11:5811:58, 5 November 2023diffhist+74
Yoruba language
The Cuban-French duo are not native Yoruba speakers. They do use Yoruba (Lucumí) vocabulary and learned chants as they are preserved for ritual purposes in Cuba, and their songs are often of overt religious (Osha-Ifá) influence.Tags: Visual editMobile editMobile web edit
15:0315:03, 5 January 2023diffhist−87
Cuban Americans
Unclear as to how Cuban Catholicism has been influenced by that practiced in the Canary Islands. The section is fully unsourced, however this is the only extravagant claim made.Tags: Visual editMobile editMobile web edit
19:5519:55, 26 December 2022diffhist+1
Polyandry
'Disappearance' is an unclear term to use, as it diminishes the reality of targeted cultural erasure. It is also incorrect, as Guanche people themselves did not 'disappear' or die off, but rather assimilated and intermarried into Spanish culture, with modern Canarians being in great part descendants of them, and many Guanche traditions surviving into the 20th centuryTags: Visual editMobile editMobile web edit
21:0621:06, 1 June 2022diffhist+56
Valencia
Added specifications since the article seemed to, as is common in Western sources, mix up Arabic and Berber influence into a historically inaccurate "Moor" categoryTags: Visual editMobile editMobile web edit
11:5811:58, 5 November 2023diffhist+74
Yoruba language
The Cuban-French duo are not native Yoruba speakers. They do use Yoruba (Lucumí) vocabulary and learned chants as they are preserved for ritual purposes in Cuba, and their songs are often of overt religious (Osha-Ifá) influence.Tags: Visual editMobile editMobile web edit
15:0315:03, 5 January 2023diffhist−87
Cuban Americans
Unclear as to how Cuban Catholicism has been influenced by that practiced in the Canary Islands. The section is fully unsourced, however this is the only extravagant claim made.Tags: Visual editMobile editMobile web edit
19:5519:55, 26 December 2022diffhist+1
Polyandry
'Disappearance' is an unclear term to use, as it diminishes the reality of targeted cultural erasure. It is also incorrect, as Guanche people themselves did not 'disappear' or die off, but rather assimilated and intermarried into Spanish culture, with modern Canarians being in great part descendants of them, and many Guanche traditions surviving into the 20th centuryTags: Visual editMobile editMobile web edit
21:0621:06, 1 June 2022diffhist+56
Valencia
Added specifications since the article seemed to, as is common in Western sources, mix up Arabic and Berber influence into a historically inaccurate "Moor" categoryTags: Visual editMobile editMobile web edit