History of black people in Britain



A lot of racists get really upset by the idea that Britain has had a Black and ethnic minority population for hundreds of years. Recently a number of TV programmes and films set in the past have included Black or mixed-race characters or actors, which has for some reason upset a few people who cling to a myth of Britain as a white nation. These racists deny that there were Black people in the past and claim to find such representations unrealistic or unbelievable, calling them an attempt "to re-write history to achieve [the left's] unhinged political agenda" according to far-right website Infowars.

Historical evidence shows that Britain has had a small Black population for much of its history: in the Roman era, soldiers from all over the Roman Empire (including Africa) were posted there. Since the late Medieval era, when Britain was trading with, exploring, and exploiting much of the world, people of all races came or were brought there: as slaves, sailors, traders, diplomats, travellers, anthropological "specimens", or for other reasons. Some stayed there, married locals, and started families, while others died tragically, returned home, or traveled elsewhere in the empire.

Blacks, Amazigh, Moors, Ethiopians?
The matter is complicated by changing notions of race and Blackness (race is a social construct not a biological fact). Classical and Renaissance sources often refer to Africans indiscriminately as "Moors" whether of Mediterranean or sub-Saharan origin. Documents from the Elizabethan era may refer to people as negra, niger, or similar forms, which we suppose means the same as "Black". In some cases, there are records of origin and ethnic group that are sufficient to identify ethnicity with reasonable accuracy, or personal accounts in which people provide a self-description. In other cases we may have descriptions of someone's appearance, which may or may not be accurate (a "swarthy" appearance can be elevated to "Beethoven was Black" memes ).

The debate doesn't include the southern European or Jewish people, because nobody would deny their presence (except when Edward I threw the Jewish people out). But it's clear that people from much further afield lived in what is now the UK for centuries.

History
Many historical studies have been conducted on Black Britons, and much evidence presented.

Roman Empire
The Roman army recruited from throughout its empire and often posted soldiers far from their homeland. Historical figures include, a north African Amazigh who was governor of Roman Britain from 139 to 142 CE, and an unnamed Ethiopian recorded as meeting the emperor Septimius Severus at Hadrian's Wall (Septimius visited Britain in 208-211 CE). Other records include a tombstone in South Shields of a 20-year-old freed slave "Moor by race", and a unit of 500 "Moors" posted at the fort of Aballava near Burgh by Sands in Cumbria in the 3rd century CE. As noted above, "Moor" is a vague term but they certainly weren't Anglo-Saxon.

Slaves
In the 17th and 18th centuries, Black enslaved people were brought from colonies such as North America to Britain. Slavery was formally abolished in England and Wales in 1772, with upwards of 10,000 slaves (mainly of African origin) freed as a result.

Various freed slaves also made their way from the colonies. Ignatius Sancho (c. 1729-1780) was in his youth a Black enslaved man in Greenwich, England, but later a shopkeeper, composer, and man of letters who lived with his family in London and corresponded with leading literary figures of the age. Olaudah Equiano (c. 1745-1797), taken by slavers from Imo state, Nigeria, bought his freedom and moved to England around 1768, later living in Cambridgeshire and Middlesex, married to a British woman.

Diplomats
A group of 17 north Africans visited Britain with ambassador Abd el-Ouahed ben Messaoud ben Mohammed Anoun in 1600. Realms including the Barbary Coast, Ottoman Empire, and Ethiopia sent ambassadors to Europe in the Renaissance and early modern era, sometimes linked to the Prester John myth (Pepin the Short entertained an as early as 768 CE). Elizabethan Britain had diplomatic relations with the Ottoman Empire. Joseph Jenkins Roberts, President of Liberia, made an official visit to the UK in 1848.

Anthropological specimens
A number of people were brought to western Europe from distant lands as "living exhibits" or "living specimens" to be studied or shown to the public like animals in a zoo. These included Omai, brought from Tahiti to George III's court, and Saartjie Baartman, the "Hottentot Venus", displayed in London in 1810.

Travellers
As trade routes opened up, it became increasingly possible for travellers not only to go from Britain around the world, but to make the opposite journey, and visit the British Isles from distant lands. a Chinese convert to Christianity, visited Britain in 1685 as part of a Jesuit mission and met King James II; he is reportedly the first person from China to have visited what's now the UK. The Ojibwan missionary (aka Kahkewāquonāby) visited Britain in the 1840s raising money to spread the Christian message in North America.

The pioneering nurse Mary Seacole, the child of a free, Black Jamaican woman and a white Scottish soldier, spent several years in London in the mid 19th century. Hans Zakaeus aka John Sakeouse was an Inuit who stowed away on a whaling ship and arrived in Leith, Scotland in 1816; he became a celebrity with his displays of canoeing prowess before accompanying John Ross on an unsuccessful voyage of exploration to the Arctic (Ross thought he saw mountains blocking his path through Lancaster Sound and turned back, thereby failing to discover the Northwest Passage) and later dying in Edinburgh.

Miscellaneous people
Historian Miranda Kaufmann found evidence of Black people in the 16th century (before the slave trade became a major industry) living in many parts of Britain doing many different jobs: ship salvage diver, weaver, farmer, and prostitute. Elizabeth I had a Black maidservant, although in 1596 she complained "there are of late divers blackmoores brought into this realm, of which kind of people there are allready here to manie".

Media depictions
Various TV shows and films portraying Black characters have attracted opprobrium. Often this is based on a wider anti-white conspiracy theory: "the BBC is full of self hating anti-White cultural Marxists which is why I will never, ever give them a cent." Far-right website Biased BBC is typical, with commentators suggesting "The BBC is revising history to suit its own anti-White narrative". On the other hand, some critics suggest organisations like the BBC only do it out of tokenism to cover up their racism and the whiteness of their management. So it's because they hate whites and because they hate Black people?

Some criticisms of individual characters may be justified, as there is a tendency for ethnic minority characters to fall into cliches such as the "magical or numinous Black person", animalistic Black man/savage, or hypersexualised mixed-race woman. But usually it's easy to differentiate those concerned about stereotyping from those "concerned" about Black people appearing "so frequently" in the media.

Some examples follow.

Merlin
Merlin, a BBC TV drama about King Arthur included the mixed-race actor Angel Coulby playing Guinevere (depicted as a servant girl) and other Black characters. Amongst other criticisms, some people claimed this was historically inaccurate. From its 12th century origins Arthurian legend was always full of anachronisms. And sometimes dragons.

Doctor Who
Doctor Who is a bête noire of the gammon-faced right for its liberal, inclusive politics, and has shown both Black people in British historical settings, and Black travellers from the present day passing unremarked upon in past eras. At the same time, the show was criticised for racism until quite recently.

a respected actor and writer and creator of the BBC show Sherlock, expressed unease at the presence of a Black man in the Victorian-era British army in one episode, "Empress of Mars", but reportedly he changed his mind when he heard that there was at least one real-life Black soldier in the British army, Jimmy Durham from Sudan who was "adopted" by a regiment as a boy and enlisted in the 1890s.

BBC Schools
A 2017 educational program for BBC Schools depicted a high-ranking Black Roman soldier. The distinguished classicist defended the show, receiving a torrent of misogynistic abuse, as well as opposition from author Nassim Nicholas Taleb, who blamed political correctness and said, "Scholarship is dead in the UK." She innocently called his most famous book Black Swan a "pop risk book", and he replied, "I get more academic citations per year than you got all your life!" He also claimed "UK pol. cor. Gestapo managed to destroy EVERY researcher they went after, including Tim Hunt (Nobel) They can't do NOTHING to me". Beard replied "Afraid Prof Taleb has returned to attack.I have to say I dont think UK academic life IS broken.Sorry if his feelings are hurt; maybe move on". Beard gave examples including and others mentioned above, while explaining that the precise ethnicity of people from classical history isn't easily available to us.

The Hollow Crown
Sophie Okonedo (who has Nigerian and Jewish ancestors) was cast as Margaret of Anjou, wife of the title character in a TV adaptation of Shakespeare's Henry VI, although she didn't actually play a Black character. This was attacked by UKIP councillor Chris Wood, who posted as evidence a picture of a snow-white Margaret from a manuscript which described her ability to transform to a swan and back. He didn't seem to mind the swan thing.

Little Dorrit
Tattycoram in the BBC's 2008 adaptation of Dickens' Little Dorrit was portrayed by Freema Agyeman.

Robin Hood
Various dramatisations of of the myth of Robin Hood have included non-white characters, from the American 1991 Kevin Costner film to the 2006 BBC series starring Jonas Armstrong, and even parodies like the BBC's children's program Maid Marian and Her Merry Men.

Colourblind casting
The debate has linked with issues on colourblind casting, although technically the two are separate: the race or ethnicity of a character is separate from that of the actor. A Black actor can play a white character without playing them as Black (e.g. a Black actor playing Henry V wouldn't rewrite the play to explain the racial disparity, but might trust audiences to ignore their race), while particularly in animation a Black character may be played/voiced by a white actor. It is argued that casting Black people makes a show set in the past not "believable"; but what people consider believable is conditioned by media representations (which are how most people get their sense of what the past is like); and many things in historical dramas are unbelievable.

Classic literature with Black characters
Despite the view that literature of the past was all-white, various classics of British literature include Black or mixed-race characters, albeit that this introduces additional problems of racist depictions in works that are hundreds of years old. This includes William Makepeace Thackeray's Vanity Fair (1848), with its highly stereotypical characters Sambo (sometimes bowdlerised to Sam) and Miss Schwartz, respectively a Black slave and a part-Black, part-Jewish heiress. Bertha Mason, the first Mrs Rochester in Jane Eyre and archetypal "madwoman in the attic", was of mixed race from Jamaica. Jane Austen's unfinished novel Sanditon included a number of West Indians visiting Britain, including a young "half mulatto" woman, Miss Lambe.

Shakespeare set many of his plays in exotic and inaccurate locations around the known world, where Black people may have been common: this includes Othello, set around the Mediterranean with a Moorish title character; Caliban in The Tempest (ostensibly set in the Mediterranean but drawing extensively on discourse about the Caribbean and other imperial discoveries); and Aaron the Moor in Titus Andronicus. British and Irish literature has long had an interest in exotic tales of faraway lands, including Gothic fiction (William Beckwith's Vathek, 1786, drew on the Arabian Nights for its vaguely Middle Eastern setting), while foreign settings are common in satire, as in Gulliver's Travels or Gilbert and Sullivan's operetta The Mikado (set in a stylized version of Japan). Narratives about the evils of the slave trade were also common from the late 18th century. And adventure stories set in far-off lands were popular from Robinson Crusoe (1719) or before. The exotic settings have perhaps more often served as a device to freely satirize British society, as is the case with The Mikado, than to actually portray the exotic.



Questionable tales
There are also stories about Black people in British history that are less probable, sometimes intended to discredit people by claiming non-white ancestry.

Charlotte of Mecklenburg-Strelitz
(1744-1818), wife of king George III (of the madness and losing the USA) and grandmother of Queen Victoria, was descended from Margarita de Castro e Souza, a 15th century Portuguese noble, who herself claimed descent from Alfonso III of Portugal and his mistress ; some sources claim Madragana was a Moor. Coupled with reports that Charlotte had darker than average skin, looked like a "mulatto" according to contemporary sources, is depicted with vaguely African features in Allan Ramsay's 1761 portrait, and opposed the slave trade, this has led to speculation that Charlotte was Black or of mixed race. It wouldn't be surprising for someone with pre-Reconquista Portuguese ancestry to have some north African blood, or simply to have a Mediterranean skin and hair colouring, but even if the account is true, her fraction of Moorish ancestry was tiny.