 | Women and their forgotten role in Slavery Nigel Sadler Sands of Time Consultancy Often when the history of slavery is studied the argument is over whose history is being told. This debate rarely goes beyond whether it is the history as written by or about the white or black involvement 77.9 Kb. 1 | read |
 | Slave trade background It was thus declared that the condition of slavery did not exist under English law. This judgement emancipated the 10 to 14 thousand slaves in England and also laid down that slavery contracted in other jurisdictions 28.66 Kb. 1 | read |
 | English Literature and Slavery 1772-1834: From the Beginning of the Abolitionist Movement to the Abolition of Slavery British Empire in 1834 is at the centre of our project entitled English Literature and Slavery 1772-1834: From the Beginning of the Abolitionist Movement to the Abolition of Slavery 26.53 Kb. 1 | read |
 | How was the Slave Trade Abolished? You can choose one or more of any of the following tasks to complete Overleaf is a timeline which describes how the slave trade (the transport of slaves), and then slavery itself (the existence of slaves), was abolished 29.34 Kb. 1 | read |
 | The British West Indies were islands that were colonized by Great Britain, stretching across the Caribbean from Jamaica through the Lesser Antilles to British Guiana Britain as sugar became king and in order for sugar production to be successful slaves were essential. The abolition of slavery in the British West Indies in the 19 century came about largely through the influence and work of individuals and groups who held 13.88 Kb. 1 | read |
 | Unit 2: how did thomas clarkson protest? Thomas Clarkson spent his whole life trying to end slavery. Join him on a tour round the country and investigate the slave trade in greater detail 53.35 Kb. 1 | read |
 | Considering Slavery Past and Present As a consequence enslaved Africans were routinely tortured (e g whipped, branded, beaten, chained, etc.); separated from other family members; and even deprived of their own names 27.6 Kb. 1 | read |
 | Maritime archives & library information sheet 3 liverpool and the atlantic slave trade Caribbean where captains sold the Africans to plantations owners. The owners and their agents forced the Africans to work as chattel slaves producing sugar and other tropical goods. They treated the enslaved brutally and showed little concern for their 43.08 Kb. 1 | read |
 | The Constitution of the United States: Is It Pro-Slavery or Anti-Slavery? States required by fidelity to the slaves, or by the just demands of conscience? Or, in other words, is the refusal to exercise the elective franchise, and to hold office in America, the surest, wisest 37.61 Kb. 1 | read |
 | Comemmoration of the bill for the abolition of the slave trade Bristol. 800 years or so later and, for the twentieth year in succession, William Wilberforce brought a bill before Parliament for the Abolition of the Slave Trade and on 25 March 1807 it received the Royal Assent 28.45 Kb. 1 | read |
 | Matthew mason Associate Professor, Department of History, Brigham Young University, Fall 2009 present 81.17 Kb. 1 | read |
 | Harriet tubman seminar On the African background to the slave insurrection in Saint-Domingue (Haïti) in 1791: The Bois Caiman ceremony and the Dahomian ‘blood pact’ 164.55 Kb. 3 | read |
 | The Abolition of The Slave Trade Abolitionism African captives than any nation (an estimated three million); Britain's colonies in the Caribbean and mainland North America produced vast quantities of tropical goods (sugar, tobacco, rice, indigo) for the home market 77.14 Kb. 1 | read |
 | From H. E. Marshall ‘Our Island Story’ – a book written for children in 1905 They had no rights whatever, their children might be taken from them and sold, sometimes even husbands and wives were sold to different masters, and never saw each other again. A master might treat his slaves as badly as he chose 18.28 Kb. 1 | read |
 | How to Place Slavery into British Identity Britain, so Cameron informed the audience of world leaders and diplomats, had invented sport, rid Europe of fascism, and abolished slavery and ought, therefore, to be taken seriously as a nation 43.98 Kb. 1 | read |