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  1. Charles Ignatius Sancho ( c. 1729 – 14 December 1780) was a British abolitionist, writer and composer. Born on a slave ship in the Atlantic, Sancho was sold into slavery in the Spanish colony of New Granada.

    • First person of African descent to vote in a British general election; influence on abolitionism
    • Charles Ignatius Sancho, c. 1729, Atlantic Ocean
    • Anne Osborne
  2. Ignatius Sancho was a Black British writer and musician who was deeply engaged with the visual and performing arts as a means for calling attention to the inhumanity and hypocrisy of discrimination, racism, and the enslavement of Black people in London and across the British empire.

  3. Ignatius Sancho: The Composer. Whilst Ignatius Sancho spent most of his life in England, his work, letters and exposure to the US creates the general consensus that Sancho is one of many who helped abolish Slavery across the Atlantic. Written by History Contributor 04/10/2021

  4. Writer, Musician, Playwright and Abolitionist. Ignatius Sancho, composer, writer, slave abolitionist and actor, died on 14th December 1780 and was buried on 17th December in the churchyard of the Broadway, or New, Chapel, which was an overflow burial area for the parish of St Margaret's Westminster. All the gravestones in the Broadway Chapel ...

    • Writer,Musician,Playwright,Abolitionist
  5. Learn about the life of British composer, actor and writer. Written by Patrick Vernon. Ignatius Sancho is said to have been born in 1729 on board a slave ship that was sailing from Guinea to...

  6. 21 de oct. de 2021 · Ignatius Sancho was a man who through his own authentic voice changed contemporary perceptions of what it was to be an African. Ignatius Sancho 1768 by Thomas Gainsborough oil on canvas....

  7. 31 de mar. de 2022 · Ignatius Sancho (c1729-1780): composer, writer, mentor and friend. Samantha Arrowsmith. March 31, 2022. 8:52 pm. When a two year old boy named Ignatius Sancho arrived in England in 1731, an orphan and a slave, it would have been hard for anyone to have imagined that we would still be talking about him nearly 300 years later.