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  2. Queen Nanny, Granny Nanny, or Nanny of the Maroons ONH (c. 1686 – c. 1760), was an early-18th-century freedom fighter and leader of the Jamaican Maroons. She led a community of formerly-enslaved escapee slaves, the majority of them West African in descent, called the Windward Maroons, along with their children and families. [ 1 ]

  3. Oct 10, 2018 · Queen Nanny is said to have been a leader of the Maroons, a community which had escaped slavery in Jamaica in the 18th Century. Little about her life is historically confirmed, but she is...

  4. Mar 1, 2011 · Nanny, known as Granny Nanny, Grandy Nanny, and Queen Nanny was a Maroon leader and Obeah woman in Jamaica during the late 17th and early 18th centuries. Maroons were slaves in the Americas who escaped and formed independent settlements.

  5. Apr 7, 2021 · Queen Nanny or Nanny (c. 1685 – c. 1755), the Jamaican national heroine, is one of the greatest emblematic figures of the resistance of the Jamaican maroons in the eighteenth century, just like Zumbi dos Palmares in Brazil or Toussaint Louverture in Haiti.

  6. Mar 5, 1999 · Often referred to as Queen Nanny, Nanny of the Maroons stands out in history as the only woman among Jamaica’s National Heroes. She possessed that fierce fighting spirit generally associated with the courage of men.

  7. Nanny was a leader of the Maroons at the beginning of the 18th century. She was known by both the Maroons and the British settlers as an outstanding military leader who became, in her lifetime and after, a symbol of unity and strength for her people during times of crisis.

  8. Aug 17, 2021 · According to Maroon legend, ‘Queen Nanny’ was born in present-day Ghana, known as the Gold Coast. Some accounts insist that Nanny was never enslaved, but the likelihood is that she escaped from slavery shortly after arriving in Jamaica.

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