Slavery

The terms slavery and enslavement describe the state and condition of being a slave,[1] whilst chattel slavery is the system by which the enslaved person is rendered personal property.[2] In a system of de jure human bondage, the legal principles of property law are applied to a human being to reduce him or her into an object; that dehumanistion allows slavers to buy and sell and own people as personal property.[3] In economics, the term de facto slavery describes the conditions of unfree labour and forced labour, wherein people either are forced or compelled to work against their will.[4]

Relief depicting slaves in chains in the Roman Empire, at Smyrna, 200 CE.

Human slavery usually was a feature of civilisation,[5] and was legal in most societies, but now is outlawed in most countries of the world.[6][7] In 2019, approximately 40 million people, 26 per cent children, were enslaved throughout the world.[8] In modern times, more than one half of enslaved people provide forced labor, usually in the factories and sweatshops of the private sector.[8] In the industrialised world, Human trafficking is the modern variety of slavery; in the unindustrialised world, enslavement by debt bondage is a common form of entrapping a person,[4] such as captive domestic servants, forced marriage, and child soldiers.[9]

Terminology

The word slave is derived from the ethnonym (ethnic name) Slav.[10][11][12] It arrived in English via the Old French sclave. In Medieval Latin the word was sclavus and in Byzantine Greek σκλάβος.[10] Use of the word arose during the Early Medieval Period, when Slavs from Central and Eastern Europe (Saqaliba) were frequently enslaved by Moors from the Iberian Peninsula and North Africa.[13][14][15] An older interpretation connected slave to the Greek verb skyleúo 'to strip a slain enemy'.[16]

There is a dispute among historians about whether terms such as "unfree labourer" or enslaved person, rather than "slave", should be used when describing the victims of slavery. According to those proposing a change in terminology, slave perpetuates the crime of slavery in language; by reducing its victims to a nonhuman noun instead of "carry[ing] them forward as people, not the property that they were". Other historians prefer slave because the term is familiar and shorter, or because it accurately reflects the inhumanity of slavery, with "person" implying a degree of autonomy that slavery does not allow.[17]

A poster for a slave auction in Georgia, U.S., 1860
Portrait of an older woman in New Orleans with her enslaved servant girl in the mid 19th century

Bonded labour

Indenture, otherwise known as bonded labour or debt bondage, is a form of unfree labour under which a person pledges himself or herself against a loan.[18] The services required to repay the debt, and their duration, may be undefined.[18] Debt bondage can be passed on from generation to generation, with children required to pay off their progenitors' debt.[18] It is the most widespread form of slavery today.[4] Debt bondage is most prevalent in South Asia.[19]

Chattel slavery

Chattel slavery, also called traditional slavery, is so named because people are treated as the chattel (personal property) of the owner and are bought and sold as commodities. Typically, under the chattel slave system, children inherited slave status via the mother (partus sequitur ventrem).[20] Although it dominated many different societies throughout human history, this form of slavery has been formally abolished and is very rare today. Even when it can be said to survive, it is not upheld by the legal system of any internationally recognized government.[21]

Dependents

"Slavery" has also been used to refer to a legal state of dependency to somebody else.[22][23] For example, in Persia, the situations and lives of such slaves could be better than those of common citizens.[24]

Forced labour

Forced labour, or unfree labour, is sometimes used to describe an individual who is forced to work against their own will, under threat of violence or other punishment, but the generic term unfree labour is also used to describe chattel slavery, as well as any other situation in which a person is obliged to work against their own will, and a person's ability to work productively is under the complete control of another person.[4] This may also include institutions not commonly classified as slavery, such as serfdom, conscription and penal labour. While some unfree labourers, such as serfs, have substantive, de jure legal or traditional rights, they also have no ability to terminate the arrangements under which they work and are frequently subject to forms of coercion, violence, and restrictions on their activities and movement outside their place of work.

Human trafficking primarily involves women and children forced into prostitution and is the fastest growing form of forced labour, with Thailand, Cambodia, India, Brazil and Mexico having been identified as leading hotspots of commercial sexual exploitation of children.[4][25][26] Examples of sexual slavery, often in military contexts, include detention in "rape camps" or "comfort stations," "comfort women", forced "marriages" to soldiers and other practices involving the treatment of women or men as chattel and, as such, violations of the peremptory norm prohibiting slavery.[27][28][29][30]

In 2007, Human Rights Watch estimated that 200,000 to 300,000 children served as soldiers in current conflicts.[31] More girls under 16 work as domestic workers than any other category of child labor, often sent to cities by parents living in rural poverty[32] such as in restaveks in Haiti.

Forced marriage

Forced marriages or early marriages are often considered types of slavery. Forced marriage continues to be practiced in parts of the world including some parts of Asia and Africa and in immigrant communities in the West.[33][34][35][36] Sacred prostitution is where girls and women are pledged to priests or those of higher castes, such as the practice of Devadasi in South Asia or fetish slaves in West Africa.[4] Marriage by abduction occurs in many places in the world today, with a national average of 69% of marriages in Ethiopia being through abduction.[37]

Characteristics

Economics

Economists have attempted to model the circumstances under which slavery (and variants such as serfdom) appear and disappear. One observation is that slavery becomes more desirable for landowners where land is abundant but labour is scarce, such that rent is depressed and paid workers can demand high wages. If the opposite holds true, then it becomes more costly for landowners to have guards for the slaves than to employ paid workers who can only demand low wages because of the amount of competition.[38] Thus, first slavery and then serfdom gradually decreased in Europe as the population grew but were reintroduced in the Americas and in Russia as large areas of new land with few people became available.[39]

Slavery is more common when the labor done is relatively simple and thus easy to supervise, such as large-scale growing of a single crop, like sugar and cotton, in which output was based on economies of scale. This enables such systems of labor, such as the gang system in the United States, to become prominent on large plantations where field hands were monitored and worked with factory-like precision. For example, each work gang was based on an internal division of labour that assigned every member of the gang to a precise task and simultaneously made their own performance dependent on the actions of the others. The hoe hands chopped out the weeds that surrounded the cotton plants as well as excessive sprouts. The plow gangs followed behind, stirring the soil near the rows of cotton plants and tossing it back around the plants. Thus, the gang system worked like an assembly line.[40]

Since the 18th century, critics have argued that slavery tends to retard technological advancement because the focus is on increasing the number of slaves doing simple tasks rather than upgrading the efficiency of labour. For example, it is sometime argued that, because of this narrow focus, theoretical knowledge and learning in Greece – and later in Rome – was not applied to ease physical labour or improve manufacturing.[41]

The work of the Mercedarians was in ransoming Christian slaves held in North Africa (1637).

Scottish economist Adam Smith states that free labour was economically better than slave labour, and that it is nearly impossible to end slavery in a free, democratic, or republican form of government since many of its legislators or political figures were slave owners, and would not punish themselves. He further states that slaves would be better able to gain their freedom when there was centralized government, or a central authority like a king or the church.[42][43] Similar arguments appear later in the works of Auguste Comte, especially when it comes to Smith's belief in the separation of powers, or what Comte called the "separation of the spiritual and the temporal" during the Middle Ages and the end of slavery, and Smith's criticism of masters, past and present. As Smith states in the Lectures on Jurisprudence, "The great power of the clergy thus concurring with that of the king set the slaves at liberty. But it was absolutely necessary both that the authority of the king and of the clergy should be great. Where ever any one of these was wanting, slavery still continues..."

Sale and inspection of slaves

Worldwide, slavery is a criminal offense, but slave owners can get very high returns for their risk. According to researcher Siddharth Kara, the profits generated worldwide by all forms of slavery in 2007 were $91.2 billion. That is second only to drug trafficking, in terms of global criminal enterprises. Currently, the weighted average global sales price of a slave is calculated to be approximately $340, with a high of $1,895 for the average trafficked sex slave, and a low of $40 to $50 for debt bondage slaves in part of Asia and Africa.[44] The weighted average annual profits generated by a slave in 2007 was $3,175, with a low of an average $950 for bonded labor and $29,210 for a trafficked sex slave.[44] Approximately 40% of slave profits each year are generated by trafficked sex slaves, representing slightly more than 4% of the world's 29 million slaves.[44]

Identification

Branding of a female slave
Barefooted slaves depicted in David Roberts' Egypt and Nubia, issued between 1845 and 1849
Slave branding, c. 1853

Throughout history, slaves were clothed in a distinctive fashion, particularly with respect to the frequent lack of footwear, as they were rather commonly forced to go barefoot. This was partly because of economic reasons but also served as a distinguishing feature, especially in South Africa and South America. For example, the Cape Town slave code stated that "Slaves must go barefoot and must carry passes."[45] It also puts slaves at a physical disadvantage because of the lack of protection against environmental adversities and also in situations of possible confrontation, thereby making it more difficult to escape or to rebel against their owners.

This was the case in the majority of states that abolished slavery later in history, as most images from the respective historical period suggest that slaves were barefoot.[46] To quote Brother Riemer (1779): "[the slaves] are, even in their most beautiful suit, obliged to go barefoot. Slaves were forbidden to wear shoes. This was a prime mark of distinction between the free and the bonded and no exceptions were permitted."[47]

According to the Bible, shoes have been considered badges of freedom since antiquity: "But the father said to his servants, Bring forth the best robe, and put [it] on him; and put a ring on his hand, and shoes on [his] feet" (Luke 15:22). This aspect can be viewed as an informal law in areas where slavery existed as any person sighted barefoot in public would be conclusively regarded as a slave.

In certain societies this rule is valid to this day. As with the Tuareg, where slavery is still unofficially practiced, their slaves are constantly forced to remain barefoot as a recognition mark. Mainly through their bare feet their societal status and rank opposite their owners is displayed to the public in a plainly visible way.[48]

Another widespread practice was branding the slaves either to generally mark them as property or as punishment usually reserved for fugitives.

History

Some scholars differentiate between ancient forms of slavery and the large-scale, largely race-based slavery which grew to immense proportions starting in the 14th century. The first type of slavery, sometimes called "just title servitude," was suffered by prisoners of war, debtors, and other vulnerable people.[49] The second, race-based type of slavery was argued even by some contemporary writers to be intrinsically immoral.[50][51][52]

Early history

Slaves working in a mine, Ancient Greece

Evidence of slavery predates written records and has existed in many cultures.[5] Slavery is rare among hunter-gatherer populations because it requires economic surpluses and a high population density to be viable. Thus, although it has existed among unusually resource-rich hunter gatherers, such as the American Indian peoples of the salmon-rich rivers of the Pacific Northwest Coast, slavery became widespread only with the invention of agriculture during the Neolithic Revolution about 11,000 years ago.[53]

In the earliest known records, slavery is treated as an established institution. The Code of Hammurabi (c. 1760 BC), for example, prescribed death for anyone who helped a slave escape or who sheltered a fugitive.[54] The Bible mentions slavery as an established institution.[5] Slavery was known in almost every ancient civilization and society.[5] Such institutions included debt bondage, punishment for crime, the enslavement of prisoners of war, child abandonment, and the birth of slave children to slaves.[55]

Classical antiquity

Africa

Slavery existed in Pharaonic Egypt, but studying it is complicated by terminology used by the Egyptians to refer to different classes of servitude over the course of history. Interpretation of the textual evidence of classes of slaves in ancient Egypt has been difficult to differentiate by word usage alone.[56][57] There were three apparent types of enslavement in Ancient Egypt: chattel slavery, bonded labor, and forced labor.[58][59][60]

Asia

Slavery is known to have existed in ancient China as early as the Shang dynasty.[61] Slavery was largely employed by governments as a means of maintaining a public labor force.[62][63]

Europe

Ancient Greece and Rome
Ishmaelites Purchase Joseph, Schnorr von Carolsfeld, 1860

Records of slavery in Ancient Greece date as far back as Mycenaean Greece. It is certain that Classical Athens had the largest slave population, with as many as 80,000 in the 6th and 5th centuries BC.[64] As the Roman Republic expanded outward, entire populations were enslaved, thus creating an ample supply from all over Europe and the Mediterranean. Slaves were used for labour, as well as for amusement (e.g. gladiators and sex slaves). This oppression by an elite minority eventually led to slave revolts (see Roman Servile Wars); the Third Servile War, led by Spartacus, (a Thracian) being the most famous.

Slave Market in Ancient Rome, by Jean-Léon Gérôme

By the late Republican era, slavery had become a vital economic pillar in the wealth of Rome, as well as a very significant part of Roman society.[65] It is estimated that 25% or more of the population of Ancient Rome was enslaved, although the actual percentage is debated by scholars and varied from region to region.[66][67] Slaves represented 15–25% of Italy's population,[68] mostly captives in war,[68] especially from Gaul[69] and Epirus. Estimates of the number of slaves in the Roman Empire suggest that the majority of slaves were scattered throughout the provinces outside of Italy.[68] Generally, slaves in Italy were indigenous Italians,[70] with a minority of foreigners (including both slaves and freedmen) born outside of Italy estimated at 5% of the total in the capital at its peak, where their number was largest. Those from outside of Europe were predominantly of Greek descent, while the Jewish ones never fully assimilated into Roman society, remaining an identifiable minority. These slaves (especially the foreigners) had higher death rates and lower birth rates than natives and were sometimes even subjected to mass expulsions.[71] The average recorded age at death for the slaves of the city of Rome was seventeen and a half years (17.2 for males; 17.9 for females).[72]

Middle Ages

Africa

Slavery was widespread in Africa, with both internal and external slave trade.[73] In the Senegambia region, between 1300 and 1900, close to one-third of the population was enslaved. In early Islamic states of the western Sahel, including Ghana, Mali, Segou, and Songhai, about a third of the population were enslaved.[74]

13th-century slave market in Yemen.[75]

The Arab slave trade, across the Sahara desert and across the Indian Ocean, began after Muslim Arab and Swahili traders won control of the Swahili Coast and sea routes during the 9th century (see Sultanate of Zanzibar). These traders captured Bantu peoples (Zanj) from the interior in present-day Kenya, Mozambique and Tanzania and brought them to the coast.[76][77] There, the slaves gradually assimilated in the rural areas, particularly on the Unguja and Pemba islands.[78]

Americas

Slavery in Mexico can be traced back to the Aztecs.[79] Other Amerindians, such as the Inca of the Andes, the Tupinambá of Brazil, the Creek of Georgia, and the Comanche of Texas, also owned slaves.[5]

Asia

China

Many Han Chinese were enslaved in the process of the Mongol invasion of China proper.[80] According to Japanese historians Sugiyama Masaaki (杉山正明) and Funada Yoshiyuki (舩田善之), there were also a certain number of Mongolian slaves owned by Han Chinese during the Yuan dynasty. Moreover, there is no evidence that the Han Chinese, who were at the bottom of Yuan society according to some research, suffered particularly cruel abuse.[81][82]

Korea

Slavery in Korea existed since before the Three Kingdoms of Korea period, approximately 2,000 years ago.[83] Slavery has been described as "very important in medieval Korea, probably more important than in any other East Asian country, but by the 16th century, population growth was making [it] unnecessary".[84] Slavery went into decline around the 10th century but came back in the late Goryeo period when Korea also experienced a number of slave rebellions.[83]

In the Joseon period of Korea, members of the slave class were known as nobi. The nobi were socially indistinct from freemen (i.e., the middle and common classes) other than the ruling yangban class, and some possessed property rights, legal entities and civil rights. Hence, some scholars argue that it is inappropriate to call them "slaves",[85] while some scholars describe them as serfs.[86][87] The nobi population could fluctuate up to about one-third of the population, but on average the nobi made up about 10% of the total population.[88] In 1801, the vast majority of government nobi were emancipated,[89] and by 1858 the nobi population stood at about 1.5 percent of the total population of Korea.[90]

Europe

Adalbert of Prague accuses Jews of the Christian slave trade against Boleslaus II

Slavery largely disappeared from Western Europe in the Middle Ages but persisted longer in Eastern Europe.[91] Large-scale trading in slaves was mainly confined to the South and East of early medieval Europe: the Byzantine Empire and the Muslim world were the destinations, while pagan Central and Eastern Europe (along with the Caucasus and Tartary) were important sources. Viking, Arab, Greek, and Radhanite Jewish merchants were all involved in the slave trade during the Early Middle Ages.[92][93][94] The trade in European slaves reached a peak in the 10th century following the Zanj Rebellion which dampened the use of African slaves in the Arab world.[95][96]

Slavery in early medieval Europe was so common that the Catholic Church repeatedly prohibited it, or at least the export of Christian slaves to non-Christian lands, as for example at the Council of Koblenz (922), the Council of London (1102) (which aimed mainly at the sale of English slaves to Ireland)[97] and the Council of Armagh (1171). Serfdom, on the contrary, was widely accepted. In 1452, Pope Nicholas V issued the papal bull Dum Diversas, granting the kings of Spain and Portugal the right to reduce any "Saracens (Muslims), pagans and any other unbelievers" to perpetual slavery, legitimizing the slave trade as a result of war.[98] The approval of slavery under these conditions was reaffirmed and extended in his Romanus Pontifex bull of 1455.

Britain

In Britain, slavery continued to be practiced following the fall of Rome, and sections of Hywel the Good's laws dealt with slaves in medieval Wales. The trade particularly picked up after the Viking invasions, with major markets at Chester[99] and Bristol[100] supplied by Danish, Mercian, and Welsh raiding of one another's borderlands. At the time of the Domesday Book, nearly 10% of the English population were slaves.[101] William the Conqueror introduced a law preventing the sale of slaves overseas.[102] According to historian John Gillingham, by 1200 slavery in the British Isles was non-existent.[103]

However, when England began to participate in the slave trade, and cultivated colonies in the Caribbean, African slaves began to make their appearance in Tudor England, and remained a presence until abolition in the 19th century. The slave trade was abolished by the Slave Trade Act 1807, although slavery remained legal in possessions outside Europe until the passage of the Slavery Abolition Act 1833 and the Indian Slavery Act, 1843.[104]

Ottoman Empire
British captain witnessing the miseries of slaves in Ottoman Algeria, 1815

The Byzantine-Ottoman wars and the Ottoman wars in Europe brought large numbers of slaves into the Islamic world.[105] To staff its bureaucracy, the Ottoman Empire established a janissary system which seized hundreds of thousands of Christian boys through the devşirme system. They were well cared for but were legally slaves owned by the government and were not allowed to marry. They were never bought or sold. The empire gave them significant administrative and military roles. The system began about 1365; there were 135,000 janissaries in 1826, when the system ended.[106]

After the Battle of Lepanto, 12,000 Christian galley slaves were recaptured and freed from the Ottoman fleet.[107] Eastern Europe suffered a series of Tatar invasions, the goal of which was to loot and capture slaves into jasyr.[108] Seventy-five Crimean Tatar raids were recorded into Poland–Lithuania between 1474 and 1569.[109]

Poland

Slavery in Poland was forbidden in the 15th century; in Lithuania, slavery was formally abolished in 1588; they were replaced by the second serfdom.

Spain and Portugal

Medieval Spain and Portugal were the scene of almost constant Muslim invasion of the predominantly Christian area. Periodic raiding expeditions were sent from Al-Andalus to ravage the Iberian Christian kingdoms, bringing back booty and slaves. In a raid against Lisbon in 1189, for example, the Almohad caliph Yaqub al-Mansur took 3,000 female and child captives, while his governor of Córdoba, in a subsequent attack upon Silves, Portugal, in 1191, took 3,000 Christian slaves.[110] From the 11th to the 19th century, North African Barbary Pirates engaged in Razzias, raids on European coastal towns, to capture Christian slaves to sell at slave markets in places such as Algeria and Morocco.[111][112] The maritime town of Lagos was the first slave market created in Portugal (one of the earliest colonizers of the Americas) for the sale of imported African slaves – the Mercado de Escravos, opened in 1444.[113][114] In 1441, the first slaves were brought to Portugal from northern Mauritania.[114]

By 1552, black African slaves made up 10% of the population of Lisbon.[115][116] In the second half of the 16th century, the Crown gave up the monopoly on slave trade, and the focus of European trade in African slaves shifted from import to Europe to slave transports directly to tropical colonies in the Americas – especially Brazil.[114] In the 15th century one-third of the slaves were resold to the African market in exchange of gold.[117]

Russia
Crimean Tatar raiders enslaved more than 1 million Eastern Europeans.[118]

In Kievan Rus and Muscovy, slaves were usually classified as kholops. According to David P. Forsythe, "In 1649 up to three-quarters of Muscovy's peasants, or 13 to 14 million people, were serfs whose material lives were barely distinguishable from slaves. Perhaps another 1.5 million were formally enslaved, with Russian slaves serving Russian masters."[119] Slavery remained a major institution in Russia until 1723, when Peter the Great converted the household slaves into house serfs. Russian agricultural slaves were formally converted into serfs earlier in 1679.[120]

Scandinavia

In Scandinavia, thralldom was abolished in the mid-14th century.[121]

Early modern period

Nazi Germany

During the Second World War Nazi Germany effectively enslaved about 12 million people, both those considered undesirable and citizens of conquered countries, with the avowed intention of treating these Untermenschen (sub-humans) as a permanent slave-class of inferior beings who could be worked until they died, and who possessed neither the rights nor the legal status of members of the Aryan race.[122]

Africa

19th-century engraving depicting an Arab slave-trading caravan transporting black African slaves across the Sahara.

The Arab slave trade lasted more than a millennium.[123] As recently as the early 1960s, Saudi Arabia's slave population was estimated at 300,000.[124] Along with Yemen, the Saudis abolished slavery in 1962.[125] Historically, slaves in the Arab World came from many different regions, including Sub-Saharan Africa (mainly Zanj),[126] the Caucasus (mainly Circassians),[127] Central Asia (mainly Tartars), and Central and Eastern Europe (mainly Saqaliba).[128]

Some historians assert that as many as 17 million people were sold into slavery on the coast of the Indian Ocean, the Middle East, and North Africa, and approximately 5 million African slaves were bought by Muslim slave traders and taken from Africa across the Red Sea, Indian Ocean, and Sahara desert between 1500 and 1900.[129] The captives were sold throughout the Middle East. This trade accelerated as superior ships led to more trade and greater demand for labour on plantations in the region. Eventually, tens of thousands of captives were being taken every year.[78][130][131] The Indian Ocean slave trade was multi-directional and changed over time. To meet the demand for menial labor, Bantu slaves bought by Arab slave traders from southeastern Africa were sold in cumulatively large numbers over the centuries to customers in Egypt, Arabia, the Persian Gulf, India, European colonies in the Far East, the Indian Ocean islands, Ethiopia and Somalia.[132]

According to the Encyclopedia of African History, "It is estimated that by the 1890s the largest slave population of the world, about 2 million people, was concentrated in the territories of the Sokoto Caliphate. The use of slave labor was extensive, especially in agriculture."[133][134] The Anti-Slavery Society estimated there were 2 million slaves in Ethiopia in the early 1930s out of an estimated population of 8 to 16 million.[135]

Slave labor in East Africa was drawn from the Zanj, Bantu peoples that lived along the East African coast.[77][136] The Zanj were for centuries shipped as slaves by Arab traders to all the countries bordering the Indian Ocean. The Umayyad and Abbasid caliphs recruited many Zanj slaves as soldiers and, as early as 696, there were slave revolts of the Zanj against their Arab enslavers in Iraq. The Zanj Rebellion, a series of uprisings that took place between 869 and 883 near Basra (also known as Basara), situated in present-day Iraq, is believed to have involved enslaved Zanj that had originally been captured from the African Great Lakes region and areas further south in East Africa.[137] It grew to involve over 500,000 slaves and free men who were imported from across the Muslim empire and claimed over "tens of thousands of lives in lower Iraq".[138] The Zanj who were taken as slaves to the Middle East were often used in strenuous agricultural work.[139] As the plantation economy boomed and the Arabs became richer, agriculture and other manual labor work was thought to be demeaning. The resulting labor shortage led to an increased slave market.

Slave market in Algiers, 1684

In Algiers, the capital of Algeria, captured Christians and Europeans were forced into slavery. In about 1650, there were as many as 35,000 Christian slaves in Algiers.[140] By one estimate, raids by Barbary pirates on coastal villages and ships extending from Italy to Iceland, enslaved an estimated 1 to 1.25 million Europeans between the 16th and 19th centuries.[141][142][143] However, to this estimate is extrapolated by assuming the number of European, slaves captured by Barbary pirates, was constant for 250 years period:

There are no records of how many men, women and children were enslaved, but it is possible to calculate roughly the number of fresh captives that would have been needed to keep populations steady and replace those slaves who died, escaped, were ransomed, or converted to Islam. On this basis it is thought that around 8,500 new slaves were needed annually to replenish numbers – about 850,000 captives over the century from 1580 to 1680. By extension, for the 250 years between 1530 and 1780, the figure could easily have been as high as 1,250,000.[144]

Davis' numbers have been refuted by other historians, such as David Earle, who cautions that true picture of Europeans slaves is clouded by the fact the corsairs also seized non-Christian whites from eastern Europe.[144] In addition, the number of slaves traded was hyperactive, with exaggerated estimates relying on peak years to calculate averages for entire centuries, or millennia. Hence, there were wide fluctuations year-to-year, particularly in the 18th and 19th centuries, given slave imports, and also given the fact that, prior to the 1840s, there are no consistent records. Middle East expert, John Wright, cautions that modern estimates are based on back-calculations from human observation.[145] Such observations, across the late 16th and early 17th century observers, account for around 35,000 European Christian slaves held throughout this period on the Barbary Coast, across Tripoli, Tunis, but mostly in Algiers. The majority were sailors (particularly those who were English), taken with their ships, but others were fishermen and coastal villagers. However, most of these captives were people from lands close to Africa, particularly Spain and Italy.[146] This eventually led to the bombardment of Algiers by an Anglo-Dutch fleet in 1816.[147][148]

Arab-Swahili slave traders and their captives on the Ruvuma River in East Africa, 19th century

Under Omani Arabs, Zanzibar became East Africa's main slave port, with as many as 50,000 enslaved Africans passing through every year during the 19th century.[149][150] Some historians estimate that between 11 and 18 million African slaves crossed the Red Sea, Indian Ocean, and Sahara Desert from 650 to 1900 AD.[5][151] Eduard Rüppell described the losses of Sudanese slaves being transported on foot to Egypt: "after the Daftardar bey's 1822 campaign in the southern Nuba mountains, nearly 40,000 slaves were captured. However, through bad treatment, disease and desert travel barely 5,000 made it to Egypt.."[152] W.A. Veenhoven wrote: "The German doctor, Gustav Nachtigal, an eye-witness, believed that for every slave who arrived at a market three or four died on the way ... Keltie (The Partition of Africa, London, 1920) believes that for every slave the Arabs brought to the coast at least six died on the way or during the slavers' raid. Livingstone puts the figure as high as ten to one."[153]

Systems of servitude and slavery were common in parts of Africa, as they were in much of the ancient world. In many African societies where slavery was prevalent, the enslaved people were not treated as chattel slaves and were given certain rights in a system similar to indentured servitude elsewhere in the world. The forms of slavery in Africa were closely related to kinship structures. In many African communities, where land could not be owned, enslavement of individuals was used as a means to increase the influence a person had and expand connections.[154] This made slaves a permanent part of a master's lineage and the children of slaves could become closely connected with the larger family ties.[155] Children of slaves born into families could be integrated into the master's kinship group and rise to prominent positions within society, even to the level of chief in some instances. However, stigma often remained attached and there could be strict separations between slave members of a kinship group and those related to the master.[154] Slavery was practiced in many different forms: debt slavery, enslavement of war captives, military slavery, and criminal slavery were all practiced in various parts of Africa.[156] Slavery for domestic and court purposes was widespread throughout Africa.

A model showing a typical 1700s European slave ship on the Middle Passage, National Museum of American History.

When the Atlantic slave trade began, many of the local slave systems began supplying captives for chattel slave markets outside Africa. Although the Atlantic slave trade was not the only slave trade from Africa, it was the largest in volume and intensity. As Elikia M’bokolo wrote in Le Monde diplomatique:

The African continent was bled of its human resources via all possible routes. Across the Sahara, through the Red Sea, from the Indian Ocean ports and across the Atlantic. At least ten centuries of slavery for the benefit of the Muslim countries (from the ninth to the nineteenth).... Four million enslaved people exported via the Red Sea, another four million through the Swahili ports of the Indian Ocean, perhaps as many as nine million along the trans-Saharan caravan route, and eleven to twenty million (depending on the author) across the Atlantic Ocean.[157]

The trans-Atlantic slave trade peaked in the late 18th century, when the largest number of slaves were captured on raiding expeditions into the interior of West Africa. These expeditions were typically carried out by African kingdoms, such as the Oyo Empire (Yoruba), the Ashanti Empire,[158] the kingdom of Dahomey,[159] and the Aro Confederacy.[160] It is estimated that about 15 percent of slaves died during the voyage, with mortality rates considerably higher in Africa itself in the process of capturing and transporting indigenous peoples to the ships.[161][162]

Americas

Diagrams of a slave ship and the alignment of captive slaves during the Atlantic slave trade.

Slavery in America remains a contentious issue and played a major role in the history and evolution of some countries, triggering a revolution, a civil war, and numerous rebellions.

In order to establish itself as an American empire, Spain had to fight against the relatively powerful civilizations of the New World. The Spanish conquest of the indigenous peoples in the Americas included using the Natives as forced labour. The Spanish colonies were the first Europeans to use African slaves in the New World on islands such as Cuba and Hispaniola.[163] Bartolomé de las Casas, a 16th-century Dominican friar and Spanish historian, participated in campaigns in Cuba (at Bayamo and Camagüey) and was present at the massacre of Hatuey; his observation of that massacre led him to fight for a social movement away from the use of natives as slaves. Also, the alarming decline in the native population had spurred the first royal laws protecting the native population. The first African slaves arrived in Hispaniola in 1501.[164] England played a prominent role in the Atlantic slave trade. The "slave triangle" was pioneered by Francis Drake and his associates.

Many Africans who arrived in North America during the 17th and 18th centuries came under contract as indentured servants.[165] The transformation from indentured servitude to slavery was a gradual process in Virginia. The earliest legal documentation of such a shift was in 1640 where a negro, John Punch, was sentenced to lifetime slavery, forcing him to serve his master, Hugh Gwyn, for the remainder of his life, for attempting to run away. This case was significant because it established the disparity between his sentence as a black man and that of the two white indentured servants who escaped with him (one described as Dutch and one as a Scotchman). It is the first documented case of a black man sentenced to lifetime servitude and is considered one of the first legal cases to make a racial distinction between black and white indentured servants.[166][167][168][169][170]

After 1640, planters started to ignore the expiration of indentured contracts and keep their servants as slaves for life. This was demonstrated by the 1655 case Johnson v. Parker, where the court ruled that a black man, Anthony Johnson of Virginia, was granted ownership of another black man, John Casor, as the result of a civil case.[171] This was the first instance of a judicial determination in the Thirteen Colonies holding that a person who had committed no crime could be held in servitude for life.[172][173][174][175][176][177][178]

Barbados
Statue of Bussa, who led the largest slave rebellion in Barbadian history.

In the early 17th century, the majority of the labour in Barbados was provided by European indentured servants, mainly English, Irish and Scottish, with enslaved Africans and enslaved Amerindians providing little of the workforce. The introduction of sugar cane from Dutch Brazil in 1640 completely transformed society and the economy. Barbados eventually had one of the world's largest sugar industries.[179]

As the effects of the new crop increased, so did the shift in the ethnic composition of Barbados and surrounding islands. The workable sugar plantation required a large investment and a great deal of heavy labour. At first, Dutch traders supplied the equipment, financing, and enslaved Africans, in addition to transporting most of the sugar to Europe. In 1644, the population of Barbados was estimated at 30,000, of which about 800 were of African descent, with the remainder mainly of English descent. These English smallholders were eventually bought out, and the island filled up with large sugar plantations worked by enslaved Africans. By 1660, there was near parity with 27,000 blacks and 26,000 whites. By 1666, at least 12,000 white smallholders had been bought out, died, or left the island. Many of the remaining whites were increasingly poor. By 1680, there were 17 slaves for every indentured servant. By 1700, there were 15,000 free whites and 50,000 enslaved Africans.

Because of the increased implementation of slave codes, which created differential treatment between Africans and the white workers and ruling planter class, the island became increasingly unattractive to poor whites. Black or slave codes were implemented in 1661, 1676, 1682, and 1688. In response to these codes, several slave rebellions were attempted or planned during this time, but none succeeded. Nevertheless, poor whites who had or acquired the means to emigrate often did so. Planters expanded their importation of enslaved Africans to cultivate sugar cane.

Brazil
Public flogging of a slave in 19th-century Brazil, by Johann Moritz Rugendas
Slave punishment by Jacques Étienne Arago, 1839.

Slavery in Brazil began long before the first Portuguese settlement was established in 1532, as members of one tribe would enslave captured members of another.[180]

Later, Portuguese colonists were heavily dependent on indigenous labor during the initial phases of settlement to maintain the subsistence economy, and natives were often captured by expeditions called bandeiras. The importation of African slaves began midway through the 16th century, but the enslavement of indigenous peoples continued well into the 17th and 18th centuries.

During the Atlantic slave trade era, Brazil imported more African slaves than any other country. Nearly 5 million slaves were brought from Africa to Brazil during the period from 1501 to 1866.[181] Until the early 1850s, most enslaved Africans who arrived on Brazilian shores were forced to embark at West Central African ports, especially in Luanda (present-day Angola). Today, with the exception of Nigeria, the largest population of people of African descent is in Brazil.[182]

Slave labor was the driving force behind the growth of the sugar economy in Brazil, and sugar was the primary export of the colony from 1600 to 1650. Gold and diamond deposits were discovered in Brazil in 1690, which sparked an increase in the importation of African slaves to power this newly profitable market. Transportation systems were developed for the mining infrastructure, and population boomed from immigrants seeking to take part in gold and diamond mining. Demand for African slaves did not wane after the decline of the mining industry in the second half of the 18th century. Cattle ranching and foodstuff production proliferated after the population growth, both of which relied heavily on slave labor. 1.7 million slaves were imported to Brazil from Africa from 1700 to 1800, and the rise of coffee in the 1830s further enticed expansion of the slave trade.

Brazil was the last country in the Western world to abolish slavery. Forty percent of the total number of slaves brought to the Americas were sent to Brazil. For reference, the United States received 10 percent. Despite being abolished, there are still people working in slavery-like conditions in Brazil in the 21st century.

Cuba

In 1789 the Spanish Crown led an effort to reform slavery, as the demand for slave labor in Cuba was growing. The Crown issued a decree, Código Negro Español (Spanish Black Codex), that specified food and clothing provisions, put limits on the number of work hours, limited punishments, required religious instruction, and protected marriages, forbidding the sale of young children away from their mothers.[183] The British made other changes to the institution of slavery in Cuba.[183] But planters often flouted the laws and protested against them, considering them a threat to their authority[183] and an intrusion into their personal lives.[183]

The slaveowners did not protest against all the measures of the codex, many of which they argued were already common practices. They objected to efforts to set limits on their ability to apply physical punishment. For instance, the Black Codex limited whippings to 25 and required the whippings "not to cause serious bruises or bleeding".[183] The slave-owners thought that the slaves would interpret these limits as weaknesses, ultimately leading to resistance.[183] Another contested issue was the work hours that were restricted "from sunrise to sunset"; plantation owners responded by explaining that cutting and processing of cane needed 20-hour days during the harvest season.[183]

Those slaves who worked on sugar plantations and in sugar mills were often subject to the harshest of conditions. The field work was rigorous manual labor which the slaves began at an early age. The work days lasted close to 20 hours during harvest and processing, including cultivating and cutting the crops, hauling wagons, and processing sugarcane with dangerous machinery. The slaves were forced to reside in barracoons, where they were crammed in and locked in by a padlock at night, getting about three to four hours of sleep. The conditions of the barracoons were harsh; they were highly unsanitary and extremely hot. Typically there was no ventilation; the only window was a small barred hole in the wall.[184]

Slaves in Cuba unloading ice from Maine, 1832

Cuba's slavery system was gendered in a way that some duties were performed only by male slaves, some only by female slaves. Female slaves in Havana from the 16th century onwards performed duties such as operating the town taverns, eating houses, and lodges, as well as being laundresses and domestic laborers and servants. Female slaves also served as the town prostitutes.

Some Cuban women could gain freedom by having children with white men. As in other Latin cultures, there were looser borders with the mulatto or mixed-race population. Sometimes men who took slaves as wives or concubines freed both them and their children. As in New Orleans and Saint-Domingue, mulattos began to be classified as a third group between the European colonists and African slaves. Freedmen, generally of mixed race, came to represent 20% of the total Cuban population and 41% of the non-white Cuban population.[185]

Planters encouraged Afro-Cuban slaves to have children in order to reproduce their work force. The masters wanted to pair strong and large-built black men with healthy black women. They were placed in the barracoons and forced to have sex and create offspring of “breed stock” children, who would sell for around 500 pesos. The planters needed children to be born to replace slaves who died under the harsh regime. Sometimes if the overseers did not like the quality of children, they separate the parents and sent the mother back to working in the fields.[186]

Both women and men were subject to the punishments of violence and humiliating abuse. Slaves who misbehaved or disobeyed their masters were often placed in stocks in the depths of the boiler houses where they were abandoned for days at a time, and oftentimes two to three months. These wooden stocks were made in two types: lying-down or stand-up types. women were punished, even when pregnant. They were subjected to whippings: they had to lie "face down over a scooped-out piece of round [earth] to protect their bellies."[187] Some masters reportedly whipped pregnant women in the belly, often causing miscarriages. The wounds were treated with “compresses of tobacco leaves, urine and salt."[188]

Haiti

Slavery in Haiti started with the arrival of Christopher Columbus on the island in 1492. The practice was devastating to the native population.[189] Following the indigenous Taíno's near decimation from forced labour, disease and war, the Spanish, under advisement of the Catholic priest Bartolomeu de las Casas, and with the blessing of the Catholic church began engaging in earnest in the kidnapped and forced labour of enslaved Africans. During the French colonial period beginning in 1625, the economy of Haiti (then known as Saint-Domingue) was based on slavery, and the practice there was regarded as the most brutal in the world.

Following the Treaty of Ryswick of 1697, Hispaniola was divided between France and Spain. France received the western third and subsequently named it Saint-Domingue. To develop it into sugarcane plantations, the French imported thousands of slaves from Africa. Sugar was a lucrative commodity crop throughout the 18th century. By 1789, approximately 40,000 white colonists lived in Saint-Domingue. The whites were vastly outnumbered by the tens of thousands of African slaves they had imported to work on their plantations, which were primarily devoted to the production of sugarcane. In the north of the island, slaves were able to retain many ties to African cultures, religion and language; these ties were continually being renewed by newly imported Africans. Blacks outnumbered whites by about ten to one.

Saint-Domingue slave revolt in 1791

The French-enacted Code Noir ("Black Code"), prepared by Jean-Baptiste Colbert and ratified by Louis XIV, had established rules on slave treatment and permissible freedoms. Saint-Domingue has been described as one of the most brutally efficient slave colonies; one-third of newly imported Africans died within a few years.[190] Many slaves died from diseases such as smallpox and typhoid fever.[191] They had birth rates around 3 percent, and there is evidence that some women aborted fetuses, or committed infanticide, rather allow their children to live within the bonds of slavery.[192][193]

As in its Louisiana colony, the French colonial government allowed some rights to free people of color: the mixed-race descendants of white male colonists and black female slaves (and later, mixed-race women). Over time, many were released from slavery. They established a separate social class. White French Creole fathers frequently sent their mixed-race sons to France for their education. Some men of color were admitted into the military. More of the free people of color lived in the south of the island, near Port-au-Prince, and many intermarried within their community. They frequently worked as artisans and tradesmen, and began to own some property. Some became slave holders. The free people of color petitioned the colonial government to expand their rights.

Slaves that made it to Haiti from the trans-Atlantic journey and slaves born in Haiti were first documented in Haiti's archives and transferred to France's Ministry of Defense and the Ministry of Foreign Affairs. As of 2015, these records are in The National Archives of France. According to the 1788 Census, Haiti's population consisted of nearly 40,000 whites, 30,000 free coloureds and 450,000 slaves.[194]

The Haitian Revolution of 1804, the only successful slave revolt in human history, precipitated the end of slavery in all French colonies.

Jamaica
Planting the sugar cane, British West Indies, 1823

Jamaica was colonized by the Taino tribes prior to the arrival of Columbus in 1494. The Spanish enslaved many of the Taino; some escaped, but most died from European diseases and overwork. The Spaniards also introduced the first African slaves.[195]

The Spanish colonists did not bring women in the first expeditions and took Taíno women for their common-law wives, resulting in mestizo children.[196] Sexual violence with the Taíno women by the Spanish was also common.[197][198]

Although the African slave population in the 1670s and 1680s never exceeded 10,000, by 1800 it had increased to over 300,000.

Mexico

In 1519, Hernán Cortés brought the first modern slave to the area.[199] In the mid-16th century, the second viceroy to Mexico, Luis de Velasco, prohibited slavery of the Aztecs. A labor shortage resulted as the Aztecs were either killed or died from disease. This led to the African slaves being imported, as they were not susceptible to smallpox. In exchange, many Africans were afforded the opportunity to buy their freedom, while eventually others were granted their freedom by their masters.[199]

Puerto Rico

When Ponce de León and the Spaniards arrived on the island of Borikén (Puerto Rico), they enslaved Taíno tribes on the island, forcing them to work in the gold mines and in the construction of forts. Many Taíno died, particularly from smallpox, of which they had no immunity. Other Taínos committed suicide or left the island after the failed Taíno revolt of 1511.[200] The Spanish colonists, fearing the loss of their labor force, complained the courts that they needed manpower. As an alternative, Las Casas suggested the importation and use of African slaves. In 1517, the Spanish Crown permitted its subjects to import twelve slaves each, thereby beginning the slave trade on the colonies.[201]

African slaves were legally branded with a hot iron on the forehead, prevented their "theft" or lawsuits that challenged their captivity.[202] The colonists continued this branding practice for more than 250 years.[203] They were sent to work in the gold mines, or in the island's ginger and sugar fields. They were allowed to live with their families in a hut on the master's land, and given a patch of land where they could farm, but otherwise were subjected to harsh treatment; including sexual abuse as the majority of colonists had arrived without women; many of them intermarried with the Africans or Taínos. Their mixed-race descendants formed the first generations of the early Puerto Rican population.[202]

On March 22, 1873, Spain abolished slavery in Puerto Rico. The owners were compensated.

The slaves faced heavy discrimination and had no opportunity for advancement, though they were educated by their masters. The Spaniards considered the Africans superior to the Taíno, since the latter were unwilling to assimilate. The slaves, in contrast, had little choice but to adapt. Many converted to Christianity and were given their masters' surnames.[202]

By 1570, the colonists found that the gold mines were depleted, relegating the island to a garrison for passing ships. The cultivation of crops such as tobacco, cotton, cocoa, and ginger became the cornerstone of the economy.[204] With rising demand for sugar on the international market, major planters increased their labor-intensive cultivation and processing of sugar cane. Sugar plantations supplanted mining as Puerto Rico's main industry and kept demand high for African slavery.[204]

After 1784, Spain provided five ways by which slaves could obtain freedom.[203] Five years later, the Spanish Crown issued the "Royal Decree of Graces of 1789", which set new rules related to the slave trade and added restrictions to the granting of freedman status. The decree granted its subjects the right to purchase slaves and to participate in the flourishing slave trade in the Caribbean. Later that year a new slave code, also known as El Código Negro (The Black Code), was introduced.[205]

Under "El Código Negro", a slave could buy his freedom, in the event that his master was willing to sell, by paying the price sought in installments. Slaves were allowed to earn money during their spare time by working as shoemakers, cleaning clothes, or selling the produce they grew on their own plots of land. For the freedom of their newborn child, not yet baptized, they paid at half the going price for a baptized child.[205] Many of these freedmen started settlements in the areas which became known as Cangrejos (Santurce), Carolina, Canóvanas, Loíza, and Luquillo. Some became slave owners themselves.[202] Despite these paths to freedom, from 1790 onwards, the number of slaves more than doubled in Puerto Rico as a result of the dramatic expansion of the sugar industry in the island.[204]

On March 22, 1873, slavery was legally abolished in Puerto Rico. However, slaves were not emancipated but rather had to buy their own freedom, at whatever price was set by their last masters. They were also required to work for another three years for their former masters, for other colonists interested in their services, or for the state in order to pay some compensation.[206] Between 1527 and 1873, slaves in Puerto Rico had carried out more than twenty revolts.[207][208]

Suriname
Funeral at slave plantation, Dutch Suriname. 1840–1850.

The planters of the Dutch colony relied heavily on African slaves to cultivate, harvest and process the commodity crops of coffee, cocoa, sugar cane and cotton plantations along the rivers. Planters' treatment of the slaves was notoriously bad.[209] Historian C. R. Boxer wrote that "man's inhumanity to man just about reached its limits in Surinam."[210]

Many slaves escaped the plantations. With the help of the native South Americans living in the adjoining rain forests, these runaway slaves established a new and unique culture in the interior that was highly successful in its own right. They were known collectively in English as Maroons, in French as Nèg'Marrons (literally meaning "brown negroes", that is "pale-skinned negroes"), and in Dutch as Marrons. The Maroons gradually developed several independent tribes through a process of ethnogenesis, as they were made up of slaves from different African ethnicities. These tribes include the Saramaka, Paramaka, Ndyuka or Aukan, Kwinti, Aluku or Boni, and Matawai.

The Maroons often raided plantations to recruit new members from the slaves and capture women, as well as to acquire weapons, food and supplies. They sometimes killed planters and their families in the raids.[211] The colonists also mounted armed campaigns against the Maroons, who generally escaped through the rain forest, which they knew much better than did the coloniss. To end hostilities, in the 18th century the European colonial authorities signed several peace treaties with different tribes. They granted the Maroons sovereign status and trade rights in their inland territories, giving them autonomy.

In 1861–63, President Abraham Lincoln of the United States and his administration looked abroad for places to relocate freed slaves who wanted to leave the United States. It opened negotiations with the Dutch government regarding African-American emigration to and colonization of the Dutch colony of Suriname in South America. Nothing came of it and after 1864, the proposal was dropped.[212]

The Netherlands abolished slavery in Suriname, in 1863, under a gradual process that required slaves to work on plantations for 10 transition years for minimal pay, which was considered as partial compensation for their masters. After 1873, most freedmen largely abandoned the plantations where they had worked for several generations in favor of the capital city, Paramaribo.

United States
A coffle of slaves being driven on foot from Staunton, Virginia to Tennessee in 1850.

Slavery in the United States was the legal institution of human chattel enslavement, primarily of Africans and African Americans, that existed in the United States of America in the 18th and 19th centuries after it gained independence from the British and before the end of the American Civil War. Slavery had been practiced in British America from early colonial days and was legal in all Thirteen Colonies at the time of the Declaration of Independence in 1776.

By the time of the American Revolution, the status of slave had been institutionalized as a racial caste associated with African ancestry.[213] The United States became polarized over the issue of slavery, represented by the slave and free states divided by the Mason–Dixon line, which separated free Pennsylvania from slave Maryland and Delaware.

Congress, during the Jefferson administration prohibited the importation of slaves, effective 1808, although smuggling (illegal importing) was not unusual.[214] Domestic slave trading, however, continued at a rapid pace, driven by labor demands from the development of cotton plantations in the Deep South. Those states attempted to extend slavery into the new western territories to keep their share of political power in the nation. Such laws proposed to Congress to continue the spread of slavery into newly ratified states include the Kansas-Nebraska Act.

The treatment of slaves in the United States varied widely depending on conditions, times, and places. The power relationships of slavery corrupted many whites who had authority over slaves, with children showing their own cruelty. Masters and overseers resorted to physical punishments to impose their wills. Slaves were punished by whipping, shackling, hanging, beating, burning, mutilation, branding and imprisonment. Punishment was most often meted out in response to disobedience or perceived infractions, but sometimes abuse was carried out to re-assert the dominance of the master or overseer of the slave.[215] Treatment was usually harsher on large plantations, which were often managed by overseers and owned by absentee slaveholders.

Whipping keloid scars of escaped slave, Gordon, in 1863. Louisiana. This famous photo was distributed by abolitionists.[216]

William Wells Brown, who escaped to freedom, reported that on one plantation, slave men were required to pick 80 pounds of cotton per day, while women were required to pick 70 pounds per day; if any slave failed in his or her quota, they were subject to whip lashes for each pound they were short. The whipping post stood next to the cotton scales.[217] A New York man who attended a slave auction in the mid-19th century reported that at least three-quarters of the male slaves he saw at sale had scars on their backs from whipping.[218] By contrast, small slave-owning families had closer relationships between the owners and slaves; this sometimes resulted in a more humane environment but was not a given.[215]

More than one million slaves were sold from the Upper South, which had a surplus of labor, and taken to the Deep South in a forced migration, splitting up many families. New communities of African-American culture were developed in the Deep South, and the total slave population in the South eventually reached 4 million before liberation.[219][220] In the 19th century, proponents of slavery often defended the institution as a "necessary evil". White people of that time feared that emancipation of black slaves would have more harmful social and economic consequences than the continuation of slavery. The French writer and traveler Alexis de Tocqueville, in Democracy in America (1835), expressed opposition to slavery while observing its effects on American society. He felt that a multiracial society without slavery was untenable, as he believed that prejudice against black people increased as they were granted more rights. Others, like James Henry Hammond argued that slavery was a "positive good" stating: "Such a class you must have, or you would not have that other class which leads progress, civilization, and refinement."

The Southern state governments wanted to keep a balance between the number of slave and free states to maintain a political balance of power in Congress. The new territories acquired from Britain, France, and Mexico were the subject of major political compromises. By 1850, the newly rich cotton-growing South was threatening to secede from the Union, and tensions continued to rise. Many white Southern Christians, including church ministers, attempted to justify their support for slavery as modified by Christian paternalism.[221] The largest denominations, the Baptist, Methodist, and Presbyterian churches, split over the slavery issue into regional organizations of the North and South.

Slaves on a Virginia plantation (The Old Plantation, c. 1790).

When Abraham Lincoln won the 1860 election on a platform of halting the expansion of slavery, according to the 1860 U.S. census, roughly 400,000 individuals, representing 8% of all U.S. families, owned nearly 4,000,000 slaves.[222] One-third of Southern families owned slaves.[223] The South was heavily invested in slavery. As such, upon Lincoln's election, seven states broke away to form the Confederate States of America. The first six states to secede held the greatest number of slaves in the South. Shortly after, over the issue of slavery, the United States erupted into an all out Civil War, with slavery legally ceasing as an institution following the war in December 1865.

In 2018, the Orlando Sentinel reported some private Christian schools in Florida as teaching students a creationist curriculum which includes assertions such as, “most black and white southerners had long lived together in harmony” and that “power-hungry individuals stirred up the people” leading to the Civil Rights Movement.[224]

Asia

Slavery has existed all throughout Asia, and forms of slavery still exist today.

China
A contract from the Tang dynasty recording the purchase of a 15-year-old slave for six bolts of plain silk and five coins.

Slavery has taken various forms throughout China's history. It was reportedly abolished as a legally recognized institution, including in a 1909 law[225][226] fully enacted in 1910,[227] although the practice continued until at least 1949.[228]

The Tang dynasty purchased Western slaves from the Radhanite Jews.[229] Tang Chinese soldiers and pirates enslaved Koreans, Turks, Persians, Indonesians, and people from Inner Mongolia, central Asia, and northern India.[230][231][232][233] The greatest source of slaves came from southern tribes, including Thais and aboriginals from the southern provinces of Fujian, Guangdong, Guangxi, and Guizhou. Malays, Khmers, Indians, and "black skinned" peoples (who were either Austronesian Negritos of Southeast Asia and the Pacific Islands, or Africans, or both) were also purchased as slaves in the Tang dynasty.[234]

In the 17th century Qing Dynasty, there was a hereditarily servile people called Booi Aha (Manchu:booi niyalma; Chinese transliteration: 包衣阿哈), which is a Manchu word literally translated as "household person" and sometimes rendered as "nucai." The Manchu was establishing close personal and paternalist relationship between masters and their slaves, as Nurhachi said, "The Master should love the slaves and eat the same food as him".[235] However, booi aha "did not correspond exactly to the Chinese category of "bond-servant slave" (Chinese:奴僕); instead, it was a relationship of personal dependency on a master which in theory guaranteed close personal relationships and equal treatment, even though many western scholars would directly translate "booi" as "bond-servant" (some of the "booi" even had their own servant).[236][237]

Chinese Muslim (Tungans) Sufis who were charged with practicing xiejiao (heterodox religion), were punished by exile to Xinjiang and being sold as a slave to other Muslims, such as the Sufi begs.[238] Han Chinese who committed crimes such as those dealing with opium became slaves to the begs, this practice was administered by Qing law.[239] Most Chinese in Altishahr were exile slaves to Turkestani Begs.[240] While free Chinese merchants generally did not engage in relationships with East Turkestani women, some of the Chinese slaves belonging to begs, along with Green Standard soldiers, Bannermen, and Manchus, engaged in affairs with the East Turkestani women that were serious in nature.[241]

India

Slavery in India was widespread by the 6th century BC, and perhaps even as far back as the Vedic period.[242] Slavery intensified during the Muslim domination of northern India after the 11th-century.[243] Slavery existed in Portuguese India after the 16th century. The Dutch, too, largely dealt in Abyssian slaves, known in India as Habshis or Sheedes.[244] Arakan/Bengal, Malabar, and Coromandel remained the largest sources of forced labour until the 1660s.

Between 1626 and 1662, the Dutch exported on an average 150–400 slaves annually from the Arakan-Bengal coast. During the first 30 years of Batavia's existence, Indian and Arakanese slaves provided the main labour force of the Dutch East India Company, Asian headquarters. An increase in Coromandel slaves occurred during a famine following the revolt of the Nayaka Indian rulers of South India (Tanjavur, Senji, and Madurai) against Bijapur overlordship (1645) and the subsequent devastation of the Tanjavur countryside by the Bijapur army. Reportedly, more than 150,000 people were taken by the invading Deccani Muslim armies to Bijapur and Golconda. In 1646, 2,118 slaves were exported to Batavia, the overwhelming majority from southern Coromandel. Some slaves were also acquired further south at Tondi, Adirampatnam, and Kayalpatnam. Another increase in slaving took place between 1659 and 1661 from Tanjavur as a result of a series of successive Bijapuri raids. At Nagapatnam, Pulicat, and elsewhere, the company purchased 8,000–10,000 slaves, the bulk of whom were sent to Ceylon, while a small portion were exported to Batavia and Malacca. Finally, following a long drought in Madurai and southern Coromandel, in 1673, which intensified the prolonged Madurai-Maratha struggle over Tanjavur and punitive fiscal practices, thousands of people from Tanjavur, mostly children, were sold into slavery and exported by Asian traders from Nagapattinam to Aceh, Johor, and other slave markets.

In September 1687, 665 slaves were exported by the English from Fort St. George, Madras. And, in 1694–96, when warfare once more ravaged South India, a total of 3,859 slaves were imported from Coromandel by private individuals into Ceylon.[245][246][247][248] The volume of the total Dutch Indian Ocean slave trade has been estimated to be about 15–30% of the Atlantic slave trade, slightly smaller than the trans-Saharan slave trade, and one-and-a-half to three times the size of the Swahili and Red Sea coast and the Dutch West India Company slave trades.[249] According to Sir Henry Bartle Frere (who sat on the Viceroy's Council), there were an estimated 8 or 9 million slaves in India in 1841. About 15% of the population of Malabar were slaves. Slavery was legally abolished in the possessions of the East India Company by the Indian Slavery Act, 1843.[5]

Indochina

The hill tribe people in Indochina were "hunted incessantly and carried off as slaves by the Siamese (Thai), the Anamites (Vietnamese), and the Cambodians".[250] A Siamese military campaign in Laos in 1876 was described by a British observer as having been "transformed into slave-hunting raids on a large scale".[251] The census, taken in 1879, showed that 6% of the population in the Malay sultanate of Perak were slaves.[252] Enslaved people made up about two-thirds of the population in part of North Borneo in the 1880s.[252]

Japan

After the Portuguese first made contact with Japan in 1543, a large scale slave trade developed in which Portuguese purchased Japanese as slaves in Japan and sold them to various locations overseas, including Portugal, throughout the 16th and 17th centuries.[253][254] Many documents mention the large slave trade along with protests against the enslavement of Japanese. Japanese slaves are believed to be the first of their nation to end up in Europe, and the Portuguese purchased large numbers of Japanese slave girls to bring to Portugal for sexual purposes, as noted by the Church[255] in 1555. Japanese slave women were even sold as concubines to Asian lascar and African crew members, along with their European counterparts serving on Portuguese ships trading in Japan, mentioned by Luis Cerqueira, a Portuguese Jesuit, in a 1598 document.[256] Japanese slaves were brought by the Portuguese to Macau, where they were enslaved to Portuguese or became slaves to other slaves.[257][258]

Some Korean slaves were bought by the Portuguese and brought back to Portugal from Japan, where they had been among the tens of thousands of Korean prisoners of war transported to Japan during the Japanese invasions of Korea (1592–98).[259][260] Historians pointed out that at the same time Hideyoshi expressed his indignation and outrage at the Portuguese trade in Japanese slaves, he was engaging in a mass slave trade of Korean prisoners of war in Japan.[261][262] Fillippo Sassetti saw some Chinese and Japanese slaves in Lisbon among the large slave community in 1578, although most of the slaves were black.[263][264][265][266][267] The Portuguese "highly regarded" Asian slaves from the East much more "than slaves from sub-Saharan Africa".[268] The Portuguese attributed qualities like intelligence and industriousness to Chinese and Japanese slaves.[269][270][271][272]

King Sebastian of Portugal feared rampant slavery was having a negative effect on Catholic proselytization, so he commanded that it be banned in 1571.[273][274]Hideyoshi was so disgusted that his own Japanese people were being sold en masse into slavery on Kyushu, that he wrote a letter to Jesuit Vice-Provincial Gaspar Coelho on July 24, 1587, to demand the Portuguese, Siamese (Thai), and Cambodians stop purchasing and enslaving Japanese and return Japanese slaves who ended up as far as India.[275][276][277] Hideyoshi blamed the Portuguese and Jesuits for this slave trade and banned Christian proselytizing as a result.[278][279] In 1595, a law was passed by Portugal banning the selling and buying of Chinese and Japanese slaves.[280]

Korea
Kisaeng, women from outcast or slave families who were trained to provide entertainment, conversation, and sexual services to men of the upper class.

During the Joseon period, the nobi population could fluctuate up to about one-third of the population, but on average the nobi made up about 10% of the total population.[83] The nobi system declined beginning in the 18th century.[281] Since the outset of the Joseon dynasty and especially beginning in the 17th century, there was harsh criticism among prominent thinkers in Korea about the nobi system. Even within the Joseon government, there were indications of a shift in attitude toward the nobi.[282] King Yeongjo implemented a policy of gradual emancipation in 1775,[84] and he and his successor King Jeongjo made many proposals and developments that lessened the burden on nobi, which led to the emancipation of the vast majority of government nobi in 1801.[282] In addition, population growth,[84] numerous escaped slaves,[83] growing commercialization of agriculture, and the rise of the independent small farmer class contributed to the decline in the number of nobi to about 1.5% of the total population by 1858.[283] The hereditary nobi system was officially abolished around 1886–87,[83][283] and the rest of the nobi system was abolished with the Gabo Reform of 1894.[83][284] However, slavery did not completely disappear in Korea until 1930, during Imperial Japanese rule.

During the Imperial Japanese occupation of Korea around World War II, some Koreans were used in forced labor by the Imperial Japanese, in conditions which have been compared to slavery.[83][285] These included women forced into sexual slavery by the Imperial Japanese Army before and during World War II, known as "comfort women".[83][285]

Oceania

Slaves (he mōkai) had a recognised social role in traditional Māori society in New Zealand.[286]

Blackbirding occurred in the Pacific, especially in the 19th century.

Ottoman Empire and Black Sea

Ottoman wars in Europe resulted in many captive Europeans being carried deep into Ottoman territory.
An 1852 Wallachian poster advertising an auction of Roma slaves in Bucharest

In Constantinople, about one-fifth of the population consisted of slaves.[287] The city was a major centre of the slave trade in the 15th and later centuries. Slaves were provided by Tatar raids on Slavic villages[288] but also by conquest and the suppression of rebellions, in the aftermath of which entire populations were sometimes enslaved and sold across the Empire, reducing the risk of future rebellion. The Ottomans also purchased slaves from traders who brought slaves into the Empire from Europe and Africa. It has been estimated that some 200,000 slaves – mainly Circassians – were imported into the Ottoman Empire between 1800 and 1909.[252] As late as 1908, women slaves were still sold in the Ottoman Empire.[289]

Until the late 18th century, the Crimean Khanate (a Muslim Tatar state) maintained a massive slave trade with the Ottoman Empire and the Middle East.[108] The slaves were captured in southern Russia, Poland-Lithuania, Moldavia, Wallachia, and Circassia by Tatar horsemen[290] and sold in the Crimean port of Kaffa.[291] About 2 million mostly Christian slaves were exported over the 16th and 17th centuries[292] until the Crimean Khanate was destroyed by the Russian Empire in 1783.[293]

Persian slave in the Khanate of Khiva, 19th century

A slave market for captured Russian and Persian slaves was centred in the Central Asian khanate of Khiva.[294] In the early 1840s, the population of the Uzbek states of Bukhara and Khiva included about 900,000 slaves.[252] Darrel P. Kaiser wrote, "Kazakh-Kirghiz tribesmen kidnapped 1573 settlers from colonies [German settlements in Russia] in 1774 alone and only half were successfully ransomed. The rest were killed or enslaved."[295]

Contemporary slavery

Modern incidence of slavery, as a percentage of the population, by country.

Even though slavery is now outlawed in every country, the number of slaves today is estimated as between 12 million and 29.8 million.[296][297][298] According to a broad definition of slavery, there were 27 million people in slavery in 1999, spread all over the world.[299] In 2005, the International Labour Organization provided an estimate of 12.3 million forced labourers.[300] Siddharth Kara has also provided an estimate of 28.4 million slaves at the end of 2006 divided into three categories: bonded labour/debt bondage (18.1 million), forced labour (7.6 million), and trafficked slaves (2.7 million).[44] Kara provides a dynamic model to calculate the number of slaves in the world each year, with an estimated 29.2 million at the end of 2009.

Tuareg society is traditionally feudal, ranging from nobles, through vassals, to dark-skinned slaves.[301]

According to a 2003 report by Human Rights Watch, an estimated 15 million children in debt bondage in India work in slavery-like conditions to pay off their family's debts.[302][303]

Distribution

A report by the Walk Free Foundation in 2013,[304] found India had the highest number of slaves, nearly 14 million, followed by China (2.9 million), Pakistan (2.1 million), Nigeria, Ethiopia, Russia, Thailand, Democratic Republic of Congo, Myanmar and Bangladesh; while the countries with the highest proportions of slaves were Mauritania, Haiti, Pakistan, India and Nepal.[305]

In June 2013, U.S. State Department released a report on slavery. It placed Russia, China, and Uzbekistan in the worst offenders category. Cuba, Iran, North Korea, Sudan, Syria, and Zimbabwe were at the lowest level. The list also included Algeria, Libya, Saudi Arabia and Kuwait among a total of 21 countries.[306][307]

The Walk Free Foundation reported in 2018 that slavery in wealthy Western societies is much more prevalent than previously known, in particular the United States and Great Britain, which have 403,000 (one in 800) and 136,000 slaves respectively. Andrew Forrest, founder of the organization, said that "The United States is one of the most advanced countries in the world yet has more than 400,000 modern slaves working under forced labor conditions."[308] An estimated 40.3 million are enslaved globally, with North Korea having the most slaves at 2.6 million (one in 10). The foundation defines contemporary slavery as "situations of exploitation that a person cannot refuse or leave because of threats, violence, coercion, abuse of power, or deception."[309]

Libya

During the Second Libyan Civil War, Libyans started capturing Sub-Saharan African migrants trying to get to Europe through Libya and selling them on slave markets or holding them hostage for ransom[310] Women are often raped, used as sex slaves, or sold to brothels.[311][312][313] Child migrants suffer from abuse and child rape in Libya.[314][315]

Mauritania

In Mauritania, the last country to abolish slavery (in 1981), it is estimated that 20% of its 3 million population, are enslaved as bonded laborers.[316][317][318] Slavery in Mauritania was criminalized in August 2007.[319] However, although slavery, as a practice, was legally banned in 1981, it was not a crime to own a slave until 2007.[320] Although many slaves have escaped or have been freed since 2007, as of 2012, only one slave owner had been sentenced to serve time in prison.[321]

Economics

While American slaves in 1809 were sold for around $40,000 (in inflation adjusted dollars), a slave nowadays can be bought for just $90, making replacement more economical than providing long-term care.[322] Slavery is a multibillion-dollar industry with estimates of up to $35 billion generated annually.[323]

Trafficking

A world map showing countries by prevalence of female trafficking

Victims of human trafficking are typically recruited through deceit or trickery (such as a false job offer, false migration offer, or false marriage offer), sale by family members, recruitment by former slaves, or outright abduction. Victims are forced into a "debt slavery" situation by coercion, deception, fraud, intimidation, isolation, threat, physical force, debt bondage or even force-feeding with drugs to control their victims.[324] "Annually, according to U.S. government-sponsored research completed in 2006, approximately 800,000 people are trafficked across national borders, which does not include millions trafficked within their own countries. Approximately 80% of transnational victims are women and girls, and up to 50% are minors, reports the U.S. State Department in a 2008 study.[325]

While the majority of trafficking victims are women who are forced into prostitution (in which case the practice is called sex trafficking), victims also include men, women and children who are forced into manual labour.[326] Because of the illegal nature of human trafficking, its extent is unknown. A U.S. government report, published in 2005, estimates that about 700,000 people worldwide are trafficked across borders each year. This figure does not include those who are trafficked internally.[326] Another research effort revealed that roughly 1.5 million individuals are trafficked either internally or internationally each year, of which about 500,000 are sex trafficking victims.[44]

Abolitionism

Isaac Crewdson (Beaconite) writerSamuel Jackman Prescod - Barbadian JournalistWilliam Morgan from BirminghamWilliam Forster - Quaker leaderGeorge Stacey - Quaker leaderWilliam Forster - Anti-Slavery ambassadorJohn Burnet -Abolitionist SpeakerWilliam Knibb -Missionary to JamaicaJoseph Ketley from GuyanaGeorge Thompson - UK & US abolitionistJ. Harfield Tredgold - British South African (secretary)Josiah Forster - Quaker leaderSamuel Gurney - the Banker's BankerDr Stephen Lushington - MP and JudgeJohn BeaumontGeorge Bradburn - Massachusetts politicianGeorge William Alexander - Banker and TreasurerBenjamin Godwin - Baptist activistWilliam TaylorWilliam TaylorJohn MorrisonGK PrinceJosiah ConderJoseph SoulJames Dean (abolitionist)John Keep - Ohio fund raiserJoseph EatonJoseph Sturge - Organiser from BirminghamJames WhitehorneGeorge BennettRichard AllenStafford AllenWilliam Leatham, bankerWilliam BeaumontSir Edward Baines - JournalistSamuel LucasLouis Celeste LecesneSamuel BowlyWilliam Dawes - Ohio fund raiserRobert Kaye Greville - BotanistJoseph Pease, railway pioneerM.M. Isambert (sic)Mary Clarkson -Thomas Clarkson's daughter in lawWilliam TatumSaxe Bannister - PamphleteerRichard Davis Webb - IrishNathaniel Colver - Americannot knownJohn Cropper - Most generous LiverpudlianThomas ScalesWilliam JamesWilliam WilsonThomas SwanEdward Steane from CamberwellWilliam BrockEdward BaldwinJonathon MillerCapt. Charles Stuart from JamaicaSir John Jeremie - JudgeCharles Stovel - BaptistRichard Peek, ex-Sheriff of LondonJohn SturgeElon GalushaCyrus Pitt GrosvenorRev. Isaac BassHenry SterryPeter Clare -; sec. of Literary & Phil. Soc. ManchesterJ.H. JohnsonThomas PriceJoseph ReynoldsSamuel WheelerWilliam BoultbeeDaniel O'Connell - "The Liberator"William FairbankJohn WoodmarkWilliam Smeal from GlasgowJames Carlile - Irish Minister and educationalistRev. Dr. Thomas BinneyJohn Howard Hinton - Baptist ministerJohn Angell James - clergymanJoseph CooperDr. Richard Robert Madden - IrishThomas BulleyIsaac HodgsonEdward SmithSir John Bowring - diplomat and linguistJohn EllisC. Edwards Lester - American writerTapper Cadbury - Businessmannot knownThomas PinchesEdward AdeyRichard BarrettJohn SteerHenry TuckettJames Mott - American on honeymoonRobert Forster (brother of William and Josiah)Richard RathboneJohn BirtWendell Phillips - AmericanM. L'Instant from HaitiMrs Elizabeth Tredgold - British South AfricanT.M. McDonnellMrs John BeaumontAnne Knight - FeministElizabeth Pease - SuffragistJacob Post - Religious writerAnne Isabella, Lady Byron - mathematician and estranged wifeAmelia Opie - Novelist and poetMrs Rawson - Sheffield campaignerThomas Clarkson's grandson Thomas ClarksonThomas MorganThomas Clarkson - main speakerGeorge Head Head - Banker from CarlisleWilliam AllenJohn ScobleHenry Beckford - emancipated slave and abolitionistUse your cursor to explore (or Click "i" to enlarge)
The painting of the 1840 Anti-Slavery Society Convention at Exeter Hall.[1]
  1. ^ Anti-Slavery Society Convention, 1840, Benjamin Robert Haydon, 1841, London, Given by British and Foreign Anti-Slavery Society in 1880

Slavery has existed, in one form or another, throughout recorded human history – as have, in various periods, movements to free large or distinct groups of slaves.

In antiquity

Ashoka, who ruled the Maurya Empire in the Indian subcontinent from 269–232 BCE, abolished the slave trade but not slavery.[327] The Qin dynasty, which ruled China from 221 to 206 BC, abolished slavery and discouraged serfdom. However, many of its laws were overturned when the dynasty was overthrown.[328] Slavery was again abolished by Wang Mang in China in 17 CE but was reinstituted after his assassination.[329]

North America

The Spanish colonization of the Americas sparked a discussion about the right to enslave Native Americans. A prominent critic of slavery in the Spanish New World colonies was Bartolomé de las Casas, who opposed the enslavement of Native Americans, and as well as Africans in America.

One of the first protests against slavery came from German and Dutch Quakers in Pennsylvania in 1688.[330] In 1777, Vermont, at the time an independent nation, became the first portion of what would become the United States to abolish slavery.[330]

In the United States, all of the northern states had abolished slavery by 1804, with New Jersey being the last to act.[331] Abolitionist pressure produced a series of small steps towards emancipation. After the Act Prohibiting Importation of Slaves went into effect on January 1, 1808, the importation of slaves into the United States was prohibited,[332] but not the internal slave trade, nor involvement in the international slave trade externally. Legal slavery persisted; most of those slaves already in the U.S. were legally emancipated only in 1863. Many American abolitionists took an active role in opposing slavery by supporting the Underground Railroad. Violent clashes between anti-slavery and pro-slavery Americans included Bleeding Kansas, a series of political and armed disputes in 1854–1861 as to whether Kansas would join the United States as a slave or free state. By 1860, the total number of slaves reached almost four million, and the American Civil War, beginning in 1861, led to the end of slavery in the United States.[333] In 1863, Lincoln issued the Emancipation Proclamation, which freed slaves held in the Confederate States; the 13th Amendment to the U. S. Constitution prohibited most forms of slavery throughout the country.

Many of the freed slaves became sharecroppers and indentured servants. In this manner, some became tied to the very parcel of land into which they had been born a slave having little freedom or economic opportunity because of Jim Crow laws which perpetuated discrimination, limited education, promoted persecution without due process and resulted in continued poverty. Fear of reprisals such as unjust incarcerations and lynchings deterred upward mobility further.

Olaudah Equiano, His autobiography, published in 1789, helped in the creation of the Slave Trade Act 1807 which ended the African slave trade for Britain and its colonies.
Joseph Jenkins Roberts, born in Virginia, was the first president of Liberia, which was founded in 1822 for freed American slaves.

Europe

France abolished slavery in 1794.[330]

One of the most significant milestones in the campaign to abolish slavery throughout the world occurred in England in 1772, with British Judge Lord Mansfield, whose opinion in Somersett's Case was widely taken to have held that slavery was illegal in England. This judgement also laid down the principle that slavery contracted in other jurisdictions could not be enforced in England.[334]

Sons of Africa was a late 18th-century British group that campaigned to end slavery. Its members were Africans in London, freed slaves who included Ottobah Cugoano, Olaudah Equiano and other leading members of London's black community. It was closely connected to the Society for the Abolition of the Slave Trade, a non-denominational group founded in 1787, whose members included Thomas Clarkson. British Member of Parliament William Wilberforce led the anti-slavery movement in the United Kingdom, although the groundwork was an anti-slavery essay by Clarkson. Wilberforce was urged by his close friend, Prime Minister William Pitt the Younger, to make the issue his own and was also given support by reformed Evangelical John Newton. The Slave Trade Act was passed by the British Parliament on March 25, 1807, making the slave trade illegal throughout the British Empire,[335] Wilberforce also campaigned for abolition of slavery in the British Empire, which he lived to see in the Slavery Abolition Act 1833.

After the 1807 act abolishing the slave trade was passed, these campaigners switched to encouraging other countries to follow suit, notably France and the British colonies. Between 1808 and 1860, the British West Africa Squadron seized approximately 1,600 slave ships and freed 150,000 Africans who were aboard.[336] Action was also taken against African leaders who refused to agree to British treaties to outlaw the trade, for example against "the usurping King of Lagos", deposed in 1851. Anti-slavery treaties were signed with over 50 African rulers.[337]

Worldwide

In 1839, the world's oldest international human rights organization, Anti-Slavery International, was formed in Britain by Joseph Sturge, which campaigned to outlaw slavery in other countries.[338] There were celebrations in 2007 to commemorate the 200th anniversary of the abolition of the slave trade in the United Kingdom through the work of the British Anti-Slavery Society.

In the 1860s, David Livingstone's reports of atrocities within the Arab slave trade in Africa stirred up the interest of the British public, reviving the flagging abolitionist movement. The Royal Navy throughout the 1870s attempted to suppress "this abominable Eastern trade", at Zanzibar in particular. In 1905, the French abolished indigenous slavery in most of French West Africa.[339]

On December 10, 1948, the United Nations General Assembly adopted the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, which declared freedom from slavery is an internationally recognized human right. Article 4 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights states:

No one shall be held in slavery or servitude; slavery and the slave trade shall be prohibited in all their forms.[340]

In 2014, for the first time in history, major leaders of many religions, Buddhist, Anglican, Catholic, Orthodox Christian, Hindu, Jewish, and Muslim met to sign a shared commitment against modern-day slavery; the declaration they signed calls for the elimination of slavery and human trafficking by 2020.[341] The signatories were: Pope Francis, Mātā Amṛtānandamayī, Bhikkhuni Thich Nu Chân Không (representing Zen Master Thích Nhất Hạnh), Datuk K Sri Dhammaratana, Chief High Priest of Malaysia, Rabbi Abraham Skorka, Rabbi David Rosen, Abbas Abdalla Abbas Soliman, Undersecretary of State of Al Azhar Alsharif (representing Mohamed Ahmed El-Tayeb, Grand Imam of Al-Azhar), Grand Ayatollah Mohammad Taqi al-Modarresi, Sheikh Naziyah Razzaq Jaafar, Special advisor of Grand Ayatollah (representing Grand Ayatollah Sheikh Basheer Hussain al Najafi), Sheikh Omar Abboud, Justin Welby, Archbishop of Canterbury, and Metropolitan Emmanuel of France (representing Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew.)[341]

Groups such as the American Anti-Slavery Group, Anti-Slavery International, Free the Slaves, the Anti-Slavery Society, and the Norwegian Anti-Slavery Society continue to campaign to eliminate slavery.

Apologies

Monument to slaves in Zanzibar

On May 21, 2001, the National Assembly of France passed the Taubira law, recognizing slavery as a crime against humanity. Apologies on behalf of African nations, for their role in trading their countrymen into slavery, remain an open issue since slavery was practiced in Africa even before the first Europeans arrived and the Atlantic slave trade was performed with a high degree of involvement of several African societies. The black slave market was supplied by well-established slave trade networks controlled by local African societies and individuals.[342]

There is adequate evidence citing case after case of African control of segments of the trade. Several African nations such as the Calabar and other southern parts of Nigeria had economies depended solely on the trade. African peoples such as the Imbangala of Angola and the Nyamwezi of Tanzania would serve as middlemen or roving bands warring with other African nations to capture Africans for Europeans.[343]

Several historians have made important contributions to the global understanding of the African side of the Atlantic slave trade. By arguing that African merchants determined the assemblage of trade goods accepted in exchange for slaves, many historians argue for African agency and ultimately a shared responsibility for the slave trade.[344]

In 1999, President Mathieu Kerekou of Benin issued a national apology for the central role Africans played in the Atlantic slave trade.[345] Luc Gnacadja, minister of environment and housing for Benin, later said: "The slave trade is a shame, and we do repent for it."[346] Researchers estimate that 3 million slaves were exported out of the Slave Coast bordering the Bight of Benin.[346] President Jerry Rawlings of Ghana also apologized for his country's involvement in the slave trade.[345]

The issue of an apology is linked to reparations for slavery and is still being pursued by entities across the world. For example, the Jamaican Reparations Movement approved its declaration and action plan. In 2007, British Prime Minister Tony Blair made a formal apology for Great Britain's involvement in slavery.[347]

On February 25, 2007, the Commonwealth of Virginia resolved to 'profoundly regret' and apologize for its role in the institution of slavery. Unique and the first of its kind in the U.S., the apology was unanimously passed in both Houses as Virginia approached the 400th anniversary of the founding of Jamestown.[348]

On August 24, 2007, Mayor Ken Livingstone of London apologized publicly for Britain's role in colonial slave trade. "You can look across there to see the institutions that still have the benefit of the wealth they created from slavery," he said, pointing towards the financial district. He claimed that London was still tainted by the horrors of slavery. Specifically, London outfitted, financed, and insured many of the ships, which helped fund the building of London's docks.[349] Officials in Liverpool, which was a large slave trading port, apologized in 1999.[350]

On July 30, 2008, the United States House of Representatives passed a resolution apologizing for American slavery and subsequent discriminatory laws.[351] In June 2009, the U.S. Senate passed a resolution apologizing to African-Americans for the "fundamental injustice, cruelty, brutality, and inhumanity of slavery".[352] The news was welcomed by President Barack Obama, the nation's first president of African descent.[353] Some of President Obama's ancestors may have been slave owners.[354]

In 2010, Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi apologized for Arab involvement in the slave trade, saying: "I regret the behavior of the Arabs… They brought African children to North Africa, they made them slaves, they sold them like animals, and they took them as slaves and traded them in a shameful way."[355]

Reparations

There have been movements to achieve reparations for those formerly held as slaves or for their descendants. Claims for reparations for being held in slavery are handled as a civil law matter in almost every country. This is often decried as a serious problem, since former slaves' relatives lack of money means they often have limited access to a potentially expensive and futile legal process. Mandatory systems of fines and reparations paid to an as yet undetermined group of claimants from fines, paid by unspecified parties, and collected by authorities have been proposed by advocates to alleviate this "civil court problem." Since in almost all cases there are no living ex-slaves or living ex-slave owners these movements have gained little traction. In nearly all cases the judicial system has ruled that the statute of limitations on these possible claims has long since expired.

Other uses of the term

The word slavery is often used as a pejorative to describe any activity in which one is coerced into performing. Some argue that military drafts and other forms of coerced government labour constitute "state-operated slavery."[356][357] Some libertarians and anarcho-capitalists view government taxation as a form of slavery.[358]

"Slavery" has been used by some anti-psychiatry proponents to define involuntary psychiatric patients, claiming there are no unbiased physical tests for mental illness and yet the psychiatric patient must follow the orders of the psychiatrist. They assert that instead of chains to control the slave, the psychiatrist uses drugs to control the mind.[359] Drapetomania was a psychiatric diagnosis for a slave who did not want to be a slave.[360][361]

Some proponents of animal rights have applied the term slavery to the condition of some or all human-owned animals, arguing that their status is comparable to that of human slaves.[362]

The labor market, as institutionalized under today's market economic systems, has been criticized by mainstream socialists and by anarcho-syndicalists, who utilise the term wage slavery as a pejorative or dysphemism for wage labour.[363][364][365][366][367][368] Socialists draw parallels between the trade of labour as a commodity and slavery. Cicero is also known to have suggested such parallels.[369]

Media

Film has been the most influential medium in the presentation of the history of slavery to the general public around the world.[370] The American film industry has had a complex relationship with slavery and until recent decades often avoided the topic. Films such as Birth of a Nation (1915)[371] and Gone with the Wind (1939) became controversial because they gave a favourable depiction. In 1940 The Santa Fe Trail gave a liberal but ambiguous interpretation of John Brown's attacks on slavery.[372] Song of the South gave a favorable outlook on slavery in the United States in 1946.

The Civil Rights Movement in the 1950s made defiant slaves into heroes.[373] The question of slavery in American memory necessarily involves its depictions in feature films.[374]

Poster for the film Spartacus

Most Hollywood films used American settings, although Spartacus (1960), dealt with an actual revolt in the Roman Empire known as the Third Servile War. The revolt failed, and all the rebels were executed, but their spirit lived on according to the film.[375] Spartacus stays surprisingly close to the historical record.[376]

The Last Supper (La última cena in Spanish) was a 1976 film directed by Cuban Tomás Gutiérrez Alea about the teaching of Christianity to slaves in Cuba, and emphasizes the role of ritual and revolt. Burn! takes place on the imaginary Portuguese island of Queimada (where the locals speak Spanish) and it merges historical events that took place in Brazil, Cuba, Santo Domingo, Jamaica, and elsewhere.

Historians agree that films have largely shaped historical memories, but they debate issues of accuracy, plausibility, moralism, sensationalism, how facts are stretched in search of broader truths, and suitability for the classroom.[377][378] Berlin argues that critics complain if the treatment emphasizes historical brutality, or if it glosses over the harshness to highlight the emotional impact of slavery.[379]

Year Title[380] Film genre Director Actor Country Book Author
1915 The Birth of a Nation Historical drama / epic D. W. Griffith Lillian Gish  United States The Clansman Thomas Dixon, Jr.
1960 Spartacus Historical drama / epic Stanley Kubrick Kirk Douglas  United States    
1967 Cervantes Historical drama Vincent Sherman Horst Buchholz  Spain    
1968 Angélique and the Sultan Drama Bernard Borderie    France Angélique in Barbary Anne Golon
1969 Queimada (Burn!) Drama Gillo Pontecorvo Marlon Brando  Italy    
1975 Mandingo Drama, Exploitation film Richard Fleischer Ken Norton  United States Mandingo Kyle Onstott
1976 Escrava Isaura (TV series) Telenovela Herval Rossano    Brazil A Escrava Isaura Bernardo Guimarães
1977 Alex Haley's Roots (TV series) Historical drama Chomsky, Erman, Greene and Moses    United States Roots: The Saga of an American Family Alex Haley
1987 Cobra Verde Drama Werner Herzog Klaus Kinski  Germany The Viceroy of Ouidah Bruce Chatwin
1993 Alex Haley's Queen (TV series) Historical drama John Erman Halle Berry  United States Queen: The Story of an American Family Alex Haley
1997 Amistad Drama Steven Spielberg Djimon Hounsou  United States    
1998 Beloved Drama Jonathan Demme Oprah Winfrey  United States   Toni Morrison
2000 Gladiator Historical epic Ridley Scott Russell Crowe  United Kingdom,  United States  
2007 El Cimarrón Historical drama Iván Dariel Ortíz Pedro Telemaco  Puerto Rico  
2006 Amazing Grace Historical drama Michael Apted    United Kingdom,  United States    
2007 Trade Thriller Marco Kreuzpaintner    Germany,  United States    
2010 The Slave Hunters Historical drama Kwak Jung-hwan    South Korea  
2011 Muhteşem Yüzyıl (TV series) Historical soap opera The Taylan Brothers Halit Ergenç  Turkey  
2012 Lincoln Historical drama / epic Steven Spielberg Daniel Day-Lewis  United States Doris Kearns Goodwin
2012 The Horde Drama Andrei Proshkin    Russia Yuri Arabov
2012 500 Years Later Documentary Owen 'Alik Shahadah    United Kingdom,  United States    
2012 Django Unchained Western Quentin Tarantino Jamie Foxx  United States    
2013 12 Years a Slave Historical drama Steve McQueen Chiwetel Ejiofor  United Kingdom,  United States Twelve Years a Slave Solomon Northup
2013 Belle Historical drama Amma Asante Gugu Mbatha-Raw  United Kingdom Misan Sagay
2016 The Birth of a Nation Historical drama Nate Parker Nate Parker  Canada,  United States
gollark: Wow. There are quite a lot of syscalls.
gollark: No, your name is definitely Oliver [DATA EXPUNGED] Marks, I would know.
gollark: Technically, that's your name.
gollark: It is obvibiously you.
gollark: "olv er" is Lyricly.

See also

References

  1. Collins Cobuild Advanced Dictionary of English, p. 433 (Harper Collins Publishers, 2016).
  2. Pocket Oxford American Dictionary and Thesaurus, p. 729 (Oxford University Press, 2010).
  3. Brace, Laura (2004). The Politics of Property: Labour, Freedom and Belonging. Edinburgh University Press. p. 162. ISBN 978-0-7486-1535-3. Retrieved May 31, 2012.
  4. "Slavery in the 21st century". Newint.org. Archived from the original on May 27, 2010. Retrieved August 29, 2010.
  5. "Historical survey: Slave-owning societies". Encyclopædia Britannica. Archived from the original on February 23, 2007.
  6. Kevin Bales (2004). New Slavery: A Reference Handbook. ABC-CLIO. p. 4. ISBN 978-1-85109-815-6. Retrieved February 11, 2016.
  7. White, Shelley K.; Jonathan M. White; Kathleen Odell Korgen (2014). Sociologists in Action on Inequalities: Race, Class, Gender, and Sexuality. Sage. p. 43. ISBN 978-1-4833-1147-0.
  8. Kate Hodal (May 31, 2016). "One in 200 people is a slave. Why?". The Guardian.
  9. "Religion & Ethics – Modern slavery: Modern forms of slavery". BBC. January 30, 2007. Retrieved June 16, 2009.
  10. Oxford English Dictionary, 2nd edition 1989, s.v. 'slave'
  11. "slave | Origin and meaning of slave by Online Etymology Dictionary". www.etymonline.com. Retrieved June 11, 2020.
  12. "Slave definition and meaning | Collins English Dictionary". www.collinsdictionary.com. Retrieved June 11, 2020.
  13. Jankowiak, Marek (February 2017). "What Does the Slave Trade in the Saqaliba Tell Us about Early Islamic Slavery?". International Journal of Middle East Studies. 49 (1): 169–172.
  14. "The international slave trade". Encyclopædia Britannica.
  15. Lewis (1994). "Race and Slavery in the Middle East". Oxford University Press.
  16. Kluge, F. Etymologisches Wörterbuch der deutschen Sprache. 1891, s.v. "Sklave".
  17. Waldman, Katy (May 19, 2015). "Slave or Enslaved Person? It's not just an academic debate for historians of American slavery". Slate. Archived from the original on May 21, 2015.
  18. Bales, Kevin (2004). New Slavery: A Reference Handbook. pp. 15–18. Retrieved March 11, 2011.
  19. Bales, Kevin (2004). "New Slavery: A Reference Handbook". Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  20. Frost, Dan (2011). "Chattel Slavery". In Rodriguez, Junius P. (ed.). Slavery in the Modern World. 1. ABC-CLIO. p. 182. ISBN 978-1-85109-783-8.
  21. "Traditional or Chattel Slavery". FSE Project. The Feminist Sexual Ethics Project. Retrieved August 31, 2014.
  22. Indrani Chatterjee, Richard Eaton (2006). Slavery and South Asian History. Indiana University Press. p. 3. ISBN 978-0-253-11671-0.
  23. M.A. Dandamayev, Barda and Bardadārī in Encyclopædia Iranica
  24. Farazmand, Ali (1998) "Persian/Iranian Administrative Tradition", in Jay M. Shafritz (Editor), International Encyclopedia of Public Edict and Administration. Boulder, CO: Westview Press, pp. 1640–1645 – Excerpt: "Persians never practiced mass slavery, and in many cases the situations and lives of semi-slaves (prisoners of war) were in fact better than the common citizens of Persia." (p. 1642)
  25. "Experts encourage action against sex trafficking". Archived from the original on December 23, 2009.
  26. "Rights–Mexico: 16,000 Victims of Child Sexual Exploitation". ipsnews.net. Retrieved February 11, 2016.
  27. Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court, International Criminal Law Database & Commentary, p. footnotes: 29, 82, 107
  28. Acuña, Tathiana Flores (January 2004). "The Rome Statute's Sexual Related Crimes: an Appraisal under the Light of International Humanitarian Law" (PDF). Revista Instituto Interamericano de Derechos Humanos. 1 (39): 29–30. Retrieved July 8, 2012.
  29. "Ethics – Slavery: Modern slavery". bbc.co.uk. Retrieved February 11, 2016.
  30. "Report of the Special Rapporteur on contemporary forms of slavery, including its causes and consequences, Gulnara Shahinian" (PDF). ohchr.org. United Nations Human Rights Council. July 10, 2012. Archived from the original (PDF) on September 21, 2013. Retrieved October 14, 2015.
  31. Staff. Campaign Page: Child Soldiers, Human Rights Watch.
  32. Sullivan, Kevin (December 26, 2008). "In Togo, a 10-Year-Old's Muted Cry: 'I Couldn't Take Any More'". The Washington Post. Retrieved May 27, 2018.
  33. "Two-year-old 'at risk' of forced marriage". BBC News. March 5, 2013.
  34. "Honor Diaries : Child/Forced Marriage : Factsheet" (PDF). Honordiaries.com. Retrieved September 29, 2015.
  35. Black, Debra (September 20, 2013). "Forced marriages rampant in Ontario". The Hamilton Spectator.
  36. "Without Consent: Forced Marriage in Australia" (PDF). Archived (PDF) from the original on June 13, 2015.
  37. "UNICEF supports fight to end marriage by abduction in Ethiopia". reliefweb.int. November 9, 2004. Retrieved August 29, 2013.
  38. North, Douglass C.; Robert Paul Thomas (December 1971). "The Rise and Fall of the Manorial System: A Theoretical Model". The Journal of Economic History. 31 (4): 777–803. doi:10.1017/S0022050700074623. JSTOR 2117209.
  39. Domar, Evsey D. (March 1970). "The Causes of Slavery or Serfdom: A Hypothesis". The Journal of Economic History. 30 (1): 18–32. doi:10.1017/S0022050700078566. JSTOR 2116721.
  40. Lagerlöf, Nils-Petter (November 12, 2006). "Slavery and other property rights". Ideas. repec.org. Retrieved May 6, 2009. Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  41. "Technology". History.com. January 4, 2008. Archived from the original on April 23, 2008. Retrieved May 6, 2009.
  42. John R. McKivigan; Mitchell Snay (1998). Religion and the Antebellum Debate Over Slavery. University of Georgia Press. pp. 68–. ISBN 978-0-8203-2076-2. Retrieved May 31, 2012.
  43. Griswold, Charles L. (1999). Adam Smith and the Virtues of Enlightenment. Cambridge University Press. p. 198. ISBN 978-0-521-62891-4. Retrieved May 31, 2012.
  44. Kara, Siddharth (2008). Sex Trafficking – Inside the Business of Modern Slavery. Columbia University Press. ISBN 978-0-231-13960-1.
  45. "Cape Town and Surrounds". westerncape.gov.za. Retrieved July 18, 2012.
  46. "Slavery in Brazil". Historical Boys' Clothing. Retrieved July 18, 2012.
  47. "Living conditions of slaves". Historical Boys' Clothing. October 6, 2008. Retrieved July 18, 2012.
  48. Scheen, Thomas (October 28, 2008). "Niger: Ehemalige Sklavin erhält Entschädigung". Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung (in German). Johannesburg. Archived from the original on October 31, 2008. Retrieved October 14, 2015.
  49. Panzer, Joel S. (1996). The Popes and Slavery. Alba House. p. 3. ISBN 0-8189-0764-9."The earlier forms of servitude were varied, complex, and very often of a different sociological category than those which were prevalent after the 14th century. While all forms of servitude are certainly unacceptable to most people today, this has not always been the case. Formerly, the rules of war and society were such that servitude was often imposed as a penalty on criminals and prisoners of war, and was even freely chosen by many workers for economic reasons. Children born of those held in servitude were also at times considered to be in the same state as that of their parents. These types of servitude were the most common among those generally considered to establish the so-called 'just titles' of servitude."
  50. "Sicut Dudem -Against the Enslavement of Black Natives of the Canary Islands". papalencyclicals.net.
  51. "Sublimus Dei - On the Enslavement and Evangelization of Indians". papalencyclicals.net.
  52. Hanke, Lewis (1974). All Mankind Is One: A Study of the Disputation Between Bartolomé de Las Casas and Juan Ginés de Sepúlveda on the Religious and Intellectual Capacity of the American Indians. Northern Illinois University Press. pp. xi. ISBN 0-87580-043-2."For the first time, and probably for the last, a colonizing nation organized a formal enquiry into the justice of the methods used to extend its empire. For the first time, too, in the modern world, we see an attempt to stigmatize an entire race as inferior, as born slaves according to the theory elaborated centuries before by Aristotle."
  53. "Slavery". Encyclopædia Britannica.
  54. "Mesopotamia: The Code of Hammurabi". Archived from the original on May 14, 2011. e.g. Prologue, "the shepherd of the oppressed and of the slaves". Code of Laws #7, "If any one buy from the son or the slave of another man".
  55. Harris, W.V. "Demography, Geography and the Sources of Roman Slaves", The Journal of Roman Studies, 1999.
  56. Shaw, G. J. 2012. Slavery, Pharaonic Egypt. The Encyclopedia of Ancient History.
  57. "Ancient Egypt: Slavery, its causes and practice". reshafim.org.il. Retrieved March 6, 2019.
  58. David, Rosalie (April 1, 1998). The Ancient Egyptians (Beliefs & Practices). Sussex Academic Press. p. 91.
  59. Everett, Susanne (October 24, 2011). History of Slavery. Chartwell Books. pp. 10–11.
  60. Dunn, Jimmy (October 24, 2011). "Slaves and Slavery in Ancient Egypt". Retrieved April 9, 2016.
  61. Critical Readings on Global Slavery, Damian Alan Pargas, Felicia Roşu (ed), p. 523
  62. "Slavery and forced labour in Ancient China and the Ancient Mediterranean". The University of Edinburgh. Retrieved March 6, 2019.
  63. Scheidel, W. (2010). Princeton/Stanford Working Papers in Classics.
  64. (in German) Lauffer, S. "Die Bergwerkssklaven von Laureion", Abhandlungen no. 12 (1956), p. 916.
  65. "Slavery in Ancient Rome". Dl.ket.org. Retrieved August 29, 2010.
  66. Harper, Kyle (2011), Slavery in the Late Roman World, AD 275–425, Cambridge University Press, pp. 59–60, ISBN 978-1-139-50406-5, retrieved August 11, 2016
  67. "Resisting Slavery in Ancient Rome". BBC News. November 5, 2009. Retrieved August 29, 2010.
  68. The Roman slave supply Walter Scheidel. Stanford University.
  69. Sandra R. Joshel, Slavery in the Roman World Cambridge University Press (2010) pp. 55, 90
  70. Santosuosso (2001), pp. 43–44
  71. Noy, David (2000). Foreigners at Rome: Citizens and Strangers. Duckworth with the Classical Press of Wales. ISBN 978-0-7156-2952-9.
  72. Harper, James (1972). Slaves and Freedmen in Imperial Rome. Am J Philol.
  73. Perbi, Akosua (April 5, 2001). "Slavery and the Slave Trade in Pre-colonial Africa" (PDF). latinamericanstudies.org. Retrieved August 11, 2016.
  74. "Welcome to Encyclopædia Britannica's Guide to Black History". Britannica.com. Archived from the original on December 30, 2007. Retrieved March 19, 2018.
  75. "Slaves in Saudi". Naeem Mohaiemen. The Daily Star. July 27, 2004.
  76. Ochiengʼ, William Robert (1975). Eastern Kenya and Its Invaders. East African Literature Bureau. p. 76. Retrieved May 15, 2015.
  77. Ogot, Bethwell A., Zamani: A Survey of East African History (East African Publishing House: 1974), p. 104.
  78. Lodhi, Abdulaziz (2000). Oriental influences in Swahili: a study in language and culture contacts. Acta Universitatis Gothoburgensis. p. 17. ISBN 978-91-7346-377-5.
  79. "Aztec Social Structure". The University of Texas at Austin.
  80. Junius P. Rodriguez, "The Historical Encyclopedia of World Slavery", ABC-CLIO, 1997, p.146
  81. 杉山正明《忽必烈的挑战》,社会科学文献出版社,2013年,第44-46頁
  82. 船田善之《色目人与元代制度、社会 – 重新探讨蒙古、色目、汉人、南人划分的位置》,〈蒙古学信息〉2003年第2期
  83. Rodriguez, Junius P. (1997). The Historical Encyclopedia of World Slavery. ABC-CLIO. pp. 392–393. ISBN 978-0-87436-885-7.
  84. Klein, Martin A. (2014). Historical Dictionary of Slavery and Abolition. Rowman & Littlefield Publishers. p. 13. ISBN 978-0-8108-7528-9.
  85. Rhee, Young-hoon; Yang, Donghyu. "Korean Nobi in American Mirror: Yi Dynasty Coerced Labor in Comparison to the Slavery in the Antebellum Southern United States". Working Paper Series. Institute of Economic Research, Seoul National University.
  86. Bok Rae Kim (2004). "Nobi: A Korean System of Slavery". In Gwyn Campbell (ed.). Structure of Slavery in Indian Ocean Africa and Asia. Routledge. pp. 153–157. ISBN 978-1-135-75917-9.
  87. Palais, James B. (1998). Views on Korean social history. Institute for Modern Korean Studies, Yonsei University. p. 50. ISBN 978-89-7141-441-5. Retrieved February 15, 2017. Another target of his critique is the insistence that slaves (nobi) in Korea, especially in Choson dynasty, were closer to serfs (nongno) than true slaves (noye) in Europe and America, enjoying more freedom and independence than what a slave would normally be allowed.
  88. Rodriguez, Junius P. (1997). The Historical Encyclopedia of World Slavery. ABC-CLIO. p. 392. ISBN 978-0-87436-885-7. Retrieved February 14, 2017.
  89. Kim, Youngmin; Pettid, Michael J. (2011). Women and Confucianism in Choson Korea: New Perspectives. SUNY Press. p. 141. ISBN 978-1-4384-3777-4. Retrieved February 14, 2017.
  90. Campbell, Gwyn (2004). Structure of Slavery in Indian Ocean Africa and Asia. Routledge. p. 163. ISBN 978-1-135-75917-9. Retrieved February 14, 2017.
  91. Slavery in the Middle Ages. Historymedren. about. com
  92. "Slave trade – Britannica Concise Encyclopedia". Encyclopædia Britannica. Archived from the original on May 28, 2008. Retrieved August 29, 2010.
  93. Singer, Isido Singer; Joseph Jacobs. "Slave-trade". Jewishencyclopedia.com. Retrieved August 29, 2010.
  94. "Slavery Encyclopedia of Ukraine". Encyclopediaofukraine.com. Retrieved August 29, 2010.
  95. Michael Moïssey Postan; Edward Miller (1987). The Cambridge Economic History of Europe: Trade and industry in the Middle Ages. Cambridge University Press. p. 417. ISBN 978-0-521-08709-4. Retrieved May 31, 2012.
  96. Boyce Davies, Carole Elizabeth (2008). Encyclopedia of the African Diaspora: Origins, Experiences, and Culture. ABC-CLIO. p. 1002. ISBN 978-1-85109-705-0. Retrieved May 31, 2012.
  97. Thomas, Hugh (2006). The Slave Trade: History of the Atlantic Slave Trade, 1440–1870. Weidenfeld & Nicolson. p. 35. ISBN 978-0-7538-2056-8.
  98. Hayes, Diana (2003), "Reflections on Slavery", in Curran, Charles E. (ed.), Change in Official Catholic Moral Teaching, Paulist, p. 67.
  99. Lewis, C.P. & al. A History of the County of Chester. "Early Medieval Chester 400–1230". Retrieved February 5, 2013.
  100. Clapham, John H. A Concise Economic History of Britain from the Earliest Times. CUP Archive. p. 63. GGKEY:HYPAY3GPAA5.
  101. "Medieval English society". University of Wisconsin. Retrieved September 5, 2009.
  102. Hudson, John (2012). The Oxford History of the Laws of England. II (871–1216) (First ed.). Oxford: Oxford University Press. pp. 424–425. ISBN 978-0-19-163003-3.
  103. Gillingham, John (2014), "French chivalry in twelfth-century Britain?", The Historian, pp. 8–9
  104. The Saxon Slave-Market. First published in Bristol Magazine July 2006.
  105. Phillips, Jr, William D. (1985). Slavery from Roman times to the Early Transatlantic Trade. Manchester: Manchester University Press. ISBN 978-0-7190-1825-1.
  106. David Nicolle, The Janissaries (Osprey Publishing, 1995)
  107. "Famous Battles in History The Turks and Christians at Lepanto". Trivia-library.com. Retrieved August 29, 2010.
  108. Kizilov, Mikhail (2007). "Slave Trade in the Early Modern Crimea From the Perspective of Christian, Muslim, and Jewish Sources". Journal of Early Modern History. 11 (1): 1–31. doi:10.1163/157006507780385125.
  109. Davies, Brian (2007). Warfare, State and Society on the Black Sea Steppe, 1500–1700. p. 17. ISBN 978-0-415-23986-8.
  110. Brodman, James William. "Ransoming Captives in Crusader Spain: The Order of Merced on the Christian-Islamic Frontier". Libro.uca.edu. Retrieved August 29, 2010.
  111. "British Slaves on the Barbary Coast". Archived from the original on March 10, 2008.
  112. Hitchens, Christopher (2007). "Jefferson Versus the Muslim Pirates". City Journal. Retrieved September 30, 2015.
  113. Joan E. Goodman; Tom McNeely (2001). A Long and Uncertain Journey: The 27,000 Mile Voyage of Vasco Da Gama. Mikaya Press. ISBN 978-0-9650493-7-5. Retrieved May 31, 2012.
  114. de Oliveira Marques, António Henrique R. (1972). History of Portugal. Columbia University Press, ISBN 0-231-03159-9, pp. 158–160, 362–370.
  115. Lowe, K.J.P. (2005). Black Africans In Renaissance Europe. Cambridge University Press. p. 156. ISBN 978-0-521-81582-6. Retrieved May 31, 2012.
  116. Northrup, David (2002). Africa's Discovery of Europe: 1450 to 1850. Oxford University Press. p. 8. ISBN 978-0-19-514084-2. Retrieved May 31, 2012.
  117. Klein, Herbert S. (2010). The Atlantic Slave Trade. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-1-139-48911-9.
  118. Glyn Williams, Brian (2013). "The Sultan's Raiders: The Military Role of the Crimean Tatars in the Ottoman Empire" (PDF). The Jamestown Foundation. p. 27. Archived from the original (PDF) on October 21, 2013.
  119. David P. Forsythe (2009). Encyclopedia of Human Rights, Volume 1. Oxford University Press. p. 464. ISBN 0-19-533402-7
  120. "Historical survey: Ways of ending slavery". Encyclopædia Britannica. Archived from the original on October 16, 2014.
  121. Träldom. Nordisk familjebok / Uggleupplagan. 30. Tromsdalstind – Urakami /159–160, 1920. (In Swedish)
  122. "Nazi slave fund passes final hurdle". BBC News. May 30, 2001.
  123. "Islam and Slavery" (PDF). London School of Economics. Archived from the original (PDF) on March 25, 2009. Retrieved August 29, 2014.
  124. Veenhoven, Willem Adriaan; Winifred Crum Ewing; Stichting Plurale Samenlevingen (1975). Case Studies on Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms: A World Survey. BRILL. p. 452. ISBN 978-90-247-1779-8. Retrieved May 31, 2012.
  125. "Religion & Ethics – Islam and slavery: Abolition". BBC. Archived from the original on May 21, 2009. Retrieved May 1, 2010.
  126. Lewis, Bernard (1992). Race and Slavery in the Middle East: An Historical Enquiry. Oxford University Press. pp. 53–. ISBN 978-0-19-505326-5. Retrieved May 31, 2012.
  127. ""Horrible Traffic in Circassian Women – Infanticide in Turkey, " New York Daily Times, August 6, 1856". Chnm.gmu.edu. Retrieved August 29, 2010.
  128. "Soldier Khan". Avalanchepress.com. Retrieved August 29, 2010.
  129. "Focus on the slave trade". BBC. September 3, 2001. Archived from the original on May 25, 2017.
  130. John Donnelly Fage; William Tordoff (2001). A History of Africa (4 ed.). Budapest: Routledge. p. 258. ISBN 978-0-415-25248-5.
  131. Edward R. Tannenbaum, Guilford Dudley (1973). A History of World Civilizations. Wiley. p. 615. ISBN 978-0-471-84480-8.
  132. Gwyn Campbell, The Structure of Slavery in Indian Ocean Africa and Asia, 1 edition, (Routledge: 2003), p. ix
  133. Kevin Shillington (2005). Encyclopedia of African history. Michigan University Press. p. 1401. ISBN 1-57958-455-1
  134. Slow Death for Slavery: The Course of Abolition in Northern Nigeria, 1897–1936 (review), Project MUSE – Journal of World History
  135. ""Freedom is a good thing but it means a dearth of slaves": Twentieth Century Solutions to the Abolition of Slavery" (PDF). Retrieved August 29, 2010.
  136. F.R.C. Bagley et al., The Last Great Muslim Empires, (Brill: 1997), p. 174
  137. Rodriguez, Junius P. (2007). Encyclopedia of Slave Resistance and Rebellion, Volume 2. Greenwood Publishing Group. p. 585. ISBN 978-0-313-33273-9.
  138. Asquith, Christina. "Revisiting the Zanj and Re-Visioning Revolt: Complexities of the Zanj Conflict – 868–883 AD – slave revolt in Iraq". Questia.com. Retrieved March 23, 2016.
  139. "Islam, From Arab To Islamic Empire: The Early Abbasid Era". History-world.org. Retrieved March 23, 2016.
  140. Kissling, H. J; Spuler, Bertold; Barbour, N; Trimingham, J.S.; Braun, H; Hartel, H (August 1, 1997). The Last Great Muslim Empires. ISBN 978-90-04-02104-4.
  141. Syed, Muzaffar Husain (2011). A Concise History of Islam. New Delhi: VIJ Books (India) Pty Ltd. p. 453. ISBN 978-93-81411-09-4. According to Robert Davis, from the 16th to 19th century, pirates captured 1 million to 1.25 million Europeans as slaves.
  142. Davis, Robert. Christian Slaves, Muslim Masters: White Slavery in the Mediterranean, the Barbary Coast and Italy, 1500–1800.
  143. "When Europeans were slaves: Research suggests white slavery was much more common than previously believed", Research News, Ohio State University
  144. Carroll, Rory; correspondent, Africa (March 11, 2004). "New book reopens old arguments about slave raids on Europe". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved December 11, 2017.
  145. Wright, John (2007). "Trans-Saharan Slave Trade". Routledge.
  146. Davis, Robert (February 17, 2011). "British Slaves on the Barbary Coast". BBC.
  147. Baepler, B. "White Slaves, African Masters 1st Edition." White Slaves, African Masters, 1st edition, University of Chicago Press, n.d. Web. January 7, 2013. p. 5.
  148. "History – British History in depth: British Slaves on the Barbary Coast". BBC. Retrieved March 12, 2013.
  149. "Swahili Coast". National Geographic. October 17, 2002. Retrieved September 30, 2015.
  150. Remembering East African slave raids, BBC News, March 30, 2007.
  151. Focus on the slave trade, BBC News, September 3, 2001.
  152. Gwyn Campbell; Suzanne Miers; Joseph Calder Miller (2007). Women and Slavery: Africa, the Indian Ocean world, and the medieval north Atlantic. Ohio University Press. p. 173. ISBN 978-0-8214-1724-9. Retrieved May 31, 2012.
  153. Willem A. Veenhoven (1977). Case Studies on Human Rights And Fundamental Freedoms: A World Survey. Martinus Nijhoff Publishers. pp. 440–. ISBN 978-90-247-1956-3. Retrieved May 31, 2012.
  154. Snell, Daniel C. (2011). "Slavery in the Ancient Near East". In Keith Bradley and Paul Cartledge (ed.). The Cambridge World History of Slavery. New York: Cambridge University Press. pp. 4–21.
  155. Lovejoy, Paul E. (1989). "The Impact of the Atlantic Slave Trade on Africa: A Review of the Literature". Journal of African History: 30.
  156. Foner, Eric (2012). Give Me Liberty: An American History. New York: W.W. Norton & Company. p. 18.
  157. M’bokolo, Elikia, "The impact of the slave trade on Africa", Le Monde diplomatique, April 2, 1998.
  158. "Ending the Slavery Blame-Game", The New York Times, April 22, 2010.
  159. The Transatlantic Slave Trade Alexander Ives Bortolot. Department of Art History and Archaeology, Columbia University.
  160. Nigeria – The Slave Trade. Source: U.S. Library of Congress.
  161. Rubinstein, W.D. (2004). Genocide: a history. Pearson Education. pp. 76–78. ISBN 978-0-582-50601-5.
  162. Mancke, Elizabeth and Shammas, Carole. The Creation of the British Atlantic World, 2005, pp. 30–31.
  163. "The World Factbook". cia.gov.
  164. "Health In Slavery". Archived from the original on October 3, 2006.
  165. Indentured Servitude in Colonial America. Deanna Barker, Frontier Resources.
  166. Slavery and Indentured Servants Law Library of Congress
  167. "Slave Laws". Virtual Jamestown. Retrieved November 4, 2013.
  168. Donoghue, John (2010). "Out of the Land of Bondage": The English Revolution and the Atlantic Origins of Abolition". The American Historical Review. 115 (4): 943–974. doi:10.1086/ahr.115.4.943.
  169. Higginbotham, A. Leon (1975). In the Matter of Color: Race and the American Legal Process: The Colonial Period. Greenwood Press. p. 7. ISBN 978-0-19-502745-7.
  170. Higginbotham, A. Leon (1975). In the Matter of Color: Race and the American Legal Process: The Colonial Period. Greenwood Press. ISBN 978-0-19-502745-7.
  171. Billings, Warren M. (2009). The Old Dominion in the Seventeenth Century: A Documentary History of Virginia, 1606–1700: Easyread Super Large 18pt Edition. ReadHowYouWant.com. pp. 286–87. ISBN 978-1-4429-6090-9.
  172. Federal Writers' Project (1954). Virginia: A Guide to the Old Dominion. US History Publishers. p. 76. ISBN 978-1-60354-045-2.
  173. Danver, Steven (2010). Popular Controversies in World History. ABC-CLIO. p. 322. ISBN 978-1-59884-078-0.
  174. Kozlowski, Darrell (2010). Colonialism: Key Concepts in American History. Infobase Publishing. p. 78. ISBN 978-1-60413-217-5.
  175. Conway, John (2008). A Look at the Thirteenth and Fourteenth Amendments: Slavery Abolished, Equal Protection Established. Enslow Publishers. p. 5. ISBN 978-1-59845-070-5.
  176. Toppin, Edgar (2010). The Black American in United States History. Allyn & Bacon. p. 46. ISBN 978-1-4759-6172-0.
  177. Foner, Philip S. (1980). "History of Black Americans: From Africa to the emergence of the cotton kingdom". Oxford University Press. Archived from the original on October 14, 2013. Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  178. Selling Poor Steven. Philip Burnham, American Heritage Magazine.
  179. Ali, Arif (1997). Barbados: Just Beyond Your Imagination. Hansib Publishing (Caribbean) Ltd. pp. 46, 48. ISBN 978-1-870518-54-3.
  180. Sousa, Gabriel Soars. Tratado Descritivo do Brasil em 1587
  181. "Vergonha Ainda Maior: Novas informações disponíveis em um enorme banco de dados mostram que a escravidão no Brasil foi muito pior do que se sabia antes (". Veja (in Portuguese). Archived from the original on March 13, 2015. Retrieved March 16, 2015.
  182. African Heritage and Memories of Slavery in Brazil and the South Atlantic World
  183. Childs, Matt D. (2006). 1812 Aponte Rebellion in Cuba and the Struggle against Atlantic Slavery. University of North Carolina Press. ISBN 978-0-8078-5772-4.
  184. Montejo pp. 80–82
  185. Knight pp. 144–145
  186. Montejo p. 39
  187. Montejo p. 40
  188. Montejo pp. 39–40
  189. Reséndez, Andrés (2016). The Other Slavery: The Uncovered Story of Indian Enslavement in America. Houghton Mifflin Harcourt. p. 17. ISBN 978-0547640983.
  190. Farmer, Paul (April 15, 2004). "Who removed Aristide?". London Review of Books. pp. 28–31. Archived from the original on June 8, 2008. Retrieved February 19, 2010.
  191. Kiple, Kenneth F. (2002). The Caribbean Slave: A Biological History. Cambridge University Press. p. 145. ISBN 978-0-521-52470-4.
  192. Gwyn Campbell, Suzanne Miers, and Joseph C. Miller (July 2007). "Women and Slavery". ResearchGate.CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  193. Moitt, Bernard (2001). Women and Slavery in the French Antilles, 1635–1848. Indiana University Press. p. 63.
  194. Coupeau, Steeve (2008). The History of Haiti. Greenwood Publishing Group. p. 18. ISBN 978-0-313-34089-5.
  195. "JAMAICAN HISTORY I". Discover Jamaica. Archived from the original on August 5, 2013. Retrieved August 23, 2013.
  196. Guitar, Lynne. "Criollos: The Birth of a Dynamic New Indo-Afro-European People and Culture on Hispaniola". KACIKE: Journal of Caribbean Amerindian History and Anthropology. Archived from the original on December 2, 2008. Retrieved May 27, 2011.
  197. Léger 1907, p. 23.
  198. Accilien et al. 2003, p. 12.
  199. Agurilar-Moreno, Manuel (2006). Handbook to Life in the Aztec World. California State University, Los Angeles.
  200. Yaz (June 29, 2001). "'Puerto Rico' Grilla's Homepage". Angelfire.com. Retrieved July 23, 2015.
  201. "Bartoleme de las Casas". Oregonstate.edu. Archived from the original on December 26, 2002. Retrieved July 23, 2015.
  202. Martinez, Robert A. "African Aspects of the Puerto Rican Personality". ipoaa.com. Retrieved March 22, 2016.
  203. "Teoría, Crítica e Historia: La abolición de la esclavitud y el mundo hispano" (in Spanish). Ensayistas.org. Retrieved July 23, 2015.
  204. Slave Revolts in Puerto Rico: Conspiracies and Uprisings, 1795–1873; by: Guillermo A. Baralt (2007; pp. 5–6; Publisher: Markus Wiener Publishers Archived January 2, 2014, at the Wayback Machine ISBN 1-55876-463-1, 978-1-55876-463-7
  205. "El 'Bando Negro' o "Código Negro"" [The "Black Edict" or "Black Code"]. Government Gazette of Puerto Rico (in Spanish). fortunecity.com. May 31, 1848. Archived from the original on June 6, 2007.
  206. Bas García, José R. (March 23, 2009). "La abolición de la esclavitud de 1873 en Puerto Rico" [The abolition of slavery in 1873 in Puerto Rico]. Center for Advanced Studies of Puerto Rico and the Caribbean (in Spanish). independencia.net. Archived from the original on March 19, 2011.
  207. Rodriguez, Junius P. (2007). Encyclopedia of Slave Resistance and Rebellion. Greenwood Publishing Group. p. 398. ISBN 978-0-313-33273-9. Retrieved March 28, 2016.
  208. "Esclavitud Puerto Rico". Proyectosalonhogar.com. Retrieved July 23, 2015.
  209. Streissguth, Tom (2009). Suriname in Pictures. Twenty-First Century Books. pp. 23–. ISBN 978-1-57505-964-8.
  210. Boxer, C.R. (1990). The Dutch Seaborne Empire. Penguin. pp. 271–272.
  211. Mentelle, Simon M., "Extract of the Dutch Map Representing the Colony of Surinam", c.1777, Digital World Library via Library of Congress. Retrieved May 26, 2013.
  212. Michael J. Douma, "The Lincoln Administration's Negotiations to Colonize African Americans in Dutch Suriname," Civil War History 61#2 (2015): 111–37. online
  213. Wood, Peter (2003). "The Birth of Race-Based Slavery". Slate.
  214. Smith, Julia Floyd (1973). Slavery and Plantation Growth in Antebellum Florida, 1821–1860. Gainesville: University of Florida Press. pp. 44–46. ISBN 978-0-8130-0323-8.
  215. Moore, Wilbert Ellis (1980). American Negro Slavery and Abolition: A Sociological Study. Ayer Publishing.
  216. Collins, Kathleen, "The Scourged Back", History of Photography 9 (January 1985): 43–45.
  217. Clinton, Catherine, Scholastic Encyclopedia of the Civil War, New York: Scholastic Inc., 1999, p. 8.
  218. McInnis, Maurie D. (2011). Slaves Waiting for Sale: Abolitionist Art and the American Slave Trade. University of Chicago Press. p. 129. ISBN 978-0-226-55933-9.
  219. Stephen D. Behrendt, David Richardson, and David Eltis, W.E.B. Du Bois Institute for African and African-American Research, Harvard University. Based on "records for 27,233 voyages that set out to obtain slaves for the Americas". Stephen Behrendt (1999). "Transatlantic Slave Trade". Africana: The Encyclopedia of the African and African American Experience. New York: Basic Civitas Books. ISBN 978-0-465-00071-5.
  220. Introduction – Social Aspects of the Civil War Archived July 14, 2007, at the Wayback Machine, National Park Service.
  221. "Why Did So Many Christians Support Slavery?". christianitytoday.com. Retrieved August 28, 2017.
  222. 1860 Census Results Archived June 4, 2004, at the Wayback Machine, The Civil War Home Page.
  223. "Small Truth Papering Over a Big Lie". The Atlantic. August 9, 2010. Retrieved September 29, 2015.
  224. Postal, Leslie; et al. (June 1, 2018). "Schools Without Rules: Private schools' curriculum downplays slavery, says humans and dinosaurs lived together". Orlando Sentinel. Retrieved June 5, 2018.
  225. Hallet, Nicole. "China and Antislavery". Encyclopedia of Antislavery and Abolition, Vol. 1, pp. 154–156. Greenwood Publishing Group, 2007. ISBN 0-313-33143-X.
  226. Gang Zhou, Man and Land in Chinese History: an Economic Analysis, p. 158. Stanford University Press (Stanford), 1986. ISBN 0-8047-1271-9.
  227. Huang, Philip C. Code, Custom, and Legal Practice in China: the Qing and the Republic Compared, p. 17. Stanford University Press (Stanford), 2001. ISBN 0-8047-4110-7.
  228. Rodriguez, Junius. "China, Late Imperial". The Historical Encyclopedia of World Slavery, Vol. 1, p. 146. ABC-CLIO, 1997. ISBN 0-87436-885-5.
  229. Hirschman, Elizabeth Caldwell; Yates, Donald N. (2014). The Early Jews and Muslims of England and Wales: A Genetic and Genealogical History. McFarland. p. 51. ISBN 978-0-7864-7684-8. Retrieved February 14, 2017.
  230. (Japan), Tōyō Bunko. Memoirs of the Research Department, Issue 2. p. 63. Retrieved July 4, 2010.
  231. Lee, Kenneth B. (1997). Korea and East Asia: the story of a Phoenix. Greenwood Publishing Group. p. 49. ISBN 978-0-275-95823-7. Retrieved July 4, 2010.
  232. Davis, David Brion (1966). The Problem of Slavery in Western Culture. Oxford University Press. p. 51. ISBN 978-0-19-505639-6. Retrieved February 14, 2017.
  233. Salisbury, Joyce E. (2004). The Greenwood Encyclopedia of Daily Life: The medieval world. Greenwood Press. p. 316. ISBN 978-0-313-32543-4. Retrieved January 9, 2011.
  234. Schafer, Edward H. (1963). The Golden Peaches of Samarkand: A Study of Tʻang Exotics. University of California Press. pp. 45–46. ISBN 978-0-520-05462-2.
  235. A History of Chinese Civilization
  236. Perdue, Peter (2005). China Marches West. Triliteral. p. 118. ISBN 978-0-674-01684-2.
  237. Rodriguez, Junius P. (1997). The Historical Encyclopedia of World Slavery. ABC-CLIO. p. 146. ISBN 978-0-87436-885-7. chinese slaves mongols manchu.
  238. Lipman, Jonathan Neaman (2004). Familiar strangers: a history of Muslims in Northwest China. Seattle: University of Washington Press. p. 69. ISBN 978-0-295-97644-0. Retrieved November 28, 2010.
  239. Brook, Timothy, and Bob Tadashi Wakabayashi (2000). Opium regimes: China, Britain, and Japan, 1839–1952. University of California Press. p. 148. ISBN 978-0-520-22236-6. Retrieved November 28, 2010.CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  240. Millward, James A. (1998). Beyond the pass: economy, ethnicity, and empire in Qing Central Asia, 1759–1864. Stanford University Press. p. 145. ISBN 978-0-8047-2933-8. Retrieved November 28, 2010.
  241. Millward, James A. (1998). Beyond the pass: economy, ethnicity, and empire in Qing Central Asia, 1759–1864. Stanford University Press. p. 206. ISBN 978-0-8047-2933-8. Retrieved November 28, 2010.
  242. [footnote 2: (...) While it is likely that the institution of slavery existed in India during the Vedic period, the association of the Vedic 'Dasa' with 'slaves' is problematic and likely to have been a later development.
  243. Levi, Scott C. (November 2002). "Hindus Beyond the Hindu Kush: Indians in the Central Asian Slave Trade". Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society. 12 (3): 277–288. doi:10.1017/S1356186302000329. JSTOR 25188289. Sources such as the Arthasastra, the Manusmriti and the Mahabharata demonstrate that institutionalized slavery was well established in India by beginning of the common era
  244. "Windows – Slice of history". The Tribune.
  245. S. Subrahmanyam, "Slaves and Tyrants: Dutch Tribulations in Seventeenth-Century Mrauk-U," Journal of Early Modern History 1, no. 3 (August 1997); O. Prakash, "European Commercial Enterprise in Pre-Colonial India", The New Cambridge History of India II:5 (New York, 1998); O. Prakash, The Dutch East India Company and the Economy of Bengal; J.F. Richards, "The Mughal Empire", The New Cambridge History of India I:5 (New York, 1993); Raychaudhuri and Habib, eds, The Cambridge Economic History of India I; V.B. Lieberman, Burmese Administrative Cycles: Anarchy and Conquest, c. 1580–1760 (Princeton, N.J., 1984); G.D. Winius, "The 'Shadow Empire' of Goa in the Bay of Bengal," Itinerario 7, no. 2 (1983); D.G.E. Hall, "Studies in Dutch relations with Arakan," Journal of the Burma Research Society 26, no. 1 (1936):; D.G.E. Hall, "The Daghregister of Batavia and Dutch Trade with Burma in the Seventeenth Century," Journal of the Burma Research Society 29, no. 2 (1939); Arasaratnam, "Slave Trade in the Indian Ocean in the Seventeenth Century,".
  246. VOC 1479, OBP 1691, fls. 611r–627v, Specificatie van Allerhande Koopmansz. tot Tuticurin, Manaapar en Alvatt.rij Ingekocht, 1670/71–1689/90; W. Ph. Coolhaas and J.van Goor, eds, Generale Missiven van Gouverneurs-Generaal en Raden van Indiaan Heren Zeventien der Verenigde Oostindische Compagnie (The Hague, 1960–present), passim; T. Raychaudhuri, Jan Company in Coromandel, 1605–1690: A Study on the Interrelations of European Commerce and Traditional Economies (The Hague, 1962); S. Arasaratnam, "Slave Trade in the Indian Ocean in the Seventeenth Century," in K.S. Mathew, ed., Mariners, Merchants and Oceans: Studies in Maritime History (New Delhi, 1995).
  247. For exports of Malabar slaves to Ceylon, Batavia, see Generale Missiven VI; H.K. s'Jacob ed., De Nederlanders in Kerala, 1663–1701: De Memories en Instructies Betreffende het Commandement Malabar van de Verenigde Oostindische Compagnie, Rijks Geschiedkundige Publication, Kleine serie 43 (The Hague, 1976); R. Barendse, "Slaving on the Malagasy Coast, 1640–1700," in S. Evers and M. Spindler, eds, Cultures of Madagascar: Ebb and Flow of Influences (Leiden, 1995). See also M.O. Koshy, The Dutch Power in Kerala (New Delhi, 1989); K.K. Kusuman, Slavery in Travancore (Trivandrum, 1973); M.A.P. Meilink-Roelofsz, De Vestiging der Nederlanders ter Kuste Malabar (The Hague, 1943); H. Terpstra, De Opkomst der Westerkwartieren van de Oostindische Compagnie (The Hague, 1918).
  248. M.P.M. Vink, "Encounters on the Opposite Coast: Cross-Cultural Contacts between the Dutch East India Company and the Nayaka State of Madurai in the Seventeenth Century," unpublished dissertation, University of Minnesota (1998); Arasaratnam, Ceylon and the Dutch, 1600–1800 (Great Yarmouth, 1996); H.D. Love, Vestiges from Old Madras (London, 1913).
  249. Of 2,467 slaves traded on 12 slave voyages from Batavia, India, and Madagascar between 1677 and 1701 to the Cape, 1,617 were landed with a loss of 850 slaves, or 34.45%. On 19 voyages between 1677 and 1732, the mortality rate was somewhat lower (22.7%). See Shell, "Slavery at the Cape of Good Hope, 1680–1731," p. 332. Filliot estimated the average mortality rate among slaves shipped from India and West Africa to the Mascarene Islands at 20–25% and 25–30%, respectively. Average mortality rates among slaves arriving from closer catchment areas were lower: 12% from Madagascar and 21% from Southeast Africa. See Filliot, La Traite des Esclaves, p. 228; A. Toussaint, La Route des Îles: Contribution à l'Histoire Maritime des Mascareignes (Paris, 1967); Allen, "The Madagascar Slave Trade and Labor Migration."
  250. "Slavery in Nineteenth-Century Northern Thailand (p. 4 of 6)". Kyoto Review of South East Asia; (Colquhoun 1885:53).
  251. "Slavery in Nineteenth-Century Northern Thailand: Archival Anecdotes and Village Voices". The Kyoto Review of South Asia. p. 3 of 6. Archived from the original on March 5, 2012.
  252. Clarence-Smith, W.G. (2006). Islam and the Abolition of Slavery. Oxford University Press. p. 13. ISBN 978-0-19-522151-0.
  253. Hoffman, Michael (May 26, 2013). "The rarely, if ever, told story of Japanese sold as slaves by Portuguese traders". Japan Times. Retrieved March 2, 2014.
  254. "Europeans had Japanese slaves, in case you didn't know…". Japan Probe. May 10, 2007.
  255. Ralf Hertel, Michael Keevak (2017). Early Encounters between East Asia and Europe: Telling Failures. Routledge. ISBN 978-1-317-14718-3.
  256. Michael Weiner, ed. (2004). Race, Ethnicity and Migration in Modern Japan: Imagined and imaginary minorites (illustrated ed.). Taylor & Francis. p. 408. ISBN 978-0-415-20857-4. Retrieved February 2, 2014.
  257. Appiah, Kwame Anthony; Henry Louis Gates, Jr., eds. (2005). Africana: The Encyclopedia of the African and African American Experience (illustrated ed.). Oxford University Press. p. 479. ISBN 978-0-19-517055-9. Retrieved February 2, 2014.
  258. Appiah, Anthony; Henry Louis Gates, eds. (2010). Encyclopedia of Africa, Volume 1 (illustrated ed.). Oxford University Press. p. 187. ISBN 978-0-19-533770-9. Retrieved February 2, 2014.
  259. Robert Gellately; Ben Kiernan, eds. (2003). The Specter of Genocide: Mass Murder in Historical Perspective (reprint ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 277. ISBN 978-0-521-52750-7. Retrieved February 2, 2014. Hideyoshi korean slaves guns silk.
  260. McCormack, Gavan (2001). Reflections on Modern Japanese History in the Context of the Concept of "genocide". Edwin O. Reischauer Institute of Japanese Studies. Harvard University, Edwin O. Reischauer Institute of Japanese Studies. p. 18.
  261. Lidin, Olof G. (2002). Tanegashima – The Arrival of Europe in Japan. Routledge. p. 170. ISBN 978-1-135-78871-1. Retrieved February 2, 2014.
  262. Stanley, Amy (2012). Selling Women: Prostitution, Markets, and the Household in Early Modern Japan. Volume 21 of Asia: Local Studies / Global Themes. Matthew H. Sommer. University of California Press. ISBN 978-0-520-95238-6. Retrieved February 2, 2014.
  263. Spence, Jonathan D. (1985). The memory palace of Matteo Ricci (illustrated, reprint ed.). Penguin Books. p. 208. ISBN 978-0-14-008098-8. Retrieved May 5, 2012. countryside.16 Slaves were everywhere in Lisbon, according to the Florentine merchant Filippo Sassetti, who was also living in the city during 1578. Black slaves were the most numerous, but there were also a scattering of Chinese
  264. Leite, José Roberto Teixeira (1999). A China no Brasil: influências, marcas, ecos e sobrevivências chinesas na sociedade e na arte brasileiras (in Portuguese). UNICAMP. Universidade Estadual de Campinas. p. 19. ISBN 978-85-268-0436-4. Idéias e costumes da China podem ter-nos chegado também através de escravos chineses, de uns poucos dos quais sabe-se da presença no Brasil de começos do Setecentos.17 Mas não deve ter sido através desses raros infelizes que a influência chinesa nos atingiu, mesmo porque escravos chineses (e também japoneses) já existiam aos montes em Lisboa por volta de 1578, quando Filippo Sassetti visitou a cidade,18 apenas suplantados em número pelos africanos. Parece aliás que aos últimos cabia o trabalho pesado, ficando reservadas aos chins tarefas e funções mais amenas, inclusive a de em certos casos secretariar autoridades civis, religiosas e militares.
  265. Pinto, Jeanette (1992). Slavery in Portuguese India, 1510–1842. Himalaya Pub. House. p. 18. ing Chinese as slaves, since they are found to be very loyal, intelligent and hard working' ... their culinary bent was also evidently appreciated. The Florentine traveller Fillippo Sassetti, recording his impressions of Lisbon's enormous slave population circa 1580, states that the majority of the Chinese there were employed as cooks.
  266. Boxer, Charles Ralph (1968). Fidalgos in the Far East 1550–1770 (2, illustrated, reprint ed.). Oxford University Press. p. 225. be very loyal, intelligent, and hard-working. Their culinary bent (not for nothing is Chinese cooking regarded as the Asiatic equivalent to French cooking in Europe) was evidently appreciated. The Florentine traveller Filipe Sassetti recording his impressions of Lisbon's enormous slave population circa 1580, states that the majority of the Chinese there were employed as cooks. Dr. John Fryer, who gives us an interesting ...
  267. Leite, José Roberto Teixeira (1999). A China No Brasil: Influencias, Marcas, Ecos E Sobrevivencias Chinesas Na Sociedade E Na Arte Brasileiras (in Portuguese). UNICAMP. Universidade Estadual de Campinas. p. 19. ISBN 978-85-268-0436-4.
  268. Finkelman, Paul; Miller, Joseph Calder (1998). Macmillan encyclopedia of world slavery. 2. Macmillan Reference US. p. 737. ISBN 978-0-02-864781-4. OCLC 39655102.
  269. de Sande, Duarte (2012). Derek Massarella (ed.). Japanese Travellers in Sixteenth-century Europe: A Dialogue Concerning the Mission of the Japanese Ambassadors to the Roman Curia (1590). Volume 25 of 3: Works, Hakluyt Society. Ashgate Publishing, Ltd. ISBN 978-1-4094-7223-0. ISSN 0072-9396.
  270. Saunders, A.C. de C.M. (1982). A Social History of Black Slaves and Freedmen in Portugal, 1441–1555. Volume 25 of 3: Works, Hakluyt Society Hakluyt Society (illustrated ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 168. ISBN 978-0-521-23150-3. Retrieved February 2, 2014.
  271. Pinto, Jeanette (1992). Slavery in Portuguese India, 1510–1842. Himalaya Pub. House. p. 18.
  272. Boxer (1968). Fidalgos in the Far East 1550–1770 (2, illustrated, reprint ed.). p. 225.
  273. Nelson, Thomas (Winter 2004). "Monumenta Nipponica (Slavery in Medieval Japan)". Monumenta Nipponica. 59 (4): 463–492. JSTOR 25066328.
  274. Monumenta Nipponica: Studies on Japanese Culture, Past and Present, Volume 59, Issues 3–4. Jōchi Daigaku. Sophia University. 2004. p. 463.CS1 maint: others (link)
  275. Monumenta Nipponica. Jōchi Daigaku. Sophia University. 2004. p. 465.CS1 maint: others (link)
  276. Kitagawa, Joseph Mitsuo (2013). Religion in Japanese History (illustrated, reprint ed.). Columbia University Press. p. 144. ISBN 978-0-231-51509-2. Retrieved February 2, 2014.
  277. Calman, Donald (2013). Nature and Origins of Japanese Imperialism. Routledge. p. 37. ISBN 978-1-134-91843-0. Retrieved February 2, 2014.
  278. Kshetry, Gopal (2008). Foreigners in Japan: A Historical Perspective. Xlibris Corporation. ISBN 978-1-4691-0244-3.
  279. Moran, J.F. (2012). Japanese and the Jesuits. Routledge. ISBN 978-1-134-88112-3. Retrieved February 2, 2014.
  280. Dias 2007, p. 71.
  281. Campbell, Gwyn (2004). Structure of Slavery in Indian Ocean Africa and Asia. Routledge. p. 157. ISBN 978-1-135-75917-9. Retrieved February 16, 2017.
  282. Kim, Youngmin; Pettid, Michael J. (2011). Women and Confucianism in Choson Korea: New Perspectives. SUNY Press. pp. 140–41. ISBN 978-1-4384-3777-4. Retrieved February 14, 2017.
  283. Bok Rae Kim (2004). "Nobi: A Korean System of Slavery". In Gwyn Campbell (ed.). Structure of Slavery in Indian Ocean Africa and Asia. Routledge. pp. 162–63. ISBN 978-1-135-75917-9.
  284. Korean History: Discovery of Its Characteristics and Developments. Hollym. 2004. p. 14. ISBN 978-1-56591-177-2.
  285. Tierney, Helen (1999). Women's Studies Encyclopedia. Greenwood Publishing Group. p. 277. ISBN 978-0-313-31071-3.
  286. Klein, Martin A. (2014). "Maori". Historical Dictionary of Slavery and Abolition. Historical Dictionaries of Religions, Philosophies, and Movements Series (2 ed.). Lanham, Maryland: Rowman & Littlefield. p. 253. ISBN 9780810875289. Retrieved February 23, 2019. Slaves called mokai were an important part of pre-colonial Maori society.
  287. Hellie, Richard. "Slavery". Encyclopædia Britannica.
  288. Kizilov, Mikhail (2007). "Slave Trade in the Early Modern Crimea From the Perspective of Christian, Muslim, and Jewish Sources". Journal of Early Modern History. 11 (1): 1–31. doi:10.1163/157006507780385125.
  289. "Sexual slavery – the harem". BBC – Religion & Ethics. Archived from the original on May 21, 2009.
  290. Subtelny, Orest (2000). Ukraine: A History. University of Toronto Press. pp. 106–. ISBN 978-0-8020-8390-6. Retrieved May 31, 2012.
  291. Halil Inalcik. "Servile Labor in the Ottoman Empire" Archived September 11, 2009, at the Wayback Machine in A. Ascher, B.K. Kiraly, and T. Halasi-Kun (eds), The Mutual Effects of the Islamic and Judeo-Christian Worlds: The East European Pattern, Brooklyn College, 1979, pp. 25–43.
  292. Darjusz Kołodziejczyk, as reported by Kizilov, Mikhail (2007). "Slaves, Money Lenders, and Prisoner Guards:The Jews and the Trade in Slaves and Captivesin the Crimean Khanate". The Journal of Jewish Studies: 2.
  293. "The Crimean Tatars and their Russian-Captive Slaves Archived June 5, 2013, at the Wayback Machine" (PDF). Eizo Matsuki, Mediterranean Studies Group at Hitotsubashi University.
  294. "The Freeing of the Slaves". Khiva.info. Retrieved August 29, 2010.
  295. Kaiser, Darrel P. (2006). Origin & Ancestors Families Karle & Kaiser Of the German-Russian Volga Colonies. Darrel P. Kaiser. ISBN 978-1-4116-9894-9. Retrieved May 31, 2012.
  296. "A Mauritanian Abolitionist's Crusade Against Slavery". The New Yorker. September 8, 2014. Retrieved September 29, 2015.
  297. "Forced labour – Themes". Ilo.org. Archived from the original on February 9, 2010. Retrieved March 14, 2010.
  298. "Inaugural Global Slavery Index Reveals More Than 29 Million People Living In Slavery". Global Slavery Index 2013. October 4, 2013. Archived from the original on April 7, 2016. Retrieved October 17, 2013.
  299. Bales, Kevin (1999). "1". Disposable People: New Slavery in the Global Economy. University of California Press. p. 9. ISBN 978-0-520-21797-3.
  300. A Global Alliance Against Forced Labour. International Labour Organisation. 2005. ISBN 978-92-2-115360-3.
  301. Fortin, Jacey (January 16, 2013). "Mali's Other Crisis: Slavery Still Plagues Mali, And Insurgency Could Make It Worse". International Business Times.
  302. "For 15 million in India, a childhood of slavery", The New York Times. January 30, 2003
  303. "Child Slaves Abandoned to India's Silk Industry". Human Rights Watch. January 23, 2003.
  304. "Global Slavery Index". globalslaveryindex.org. Retrieved February 14, 2015.
  305. "India, China, Pakistan, Nigeria on slavery's list of shame". CNN. October 18, 2013.
  306. "27 Million People Said to Live in 'Modern Slavery'". The New York Times. June 20, 2013.
  307. Nita Bhalla, "'Modern-day slavery': State Dept. says millions of human trafficking victims go unidentified," NBC News, Jun 19, 2013 (accessed November 28, 2014)
  308. Helmore, Edward (July 19, 2018). "Over 400,000 people living in 'modern slavery' in U.S., report finds". The Guardian. Retrieved July 21, 2018.
  309. Tutton, Mark (July 19, 2018). "Modern slavery in developed countries more common than thought". CNN. Retrieved July 21, 2018.
  310. Quackenbush, Casey (December 1, 2017). "The Libyan Slave Trade Has Shocked the World. Here's What You Should Know". Time Magazine.
  311. "African migrants 'sold in slave markets'". BBC News. April 11, 2017 via bbc.com.
  312. "African migrants sold as 'slaves' in Libya".
  313. "West African migrants are kidnapped and sold in Libyan slave markets / Boing Boing". boingboing.net.
  314. Adams, Paul (February 28, 2017). "Libya exposed as child migrant abuse hub". BBC News via bbc.com.
  315. "Immigrant Women, Children Raped, Starved in Libya's Hellholes: Unicef". February 28, 2017.
  316. "Mauritanian MPs pass slavery law". BBC News. August 9, 2007. Retrieved January 8, 2011.
  317. "The Abolition season on BBC World Service". BBC News. Retrieved August 29, 2010.
  318. Sutter, John D. (March 2012). "Slavery's last stronghold". CNN. Retrieved May 28, 2012.
  319. "Mauritanian MPs pass slavery law". BBC News. August 9, 2007. Retrieved August 29, 2010.
  320. "UN: There is hope for Mauritania's slaves". CNN. March 17, 2012.
  321. "Mauritania: Anti-slavery law still tough to enforce," IRIN, 11 December 2012 (accessed November 28, 2014)
  322. "Economics and Slavery" (PDF). Du.edu. Retrieved August 18, 2013.
  323. Bradford, Laurence (July 23, 2013). "Modern day slavery in Southeast Asia: Thailand and Cambodia". Inside Investor. Archived from the original on March 23, 2015. Retrieved July 24, 2013.
  324. "Trafficking FAQs – Amnesty International USA". Amnesty International. March 30, 2007. Archived from the original on July 8, 2009. Retrieved August 29, 2010.
  325. Lost Daughters – An Ongoing Tragedy in Nepal Women News Network – WNN, Dec 5, 2008
  326. "US State Department Trafficking report". State.gov. Retrieved August 29, 2010.
  327. Clarence-Smith, William. "Religions and the abolition of slavery – a comparative approach" (PDF). Retrieved August 28, 2013.
  328. The Earth and Its Peoples: A Global History. Cengage Learning. 2009. p. 165. ISBN 978-0-618-99238-6.
  329. Encyclopedia of Antislavery and Abolition. Greenwood Publishing Group. 2011. p. 155. ISBN 978-0-313-33143-5.
  330. "Abolition Movement". Archived from the original on July 23, 2018.
  331. "1804: With passage of the law excerpted here, New Jersey became the last state in the North to abolish slavery." Howard L. Green, Words that Make New Jersey History: A Primary Source Reader (1995) p. 84.
  332. Foner, Eric. "Forgotten step towards freedom", The New York Times, December 30, 2007.
  333. "Soldiers and Sailors Database – The Civil War (U.S. National Park Service)". Itd.nps.gov. September 19, 2015. Archived from the original on July 14, 2007. Retrieved September 29, 2015.
  334. S.M. Wise, Though the Heavens May Fall, Pimlico (2005)
  335. "Royal Navy and the Slave Trade : Battles : History : Royal Navy". Archived from the original on January 28, 2009. Retrieved September 29, 2015.
  336. "Devon – Abolition – Sailing against slavery". BBC. February 28, 2007. Retrieved September 29, 2015.
  337. "The West African Squadron and slave trade". Pdavis.nl. Retrieved August 29, 2010.
  338. "Anti-Slavery International: UNESCO Education". UNESCO. November 13, 2002. Retrieved September 29, 2015.
  339. "Home Page | Agrarian Studies" (PDF). Yale.edu. Archived from the original (PDF) on May 2, 2013. Retrieved September 30, 2015.
  340. "The law against slavery". BBC News. Retrieved October 5, 2008.
  341. Belardelli, Giulia (December 2, 2014). "Pope Francis And Other Religious Leaders Sign Declaration Against Modern Slavery". HuffPost.
  342. Adu Boahen, Topics In West African History p. 110
  343. "Afrikan Involvement In Atlantic Slave Trade, By Kwaku Person-Lynn, Ph. D". Africawithin.com. Archived from the original on April 18, 2008. Retrieved August 29, 2010.
  344. João C. Curto. Álcool e Escravos: O Comércio Luso-Brasileiro do Álcool em Mpinda, Luanda e Benguela durante o Tráfico Atlântico de Escravos (c. 1480–1830) e o Seu Impacto nas Sociedades da África Central Ocidental. Translated by Márcia Lameirinhas. Tempos e Espaços Africanos Series, vol. 3. Lisbon: Editora Vulgata, 2002. ISBN 978-972-8427-24-5.
  345. "Ending the Slavery Blame-Game", The New York Times. April 22, 2010.
  346. "Benin Officials Apologize For Role In U.S. Slave Trade". Chicago Tribune. May 1, 2000.
  347. Blair 'sorry' for UK slavery role BBC. Retrieved February 23, 2012.
  348. "Virginia 'sorry' for slavery role". BBC News. February 25, 2007. Retrieved August 29, 2010.
  349. Muir, Hugh (August 24, 2007). "Livingstone weeps as he apologises for slavery". The Guardian. London. Archived from the original on January 7, 2020. Retrieved January 7, 2020.
  350. Coslett, Paul (September 24, 2014). "Liverpool's slavery apology". BBC News. BBC. Retrieved January 7, 2020.
  351. Congress Apologizes for Slavery, Jim Crow NPR. Retrieved October 20, 2011
  352. "Barack Obama praises Senate slavery apology". The Daily Telegraph. June 19, 2009
  353. "Obama praises 'historic' Senate slavery apology". Agence France-Presse. June 19, 2009. Archived from the original on February 25, 2014. Retrieved July 22, 2009 via Google News.
  354. Nitkin, David; Harry Merritt (March 2, 2007). "A New Twist to an Intriguing Family History". The Baltimore Sun. Archived from the original on September 30, 2007.
  355. "Gaddafi apologizes for Arab slave traders Archived September 21, 2013, at the Wayback Machine". Press TV. October 11, 2010.
  356. Krembs, Peter. "An Idea Not Worth Drafting: Conscription is Slavery". Capmag.com. Retrieved September 29, 2015.
  357. Kopel, Dave. "Nationalized Slavery; A policy Italy should dump". davidkopel.com. Archived from the original on October 12, 2007.. Refers to both the military and national service requirements of Italy as slavery
  358. e.g., Machan, Tibor R. (April 13, 2000). "Tax Slavery". Ludwig von Mises Institute. Retrieved October 9, 2006.
  359. Elliot Valenstein (February 2002). Blaming the Brain: The Truth About Drugs and Mental Health. Simon and Schuster. p. 26. ISBN 978-0-7432-3787-1.
  360. "Psychiatric Slavery – Thomas Stephen Szasz – Google Books". Retrieved September 29, 2015.
  361. Schaler, J.A. (2003). "Slavery and psychiatry". British Journal of Psychiatry. 183: 77–78. doi:10.1192/bjp.183.1.77-a. PMID 12835252.
  362. Spiegel, Marjorie. The Dreaded Comparison: Human and Animal Slavery, New York: Mirror Books, 1996.
  363. Ellerman 1992.
  364. Thompson 1966, pp. 599, 912.
  365. Ostergaard 1997, p. 133.
  366. Lazonick 1990, p. 37.
  367. "wage slave". merriam-webster.com. Retrieved March 4, 2013.
  368. "wage slave". dictionary.com. Retrieved March 4, 2013.
  369. "...vulgar are the means of livelihood of all hired workmen whom we pay for mere manual labour, not for artistic skill; for in their case the very wage they receive is a pledge of their slavery." – De Officiis
  370. Michael T. Martin and David C. Wall, "The Politics of Cine-Memory: Signifying Slavery in the History Film," in Robert A. Rosenstone and Constantin Parvulesu, eds. A Companion to the Historical Film (Wiley-Blackwell, 2013), pp. 445–467.
  371. Melvyn Stokes, D.W. Griffith's the Birth of a Nation: A History of the Most Controversial Motion Picture of All Time (2008)
  372. Morsberger, Robert E., "Slavery and 'The Santa Fe Trail,' or, John Brown on Hollywood's Sour Apple Tree," American Studies (1977) 18#2, pp. 87–98. online
  373. Hernán Vera; Andrew M. Gordon (2003). Screen saviors: Hollywood fictions of whiteness. Rowman & Littlefield. pp. 54–56. ISBN 978-0-8476-9947-6.
  374. William L. Van Deburg, Slavery and Race in American Popular Culture (1984) covers films, fiction, television, and the stage.
  375. Natalie Zemon Davis, Slaves on Screen: Film and Historical Vision (2002) ch 2
  376. Davis, Slaves on Screen: Film and Historical Vision (2002) ch 3
  377. Mintz, Steven (1998). "Spielberg's Amistad and the History Classroom". The History Teacher. 31 (3): 370–73. doi:10.2307/494885. JSTOR 494885.
  378. Davis, Slaves on Screen: Film and Historical Vision (2002)
  379. Berlin, Ira (2004). "American Slavery in History and Memory and the Search for Social Justice". Journal of American History. 90 (4): 1251–68. doi:10.2307/3660347. JSTOR 3660347.
  380. "Films about Slavery and the transAtlantic Slave Trade". Ama. africatoday.com. Retrieved June 3, 2011.

Bibliography and further reading

Surveys and reference

Uncited sources

United States

Slavery in the modern era

Historical

Modern

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.