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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Joanna_VassaJoanna Vassa - Wikipedia

    Joanna Vassa (/ ˈ v æ s ə /; 11 April 1795 – 10 March 1857) was the only surviving child of the former slave and anti-slavery campaigner Olaudah Equiano. Her grave in Abney Park Cemetery , London , was given listed status in 2008 [2] but little is known of her life.

  2. 23. Okt. 2020 · Select Page. Equiano Society Presents: Joanna Vassa – Daughter of Olaudah Equiano. Oct 23, 2020| News & Events. Join us on Zoom as we learn about Joanna Vassa (1795-1757). Joanna lost her parents between 1796 – 1797 at only two years old. Joanna relied on her guardians and family friends for knowledge of her parents.

  3. abneypark.org › famous-residents › joanna-vassaJoanna Vassa — Abney Park

    7. März 2021 · Joanna was the daughter of the man who could claim to be Britain's first Black activist, Olaudah Equiano alias Gustavus Vassa. Equiano was shipped to England as a slave, served in the navy and obtained his freedom in 1766.

  4. 10. 358 views Streamed 2 years ago. Join Angelina Osborne on Wednesday 28th of October in Joanna Vassa: An imagined life. This talk explores the life of Joanna Vassa as gathered from the...

  5. 7. März 2021 · This talk explores the life of Joanna Vassa as gathered from the archives and considers what her life could have been like, living as the daughter of one of the leading Black abolitionists of the eighteenth century.

  6. 11 Sep 2008. Hackney Gazette. Not many people know the name Joanna Vassa. And the woman herself is not a well-known historical character. But her part in the history of slavery and race in this country is valuable and what is more, her tombstone in Abney Park Cemetery has just been awarded a Grade II Listing.

  7. 11. Dez. 2006 · The inscription on the grave of Vassa's daughter, dated March 1857, reads ‘Joanna, beloved wife of Henry Bromley, daughter of Gustavus Vassa, the African.’ 15. See Hodgkin, Nigerian Perspectives , 209–221; and Northrup, Trade without Rulers , on procurement of slaves, warfare, kidnapping, 68–70, 76, 90, 166, 168; on political ...