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・ Eman El Gammal
・ Eman El-Asy
・ Eman Fiala
・ Eman Fiala (actor)
・ Eman Gaber
・ Eman Ghoneim
・ Eman Karam Sayed Abdel Ghaffar
・ Eman Lam
・ Eman language
・ Emanation (Eastern Orthodox Christianity)
・ Emanation of the state
・ Emanationism
・ Emanations
・ Emanations (Penderecki)
・ Emanci Language Institute
Emancipados
・ Emancipate Myself
・ Emancipation
・ Emancipation (disambiguation)
・ Emancipation (horse)
・ Emancipation (House)
・ Emancipation (Nu Virgos album)
・ Emancipation (Prince album)
・ Emancipation and Liberation
・ Emancipation Day
・ Emancipation Garden
・ Emancipation Memorial
・ Emancipation Oak
・ Emancipation of Labour
・ Emancipation of minors


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Emancipados : ウィキペディア英語版
Emancipados
Emancipado ((:emanθiˈpaðo)) was a term used for an African descended social-political demographic within the population of Spanish Guinea (modern day Equatorial Guinea) that existed in the early to mid 1900s. This segment of the native population had become assimilated into the former White society of Spanish Guinea which primarily existed along the coastline communities of the continental part of the country, as well as on the islands of Bioko and Annabon.
== Population specifics ==
This population included:
* Full-blooded descendants of local/regional native tribes that had assimilated to the Whites after receiving a Christian Spanish education.〔
* Descendants of freed Cuban slaves who, despite being free to return to Cuba, remained in the country, marrying into the local population. These former slaves were brought to Africa by the ''Royal Orders of September 13, 1845'' (by way of voluntary arrangement) and a June 20, 1861 deportation from Cuba, due to the lack of volunteers. Many were of European and/or Amerindian ancestry.
* Mulattoes born to Equatorial Guinean mothers and white Spanish fathers, some unacknowledged by their fathers.〔''Espacio, Tiempo y Forma'', Serie V, Hª Contemporánea, t. 11, 1998, págs. 113-138, ''(Penología e indigenismo en la antigua Guinea española )'', Pedro María Belmonte Medina〕 Offspring resulting from unions of consent between African women and European men had become a social trend around the mid 1900s in Equatorial Guinea, as well as other parts of West Africa.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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