Nanny of the Maroons and POS: Difference between pages

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'''POS''' or '''PoS''' may refer to:
{{slavery}}
*[[Parent Over Shoulder]], used on MSN Messenger to say that their parent is looking at what is being written
'''Nanny of the Maroons''', also known as '''Queen Nanny''' and '''Granny Nanny''', a [[Order of National Hero|National Hero of Jamaica]]<ref name=heroes>[http://www.jis.gov.jm/special_sections/Heroes/Heroes1.htm#Nanny Government of Jamaica, national heroes listing]</ref>, was a well-known leader of the [[Jamaican Maroons]] in the eighteenth century. Contemporary documents refer to her as the "rebels (sic) old [[obeah]] woman," and they legally grant "Nanny and the people now residing with her and their heirs . . . a certain parcel of Land containing five hundred acres in the parish of Portland . . ." (quoted in Campbell 177, 175). [[Nanny Town]] was founded on this land. Most of what we know about Nanny comes from the oral tradition, and many claims about her cannot be verified with traditional historical evidence of the textual or empirical sort.
* [[Polycystic ovary syndrome]], a disease of the ovaries
* [[Point of sale]], the location where a business transaction occurs
** [[EFTPOS]] or [[POS terminal]], a device by which sales transactions can be ''directly'' debited to the customer's bank account
* [[Point of service plan]], a type of health insurance in which patients choose their doctor and he/she will be their "point of service"
*[[Packet over SONET/SDH]], a communications protocol for transferring packets over fiber networks
* [[Piarco International Airport]] (IATA airport code: POS)
* [[Pos chess program|Pos]] (also known as Poseidon), a chess playing program
* [[Proceedings of Science]], an electronic publishing service for proceedings of scientific conferences
* [[SNCF TGV POS]], a French high-speed train
* Product of Sums: see [[Canonical form (Boolean algebra)#Maxterms|maxterms]]
* [[P/OS]], the Professional Operating System sold by Digital Equipment Corporation for their PRO-300, PRO-350, and PRO-380 PDP-11-compatible line of personal computers
* [[PERQ#Operating systems|Perq Operating System]]
* [[Post Office Sorting Van]], a type of rail vehicle used in a Travelling Post Office train
* [[P.O.S.]], a hip-hop artist based in Minneapolis, Minnesota
* [[Pain of Salvation]], a Swedish progressive metal band
* [[Priory of Sion]], a fictitious secret society
* [[Part of speech]], the role that a word or phrase plays in a sentence
* [[Piece of shit]], a profanity saying something is of poor quality or broken
* [[Probability]] of success
* [[Pomona (Amtrak station)]], California, United States; Amtrak station code POS


{{disambig}}
==Maroons==
[[Jamaican Maroons]] originally included former slaves who ran away from the Spanish and intermarried with the native islanders in the rugged, mountainous region of the Jamaican interior. Under British rule, some more slaves were able to escape from plantations to join the two main bands of Maroons in Jamaica: Leeward and Windward Maroons, headed respectively by Nanny of the Maroons and Captain Cudjoe.
'Nanny', as she is widely known, was infact an Okomfo sent by her elders from Ghana, her real name is 'Queen Nana Afua'.


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==Family==
[[es:POS]]
Due to the cruel treatment of female slaves by plantation owners, Nanny made her decision to escape along with her five brothers. The most famous of her brothers, Cudjoe, went on to lead many more slave rebellions in Jamaica with the aid of her other brothers Accompong, Johnny, Cudjoe and Quao.<ref name="youth-culture">[http://www.moec.gov.jm/heroes/nannycont.htm Jamaican Ministry of Education, Youth & Culture: Jamaica's National Heroes]</ref>
[[fr:POS]]

[[ko:POS]]
The family then made the decision to split up in order to be able to organize more Maroons than was possible if they stuck together. Therefore, Cudjoe went to St. James and organized a village, which was later named [[Cudjoe Town]]. Accompong went to St. Elizabeth, while Nanny and Quao made their way to Portland.
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[[ja:POS]]
==Nanny Town==
[[pl:POS]]
By 1720, Nanny and Quao had organized and gained control of this town of Maroons located in the Blue Mountains. It was around this time that the town was given the title of [[Nanny Town]]. Nanny Town encompassed more than 600 acres (2.4&nbsp;km²) of land for the runaway slaves to settle, where they could domesticate animals and grow crops. Due to the town being led by Nanny and Quao, it was organized very similar to a typical [[Ashanti]] [[tribe]] in [[Africa]].
[[zh:POS]]

The Maroons were able to survive on the mountains by sending traders to the cities to exchange food for weapons and cloth. The Maroons were also known for raiding plantations for weapons and food, burning the plantation, and leading the slaves back to Nanny Town. There is no record that Nanny ever returned runaway slaves to the plantations, though some Maroons did so as a condition of their treaty with the British colonists.

Nanny Town was an excellent location for a stronghold, because it overlooked Stony River via a 900 foot (270 m) ridge making a surprise attack by the British virtually impossible<ref name="youth-culture"/>. The Maroons at Nanny town also organized look-outs for such an attack as well as designated warriors who could be summoned by the sound of a horn called an [[Abeng]].

Nanny was very adept at organizing plans to free slaves. Over the span of 50 years, Nanny has been credited with freeing over 800 slaves <ref name="youth-culture"/>. Nanny also helped these slaves remain free and healthy due to her vast knowledge of herbs and her role as a spiritual leader.

==Nanny's death and the downfall of Nanny Town==

In the ''Journal of the Assembly of Jamaica'', 29–30 March 1733, we find a citation for "resolution, bravery and fidelity" awarded to "loyal slaves . . . under the command of Captain Sambo," namely William Cuffee, who was rewarded for having fought the Maroons in the First Maroon War and who is called "a very good party Negro, having killed Nanny, the rebels (sic) old obeah woman" (quoted in Campbell 177). These hired soldiers were known as "Black Shots" (Campbell 37). Some scholars raise the possibility that more than one leader named Nanny existed, along with the possibility that Cuffee was lying to get a reward, this gives us an approximate death date for Nanny of the Maroons. Considering the use of the word "old," we can only assume that Nanny was born in the seventeenth century.

Between 1728 and 1734, [[Nanny Town]] was attacked by the British time and time again. After Nanny's death (circa 1733), the remaining Maroons of Nanny Town travelled across the island to unite with the Leeward Maroons. In 1734, a Captain Stoddart attacked the remnants of Nanny Town, “situated on one of the highest mountains in the island,” via “the only path” available: “He found it steep, rocky, and difficult, and not wide enough to admit the passage of two persons abreast” (Edwards vol. 1, page 525).

In addition to the use of the ravine, resembling what Jamaicans call a "cockpit," Maroons were skilled at disguising themselves as bushes and trees. The Maroons also utilized decoys to trick the British into a surprise attack. This was done by having non-disguised Maroons run out into view of the British and then run in the direction of the fellow Maroons who were disguised. After falling into these ambushes several times, the British had to resort to their own trickery: Captain Stoddart "found the huts in which the negroes were asleep," and "fired upon them so briskly, that many were slain in their habitations" (Edwards vol. 1, page 525).

==Nanny today==

The government of [[Jamaica]] declared Queen Nanny a National Heroine in 1975. Her portrait is on the $500 [[Jamaican dollar]] bill, which is colloquially referred to as a "Nanny".

== References ==
{{reflist}}

== Bibliography ==

* Gottlieb, Karla. The Mother of Us All: A History of Queen Nanny. Trenton, NJ: Africa World Press, 2000.
* Campbell, Mavis C. The Maroons of Jamaica, 1655-1796. Trenton, NJ: Africa World Press. 1990.
*http://www.jamaicans.com/articles/primearticles/queennanny.shtml

Among the early historians to mention the Jamaican Maroons were the following:

*[[R. C. Dallas]], The History of the Maroons, From Their Origin to the Establishment of their Chief Tribe at Sierra Leone. 1803

*[[Bryan Edwards]], History, Civil and Commercial, of the British Colonies in the West Indies. 1793.

*[[Edward Long]], The History of Jamaica. 1774

==External links==
*[http://www.itzcaribbean.com/history_jamaica_queen_nanny.php Queen Nanny profile]

[[Category:Jamaican Maroon leaders]]
[[Category:Ghanaian people]]
[[Category:Jamaican rebel slaves]]
[[Category:National Heroes of Jamaica]]
[[Category:Women in early modern warfare]]
[[Category:Jamaican Maroons]]

[[de:Granny Nanny]]
[[nl:Grandy Nanny]]
[[ja:グラニー・ナニー]]

Revision as of 17:14, 10 October 2008

POS or PoS may refer to: