blackamoor

[blak-uh-moo r] /ˈblæk əˌmʊər/
noun, Older Use: Disparaging and Offensive.
1.
a contemptuous term used to refer to a black person.
2.
a contemptuous term used to refer to any dark-skinned person.
Origin
1540-50; unexplained variant of phrase black Moor
Usage note
So-called blackamoors, or black Moors, were originally black people from North Africa who worked as servants and slaves in wealthy European households. The negative connotation of the term comes from its historical association with servitude and from the perception that black Moors were strangely exotic. In 1596, Queen Elizabeth I targeted them for deportation.
British Dictionary definitions for blackamoor

blackamoor

/ˈblækəˌmʊə; -ˌmɔː/
noun
1.
(archaic) a Black African or other person with dark skin
Word Origin
C16: see Black, Moor
Word Origin and History for blackamoor

Blackamoor

n.

"dark-skinned person," 1540s, from black (adj.) + Moor, with connecting element.