Religious, Cultural, and Racial Interactions (College Board AP® US History): Study Guide
Indigenous People & Africans
- Indigenous peoples and enslaved Africans interacted and formed relationships 
- People in these two enslaved groups began to marry each other - Children born from these marriages were considered to be enslaved 
- Some Indigenous groups adopted people of African descent into their communities 
 
- African and Indigenous peoples participated in shared acts of resistance against Europeans - In 1503: Maroon-enslaved Africans and Indigenous people resisted Europeans on Santo Domingo 
- Late 1600s: Enslaved Africans from South Carolina sought refuge in Spanish Florida and cooperated with groups of Indigenous peoples there 
 
- Africans also lived among Indigenous peoples and worked as traders and translators to protect themselves from enslavement 
- Sometimes, Indigenous people and people of African descent were different from each other - 1540s: Spanish colonists and priests in the area that is now New Mexico gave some Black people authority over the Indigenous population - These Black overseers mistreated the Indigenous people 
 
- Many Africans in the early colonial Americas believed in animism - Others followed Christianity or Islam 
 
 
Examiner Tips and Tricks
Multiple-choice questions will be asked in relation to a primary source, for example an excerpt of a diary entry from a European colonist. Their experiences will always be linked back to known historical facts in the question.
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