Marooners -

The word "maroon" is derived from the Spanish word , which originally referred to domestic cattle that had escaped to the hills. By the 1530s, the term was applied to enslaved people who fled plantations and established independent settlements in geographically secluded regions.

Maroon societies emerged wherever slavery existed in the Americas, ranging from small bands to powerful states that survived for centuries. The Caribbean marooners

The term historically carries dual meanings: it refers both to Africans and Indigenous peoples who escaped enslavement to form autonomous communities (Maroons) and to the nautical practice of abandoning individuals in remote locations (marooning). While the latter is often romanticized in pirate lore, the former represents one of the most enduring and organized forms of resistance against the trans-Atlantic slave trade and colonial rule. 1. Etymology and Origins The word "maroon" is derived from the Spanish

: The earliest recorded Maroon communities formed in what is now the Dominican Republic following a 1522 slave rebellion. South America Go to product viewer dialog for this item. The Caribbean The term historically carries dual meanings:

The Marooners: Resistance, Autonomy, and the Legacy of Self-Liberation