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Greetings,
Suggestions/Additions
are in blue.
7The
trafficking of enslaved Africans
9.
Slavery and the Law 

to
include the Somerset case, Joseph Knight vs. Wedderburn, the Zong. 8.
Africans in 18th
Century Britain: Sons
of Africa,
Olaudah Equiano, Ignatius Sancho, Phillis Wheatley, Ottobah Cugoano,
Ukawsaw Gronniosaw, William Ansah Sessarakoo, Francis Barber. Laws on
the Caribbean plantations
10.
Abolition: the struggle
African
Abolitionists and Freedom fighters

The
1807 and its almost non-enforcement for c. 35 years. Trafficking
of enslaved increases. Who continued
to profit? The abolition of slavery; data from compensation records
of the £20 million then distributed – to whom? Did it finance the
industrial revolution?
16.
Africans  and Asians in 20th century Britain
a)
Pan-Africanism; the ‘Black’ press
b)
Henry Sylvester Williams, John
Archer, Saklatvala, Dusé Mohammed
Ali, Harold Moody, Ladipo Solanke, George Padmore, Amy Ashwood
Garvey, Claudia Jones. Ras T. Makonnen, Dr Peter Milliard, et al
others
also who returned to play pivotal roles in national independence
struggles in Africa  and
Asia-
Jomo Kenyatta, Kwame Nkrumah, Hastings Banda -  Gandhi,
Jinnah, Nehru
c)
Key organisations: African
Progress Union, League of Coloured
Peoples, WASU, International African Service Bureau, Pan-African
Federation; Negro Workers Association, Indian 
Workers Association et al –
include local organistions, eg in Cardiff, Liverpool, South Shields,
Manchester
d)
African,
African-Caribbean
and
Asian servicemen
and women in the World Wars
e)
The Windrush
generation – who were they, why did they come here?
17.
African, African-Caribbean and Asian
servicemen and women in the armed forces in the world wars.

18.
Asian women’s role in key industrial disputes especially Grunwick.




Date: Sun, 3 Mar 2013 21:59:23 +0000
From: [log in to unmask]
Subject: The alternative curriculum
To: [log in to unmask]





OK here are my additions (below, added in green)  which are mainly to 
bring in the Asian diaspora (and I’m sure others can improve on what I’ve 
attempted).
Once all suggestions are in we’ll need to think hard about how to frame 
this. My feeling is that we shouldn’t be echoing Gove and just coming up with 
yet more bullet points.
 
We’ll also need to consider (maybe in tomorrow’s meeting) what we see as 
our objective both in our submissions to the government and in this alternative 
we’re developing. 
Do we want (a) to tinker with Gove’s list, removing some things and adding 
others? (b) demand that he go back to the drawing board, scrap his proposals and 
start a proper consultation? (c) to build up information and resources for 
teachers, whatever happens to the curriculum?
 
My view is that it has to be (b) and (c).
 
Pupils should be taught 
about:
1. Ancient Egypt and other great African civilizations: e.g. 
Kingdom of Ghana, est. c.400; Kingdom of Kanem-Bornu (modern-day Chad) est. c.784; Zimbabwe est. c. 
1100; Kongo, est. c.1350, etc. The empire of Mali (not today’s Mali) is very 
important as the emperor wanted to explore what ‘lay over the ocean’ and also 
went on the Hajj – and appears in contemporary European maps of the 
time.
2. Africans in Roman 
Britain
- The numerous Maurorum Aurelianorum (c.100-c.400), Hadrian’s 
wall; 
- Emperor Septimus Severus (145 
– 211), Quintus Lollius Urbicus and other African-born Romans. We now have the record of the burial of a wealthy African woman. And 
of Africans married to local women who stayed here on being discharged. And of 
artefacts from Nth Africa.
3. Medieval images of Africa: Mandeville’s Travels, 
Maps, etc. 
4. Africans in Early Modern Britain 
i) Africans at the Scottish court of James IV, 
1501-1513.
ii) Africans in Tudor England
iii) African characters in early modern literature
5. The Mughal Empire 
– especially Akbar
 
6. The Imperial 
project: colonization and empire.
a) Exploration, early trading and first colonies under Elizabeth I and 
James I. The East India 
Company. 
b) This has to include the outline of the histories, etc of 
the areas being colonised, ie Africa and the Americas and 
India
c) the effects of the ‘national’ boundaries in Africa 
created by Europeans in Berlin in 1885
7. The trade in enslaved 
Africans
Which countries were trading, how were slaves acquired, 
how shipped, sold; working conditions in the Americas. Who financed, who 
profited? It is very important to distinguish between ‘slavery’ in Africa and 
that introduced by Europeans in the Americas. That in Africa was more akin to 
the conditions of the peasantry in much of Europe.
What were the effects on Africa and the Americas and 
Britain?
8. Resistance 

i) Small-scale daily resistance, 
ii) Haitian Revolution
iii) Maroons
iv) in Africa
v) on board ships
 
9. Slavery and the Law 
to include the Somerset case, Joseph Knight vs. Wedderburn, the Zong. 
8. Africans in 18th Century Britain: Olaudah Equiano, 
Ignatius Sancho, Phillis Wheatley, Ottobah Cugoano, Ukawsaw Gronniosaw, William 
Ansah Sessarakoo, Francis Barber. Laws on the Caribbean plantations
10. Abolition: the struggle
The 1807 and its almost non-enforcement for c. 35 years. 
Export of the enslaved increases. Who continued to profit? The abolition of 
slavery; data from compensation records of the £20 million then distributed – to 
whom? Did it finance the industrial revolution?
11. The  Ayahs, Lascars and early Asian settlers 
in Britain
12. Indentured labour and the 
transportation of Asians to East Africa and the 
Caribbean
13. Resistance in 
India
The First War of Independence 
1857
14. The rise of pseudo-“scientific” 
racism
a) 1919 ‘Race riots’
b) how this idea was spread
15. Africans and Asians in 19th century Britain
William Cuffay
Robert Wedderburn
William Davidson
Mary Seacole
Ira Aldride
Samuel Coleridge 
Taylor
Sake Deen Mahomed, 
Dadabhai Naoroji, Sophia Duleep Singh
16. Africans  and Asians in 20th century 
Britain
a) Pan-Africanism; the ‘Black’ press
b) Henry Sylvester Williams, Saklatvala, Dusé Mohammed Ali, Harold 
Moody, Ladipo Solanke, George Padmore, Amy Ashwood Garvey, Claudia Jones. Ras T. 
Makonnen, Dr Peter Milliard, et al others 
also who returned to play pivotal roles in national independence struggles in 
Africa  and Asia- 
Jomo Kenyatta, Kwame Nkrumah, Hastings Banda -  Gandhi, Jinnah, Nehru
c) Key organisations: League of Coloured Peoples, WASU, International 
African Service Bureau, Pan-African Federation; Negro Workers Association, Indian  
Workers Association et al – include local organistions, eg in Cardiff, Liverpool, South 
Shields, Manchester
d) African, Caribbean and Black British servicemen and women in the 
World Wars
e) The Windrush generation – who were they, why did they come 
here?
17. African, 
Caribbean and Asian servicemen and women in the armed forces in the world 
wars.
18. Asian women’s role in key industrial disputes 
especially Grunwick. 
19. The Civil Rights Movement in the 
UK
a) The Campaign for Racial Equality, 

b) ‘Black Power’
c) West Indian Development Council (WDI) Bristol Bus Boycott, 
in response to racial discrimination by the Bristol Omnibus Company (BOC) 

 
Sources: 
D. Dabydeen, J. Gilmore, and C. Jones, 
eds.,The Oxford Companion to Black British History (Oxford, 
2005).
Some of this was written by students so 
has to be checked
P. Fryer, Staying power: the history 
of black people in Britain (1984).
Visram, R, Asians in Britain, 400 years of History 
(2002)
Guardian black history timeline: http://www.guardian.co.uk/uk/interactive/2008/oct/13/black-history-month-timeline
Black 
History 4 Schools 
website [http://www.blackhistory4schools.com] 

Black Presence: Asian and Black History in Britain, 
1500-1850 The National Archives, Exhibitions and Learning Online [http://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/pathways/blackhistory/]
2008 National Currciculum: https://www.education.gov.uk/schools/teachingandlearning/curriculum/secondary/b00199545/history