among the lists of Jamaican planters and settlers (Williams, p. 53). Irish Jamaican writer Claude McKay (center), whose work would help spark the Harlem Renaissance, with Bolshevik revolutionaries Grigory Zinoviev (left) and Nikolai Bukharin (right) in 1923. (Photo: Wikimedia Commons).
Book "Whence The Black Irish of Jamaica 1932

LAST SHIPMENTS 1800S
It is estimated that somewhere between 30,000 and 80,000 Irish were shipped from Ireland. One of the last shipments was made in 1841 from Limerick aboard the Robert Kerr. The Gleaner noted of these arrivals:

"They landed in Kingston wearing their best clothes and temperance medals," meaning they did not drink alcohol (as quoted in Mullally, 2003, part 2, pg. 1).

The Gleaner also noted of another set of arrivals in 1842: "The Irish are repeatedly intoxicated, drink excessively, are seen emerging from grog shops very dissolute and abandoned and are of very intemperate habits" (as quoted in Mullally, 2003, part 3, p. 2).

So the Irish gained a reputation for being something of a mixed blessing ¬ saints and sinners. However, other European immigrants did not seem to fare as well as the Irish in the tropical climate.

In the mid-1830s, for example, when the government was particularly concerned about replacement labour for the newly-freed slaves on the sugar and coffee plantations, over 1,000 Germans and close to 200 Portuguese from Madeira, the Azores and Portugal notched a high mortality rate.
Typical Black Irish Jamaican

The idea was to eventually create townships for the European immigrants in the island's highlands where the temperature was cooler and they would work as small farmers, labourers, and artisans on coffee estates and cattle pens. {Comment: Clearly Caucasian Europeans could not withstand working under the "Burning Caribbean Sun".

This proves the lie that "Indentures" in the Caribbean were White}. However, this would take time and in order to maintain pre-abolition levels of production, labour was needed in Jamaica's low-lands where the best land for sugar cultivation was located.

Hence the implementation of bounties for European immigrants and the institution of ships like the Robert Kerr, known as "man-traps" and sub-agents who wandered into quiet Irish towns and attracted people with the promise for free passage, high wages and the hope of bettering their lives.

The immigration of Europeans never filled the abolition labour gap and so by 1840, the government began to look to the Maltese, the free Negroes in the United States and the Asians. In 1842 laws to break up what had been completed of the townships were passed and the idea of highland colonisation was abandoned.

Oliver Cromwell (25 April 1599 – 3 September 1658) was an English military and political leader who overthrew the English monarchy and temporarily turned England into a republican Commonwealth and served as Lord Protector of England, Scotland, and Ireland. Cromwell was one of the commanders of the New Model Army which defeated the royalists in the English Civil War.
Scientific Racism in Action via "The Anglicization of the Irish people"
After the execution of King Charles I in 1649, Cromwell dominated the short-lived Commonwealth of England, conquered Ireland and Scotland, and ruled as Lord Protector from 1653 until his death in 1658. On 6 February, the Covenanter Parliament of Scotland proclaimed Charles II as King of Great Britain in succession to his father but refused to allow him to enter Scotland unless he accepted Presbyterianism throughout the British Isles.

When negotiations stalled, Charles authorised General Montrose to land in the Orkney Islands with a small army to threaten the Scots with invasion, in the hope of forcing an agreement more to his liking. Montrose feared that Charles would accept a compromise, and so chose to invade mainland Scotland anyway.
This Sign is Full of Clues

He was captured and executed. Charles reluctantly promised that he would abide by the terms of a treaty agreed between him and the Scots Parliament at Breda, and support the Solemn League and Covenant, which authorised Presbyterian church governance across Britain.

Upon his arrival in Scotland on 23 June 1650, Charles II formally agreed to the Covenant; his abandonment of Episcopal church governance, although winning him support in Scotland, left him unpopular in England. Charles himself soon came to despise the "villainy" and "hypocrisy" of the Covenanters. Cromwell left Ireland in May 1650 and several months later, invaded Scotland after the Scots had proclaimed Charles II as king. Cromwell was much less hostile to Scottish Presbyterians, some of whom had been his allies in the First English Civil War than he was to Irish Catholics. He described the Scots as a people "fearing His [God's] name, though deceived".

Note: The sign no Irish, Blacks or Dogs, is a clue in itself. Because it singled out the Irish race out of all the European races in relation to Black people, and the went on to also relate Black people to Dogs.
King Charles II, AKA The Black Boy, Debunked

Why did they not use the sign no Scottish, Blacks or Dogs, or no Spanish, Blacks or Dogs, or even no Portuguese, Blacks or Dogs, or no Albanians, Blacks or Dogs, or no Arab, Blacks or Dogs, no Indians, Blacks or Dogs, etc? Think about all these examples and come up with more, including what you have already learned and you should soon come to a conclusion one way or the other.

He made a famous appeal to the General Assembly of the Church of Scotland, urging them to see the error of the royal alliance—"I beseech you, in the bowels of Christ, think it possible you may be mistaken." The Scots' reply was robust: "would you have us to be skeptics in our religion?" This decision to negotiate with Charles II led Cromwell to believe that war was necessary.

Cromwell defeated Charles at the Battle of Worcester on 3 September 1651, and Charles fled to mainland Europe. Cromwell became virtual dictator of England, Scotland, and Ireland. Charles spent the next nine years in exile in France, the United Provinces and the Spanish Netherlands.

An Article from IRISH AMERICAN COM, By Ray Cavanaugh, Contributor June / July 2018. Please Note that this article is half-truth and half-false. Excerpt from IRISH AMERICAN COM'S Article: That Irish is Jamaica’s second-most predominant ethnicity may come as a surprise, especially to those outside the country. It all started in 1655 when the British failed in their efforts to claim Santo Domingo from the Spaniards and took Jamaica as a consolation prize. Of course, the British also had been quite active in Ireland, where, between 1641 and 1652, about half the population had been wiped out. War, famine, and plague played roles in this decline. Another lesser-known factor was slavery.

As part of his “Western Design,” Lord Protector Oliver Cromwell was expanding his ventures in the Caribbean; as part of his “Settlement in Ireland,” he was tyrannizing many of the natives. To enslave Irish natives and transport them to the West Indies was a fine way to unite both agendas.

Mixed Race Or  (MULATTOES) ALL of the IRISH DESCENDANT
Another dynamic was that few if any, Englishwomen were willing to emigrate to the West Indies, so slave catchers and plantation owners began indulging a sweet tooth for the Irish colleen.

Elliott O’Donnell’s 1915 book The Irish Abroad paints a rather vivid scene: “Gangs of [Cromwell’s] soldiers invaded Connaught, and pouncing on all the women and girls they could find, drove them in gangs to Cork.” At Cork, the slave catchers began to assess their plunder, among other activities.

WARNING BULLSHIT ALERT: In relation to "White Slaves or White Servitude" without mentioning the Black Irish indentures and slaves.
A 1969 Ebony magazine article, “White Servitude in America” by African American scholar Lerone Bennett, Jr., mentions various colonial undertakings involving white cargo, including a special 1655 project to bring “some 1,000 young Irish girls to Jamaica for breeding purposes.” Though Bennett says it’s unknown what ultimately became of this particular plan, his article talks about a colonial tradition that “in some cases” saw “whites, blacks, and reds [indigenous Americans]” being “sold from the same stand.”

John Patrick Prendergast’s 1868 work The Cromwellian Settlement of Ireland tells of a 1654 order (concerning the Governors of Carlow, Clonmel, Kilkenny, Ross, Waterford, and Wexford) requiring that “all wanderers, men and women, and such other Irish” who were lacking a “settled course of industry” be “transported to the West Indies.” Also ordered for transport were “all prisoners” and “such children as were in hospitals or workhouses.”

Bustamante and John F. Kennedy in the Oval Office, 1962. (Photo: Robert Knudsen. White House Photographs. John F. Kennedy Presidential Library and Museum, Boston)
James Curtis Ballagh’s 1895 work White Servitude in the Colony of Virginia says: “Oliver Cromwell in preparing for his settlement of Ireland did not hesitate to transport large numbers of the dispossessed Irish as slaves to the West Indies.” Into “such shameful slavery” thousands of Irish women were dispatched, relates Justin H. McCarthy’s 1883 book An Outline of Irish History from the Earliest Times to the Present Day.

Of course, a need for hard labour on the Caribbean plantations ensured that Irish men were claimed as well.
Black people different types of Features 

Sir Alexander Bustamante (1884-1977), Jamaica’s first president. Bustamante’s father was born in Ireland. Date unknown. (Photo: National Library of Jamaica Photograph Collection / Wikimedia Commons).

Writing in the 1660s, a Rev. John Lynch, author of Cambrensis Eversus, describes the Caribbean-bound Irish: “many droves of old men and youths [and] a vast multitude of virgins and matrons […] the former might pass their lives in hard slavery, and the latter maintain themselves even by their own prostitution.” Lynch added: “Many priests are sent away to the islands of the Indies that they might be sold by auction.”
Delivering his Sixth Donnellan Lecture in 1901, Anglican minister G. Robert Wynne remarked: “The victories of Cromwell in the English and Irish wars of the Long Parliament furnished thousands of white slaves to till the fertile Jamaican valleys.” These Irish were accustomed to hard work, but they were totally unacquainted with the hot Caribbean climate. Though their bondage was often a death sentence, enough of the Irish survived that by 1670 they already accounted for a significant part of Jamaica’s population. Thousands of Irish slaves were steered to Barbados.
Mordern-day Irish Family incorporating Mixed Race Children and a Couple, living in Ireland, Irish Mother and African Dad
However, Jamaica, being 25 times larger, was soon proving the more lucrative venue. In fact, quite a few owners of Barbadian plantations relocated their operations to Jamaica. And Joseph J. Williams in his 1932 book Whence the “Black Irish” of Jamaica? relates that the early Jamaican Irish in large part came from Barbados.

Catholicism was ardently suppressed in Jamaica, so the Catholic religion largely faded away within a few generations. However, other signs of the Irish were beginning to take hold. Among these signs was the prominence of Irish surnames. Even today in Jamaica, one can locate a Burke, Collins, Kennedy, Mackey, McCormack, McDermott, McKeon, O’Hare, or Walsh, along with many others.
Aside from surnames, Ireland also has taken root among place names in Jamaica. For example, there is an “Irish Pen” in a section of the country known as St. Catherine Parish, as well as “Dublin Castle” and “Irish Town” in St. Andrew Parish. Additionally, there are roads given such names as Leitrim and Longford.
Are these Black Scottish or Irish, Indentures or Slaves? Misrepresentation again?
Some of the most eminent Jamaicans have been of Irish extraction. Among these are Alexander Bustamante, Jamaica’s first prime minister upon achieving its independence in 1962 and whose father, Robert Constantine Clarke, was an Irishman, and Claude McKay, the native Jamaican writer who later would migrate to New York City and help spark the Harlem Renaissance.

Writing for the Irish cultural website The Wild Geese, Rob Mullally highlights similarities between Ireland and Jamaica: both are relatively small island nations that shared the same master for over a quarter-millennium, won their independence in the 20th century, and yet continued to see large amounts of emigration. End of part 7 of 7.  Next blog 18/01/19.

Facebook Page: University of Natural Lore (Laws)
Our aim is to counter the Narratives being asserted by White supremacist and their sympathisers, including Schools, Colleges, Universities, Teachers, Lecturers, Professors, Authors, Main-stream-Media or Social Media in relation to the historicity of people of colours in Europe and elsewhere, based on a half-truth.


Tuesday, 8 January 2019

Black Irish, Oliver Cromwell, English Civil Wars, Scotland, Ireland

Oliver Cromwell
Oliver Cromwell
For the most part, accounts summarise the two sides that fought the English Civil Wars as the Royalist Cavaliers of Charles I of England versus the Parliamentarian Round-heads of Oliver Cromwell.

However, as with many civil wars, loyalties shifted for various reasons, and both sides changed significantly during the conflicts.

In part 5 of these articles: we recap on the previous articles via summaries and introduced Dr Samuel Johnson, and His Eyewitness Account, pertaining to the Status and Ethnicity of the People living in the Hebrides, Northern Scotland, UK.

Including direct quotations from the book,"The Journal of a tour to the Hebrides, with Samuel Johnson", around 1773 AD, describing the Status and Ethnicity of the People living in the Hebrides, Northern Scotland, UK, around that time. Followed by Warning you not to read or buy any of  any edition of the book that has been published after 1810 AD, due to all the references to the word "Black or Blacks" being deleted. WHY? To cover their tracks because of to much falsifications. If you tell to many lies, then you need 10 x more to cover each lie and sooner or later one will soon be entangled in one's webs of lies.

We have been able to authentically established the status and ethnicity of the people living in Northern Scotland around 16 and 1700 AD. Now we are about to introduce you to the historicity of indentured Black Scots and Irish to America and the Caribbean. Including displaying Negroid looking Images for 3 more Stuart Descendants.
A Mulatto looking (Mixed Race), John Stewart, Seventh Earl of Galloway
Note: Oliver Cromwell was not directly descended from Thomas Cromwell himself but from Thomas's sister, Katherine, who had married Oliver's great-great-grandfather Morgan Williams, after which the family began adopting the Cromwell surname. Judging from his portraits, Oliver may well have been a Mulatto, yet he was responsible for the Genocide of Blacks in Ireland and Scotland.

As a reminder of what Cromwell did! From the book: White People, Indians, and Highlanders: Tribal Peoples and Colonial Encounters in Scotland and America by Colin G. Calloway.

Living at the borders of an expanding English empire, Highlanders and Indians confronted colonialism with all its variegated assaults on their autonomy, land, and culture. Calloway, the son of a Highland Scot and a renowned scholar of Native American history, is well poised to explore the tangled histories of these two groups.

Page 26: The Macleods of Dunvegan suffered huge casualties when Oliver Cromwell defeated the Scots at Worcester, and Cromwell transported hundreds of Scots prisoners as indentured servants to Virginia and the West Indies.

Cromwell invaded Scotland in 1650 and 1651 and built a fort at Inverness “to preserve the peace of the country, and keep the highlands in awe, which they effectually did all his time,” wrote Daniel Defoe, who toured the region in the 1720s.

Christina Snyder review, Quote: Calloway borrows his title from Georgia's founder James Oglethorpe, who raised a motley army of "White people, Indians, and highlanders" to fight against Spanish Floridians. In Oglethorpe's time, many Britons categorised Highland Scots and Indians as savage non-whites, pointing out that both held land communally, used kinship to structure their societies, and maintained warrior traditions. Highlanders and Indians, Calloway argues, did have much in common, but he emphasises their parallel and sometimes convergent historical experiences rather than their seemingly similar cultures.

Above: The Negro Head in the family crests of Bownell, Buckworth, Haliburton, Hallyburton, Soame and Stewart, Fairbairn Book of Crests - plate 121. It has been removed or deleted from the later editions of the book. It seems to be a familiar pattern not a coincident. But WHY? the evidence is overwhelming.
Henrietta Anne Stuart, daughter of Henrietta Maria & Charles I

Ireland History
During most of this time, the Irish Confederate Wars (another civil war), continued in Ireland, starting with the Irish Rebellion of 1641 and ending with the Cromwellian conquest of Ireland.

Its incidents had little or no direct connection with those of the English Civil War, but the wars were inextricably mixed with, and formed part of, a linked series of conflicts and civil wars between 1639 and 1652 in the kingdoms of England, Scotland, and Ireland, which at that time shared a monarch, but were distinct countries in political organisation.

These linked conflicts are also known as the Wars of the Three Kingdoms by some recent historians, aiming to have a unified overview, rather than treating parts of the other conflicts as a background to the English Civil War.

1625 - Charles I of England accedes to the English throne, and shortly after marries a French, Bourbon, Roman Catholic princess, Henrietta Maria. 1628 - Charles recalls Parliament; Parliament draws up Petition of Right which Charles reluctantly accepts. John Felton murders George Villiers in Portsmouth. 1642 - 23 February - Henrietta Maria goes to the Netherlands with Princess Mary and the crown jewels. 1649 - 9 March - Engager Duke of Hamilton, Royalist Earl of Holland, and Royalist Lord Capel were beheaded at Westminster

Royal Stuart, Family Crest
Figures for casualties during this period are unreliable, but some attempt has been made to provide rough estimates. In England, a conservative estimate is that roughly 100,000 people died from war-related disease during the three civil wars. Historical records count 84,830 dead from the wars themselves.

Counting in accidents and the two Bishops' wars, an estimate of 190,000 dead is achieved.

Figures for Scotland are more unreliable and should be treated with greater caution. Casualties include the deaths of prisoners-of-war in conditions that accelerated their deaths, with estimates of 10,000 prisoners not surviving or not returning home.

There are no figures to calculate how many died from war-related diseases, but if the same ratio of disease to battle deaths from English figures is applied to the Scottish figures, a not unreasonable estimate of 60,000 people is achieved. (8,000 captured during and immediately after the Battle of Worcester were deported to New England, Bermuda and the West Indies to work for landowners as indentured labourers).

Figures for Ireland are described as "miracles of conjecture". Certainly the devastation inflicted on Ireland was unbelievable, with the best estimate provided by Sir William Petty, the father of English demography. Although Petty's figures are the best available, they are still acknowledged as being tentative.
Family Crest of the Douglas family, Scotland, UK 
They do not include the estimate of 40,000 driven into exile, some of whom served as soldiers in European continental armies, while others were sold as indentured servants to New England and the West Indies.

Many of those sold to landowners in New England eventually prospered, but many of those sold to landowners in the West Indies were worked to death. Petty estimates that 112,000 Protestants were killed through plague, war and famine, and that 504,000 Catholics were killed, giving an estimated total of 618,000 dead.

These estimates indicate that England suffered a 3.7% loss of population, Scotland a loss of 6%, while Ireland suffered a loss of 41% of its population. Putting these numbers into the context of other catastrophes helps to understand the devastation to Ireland in particular. The Great Hunger of 1845–1852 resulted in a loss of 16% of the population, while during the Second World War the population of the Soviet Union fell by 16%. Above; the family crescent of another famous Black Clan in Scotland, UK, called Douglas.

The Black man on the right has disappeared from the modern crests. He would have been referred to as a wild Indian savage at that time. And below; one of the many modern family crest of the Douglas family. Note: Both the Black man and White man standing proudly by his side has vanished again.
One of the many modern family crest of the Douglas family

The English Interregnum was the period of parliamentary and military rule by the Lord Protector Oliver Cromwell under the Commonwealth of England after the English Civil War. It began with the overthrow, and execution, of Charles I in January 1649, and ended with the restoration of Charles II on May 29, 1660.

Whence the (‘Black Irish” of Jamaica? JOSEPH J. WILLIAMS, S.J., Ph.D., Litt. D., F.R.S.A., F.R.G.S., F.A.G.S. ($2.00, New York: Dial Press, 1932.)

Five years residence in Jamaica impressed Father Williams with the fact that the Jamaica Negroes were unlike all other Negro types that he had seen. Particularly among those of Gold Coast origin he found claims and remnants of Judaism. His resultant studies led to his Hebrewisms of West Africa (1930). But another outstanding fact was the large number of Negroes with pure Irish names.

These negroes could not be explained as descendants of slaves owned by early Irish colonists, for no such names appear among the land-owners in the survey of 1670.
John Stewart Earl of Traquir

So Father Williams turns to English records of the crushing of the Irish, by Cromwell, with consequent deportations of large numbers of Irish as bondmen or bond-maids to the West Indies-especially Barbados, where such names as Cavan, Collins, Connolly, Donovan, Duffey, Dunn, Grogan, Kelly, McCann, McSwiney, McDermott, Moriarity, O’Brien, O’Neal, O’Halloran, Walsh, abound in the old cemeteries.

Father Williams gives pictures of Jamaica negro children named Collins, Walsh, McKeon, McDermott, Burke, Mackey, McCormack, Kennedy. His bibliography on the deportations and barbarities includes 175 sources. Beyond this his 100-page monograph does not go.

Excerpts:
JAMAICA - ARRIVAL 1600S: The Irish arrived in Jamaica over 350 years ago in the mid-1600s at the time of British Lord Protector Oliver Cromwell's capture of Jamaica. When British Admirals Penn and Venables failed in their expedition to take Santo Domingo from the Spanish, they turned their attention to Jamaica, not wanting to return to Cromwell empty-handed.

With reinforcements from British-held Barbados (many of whom were Irish) they made quick work of dispatching the weak Spanish defence and soon realized that they needed workers to support their new prize. They looked eastward to islands already under British control, Barbados, St. Lucia, St. Kitts and Montserrat, and imported young, mainly male, bonded servants, many of whom were Irish.

In 1641 Ireland's population stood close to 1.5 million. Following a 1648 battle in Ireland known as the "Siege of Drogheda" in which Irish rebels were brutally subdued, Oliver's son, Henry, was named Major General in command of English forces in Ireland.
Estonian Negroid, White skin Blond hair

Under his jurisdiction, thousands of Irish men and women were shipped to the West Indies to provide a source of indentured labour. Between 1648 and 1655, over 12,000 political prisoners alone were sent to Barbados. This was the first set to come involuntarily as prior to that the Irish had willingly chosen to subject themselves to terms of indenture for the chance to start a new life in the New World upon completion of their contracts.

By 1652, Ireland's population had dwindled to a little over half a million famine, rebellion and forced deportation, all factors.Throughout the early years of the 1650s there was a push to send young men and women to the colonies in what the English believed was a "measure beneficial to the people removed, who might thus be made English and Christians.

And a great benefit to the West India sugar planters, who desired the men and boys for their bondsmen, and the women and Irish girls in a country where they had only Maroon women and Negresses to solace them" (Williams, 1932, pp. 10-11). The 13-year war from 1641-1654 had left behind large numbers of widows and deserted wives.

In addition, many Irish men, their properties confiscated by Cromwell had no means of making a living. By 1655 some 6,400 Irish had been shipped off when in March all orders to capture "all wanderers, men and women and other such Irish in their possession" were revoked (Williams, pp. 12-13). Modern-day Estonian Negroid, White skin, Blond hair, could some of the many of the Black Irish and Scots looked like this male or female?

End of part 6 of 7. The next blog 14/01/19: First arrival of the indentured Black Irish and Scots in the Caribbean and America., especially Jamaica and Barbados.


Thursday, 3 January 2019

Black, Hebrides, Scotland, Samuel Johnson, Scottish, Isle

The Journal of a tour to the Hebrides, 1773 AD
What lessons have we learned so far from delving into Black history researches that are based on falsified Caucasian narratives?

Let us expand further, by forensically using History, Philosophy, Psychology, Mentalism, and Logic, we have been able logically to solve the problem of truthfulness in researches, by logically and accurately working out the percentages of the probabilities of  truthfulness or falsehood, in individual Supposition, Scenario and article.

In part 1 of these articles, we introduced Thomas Cromwell via an article stating: It was Thomas Cromwell who destroyed all pieces of evidence of Black Rule in Britain? Article from the Daily Telegraph Media Group Limited Jan 2015.

Main Quote: No one can be sure of the exact figure, but it is estimated that the destruction started and legalised by Cromwell amounted to 97% of the English art then in existence.  Followed by: The British Library, which is full of thousands upon thousands of Illuminated Manuscripts, that looks very old and then posed the question that, if Thomas Cromwell destroyed 97% of Britain's artefacts, then most of those manuscripts are FAKE because they are almost completely devoid of Black people.

In addition, we displayed more realistic images and summaries of king Henry VIII, Queen Mary I, Queen Elizabeth I, Nenet boy, Anne Boleyn, and Majory mother of King Robert II of Scotland, the founder of the House of Stuart. In part 2 of these articles: We stated that nine Stewart monarchs ruled just Scotland from 1371 until 1603 and that after this there was a Union of the Crowns under James VI & I who had become the senior genealogical claimant to all of the holdings of the extinct House of Tudor. Followed by summarising and showing more realistic images of  King James VI & I, Mary Queen of Scots, Lord Stuart Darnley, John Erskine, Charles I and Henrietta Marie.

Dr Samuel Johnson
In part 3 of these articles: we displayed a more realistic image of Charles Stuart I. We also define the word "Swarthy" and applied the meaning of the description as written by the author Alison Weir, in relation to the ethnicity of Queen Elizabeth I and King Henry VIII.

Then summaries plus realistic and misleading images of Charles Stuart II, including the accurate description of his ethnicity by his mother,  Henrietta Marie. Followed by real-life event used in the "First Scenario" example of demonstrating the effects of the real-life event, pertaining to the status and ethnicity of Charles Stuart II and the nickname Black Boy, in which confusion reign supreme.

His status and ethnicity were portrayed from a Caucasian-looking king to Black Chimney sweeper, Black Sailor, Soldier, even a Black horse, and finally, he vanishes like noodle.

In part 4 of these articles: we displayed a more realistic and falsified image of James Francis Edward Stuart III, including summaries. We also confirmed the status and ethnicity of James Francis Edward Stuart III, while exposing modern French propaganda muddling his status.

Followed by real-life event used in the "Second Scenario part a and b", examples of demonstrating the effects of the real-life event, pertaining to the status and ethnicity of James Francis Edward Stuart and King George III, in which we debunked the denial of the authenticity, of the Barbados penny and confirm the identity of James Francis Edward Stuart III. Plus documented arguments  about"The myth of Scottish slaves in the Caribbean," or "The reality of Scottish slaves in the Caribbean," in the public domain, in which confusion reign supreme as usual, via blissfully falsified narratives. And now we are about to introduce you to Eyewitnesses Accounts about the Status and ethnicity of the people living in the Hebrides, Northern Scotland, UK, around 16 and 1700 AD.


Isle of Jura, Scotland
WARNING: The Journal of a tour to the Hebrides, with Samuel Johnson. By James Boswell 1810 edition (It should be noted that apparently all versions after 1810 and the “Project Gutenberg” version, have all references to Blacks deleted, so care should be taken in which version you buy or use.)

Dr. Samuel Johnson was also the Author of the English Dictionary with the aid of his manservant Frank Berber, a Black man.

Page 64: Gory, my lord's black servant, was sent as our guide, to conduct us to the high road. The circumstance of each of them having a black servant was another point of similarity between Johnson and Monboddo. I observed how curious it was to see an African in the north of Scotland, with little or no difference of manners from those of the natives. Dr. Johnson laughed to see Gory and Joseph riding together most cordially.

"Those two fellows, (said he,) one from Africa, the other from Bohemia, seem quite at home." Bohemia = Czech Republic with its capital in Prague. Ancient Black Celts land before the Caucasian Slav invasion from Central Asia.
Isle of Colonsay, Scotland


Page 121: We came to a rich green valley, comparatively speaking, and stopped a while to let our horses rest and eat grass. We soon afterward came to Auchnasheal, a kind of rural village, a number of cottages being built together, as we saw all along in the Highlands.

We passed many miles this day without seeing a house, but only little summer-huts called shillings. Evan Campbell, servant to Mr. Murchison, fastor to the Laird of Macleod in Glenelg, ran along with us today. He was a very obliging fellow. At Auchnasheal, we sat down on a green turf-seat at the end of a house; they brought us out two wooden dishes of milk, which we tasted. One of them was frothed like a syllabub. Honour

Page 122: We had a considerable circle about us, men, women and children, all M'Craas, (Macraes) Lord Seaforth's people. Not one of them could speak English. I observed to Dr. Johnson, it was much the same as being with a tribe of Indians. — Johnson, " Yes, sir; but not so terrifying."

I gave all who chose it, snuff and tobacco. Governor Trapaud had made us buy a quantity at Fort Augustus, and put them up in small parcels.
 Isle of Gigha, Scotland

I also gave each person a bit of wheat bread, which they had never tasted before. I then gave a penny apiece to each child.

I told Dr. Johnson of this; upon which he called to Joseph and our guides, for change for a shilling, and declared that he would distribute among the children. Upon this being announced in Erse (Scottish Gaelic), there was a great stir.

Page 123: There was great diversity in the faces of the circle around us: Some were as black and wild in their appearance as any American savages whatever. One woman was as comely almost as the figure of Sappho, as we see it painted.

From the Appin Regiment/Appin Historical Society: A Description of THE WESTERN ISLANDS of Scotland (CIRCA 1695) By Martin Martin, Gent. Including A Voyage to St. Kilda By the same author and A Description Of THE WESTERN ISLES Of Scotland By Sir Donald Monro. Edited with Introduction by Donald J. Macleod, O.B.E., M.A., D. Litt., Officer d'Académie Foreword:
Isle of Skye, Scotland

The Complexion of the Islanders of the Isle of Jura: The natives here are very well proportioned, being generally black of complexion and free from bodily imperfections. They speak the Irish language, and wear the plaid, bonnet, etc., as other islanders.

The Complexion of the Islanders of the Isle of Colonsay: The inhabitants are generally well proportioned, and of a black complexion; they speak only the Irish tongue, and use the habit, diet etc., that is used in the Western Isles: They are all Protestants, and observe the festivals of Christmas, Easter, and Good Friday; but the women-only observe the festival of the nativity of the Blessed Virgin. Kilouran is the principal church in this isle, and the village in which this church is, hath its name from it.

The Complexion of the Islanders of the Isle of Gigha:The inhabitants are all Protestants, and speak the Irish tongue generally, there being but few that speak English; they are grave and reserved in their conversation; they are accustomed not to bury on Friday; they are fair or brown in complexion, and use the same habit, diet, etc., that is made use of in the adjacent continent and isles. There is only one inn in this isle.
Isle of Arran, Scotland
The Complexion of the Islanders of the Isle of Skye: The inhabitants of this isle are generally well proportioned, and their complexion is for the most part black. They are not obliged to art in forming their bodies, for nature never fails to act her part bountifully to them; and perhaps there is no part of the habitable globe where so few bodily imperfections are to be seen, nor any children that go more early.

I have observed several of them walk alone before they were ten months old; they are bathed all over every morning and evening, some in cold, some in warm water, but the latter is most commonly used and they wear nothing straight about them.
A page from Bleu's map of Lewis and Harris, Scotland 1654 AD.
The mother generally suckles the child, failing of which a nurse is provided, for they seldom bring up any by hand; they give new-born infants fresh butter to take away the miconium, and this they do for several days; they taste neither sugar, nor cinnamon, nor have they any daily allowance of sack bestowed on them, as the custom is elsewhere, nor is the nurse allowed to taste ale.

On the north-west side of Strath lies that part of Skye called Macleod’s Country, possessed by Macleod. Genealogists say he is lineally descended from Leod, son to the Black Prince of Man. He is head of an ancient tribe.
 Bleu's map of Lewis and Harris, Scotland 1654 AD


The Complexion of the Islanders of the Isle of Arran: The inhabitants of this island are composed of several tribes. The most ancient family among them is by the natives reckoned to be MacLouis, which in the ancient language signifies the son of Lewis.

They own themselves to be descended of French parentage. Their surname in English is Fullerton, and their title Kirk-Mitchell, the place of their residence. If tradition be true, this little family is said to be of 700 years standing.

The present possessor obliged me with the sight of his old and new charters, by which he is one of the king’s coroners within this island, and as such he hath a halbert peculiar to his office. He has his right of late from the family of Hamilton, wherein his title and perquisites of the coroner are confirmed to him and his heirs.

He is obliged to have three men to attend him upon all public emergencies, and he is bound by his office to pursue all malefactors and to deliver them to the steward, or in his absence to the next judge.
Map of Isle of Lewis and Harris, modern-day Scotland, UK

And if any of the inhabitants refuse to pay their rents at the usual term, the coroner is bound to take him personally or to seize his goods.

And if it should happen that the coroner with his retinue of three men is not sufficient to put his office in execution, then he summons all the inhabitants to concur with him; and immediately they rendezvous to the place, where he fixes his coroner’s staff.

The perquisites due to the coroner are a firelet or bushel of oats and a lamb from every village in the Isle, both which are punctually paid him at the ordinary terms.

The inhabitants of this isle are well proportioned, generally brown, and some of a black complexion. They enjoy a good state of health and have a genius for all callings or employment, though they have but few mechanics. They wear the same habit with those of the nearest Isles and are very civil. They all speak the Irish language, yet the English tongue prevails on the east side, and ordinarily, the ministers preach in it, and in Irish on the west side. Their ordinary asseveration is by Nale, for I did not hear any oath in the island.

The Pygmies Isle (Recovered bones of Pygmies): The Pygmies Isle or Luchraban (Martin's 'Lusbirdan') near the Butt of Lewis. It is also located on most of the early maps, such a Bleu's map of Lewis and Harris (1654), as 'Ylen Dunibeg', Eilean nan Daoine Beaga - the Island of the Little People. The English poet Collins, in an Ode of 1749, refers to the 'Herbid Isle... in whose small vaults a pygmy folk is found'. This assertion was also confirmed in "Journal of the Royal Institution of Cornwall 1907 AD", Footprint of Vanished Races in Cornwall:

Page 282, second paragraph: "Cornwall, then, was in the early days of the Neolithic age, inhabited by a race of pygmies, like the Bushmen of South Africa, and whom for convenience, I shall call the Piskey-Dwarfs." Page 282, third paragraph: M. De Mortillet figured out their "diminutive half-an-inch arrow-heads," were found in France, Kitchen-midden, Hastings, England, and Rev. Reginald Gatty found large numbers of them in Yorkshire, England, including Germany and Poland.

End of part 5 of 7. The next blog 08/01/19: Black Irish indentures in Jamaica, USA, Barbados and the rest of the Caribbean.


Tuesday, 1 January 2019

James II & VII, James Francis Edward Stuart, House of Stuart

Date of the "Thirty years war" and German Genocide of Blacks (1618–1648)
Dates of the British civil wars and British Genocide of Blacks (1639 - 1652), (1689), (1715 - 1745):

Portrait of a Caucasian looking James II & VII
James II & VII, House of Stuart, (14 October 1633O.S. – 16 September 1701) was King of England and King of Ireland as James II and King of Scots as James VII, from 6 February 1685. He was the last Catholic monarch to reign over the Kingdoms of England, Scotland, and Ireland.

Members of Britain's political and religious elite increasingly opposed him for being pro-French and pro-Catholic, and for his designs on becoming an absolute monarch.

When he produced a Catholic heir, the tension exploded, and leading nobles called on William III of Orange (his son-in-law and nephew) to land an invasion army from the Netherlands, which he did.

James fled England (and thus was held to have abdicated) in the Glorious Revolution of 1688. He was replaced by William of Orange who became king as William III, ruling jointly with his wife (James's daughter) Mary II.

The Glorious Revolution also called the Revolution of 1688, is the overthrow of King James II of England (James VII of Scotland and James II of Ireland) by a union of English Parliamentarians with the Dutch stadtholder William III of Orange-Nassau (William of Orange). William's successful invasion of England with a Dutch fleet and army led to his ascending the English throne as William III of England jointly with his wife Mary II of England.

James Francis Edward Stuart son of  James II - CONFIRMED!
Thus William and Mary, both Protestants, became joint rulers in 1689. James made one serious attempt to recover his crowns when he landed in Ireland in 1689 but, after the defeat of the Jacobite forces by the Williamite forces at the Battle of the Boyne in the summer of 1690, James returned to France.

He lived out the rest of his life as a pretender at a court sponsored by his cousin and ally, King Louis XIV.

The Jacobite Wars - No accurate estimate of causalities: The Jacobite Risings were a series of uprisings, rebellions, and wars in Great Britain and Ireland occurring between 1688 and 1746.

The uprisings were aimed at returning James VII of Scotland and II of England, and later his descendants of the House of Stuart, to the throne after he was deposed by Parliament during the Glorious Revolution. The series of conflicts takes its name from Jacobus, the Latin form of James.

The major Jacobite Risings were called the Jacobite Rebellions by the ruling governments. The "First Jacobite Rebellion" and "Second Jacobite Rebellion" were known respectively as "The Fifteen" and "The Forty-Five", after the years in which they occurred (1715 and 1745).

Although each Jacobite rising had unique features, they were part of a larger series of military campaigns by Jacobites attempting to restore the Stuart kings to the thrones of Scotland and England (and after 1707, Great Britain). James was deposed in 1688 and the thrones were claimed by his daughter Mary II jointly with her husband, the Dutch-born William of Orange.

After the House of Hanover succeeded to the British throne in 1714, the risings continued and intensified. They continued until the last Jacobite Rebellion ("the Forty-Five"), led by Charles Edward Stuart (the Young Pretender), who was soundly defeated at the Battle of Culloden in 1746. This ended any realistic hope of a Stuart restoration.
French Propaganda about James Francis Edward Stuart III
James Francis Edward Stuart - CONFIRMED! James Francis Edward, Prince of Wales (the Chevalier de St George, "The King Over the Water", "The Old Pretender" or "The Old Chevalier"; (1688–1766) was the son of the deposed James II of England and Ireland (James VII of Scotland). As such, he claimed the English, Scottish and Irish thrones (as James III of England and Ireland and James VIII of Scotland) from the death of his father in 1701, when he was recognised as the king of England, Scotland and Ireland by his cousin Louis XIV of France.

Obviously, the Black Scottish people were incredibly loyal to their legitimate Black kings. Thus while their kings were in exile, there was a great yearning for pictures of them. Troy and his assistants serviced this need with unknown quantities of portraits of them.

Even though many people took part in painting those portraits, they would all have looked as much alike as humanly possible, with regards to the person's features, though backgrounds and clothing could change. This portrait, like the Holy Roman Empire Emperor Charles V portrait, was likely hidden away, and thus escaped whitewashed Caucasian type destruction with the rest. The White man as James below, may, or may not be a real person. In any case, it is part of the conspiracy of the Caucasian type narratives to create fake artefacts to replace the real ones, in support of the fake history the Caucasian have created to explain their position of rule.

Fake James Francis Edward Stuart III
Following his death in 1766, he was succeeded by his son Charles Edward Stuart in the Jacobite Succession. Had his father not been deposed, there would have been only two monarchs during his lifetime; his father and himself. In reality, there were seven; his father, William III, Mary II, Anne, George I, George II and George III.

Although the ruling Protestant Stuarts died out with his half-sister, Queen Anne, the last remaining Stuarts were James and his sons, and their endeavours to reclaim the throne while remaining devoted to their Catholic faith are remembered in history as Jacobitism.

Most Truths is "half-false" and most Falsehoods is "half-truth". These statements are ambiguous, unspecific and neither here nor there, at first without dissembling them any further.

However, we will prove beyond any reasonable doubt that these statements can be concise, precise, specific, unambiguous and accurate in certain suppositions. For example, the argument between authors and general members of the public pertaining to "The myth of Scottish slaves in the Caribbean", or "The reality of Scottish slaves in the Caribbean". However, both titles are "half-false" and "half-true".

These authors are both spectacularly wrong in relation to indentured Black Scots (not slaves), Black Scots and Black Scottish aristocrats. They assumed just because they are unaware of black people who had been living in Scotland for thousands of years before them, they physically did not exist.

It is quite frightening how little all these authors, as well the general public knew about Scottish black history. In a bite-size and piece by piece, we will expose this lack of knowledge via their argument, which is useful to them in their assertions but totally misrepresented in ours. Second Scenario part a:
The Barbados Penny, Depicting Negro Looking King George III, House of Hanover 
Even more so, the Caucasian type narrative has created fake portraits and statues of their Black Kings, depicting them falsely as Caucasians. But sometimes, innocuous-seeming remnants survived and were overlooked. When they are discovered, the Caucasian type narrative concocted outrageously stupid scenarios to explain their existence. Such is the case with the Barbados Penny:

The Caucasian type historians want us to believe that they would continually mint coins with the head of one of their chattel Slaves, in Kingly fashion, wearing the sacred symbol of the British Empire and People, the British crown, and later deny these coins authenticity by citing forgery. Which self-respecting forger, past or present, would forge coins and in getting the racial identity spectacularly wrong, hopes to prosper, from such a terrible forgery? The very same Slaves who when they were not brutalising or killing them, they worried that the Slaves would kill them.
The Regal Circlet Crown of Queen Victoria 1819 - 1901 AD
And the most Alarming and Disturbing things about the image of Caucasian looking James Francis Edward Stuart III and James II is that they would be the portrait hanging on 99% of the Schools, Colleges, and Universities around the world now. It is another case of the 6 Ds, Deceitful, Deceptive, Dishonest, Dis-informative, Dumb and Dubious, including the propaganda of portraying him as a mere Painter by the French.

King George III, Mulatto looking
Let us not forget that Caucasian type narratives have also claimed to be Egyptians and Persians, as well as other original people, in environments where a Caucasian in the native clothing could not survive the Sun.

Just like they came up with a fake explanation for their Whiteness - Vitamin D, Balderdash and Piffle!

Second Scenario part b: The White Slaves narrative: The myth of Scottish slaves in the Caribbean is a sub-set of a narrative more commonly associated with the Irish in colonial America.

It has been underpinned by two polemical books: Theodore W. Allen’s The Invention of the White Race and more recently, Don Jordan and Michael Walsh’s White Cargo: The Forgotten History of Britain’s White Slaves in America. The authors were not professional historians. Allen was a writer and activist.

Jordan is a television director and Walsh a journalist, which perhaps explains the sensationalist interpretations of White Cargo.

The American historian Michael Guasco recently suggested the text should be read in ‘conjunction with more analytical and thoroughly contextualised works’ – a diplomatic way of urging caution when considering the authors’ conclusions. So, I had a look. Chapter sixteen concerns the Jacobites forcibly transported from Scotland after the uprisings in 1715 and 1746 who, according to the authors, were sometimes enslaved: those sent to the Caribbean were treated worse than those sent to America.

Whitened Bonnie Prince Charlie or the Young Pretender,
Son of James Francis Edward Stuart III, the Old Pretender.
There is no question that Jacobites were harshly dealt within what was a concerted attack on the Highland way of life – but they were never regarded or treated as chattel slaves.

Ironically, the White Cargo bibliography includes two books written by the late Anglo-Canadian journalist, John Prebble. According to Tom Devine, it is difficult to differentiate in Prebble’s work what was ‘based on reasonable research and what was the product of the imagination’.

Prebble’s ‘victim histories’ of Scotland (Glencoe, Culloden, The Highland Clearances and Darien) sold in huge numbers from the 1960s onward; exemplars of the Scottish school of pseudo-historio-graphical victimology. -Modern academics have added more nuance.

 For example, Darien (1698-1700) was indeed a disaster for Scotland and deliberate lack of support from the English in the Caribbean contributed to the death of many Scots. Whilst the slant of Prebble’s books defined a generation of victim-hood, popular histories have been replaced by online blogs. Elizabeth McQuillan’s:  ‘The hidden Scots victims of the slave trade’ in the Caledonian Mercury is completely devoid of any relevant historical evidence or analysis. Incredibly, after repeating the ‘white slaves myth’, the article suggests that ‘pressure groups [in Scotland] were looking for an official apology’ as their ancestors were white slaves.

Fake Painting about the Jacobite war
But let’s not forget the poorly planned venture represented a failed attempt at Scottish colonisation. Indeed, one scheme proposed by the Duke of Hamilton at Darien sought to import slaves to be worked to death in the gold mines of Panama.

This was not some romantic quest to establish a new society based upon Utopian socialist principles. It was a mercantilist venture designed to improve personal fortunes and Scotland’s balance of trade through colonisation and exploitation.

It seems almost embarrassing that the article ends with Robert Burns’s The Slaves Lament which concerns the African slave trade from Senegal to Virginia (a song he almost certainly didn’t author, according to Glasgow University experts. However, he nearly made a trip to Jamaica as a slave plantation overseer in 1786). Above: Fake Whitened painting depicting a scene from one of the Jacobite War.

This type of historical blog enters an echo-chamber of misinformation cited as credible sources, sometimes in response to articles about migration or the Scottish role in slavery. The ‘white slaves myth’, based upon weak foundations flourishes in the unchecked environment of the Internet. For those familiar with Hogan’s Law, this is nothing new.
A Whitened Painting of a Jacobite Royal Family, note the black boy depicted in the background
Liam Hogan has written articles on the myth of the Irish slaves, a myth which has been hijacked in America by right-wing groups and white supremacists to deflect from the legacy of black racialised chattel slavery and the ongoing quest for reparations in America. The Scottish white slaves strand differs from the Irish version in one important way. Whilst the Irish slaves myth has been used to cultivate white victimhood in America, the Scottish version is used mainly to deflect from the wider historical narrative of Scots involvement with British imperialism and specifically Caribbean slavery.

It wisnae us – white Scots were slaves first. It wisnae us – it was English. It wisnae us – it was the rich landowners. It wisnae us – the working classes weren’t involved. It wisnae us – it happened 200 years ago. Repeat ad nauseum. The end of the arguments they are having among themselves. Above: A Whitened Painting of a Jacobite Royal Family, note the black boy depicted in the background.

These aristocrats in England and Europe must really love young male Negro boys. Their explanation for this young male Negro boy in the painting, as a servant or a slave. at least they are consistent with their lies lol. End of part 4 of 7. The next blog 04/01/19: The Status and Ethnicity of the People of the Hebrides, Northern-Scotland, UK, and Black Indentures.