maroonage
Appearance
English
[edit]Alternative forms
[edit]Etymology
[edit]From maroon + -age, often as a calque of French marronnage.
Noun
[edit]maroonage (uncountable)
- The fact or state of being a maroon.
- 1953, Maya Deren, Divine Horsemen, McPherson & Company, published 2004, page 64:
- Haiti came under French rule in 1677, but this did not diminish the “marronage”.
- 1985, Wade Davis, The Serpent and the Rainbow, Simon & Schuster, page 194:
- Between the years 1764 and 1793, for example, newspaper advertisements alone indicate some forty-eight thousand cases of Maroonage.
- 2008, Ned Sublette, The World That Made New Orleans, Lawrence Hill Books, published 2009, page 84:
- Outside the city, in the swamps, blacks and Indians lived in marronage.