[The black trumpeter John Blanke played regularly at the courts of Henry VII and Henry VIII]
John Blanke is featured at AfriClassical.com:
BBC News Magazine
The reign of Elizabeth I saw the beginning of Britain's first black community.
It's a fascinating story for modern Britons, writes historian Michael Wood. Walk out of Aldgate Tube and stroll around Whitechapel Road in east London today, and you'll experience the heady sights, smells and sounds of the temples, mosques and curry houses of Brick Lane - so typical of modern multicultural Britain.
It's a fascinating story for modern Britons, writes historian Michael Wood. Walk out of Aldgate Tube and stroll around Whitechapel Road in east London today, and you'll experience the heady sights, smells and sounds of the temples, mosques and curry houses of Brick Lane - so typical of modern multicultural Britain.
Most of us tend to think that black people came to Britain
after the war - Caribbeans on the Empire Windrush in 1948, Bangladeshis
after the 1971 war and Ugandan Asians after Idi Amin's expulsion in
1972. But, back in Shakespeare's day, you could have met people from west Africa and even Bengal in the same London streets.
Of course, there were fewer, and they drew antipathy as well
as fascination from the Tudor inhabitants, who had never seen black
people before. But we know they lived, worked and intermarried, so it is
fair to say that Britain's first black community starts here. There had been black people in Britain in Roman times, and
they are found as musicians in the early Tudor period in England and
Scotland.
But the real change came in Elizabeth I's reign, when,
through the records, we can pick up ordinary, working, black people,
especially in London. Shakespeare himself, a man fascinated by "the other", wrote
several black parts - indeed, two of his greatest characters are black -
and the fact that he put them into mainstream entertainment reflects
the fact that they were a significant element in the population of
London.
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