Fernandino people

Fernandinos
Regions with significant populations
Bioko Island, São Tomé and Príncipe
Languages
Pichinglis, Krio, Bube, Igbo, Equatoguinean Spanish, French, Portuguese
Religion
Christianity
Related ethnic groups
Bubis, Sierra Leone Creoles, Emancipados, Saros, Americo-Liberians, African Americans, Atlantic Creoles

The Fernandino people are creoles, multi-ethnic or multi-racial populations who developed in Equatorial Guinea (Spanish Guinea). Their name is derived from the island of Fernando Pó, where many worked. This island was named for the Portuguese explorer Fernão do Pó, credited with discovering the region.

Each population had a distinct ethnic, social, cultural and linguistic history. Members of these communities provided most of the labor that built and expanded the cocoa farming industry on Fernando Pó during the 1880s and 1890s.[1] The Fernandino of Fernando Po were closely related to each other. Because of the history of labor in this area, where workers were recruited, effectively impressed, from Freetown, Cape Coast, and Lagos, the Fernandino also had family ties to those areas.[2] Eventually these ethnically distinct groups intermarried and integrated. In 21st-century Bioko, their differences are considered marginal.

  1. ^ [W. G. Clarence-Smith, "African and European Cocoa Producers on Fernando Póo, 1880s to 1910s," The Journal of African History, Volume 35, Issue 02, July 1994, pp 179–199, doi:10.1017/S0021853700026384, Published online by Cambridge University Press 22 January 2009.
  2. ^ I. K. Sundiata, From Slaving to Neoslavery: The Bight of Biafra and Fernando Po in the Era of Abolition, 1827–1930; Univ of Wisconsin Press, 1996; ISBN 0-299-14510-7, ISBN 978-0-299-14510-1; p.152