Sépélu Explained
Sépélu (or Cépérou in French) was a seventeenth century indigenous Kali'na chief, or yopoto, in what is now French Guiana.[1] Oral histories recount that he sold or ceded land to the French circa 1643, namely the hill of Fort Cépérou which is now named after him.[2] [3] He is also remembered a native leader who resisted colonisation.[4]
In 2003, Christiane Taubira held a competition to rename the international airport in Cayenne. Its previous namesake, Rochambeau, was deemed unfit because his son, Donatien-Marie-Joseph de Vimeur, had brutally attempted to quell the Haitian Revolution. Four schoolchildren won Taubira's competition with the name Sépélu. However, the airport was eventually named after Black colonial official Félix Eboué in 2012.[5] [4] [6]
Notes and References
- Book: Garel de Ayala . Jean-Louis . Yami Wakalima . Nimrote . History of Amazonia: Indianus South Amerikanus Iwahto Ponpë . 2022 . Librinova . Paris . 9791040508045.
- News: Briswalter . Marion . Sepelu, ou la place de l’oralité dans l’Histoire commune . 10 July 2022 . Une saison en Guyane . 5 . December 2010 . French.
- Book: Brett . William Henry . William Henry Brett (missionary) . The Indian Tribes of Guiana . 1868 . Bell and Daldy . London . 0332505170 . 46.
- Book: Wood . Sarah . Locating Guyane . MacLeod . Catriona . 2018 . Liverpool University Press . 9781786941114 . Liverpool . 143, 147.
- Web site: Félix Eboué ou Cépérou: deux noms pour un aéroport qui en a déjà un . Blada.com . 10 July 2022 . 8 April 2010 . French.
- News: Marot . Laurent . La Guyane retrouve la mémoire en changeant le nom de l'aéroport . 10 July 2022 . . 21 January 2012 . French.