User:MassiveEartha

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As of Saturday, 14 March 2026, 15:40 (UTC), The English Wikipedia has 51,925,090 registered users, 285,578 active editors, and 813 administrators. Together we have made 1,338,716,100 edits, created 65,284,729 pages of all kinds and created 7,151,425 articles.

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  • 1865 Alexandria, VA, at Convention of the Colored People of Virginia delegated decided to replace the word 'masters' with 'former oppressors'
http://coloredconventions.org/items/show/272
  • "Wm. E. Walker, of Petersburg, desired that there should be a correction made where the expression in the address read--"our former masters." He moved that the word "masters" be stricken out and the words "our former oppressors" be substituted therefor. The amendment was adopted."
  • P. Gabrielle Foreman, et al. “Writing about Slavery/Teaching About Slavery: This Might Help” CC BY-NC-SA 3.0
https://docs.google.com/document/d/1A4TEdDgYslX-hlKezLodMIM71My3KTN0zxRv0IQTOQs/edit
  • NB: "This document uses “community-sourced” instead of “crowdsourced” to acknowledge the ways in which the connotation of “crowd” has been historically racialized, as P. Gabrielle Foreman points out. The term is also more accurate; an online community contributed to this document and its multiple intervention.
  • A Glossary of Terminology for Understanding Transatlantic Slavery and ‘Race’ : Key Stages 2 to 4, Teachers’ Resource 2021 - Nottingham Museums
  • Legacies of Slavery and Empire Glossary, 2023 - Glasgow Museums
  • Black Atlantic studies glossary - Liverpool University
  • Why Language Matters [UK, 2007]
  • Words Matter [NL, 2018]
https://www.materialculture.nl/en/publications/words-matter
  • Although I note, this document doesn't address terminology associated with enslavers.
  • "De l’esclave à l’esclavisé" [FR, 2019]
https://www.anacaona.fr/blog/esclave-esclavise-evolution-langage-racisme-slave-enslaved/

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