Chronology of World SlaveryBloomsbury Academic, 1999 M06 15 - 580 páginas Chronology of World Slavery combines multiple chronologies, sidebars on specialized topics, primary source documents, and gripping illustrations into a compelling portrayal of slavery from the dawn of civilization to the present. Organized by geographic region and time period, this work enables readers to gain a quick understanding of how long slavery has been part of human life and where it has occurred. |
Dentro del libro
Resultados 1-3 de 90
Página 108
... practices of in- digenous slavery continued . One British colo- nial official commented upon this practice when he remarked that " the lower classes are glad to bind themselves and their posterity to such perpetual service in order to ...
... practices of in- digenous slavery continued . One British colo- nial official commented upon this practice when he remarked that " the lower classes are glad to bind themselves and their posterity to such perpetual service in order to ...
Página 237
... practice . In 1783 , Derham purchased his freedom from Dr. Dove for 500 pesos , a practice known as coartación ( process by which slaves purchased their freedom ) in Spain's New World colonies . In the act of emancipation , written in ...
... practice . In 1783 , Derham purchased his freedom from Dr. Dove for 500 pesos , a practice known as coartación ( process by which slaves purchased their freedom ) in Spain's New World colonies . In the act of emancipation , written in ...
Página 373
... practice continued despite efforts to restrict it . 1923 Ethiopia was admitted to membership in the League of Nations on September 28 over the objection of Great Britain but with the support of Italy and France . The government of ...
... practice continued despite efforts to restrict it . 1923 Ethiopia was admitted to membership in the League of Nations on September 28 over the objection of Great Britain but with the support of Italy and France . The government of ...
Contenido
Chronology | 1 |
Israelites and Slavery | 8 |
GrecoRoman Women as Slaves | 18 |
Derechos de autor | |
Otras 75 secciones no mostradas
Términos y frases comunes
abolished slavery abolition of slavery abolitionist aforesaid African slave trade American American Civil War antislavery Asia authorities became began Brazil Britain British captives captured century China Chinese Christian Civil coast Congress constitution court Cuba culture declared Document Dutch East emancipation emperor Empire enacted English enslaved established European eventually forces free blacks freed freedom French Fugitive Slave Act fugitive slaves Further Reading Greek Haiti India Indies indigenous institution island issued Jews John Kansas King land large numbers leaders legislature Madagascar manumission master ment Merina modern-day moral mulatto Negro North northern numbers of slaves officially owners Parliament person plantation political port Portugal Portuguese practice prohibited proslavery published rebellion region Roman Rome Saint Domingue Senate ship slave labor slaveholders slaveowners slavery social Society sold South Carolina southern Spanish territory tion U.S. Congress Umbanda United University Press vessels Virginia West Africa York
Referencias a este libro
Religion in World History: The Persistence of Imperial Communion John C. Super,Briane K. Turley Sin vista previa disponible - 2006 |
Tolerance Is No Virtue: Ignorance, Appreciation, and the Human Story Shirley Osborne Montserrat Sin vista previa disponible - 2006 |