Peanuts by Charles Schulz for July 06, 2015

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    Linux0s  almost 9 years ago

    BeethovenTruthers.com

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    Templo S.U.D.  almost 9 years ago

    Since when were there Africans in 18th/19th-century Germany (or the Holy Roman Empire back then)?

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    orinoco womble  almost 9 years ago

    The people mistakenly called Moors were not black, dear. I’ve lived in Spain most of my life. I know this,.

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    Space_cat  almost 9 years ago

    Beethoven’s 5th has a deep bass line, it’s possible..

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    Mugens Premium Member almost 9 years ago

    I was on a Egyptian Cruise on the Nile River (pre-revolution) and the further south I got the more I was asked if I was a “Moor”. Needless to say that I am a Black American. So yeah “orinoco wombie” seems to be either in denial or simply made a bit of a honest mistake.

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    Wren Fahel  almost 9 years ago

    By that…I’m still white. Year ‘round. I don’t tan OR burn. It’s rather pathetic, as I AM part Blackfoot NAI.

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    Darryl Heine  almost 9 years ago

    Starting week 2 of 1969 Peanuts daily strips.

    And this was a few years before we ever heard of “The SOUUUUUULLLLLLLLLLLL TRAIN:” (Apologies to the late Don Cornelious).

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    Chief Inspector   almost 9 years ago

    www.youtube.com/watch?v=LQzW73WRrYM

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    legaleagle48  almost 9 years ago

    That doesn’t really answer the question. The Iberian Peninsula isn’t anywhere near Germany, which is what Templo was asking about. What he’s saying is that the Germany of Beethoven’s time (18th-19th century) would have been lily-white, so there is no chance that Beethoven would have been black or even biracial.

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    housepianist  almost 9 years ago

    Yes, Schroeder, you’ve been playing soul music. Beethoven’s music is full of soul, passion, and energy. As a professional pianist, I certainly play his music as such. As a side note to the history lessons being given in the comments, and being an African American man, I am constantly being asked what my ethnicity is. People wonder if I’m from Afghanistan, Pakistan or India. I just smile.

    Does it really matter?

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    BMD Premium Member almost 9 years ago

    http://www.academia.edu/4074689/Black_Beethoven_and_the_Racial_Politics_of_Music_History

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    JanLC  almost 9 years ago

    That particular tidbit of information has been acknowledged for many years. So what?

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    Robert Nowall Premium Member almost 9 years ago

    After a certain point, you’re taking the wrong end of the stick if you make a bet on your ancestry.

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    strickmaedel  almost 9 years ago

    http://www.straightdope.com/columns/read/2598/was-ludwig-van-beethoven-of-african-ancestry

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    rqs1123  almost 9 years ago

    Another attempt to change history.

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    Snoopy_Fan  almost 9 years ago

    Schulz was way ahead of the time, eh, Ms. Dolezal?

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    Number Three  almost 9 years ago

    I love Soul Music and I have a 2-Disc Motown CD.xxx

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    rush.diana  almost 9 years ago

    Oh good grief……………………………………………………………………..

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    Tarredandfeathered  almost 9 years ago

    I’m waiting for the DNA results.

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    legaleagle48  almost 9 years ago

    It doesn’t help that NunYa Bidness misspelled “Moor”!

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    bmckee  almost 9 years ago

    A few facts in this whole question. Germany, and in particular Bonn where Beethoven was born, was adjacent to both France and the Netherlands which were both major colonial and slave trading powers. It was also a common practice in many European courts to have at least a few “blackamoor” servants, the term being “slang for dark skinned people.” So do I think that Beethoven was black, as Lucy suggests: no. Do I think that it is impossible that somewhere in his ancestry there might possibly have been a black person: again no, I don’t think that it is impossible.

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