Category:Adga Tome
Epilogue: Critical Conjecture and the Archive
We hope that learning about Damma’s Gbe words has opened up a new window for you into a period of human history that continues...
adga tome
A team of historians, linguists, and curators examines the term adga tome, used by one African woman named Damma in a 1739 petition to...
The Gbe Language Cluster
The Gbe language cluster, spoken across West Africa, consists of multiple lects with varying mutual intelligibility. Despite linguistic differences, historical and contemporary evidence suggests...
Creole Linguistics and Virgin Islands Dutch Creole
Virgin Islands Dutch Creole emerged in the late seventeenth century, following the colonization and settlement of the Danish West Indies.
The Moravian Brethren and the Mission to St. Thomas
The Moravian mission to St. Thomas—sparked by an Afro-Caribbean man’s plea and sustained by the faith of Black converts like Damma and Rebecca—became a...
The Danish West Indies during Damma’s Life
Damma’s life unfolded within the violent, multicultural world of the Danish West Indies, where sugar plantations, racial hierarchies, rebellion, and creole kinship shaped a...
Mingo: Damma’s Son, Moravian Leader, and Scribe
Domingo Gesoe, known as Mingo—Damma’s son—was a literate preacher, scribe, and Moravian leader whose extraordinary life bridged enslavement and influence, West Africa and Europe,...
Damma’s Life: From Adga Tome to St. Thomas
Born in West Africa and later enslaved in St. Thomas, Damma—also known as Marotta and Madlena—navigated captivity, faith, and freedom to become a Moravian...
What is Race?
Damma’s letter exposes how the concept of “race” was reshaped across languages and empires, revealing her critique of white Christian supremacy and her call...
What is God?
Damma’s letter reveals how the West African deity Mawu—also called Mau, Bruku, and vodu—traveled with her across the Atlantic, embodying both continuity and adaptation...










