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The 17th-century slave ship roots of country music Published: Aug. 02, 2019, 7:13 a.m. Billy Ray Cyrus, left, and Lil Nas X perform "Old Town Road" at the BET Awards on Sunday, June 23, 2019, at ...
Dr. Dina Bennett, senior curator at the National Museum of African American Music in Nashville, said country music can trace its roots back to 17th-century slave ships, where captors made Africans ...
Wreck hunters working in the Mediterranean Sea uncovered a 17th-century Algerian vessel which experts say was a pirate ship operated by slave traders.
Dina Bennett, senior curator at the National Museum of African American Music in Nashville, Tennessee, said that country music can trace its roots back to 17th-century slave ships, where captors ...
Experts believe that the ship, identified as a Barbary corsair (or pirate ship) from the 17th century, was most likely headed to the Spanish coast to capture and enslave locals, Live Science reported.
"It told my son to put a slave cuff around the black character's neck, and then to play with the toy." ... Playmobil said that the toy was intended to portray life on a 17th century pirate ship.
Archaeology 'Pirate' shipwrecks that sank in 1710 off Costa Rica are actually remains of Danish slave ships . ... Eerily well-preserved 17th-century ship found in the dark waters of the Baltic Sea.
A statue of a 17th-century slave trader that was toppled by anti-racism protesters in Bristol, England, ... which was once the U.K.’s biggest port for slave ships.
Wreck-hunters have discovered the remains of a small 17th-century pirate ship, known as a Barbary corsair, in deep water between Spain and Morocco. The wreck is "the first Algiers corsair found in ...
Wreck-hunters have discovered the remains of a small 17th-century pirate ship, ... 'Pirate' shipwrecks that sank in 1710 off Costa Rica are actually remains of Danish slave ships ; ...