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@ Aciram: Jesus wept, would you stop edit warring already. I'll go ahead and open this now, since it should have been done as your first step after the first time you were reverted per BRD. Why are you insisting the person was a slave in a country that at the time did not exist? Especially considering her age at the time and the time of the Haitian Revolution, it is a pretty fair assumption she had died long before 1791. You wouldn't call a person who lived in British colonial Virginia 50/60 years before 1776 as a resident of the USA. Why are you insisting someone in St Domingue is a Haitian when Haiti as a country did not exist? If "slavery has never existed in Haiti" then how can she be a Haitian slave? Your logic is so far escaping me. He iro 23:31, 30 November 2019 (UTC)
This article has serious sourcing problems. The Gayarré book, the only "source" provided for this article for years, relates that Bras Piqué, or "Pricked Arm", warned the French about the Natchez attack, but says nothing about what happened to her after the attack. I found the McCloud article, "Natchez Political Evolution", that was listed under External links, on line here, but it has no mention of Bras Piqué, or "Pricked Arm", or "Tattooed Arm". I therefore removed it from the article. That leaves two recently published books about the Natchez that I do not have access to. Unless someone can soon provide a reliable source for the fate of Tattooed Arm after the Natchez attacked the French, I intend to removed that part of the article. - Donald Albury 02:04, 1 December 2019 (UTC)
I changed Category:Haitian slaves to Category:French slaves, and removed Category:People of Saint-Domingue, because, per the Barnett book, which is from an academic press, it is not clear that Tattooed Arm was sent to Saint-Domingue, and in any case we have, so far, no source indicating that she reached Saint-Domingue. Some of the Natchez prisoners may have been sold as slaves in New Orleans, or may have died in New Orleans, while some of those shipped to Saint-Domingue may have died en-route. - Donald Albury 18:51, 1 December 2019 (UTC)
This article is rated Stub-class on Wikipedia's
content assessment scale. It is of interest to the following WikiProjects: | |||||||||||||||||||||
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It is requested that an image or photograph be
included in this article to
improve its quality. Please replace this template with a more specific
media request template where possible.
The Free Image Search Tool or Openverse Creative Commons Search may be able to locate suitable images on Flickr and other web sites. |
@ Aciram: Jesus wept, would you stop edit warring already. I'll go ahead and open this now, since it should have been done as your first step after the first time you were reverted per BRD. Why are you insisting the person was a slave in a country that at the time did not exist? Especially considering her age at the time and the time of the Haitian Revolution, it is a pretty fair assumption she had died long before 1791. You wouldn't call a person who lived in British colonial Virginia 50/60 years before 1776 as a resident of the USA. Why are you insisting someone in St Domingue is a Haitian when Haiti as a country did not exist? If "slavery has never existed in Haiti" then how can she be a Haitian slave? Your logic is so far escaping me. He iro 23:31, 30 November 2019 (UTC)
This article has serious sourcing problems. The Gayarré book, the only "source" provided for this article for years, relates that Bras Piqué, or "Pricked Arm", warned the French about the Natchez attack, but says nothing about what happened to her after the attack. I found the McCloud article, "Natchez Political Evolution", that was listed under External links, on line here, but it has no mention of Bras Piqué, or "Pricked Arm", or "Tattooed Arm". I therefore removed it from the article. That leaves two recently published books about the Natchez that I do not have access to. Unless someone can soon provide a reliable source for the fate of Tattooed Arm after the Natchez attacked the French, I intend to removed that part of the article. - Donald Albury 02:04, 1 December 2019 (UTC)
I changed Category:Haitian slaves to Category:French slaves, and removed Category:People of Saint-Domingue, because, per the Barnett book, which is from an academic press, it is not clear that Tattooed Arm was sent to Saint-Domingue, and in any case we have, so far, no source indicating that she reached Saint-Domingue. Some of the Natchez prisoners may have been sold as slaves in New Orleans, or may have died in New Orleans, while some of those shipped to Saint-Domingue may have died en-route. - Donald Albury 18:51, 1 December 2019 (UTC)