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  2. Afro-Hondurans - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Afro-Hondurans

    Afro-Hondurans or Black Hondurans are Hondurans of Sub-Saharan African descent. Research by Henry Louis Gates and other sources regards their population to be around 1-2%. [2] [3] [4] They descended from: enslaved Africans by the Spanish, as well as those who were enslaved from the West Indies and identify as Creole peoples, and the Garifuna who descend from exiled zambo Maroons from Saint ...

  3. Zambo - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zambo

    The Misquito Zambos developed as the descendants of a group of African slaves who revolted in 1640 on a slave ship. They wrecked it at Cape Gracias a Dios on the border between Honduras and Nicaragua, to escape into the interior. There they united with the indigenous Miskito people. By the early eighteenth century, Afro-Miskito people came to ...

  4. History of Honduras (to 1838) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_Honduras_(to_1838)

    The early 1530s were not prosperous for Honduras. Renewed fighting among the Spaniards, revolts, and decimation of the settled indigenous population through disease, mistreatment, and exportation of large numbers to the Caribbean islands as slaves left the colony on the edge of collapse by 1534.

  5. Afro–Latin Americans - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Afro–Latin_Americans

    The earliest black slaves consigned to Honduras were part of a license granted to the Bishop Cristóbal de Pedraza in 1547 to bring 300 slaves into Honduras. Honduras has the highest African ancestry in Central America from the Garifuna, Miskitos, Mulattoes, and Africans which make 30% of the country.

  6. Miskito Sambu - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Miskito_Sambu

    The Miskito Sambu, also known simply as the Miskito, are an ethnic group of mixed cultural ancestry (African-Indigenous American) occupying a portion of the Caribbean coast of Central America (particularly on the Atlantic coasts of Honduras and Nicaragua) known as the Mosquito Coast region.

  7. Maroons - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maroons

    When slaves escaped, they went to the mountains for safety. In 1548, in what is now Honduras, slaves in San Pedro rebelled, led by a self-freed slave named Miguel, who set up his own capital. The Spaniards had to send in reinforcements to put down the revolt. [13]: 36

  8. History of Honduras - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_Honduras

    African slavery was introduced into Honduras, and by 1545 the province may have had as many as 2,000 slaves. Other gold deposits were found near San Pedro Sula and the port of Trujillo. [9] Mining production began to decline in 1560, and thus the importance of Honduras.

  9. Hondurans - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hondurans

    Latin Americans refer to a person from Honduras as a catracho or catracha.The term was coined by Nicaraguans in the mid-19th century when Honduran General Florencio Xatruch returned from battle with his Honduran and Salvadoran soldiers after defeating American freebooters commanded by William Walker, whose purpose was to re-establish slavery and take over all of Central America.