Juan Ethnnius Mamby was a black officer of the Spanish Army who arrived in the Dominican Republic at some point in 1810s.[1] In the 1840s, however, he deserted the Spanish and enlisted in the Dominican Army to fight in the Dominican War of Independence and the Dominican Restoration War.[2][3][citation needed] According to Elmore Leonard, he is said to have been the origin of the word, Mambises, which is used to refer to independence fighters from the Dominican Republic and Cuba.[note 1][4]
See also
References
- ^ Cardona y Losada, pag.27
- ^ "La cripta homenaje a los mambises de la independencia 🇨🇺". CubaConecta. 2017-10-25. Retrieved 2025-02-16.
- ^ Redacción (2020-04-01). "Juan Ethnnius Mamby y la palabra Mambi. Hay varias teorías sobre el nacimiento". Nostalgia Cuba (in Spanish). Retrieved 2025-02-16.
- ^ Arhtur Steinberg. “Mambises,” in Encyclopedia of the Spanish-American and Philippine American War, Volume 1. ed. Spencer Tucker (ABC-CLIO, 2009), 366-367.
- ^ Elmore Leonard, in his adventure novel Cuba Libre, implies that the word has its roots in the surname of Eutimio Mambí, a leader who fought against the Spanish in Santo Domingo. He adds that Spanish soldiers, noting the similar machete tactics of the Cuban revolutionaries, began referring to them as "Mambí's men," which was later shortened in usage to "mambís" or "mambises."
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