All Object Lessons
Encounter & Conflict

The Abeng: A Cow Horn That Won Freedom

⏱ 45 minutes 🎓 Primary & Secondary 📚 history, ethics, citizenship, music, language
Core question How did escaped Africans, fighting in the mountains of Jamaica, win the only major formal independence ever recognised by a colonial power for a community of escaped enslaved people — and what role did one cow horn play in that fight?
A cow horn instrument of the kind used as an abeng — the signal horn of the Jamaican Maroons. Used for over 300 years to communicate across Jamaica's mountains, in war and in ceremony. Photo: Imani selemani Nsamila / Wikimedia Commons / CC BY-SA 4.0
Introduction

In 1655, the English captured Jamaica from the Spanish. The Spanish settlers fled. They left behind hundreds of enslaved Africans, who saw their chance and escaped into the mountains. There they joined other escaped Africans who had been free in the mountains for decades, and they built new lives. They called themselves Maroons — from the Spanish 'cimarrón', meaning 'wild' or 'untamed'. The Maroons established free communities in the most difficult country in Jamaica — the Cockpit Country in the west, the Blue Mountains in the east. They cleared small fields. They hunted. They built villages on hilltops. They lived as free people in a colony where most other Africans were enslaved on sugar plantations. The British wanted them back. They sent soldiers, again and again, into the mountains. The Maroons fought back. They knew the land. They had developed brilliant guerrilla tactics — ambushes, hidden paths, false trails, sudden attacks. The British soldiers, in their red coats and heavy boots, were no match for warriors who knew every ridge and stream. To coordinate their fighting, the Maroons used the abeng. The word means 'horn' or 'animal horn' in Akan, an African language brought to Jamaica with enslaved people. The abeng is a cow horn, hollowed out, with a small mouthpiece carved at the narrow end. When blown by a skilled player, it produces deep notes that carry across mountains and valleys. Different patterns of notes carry different messages — 'enemy approaching', 'gather here', 'attack', 'retreat', 'all clear'. The Maroons developed a complex code of abeng signals that the British soldiers could not understand. The First Maroon War lasted from about 1728 to 1739, more than ten years of fighting. It ended in something almost unprecedented in the history of the Americas. The British, exhausted by the failure of their military campaigns, signed a peace treaty. They formally recognised the Maroons as a free people, with their own land, their own government, and their own laws. This was perhaps the only case in the Americas where escaped enslaved Africans won formal independence from a colonial power. Today, the four official Maroon communities — Accompong, Moore Town, Charles Town, and Scott's Hall — still exist. They have their own elected leaders (called colonels), their own land rights, their own customs. The abeng is still blown at major ceremonies. The Maroons are still here. This lesson asks who they are, how the abeng worked in their fight, and what their long survival teaches about freedom, resistance, and the communities that come from struggle.

The object
Origin
Jamaica. Used by the Jamaican Maroons — descendants of escaped enslaved Africans who established free communities in the mountains from the 1600s onwards. The horn type and the basic technique have West African roots.
Period
Used in Jamaica from at least the 1600s to today. The abeng was especially important during the Maroon wars against the British (1655-1739 and 1795-1796). It is still used today by Maroon communities in ceremonies.
Made of
A cow horn — usually from a long-horned cow breed. The horn is hollowed out and a small hole is carved at the narrow end. Different sizes of horn produce different notes. The instrument is light and easy to carry.
Size
A typical abeng is 30 to 50 cm long. Light enough to carry on a hip or hung from a strap. Loud enough that the sound can carry several kilometres in mountain country, especially up valleys and across ridges.
Number of objects
Several thousand abeng are estimated to be in use today across the four official Maroon communities in Jamaica (Accompong, Moore Town, Charles Town, and Scott's Hall) and in Maroon diaspora communities worldwide.
Where it is now
Used in Maroon community ceremonies, especially the Accompong Maroon Festival every 6 January. Major museum collections include the National Museum of Jamaica in Kingston and the Smithsonian National Museum of African American History and Culture in Washington DC.
Before you teach this — reflect

Questions for you

  1. The Maroons are a real living community whose ancestors won their freedom by fighting. How will you teach this with the same respect you would give to any other founding national struggle?
  2. Some details of Maroon ceremony and history are private to the community. How will you teach the public story without intruding into private matters?
  3. The Maroon story includes serious violence on all sides. How will you handle this honestly without dwelling on graphic detail?

Common student difficulties — tick any you have noticed

Discovery sequence
1
Think about what it would take to win freedom from slavery. Not by escaping alone, hoping not to be caught — though that was hard enough. Not even by joining an existing free community quietly. By winning freedom, formally, openly, with a treaty signed by your former enslaver, recognising you as free people with your own land. This was almost never achieved in the Americas during the 400 years of slavery. Most escaped enslaved people lived in fear, hidden, sometimes for whole lifetimes. Most rebellions were crushed. Most free communities were eventually destroyed by colonial militaries. The pattern was overwhelming. But a few times, escape became something more. In Jamaica, the Maroons did it. In Brazil, the quilombo of Palmares lasted for almost 100 years (1605-1694) before being finally destroyed. In Suriname, several Maroon peoples (the Saramaka, Ndyuka, and others) won similar treaties to the Jamaicans. In Colombia, the village of San Basilio de Palenque was founded by escaped enslaved people in the 1600s and still exists today. The Jamaican Maroons are perhaps the most successful case. Their treaty of 1739 has held for nearly 300 years. Why might one community succeed where so many others failed?
Points to consider (for the teacher)

Several factors together. Geography: the Cockpit Country in western Jamaica is some of the most rugged terrain in the Caribbean — limestone hills full of caves, sinkholes, dense forest, no easy paths. The British army could barely move there. The Maroons knew every step. Numbers: the Maroon community grew large enough — perhaps 1,000-2,000 people at the time of the First Maroon War — to be a real military force, while still small enough to hide. Leadership: leaders like Cudjoe (in the western mountains) and Nanny (in the east) were brilliant guerrilla strategists. Nanny is now a National Hero of Jamaica. Determination: the Maroons knew that surrender meant slavery, and they were prepared to fight as long as it took. Communication: the abeng allowed coordination across mountain country that the British could not match. The combination of geography, leadership, numbers, determination, and the abeng made the Maroons one of the few escaped communities that could not be defeated. The British signed the treaty because they could not win. Students should see that 'won freedom' was extraordinarily rare. The Maroons are part of a tiny exceptional group in the long history of slavery. Their success is worth honouring on its own terms.

2
The abeng is a remarkable signalling instrument. The horn is hollowed out and the player blows into a small hole at the narrow end. By controlling the lips and breath, a skilled player can produce different pitches, durations, and patterns. The basic notes are loud and clear, carrying for several kilometres in mountain country. Sound travels especially well up valleys and across ridges, where the Maroons fought. The Maroons developed a complex code. Specific patterns of notes meant specific things. 'Soldiers approaching from the south.' 'Gather at the meeting place.' 'Attack now.' 'All clear.' 'Welcome, friend.' The code was passed from older players to younger ones, never written down. The British soldiers could hear the abeng but could not understand what it was saying. The abeng was also part of community life beyond war. It was blown at the start of important meetings. It was used to call community members together. It was sounded at celebrations. It is still used in these ways today in the official Maroon communities — especially during the Accompong Maroon Festival every 6 January, which celebrates the signing of the peace treaty in 1739. Why might communication technology decide a war?
Points to consider (for the teacher)

Because war is largely about coordination. An army that cannot communicate effectively cannot fight effectively. Modern armies use radios, then computers, then satellite networks. Older armies used drums, flags, runners, signal fires. The British soldiers in 18th-century Jamaica had drums and bugles, but these were standard military signals that the Maroons could also recognise. The abeng was different. The Maroons' code was theirs alone. Messages could pass across mountain country in seconds, carrying coordinated tactics that the British could not match. Information warfare is sometimes more important than weapons warfare. The abeng was a small piece of technology but a huge advantage. The same principle has worked in many wars. Code-breaking won World War II for the Allies. Encrypted radio gave one side many advantages in the Vietnam War. Even today, military communication is a core part of military success. The abeng is one of history's clearest examples of communication technology deciding a conflict — at the scale of dozens of valleys, between a few hundred Maroons and several thousand British soldiers. Students should see that 'small technology' can have outsized effects. The cow horn was simple. The code was sophisticated. The combination won a war.

3
The Maroon Wars ended with treaties. In 1739, Cudjoe — the Maroon leader in the west — signed a treaty with the British. In 1740, Nanny's group in the east signed a similar treaty. Under the treaties, the Maroons were recognised as free people. They were given specific lands as their own — about 1,500 acres in the west, smaller areas in the east. They had the right to govern themselves. They had to agree to certain things, including helping to recapture other escaped enslaved people — a controversial clause that has been debated in Maroon communities ever since. The treaties held. For about 50 years, the Maroons lived as free people in a colony where slavery still flourished. They governed themselves. They farmed, hunted, raised families. They blew their abeng. They danced their dances. They sang their songs. In 1795, a second war broke out — the Second Maroon War. This was started by tensions in the western Maroon community at Trelawny Town. The British, this time, had learned better tactics, and used Cuban hunting dogs to track Maroon fighters through the bush. The war ended badly for the Trelawny Maroons. Most were deported — first to Nova Scotia in Canada, later to Sierra Leone in West Africa. Their descendants still exist in Sierra Leone today. But the other Maroon communities — Accompong, Moore Town, Charles Town, Scott's Hall — were not affected. They continued their separate existence under their original treaties. What does this teach us?
Points to consider (for the teacher)

That formal independence does not guarantee permanent peace. The Trelawny deportation was a major loss. Their descendants in Sierra Leone are now culturally distinct from both Jamaicans and other West Africans — a Maroon people without their original land. This is a tragedy of the second war. But the other Maroon communities have continued for nearly 300 years. They have weathered Jamaica's emancipation of all enslaved people in 1834, the country's independence from Britain in 1962, and many other changes. They still hold their treaty lands. They still elect their own leaders. They still maintain their own customs. Their continuous existence is one of the longest-running examples of Indigenous sovereignty within a colonial state in the Americas. The fact that the Maroon communities exist today, with all the history layered on them, is itself a major political and cultural achievement. Students should see that 'won freedom' is not a one-time event. It is a continuing project. Each generation of Maroons has had to keep the community alive. Each generation has had its own challenges. The fact that they are still here is the achievement of three centuries of work.

4
Today, the four official Maroon communities — Accompong (in the west), and Moore Town, Charles Town, and Scott's Hall (in the east) — are recognised by the Jamaican government as having their own special status. They have their own elected leaders, called colonels. They have their own annual celebrations, including the great Accompong Maroon Festival every 6 January, which marks the anniversary of the 1739 treaty. The festival draws thousands of visitors. The abeng is blown. Maroon descendants live across Jamaica and around the world. Many do not live in the four official communities but identify as Maroon and participate in Maroon cultural life. Many ordinary Jamaicans have Maroon ancestors — perhaps a quarter of all Jamaicans, by some estimates. The Maroon legacy is part of the wider Jamaican identity. Maroon culture has also influenced the wider world. Reggae music has Maroon roots. The use of drumming and chanting in Rastafari religious practice draws on Maroon traditions. Bob Marley's music includes references to Maroon resistance. The Maroons face real challenges today. Some young people leave the communities for cities. Some Maroon land has been encroached on by mining companies and other developments. Maroon spiritual practices, which include traditions from many West African religions, are sometimes misunderstood by outsiders. The communities work to maintain their traditions while engaging with the modern world. What is the Maroon legacy today?
Points to consider (for the teacher)

Wide and deep. The four official communities continue. Maroon descendants are spread across Jamaica and the global diaspora. Maroon resistance is a major chapter in the history of African liberation. Nanny of the Maroons is a National Hero of Jamaica — the only woman among the seven National Heroes. Her face appears on the Jamaican $500 banknote. Her story is taught in schools. The wider influence on reggae, Rastafari, and Caribbean culture is real. Beyond Jamaica, the Maroons' success is studied by scholars of resistance worldwide. They are part of a global story of African peoples winning back their freedom — alongside the Haitian Revolution (1791-1804), the quilombo of Palmares in Brazil, the Saramaka in Suriname, San Basilio de Palenque in Colombia, and many others. The Jamaican Maroon case is the longest continuous one. They won their freedom and have kept it for nearly 300 years. The abeng is still being blown. The story continues. Students should see that 'history' is not just behind us. It is also alongside us, in living communities. The Maroons of Jamaica are one of the clearest cases.

What this object teaches

The abeng is a cow horn signal instrument used by the Jamaican Maroons — descendants of escaped enslaved Africans who established free communities in the mountains of Jamaica from the 1600s. The Maroons fought the British in two major wars (1728-1739 and 1795-1796). The First Maroon War ended in a peace treaty signed in 1739, recognising the Maroons as free people with their own land and government. This was one of the very few cases in the Americas where escaped Africans won formal recognition of their freedom. The abeng played a central role in the Maroons' fighting strategy. The horn produces deep notes that carry across mountain country. The Maroons developed a complex code of patterns that the British could not understand. Today, four official Maroon communities exist in Jamaica — Accompong, Moore Town, Charles Town, and Scott's Hall — with their own elected leaders, lands, and customs. The abeng is still blown at major ceremonies, including the Accompong Maroon Festival every 6 January. Maroon culture has influenced reggae, Rastafari, and the wider Jamaican identity. Nanny of the Maroons is one of Jamaica's seven National Heroes — the only woman — and her face is on the Jamaican $500 banknote. The story is one of the longest-running examples of African self-liberation in the Americas.

DateEventWhat changed
1655England captures Jamaica from SpainSpanish-held enslaved Africans escape to the mountains, joining earlier escapees
Late 1600s-early 1700sMaroon communities establish themselves in the Cockpit Country and Blue MountainsThe Maroons become a separate free people in colonial Jamaica
1728-1739First Maroon WarCudjoe in the west and Nanny in the east lead resistance against British forces
1739Cudjoe signs peace treaty with BritishMaroons recognised as free people with their own land — almost unique in the Americas
1795-1796Second Maroon WarTrelawny Maroons defeated and deported, eventually to Sierra Leone
1834Slavery abolished in JamaicaAll Africans in Jamaica become legally free
TodayFour official Maroon communities continueThe Maroons maintain their lands, leaders, and traditions; the abeng is still blown
Key words
Maroons
Descendants of escaped enslaved Africans who established free communities in the Americas during the slavery era. Found across the Caribbean, South America, and Central America. The Jamaican Maroons are among the most well-known.
Example: The word comes from Spanish 'cimarrón', meaning 'wild' or 'untamed'. Other Maroon peoples include the Saramaka of Suriname, the inhabitants of San Basilio de Palenque in Colombia, and the descendants of Palmares in Brazil.
Abeng
A cow horn signal instrument used by the Jamaican Maroons. The word comes from Akan, a West African language. Used both for war signals and for community communication.
Example: A skilled abeng player can produce different patterns of notes that carry specific meanings. Different patterns might mean 'enemy approaching', 'gather here', or 'all clear'.
Cockpit Country
A rugged limestone region in western Jamaica with steep hills, sinkholes, and dense forest. Almost impossible terrain for traditional military operations. Home of the western Maroon communities.
Example: The name 'Cockpit Country' comes from the resemblance of the round limestone hollows to cockfighting pits. The terrain provided perfect cover for Maroon guerrilla tactics.
Cudjoe
A Maroon leader who signed the 1739 peace treaty with the British. Probably born in West Africa and brought to Jamaica enslaved before escaping. Led Maroon forces in the western mountains during the First Maroon War.
Example: Cudjoe's leadership combined military skill, political vision, and willingness to negotiate. The treaty he signed has held for nearly 300 years.
Nanny of the Maroons
A Maroon leader of the eastern communities, also called Queen Nanny or Granny Nanny. Probably born in West Africa, possibly an Akan princess. Led successful resistance against the British in the eastern Blue Mountains. One of Jamaica's seven National Heroes — the only woman.
Example: Nanny's face appears on the Jamaican $500 banknote. The settlement she founded — Nanny Town — was destroyed by the British, but her legacy continues in Moore Town and the wider Maroon tradition.
Accompong
The largest of the four official Jamaican Maroon communities today, in the western Cockpit Country. About 600 people live there. The Accompong Maroon Festival every 6 January marks the anniversary of the 1739 peace treaty.
Example: Accompong has its own elected colonel as leader, its own laws, its own land rights. Visitors are welcome but the community maintains its own traditions and rules.
Use this in other subjects
  • Geography: On a map of Jamaica, mark the four official Maroon communities — Accompong (in St Elizabeth parish), Moore Town and Scott's Hall (in Portland and St Mary parishes), and Charles Town (in Portland). Discuss how the rugged geography of these regions made successful Maroon resistance possible.
  • History: Build a class timeline of the Jamaican Maroons: English capture of Jamaica (1655), formation of Maroon communities (late 1600s), First Maroon War (1728-1739), peace treaties (1739-1740), Second Maroon War (1795-1796), abolition of slavery (1834), Jamaican independence (1962), Nanny named National Hero (1976), modern Maroon revival. The story spans nearly 400 years.
  • Citizenship: The Maroons have maintained a special status within Jamaica for nearly 300 years. Discuss what 'special status' means in modern democratic states. Other examples include some Indigenous reservations in the United States and Canada, the constitutional protections for Indigenous Australians, and various special-status regions worldwide.
  • Music: The abeng produces sound on the same physics as any wind instrument — vibrating air through a tube. Discuss how the Maroons developed a code of patterns. Compare with other coded sound communications: African talking drums, ship's bells, Boy Scout bugle calls, military trumpet signals.
  • Ethics: The 1739 treaties included a clause requiring Maroons to help recapture other escaped enslaved people. Discuss the ethical complexity. Some Maroon descendants today see this as a betrayal of solidarity; others see it as a necessary compromise to win freedom. Strong answers will see this as a real ongoing debate within Maroon communities.
  • Language: The word 'abeng' comes from Akan, an African language spoken in modern Ghana. Discuss how words from African languages have continued in Caribbean culture. Many Maroon words come from Akan, Twi, Igbo, and other African languages, alongside English and Spanish.
Common misconceptions
Wrong

The Jamaican Maroons no longer exist.

Right

Four official Maroon communities continue in Jamaica today — Accompong, Moore Town, Charles Town, and Scott's Hall. They have their own elected leaders, lands, and customs. Many other Jamaicans identify as Maroon descendants. The Maroons are very much alive.

Why

Calling living communities 'no longer existing' is one of the ways their history gets erased.

Wrong

The Maroons just escaped from slavery and were left alone.

Right

The Maroons fought the British in two major wars over more than 80 years. They won formal recognition of their freedom by force of arms — not by being ignored. The 1739 treaty was the result of British military failure, not British generosity.

Why

'Just escaped and left alone' makes the Maroon achievement sound passive. The truth is they fought hard for what they won.

Wrong

The abeng is just an old folk instrument.

Right

The abeng was a sophisticated communication technology with a complex coded system that the British could not understand. It was a major military advantage for the Maroons. It is still used today in ceremonies.

Why

'Just folk' undersells what the abeng actually did. The Maroons used it as their version of military radio.

Wrong

Nanny of the Maroons is a legend, not a real historical figure.

Right

Nanny is a real historical figure who led successful resistance in the eastern Blue Mountains. She is one of Jamaica's seven National Heroes — the only woman among them. Her face appears on the Jamaican $500 banknote. Her settlement at Nanny Town existed and was eventually destroyed by the British, but her legacy continues in the eastern Maroon communities.

Why

Sometimes Black women in history are dismissed as 'legends'. Nanny was very real.

Teaching this with care

Treat the Maroons as a real existing people, not a historical curiosity. Use 'Maroons' (capitalised) when referring to the specific Jamaican people; 'maroon' (lowercase) when referring to escaped enslaved people generally. Pronounce 'abeng' as roughly 'AH-beng'; 'Cudjoe' as 'KUD-joh'; 'Accompong' as 'AH-kom-pong'. Be careful with the slavery and resistance content. Slavery is a serious historical wrong; the Maroon resistance is a serious achievement. Both deserve clear treatment without sensational detail. Some students may have ancestors who were enslaved or who fought against slavery; the lesson should treat this with appropriate gravity. The 1739 treaty's clause about recapturing other escaped enslaved people is genuinely complicated. Mention it briefly and honestly, but do not turn the lesson into a critique of the Maroons for accepting it. The Maroons accepted it as the price of their own freedom; the ethical complexity is real and is debated within Maroon communities themselves. Be respectful of Maroon religious practices. The Maroons retain elements of West African religions (Kromanti, related to Akan religious traditions). These are private to the community and should not be described in detail. Mention that the religious tradition exists; do not describe specific practices. If you have students of Jamaican or Caribbean heritage, give them space to share but do not put them on the spot. Many Jamaicans have Maroon ancestors. Avoid the lazy 'noble savage' or 'mysterious mountain people' framings. The Maroons are real people with modern lives, including doctors, teachers, businesspeople, and government officials. The fact that they live partly in traditional communities does not make them anything but modern citizens. Avoid making the lesson into a Caribbean tourism celebration; the Maroons are real political agents, not photogenic exotics. Finally, end the lesson on the present. The four Maroon communities are alive today. The Accompong Festival is held every 6 January. The abeng is blown. The story continues.

Check what students have understood

Answer each question in one or two sentences. Use what you have learned about the Maroons and the abeng.

  1. Who are the Jamaican Maroons, and how did they form?

    The Jamaican Maroons are descendants of escaped enslaved Africans who established free communities in the mountains of Jamaica from the 1600s onwards. They formed first when the English captured Jamaica from Spain in 1655 and Spanish-held enslaved Africans escaped to the mountains, joining earlier escapees.
    Marking note: Award full marks for any answer that mentions both the escape from slavery and the establishment of communities in the mountains. The 1655 date is a bonus.
  2. What is the abeng, and how did the Maroons use it?

    The abeng is a cow horn signal instrument. The Maroons developed a complex code where different patterns of notes carried different messages — 'enemy approaching', 'gather here', 'attack', 'all clear'. The British soldiers could hear it but could not understand it. It gave the Maroons a major communication advantage in the mountains.
    Marking note: Strong answers will mention both the basic instrument and the coded communication system.
  3. Why is the 1739 treaty between the Maroons and the British so important?

    It was one of the very few times in the Americas when escaped enslaved Africans won formal recognition of their freedom from a colonial power. The British signed because they could not defeat the Maroons militarily. The treaty has held for nearly 300 years, and Maroon communities still exist today on the lands granted by it.
    Marking note: Award full marks for any answer that mentions the formal recognition of freedom and the rarity of this outcome.
  4. Who was Nanny of the Maroons?

    Nanny was a Maroon leader of the eastern communities, probably born in West Africa, who led successful resistance against the British in the eastern Blue Mountains. She is one of Jamaica's seven National Heroes — the only woman among them. Her face appears on the Jamaican $500 banknote.
    Marking note: Strong answers will mention both her historical role and her modern recognition. The banknote detail is a bonus.
  5. Are the Jamaican Maroons still a people today?

    Yes. Four official Maroon communities continue in Jamaica today — Accompong, Moore Town, Charles Town, and Scott's Hall. They have their own elected leaders, lands, and customs. The Accompong Maroon Festival every 6 January draws thousands of visitors. The abeng is still blown.
    Marking note: Award full marks for any answer that recognises the Maroons are still alive and gives at least one specific detail of their continuing existence.
Discuss together

These questions have no single right answer. Talk in pairs or small groups, then share your ideas with the class.

  1. The Maroons won formal freedom in 1739, while most other escaped Africans in the Americas did not. What does this teach us about the conditions for successful resistance?

    Push students to think beyond simple answers. Successful resistance required: difficult geography, strong leadership, large enough numbers, determined commitment, effective communication (the abeng), and exhausting your enemy's will to fight. Not every escaped community had all of these. The Maroons did. The deeper point is that 'successful resistance' is rare not because resistance was rare, but because the conditions for success rarely all came together. The Haitian Revolution (1791-1804) is the only major example of escaped Africans winning their own country in the Americas. The Maroons in Jamaica are the longest-lasting example of escaped Africans keeping a permanent free community.
  2. The 1739 treaties required the Maroons to help recapture other escaped enslaved people. Was this a betrayal of solidarity, or a necessary compromise?

    This is a real ongoing debate within Maroon communities themselves. Some argue it was a betrayal — the Maroons gained their own freedom at the cost of helping to keep others enslaved. Others argue it was a necessary compromise — the British insisted on this clause as the price of the treaty, and refusing it would have meant continued war. Strong answers will see that thoughtful people can reach different conclusions. The Maroons of the time did what they did. Modern Maroon descendants debate it openly. End by saying that this is the kind of complex historical question that does not have an easy answer, and that being honest about the complexity is part of taking the history seriously.
  3. In your community or country, are there small technologies that have given a community an unexpected advantage in a difficult fight?

    This is a creative question. Students may suggest: encrypted messaging in modern political activism, simple medical devices that have changed health outcomes, communication tools that have allowed protest movements to organise, basic agricultural innovations that have changed economic power. The deeper point is that 'small technology with the right code' is one of the recurring themes of liberation movements. The abeng is a classic case. Many other small inventions have done similar work in many other contexts.
Teaching sequence
  1. THE HOOK (5 min)
    Without saying anything about the lesson, ask: 'Could a cow horn win a war?' Take guesses. Then say: 'Yes — the Jamaican Maroons used cow horns called abeng to win a guerrilla war against the British and signed a peace treaty in 1739 recognising their freedom. We are going to find out about it.'
  2. INTRODUCE THE OBJECT (10 min)
    Describe the abeng: a cow horn instrument used by the Jamaican Maroons for over 300 years for both war signals and community communication. Pause and ask: 'How might one simple instrument decide a war?' Listen to answers. They will lead naturally into the idea of communication-as-power.
  3. WHO ARE THE MAROONS (15 min)
    Tell the story: escaped enslaved Africans who established free communities in the Jamaican mountains from the 1600s, fought the British in two major wars, won formal recognition of their freedom in 1739, still exist today as four official communities. Discuss: how is winning freedom different from running away? End by asking: 'Why is the Maroon story so rarely taught?'
  4. NANNY AND CUDJOE (10 min)
    On the board, write the names: Cudjoe (western Maroon leader, signed 1739 treaty), Nanny (eastern Maroon leader, now a National Hero of Jamaica, on the $500 banknote). Discuss: each was a brilliant leader who combined military skill with political vision. Why do students think Nanny was the only woman among Jamaica's seven National Heroes?
  5. CLOSING (5 min)
    Ask: 'What does the Maroon story teach us about resistance, sovereignty, and the long lives of communities born in struggle?' Take a few honest answers. End by saying: 'For nearly 300 years, the Maroons of Jamaica have kept what they fought for. The abeng is still blown. The Accompong Festival happens every 6 January. The Maroons are still here. The Creator's Game in our other lesson is part of a similar story — Indigenous nations finding ways to keep their identity alive within larger states. The abeng is one of the world's clearest examples.'
Classroom materials
The Code
Instructions: In small groups, students design their own simple coded communication system using only sounds — claps, whistles, drum beats. They develop signals for five messages (gather, attack, retreat, danger, all clear). Each group demonstrates their code. Discuss: this is a tiny version of what the Maroons did with the abeng. Coded communication is powerful when only one side understands it.
Example: In Mr Brown's class, students developed claps-and-whistles codes that worked surprisingly well. The teacher said: 'You have just designed your own version of what the Maroons used. Their abeng code was developed over generations, with hundreds of patterns. Yours has five. The principle is the same: a code that only your community understands gives a communication advantage. The Maroons used this principle to win a war.'
Map the Mountains
Instructions: On a map of Jamaica drawn on the board, mark the four official Maroon communities: Accompong (west, in the Cockpit Country), Moore Town and Scott's Hall (east, in the Blue Mountains), Charles Town (east). Discuss why these specific places — most rugged, hardest to reach. The British armies could not fight effectively in this terrain. The Maroons knew it intimately.
Example: In one class, students were surprised at how small the four communities are. The teacher said: 'Small in area, but enormously important historically. These are the only places in the Americas where escaped enslaved Africans won formal independence and have kept it for nearly 300 years. The geography that protected the Maroons during the wars still defines their communities today.'
Small Technology, Big Impact
Instructions: In small groups, students discuss: 'What small piece of technology has given a community an unexpected advantage in a difficult fight?' Examples might include: encrypted messaging in political activism, simple medical devices, communication tools, basic engineering inventions. Each group shares one example. Discuss: the abeng is one specific case of a wider pattern.
Example: In Mrs Walker's class, students named: encrypted phones for activists, simple solar panels for off-grid communities, basic water filters that have changed lives. The teacher said: 'You have just listed a series of cases like the abeng. Each is a relatively simple piece of technology that gave a community real power. The principle is universal: when the right tool meets the right need, small things can make big differences. The cow horn was the abeng of its time.'
Where to go next
  • Try a lesson on the steel pan for another Caribbean tradition with deep roots in resistance and creativity.
  • Try a lesson on the Brazilian carnival costume for another tradition rooted in African heritage in the Americas.
  • Try a lesson on the cowrie shell for another object connecting Africa and the wider world through trade and history.
  • Connect this lesson to history class with a longer project on slavery and resistance in the Americas. The Maroons are part of a much wider story.
  • Connect this lesson to citizenship class with a longer discussion of how minority communities maintain sovereignty within larger states. The Maroon case has parallels worldwide.
  • Connect this lesson to ethics class with a longer discussion of the 1739 treaty's complexity. The clause about recapturing other escapees is a real ethical question that the lesson only touches briefly.
Key takeaways
  • The Jamaican Maroons are descendants of escaped enslaved Africans who established free communities in the mountains of Jamaica from the 1600s. They are still a people today, with four official communities — Accompong, Moore Town, Charles Town, and Scott's Hall.
  • The abeng is a cow horn signal instrument. The Maroons developed a complex code where different patterns of notes carried different messages. It gave them a major communication advantage in their mountain wars against the British.
  • The First Maroon War (1728-1739) ended with peace treaties recognising the Maroons as free people with their own land and government. This was one of the very few cases in the Americas where escaped enslaved Africans won formal recognition of their freedom.
  • Nanny of the Maroons (eastern leader) and Cudjoe (western leader) led the resistance. Nanny is one of Jamaica's seven National Heroes — the only woman — and her face appears on the Jamaican $500 banknote.
  • The Second Maroon War (1795-1796) led to the deportation of the Trelawny Maroons, who were eventually settled in Sierra Leone. Their descendants still exist there today.
  • The Maroons have maintained their special status for nearly 300 years. The Accompong Maroon Festival every 6 January marks the anniversary of the 1739 treaty. The abeng is still blown. Maroon culture has influenced reggae, Rastafari, and the wider Jamaican identity.
Sources
  • Maroon Societies: Rebel Slave Communities in the Americas — Richard Price (1996) [academic]
  • True-Born Maroons — Kenneth Bilby (2005) [academic]
  • Jamaica's Maroons: Three Hundred Years of Freedom — BBC News (2019) [news]
  • The Accompong Maroon Festival — Jamaica National Heritage Trust (2024) [institution]
  • Nanny of the Maroons: National Hero — Government of Jamaica (2024) [institution]