The 1807 Act to abolish the British slave trade determined that those Africans seized by the British navy from illegally operating slave ships would be enlisted into the armed forces or indentured for a maximum of 14 years. In 1821, a Royal Commission was sent to the West Indies to investigate the ‘state’ and ‘condition’ of those Africans who had been indentured under the Act. This article focuses on the work of the Commission – as it became riven by a personal and political dispute – in Tortola. It pays particular attention to the testimonies of the indentured Africans documented in the records. Their dissident narratives further disrupted the inquiry as they refused to answer to either redemptive abolitionism or instrumental political eco...
This article reconstructs and interprets the early history of the Liberated African villages of Sier...
The British Empire formally emancipated its slaves in the Caribbean on 1 August 1834, then in South ...
Few could have foreseen the consequences when the British Parliament, in 1807, passed the Slave Trad...
In 1807, the British Empire ended its legal involvement in the transatlantic slave trade. The relati...
In the mid nineteenth century, the Anglo-Portuguese Mixed Commission in Luanda liberated 137 African...
When the nineteenth century dawned, Great Britain�s trade with Africa was practically identical with...
This thesis explores how anti-slave-trade laws shaped the opportunities and limitations for enslaved...
From 1807 onwards, bilateral slave-trade treaties stipulated how naval squadrons would rescue slaves...
This thesis examines the Royal Navy’s efforts to suppress the transatlantic slave trade between 1807...
This chapter examines arguments about the transition from slavery in the period c.1790 and 1833 in r...
The British Empire formally emancipated its slaves in the Caribbean on 1 August 1834, then in South ...
This article examines the journey undertaken by the slave ship Brilhante, captured by a British anti...
This article examines the journey undertaken by the slave ship Brilhante, captured by a British anti...
This article examines the journey undertaken by the slave ship Brilhante, captured by a British anti...
This article reconstructs and interprets the early history of the Liberated African villages of Sier...
This article reconstructs and interprets the early history of the Liberated African villages of Sier...
The British Empire formally emancipated its slaves in the Caribbean on 1 August 1834, then in South ...
Few could have foreseen the consequences when the British Parliament, in 1807, passed the Slave Trad...
In 1807, the British Empire ended its legal involvement in the transatlantic slave trade. The relati...
In the mid nineteenth century, the Anglo-Portuguese Mixed Commission in Luanda liberated 137 African...
When the nineteenth century dawned, Great Britain�s trade with Africa was practically identical with...
This thesis explores how anti-slave-trade laws shaped the opportunities and limitations for enslaved...
From 1807 onwards, bilateral slave-trade treaties stipulated how naval squadrons would rescue slaves...
This thesis examines the Royal Navy’s efforts to suppress the transatlantic slave trade between 1807...
This chapter examines arguments about the transition from slavery in the period c.1790 and 1833 in r...
The British Empire formally emancipated its slaves in the Caribbean on 1 August 1834, then in South ...
This article examines the journey undertaken by the slave ship Brilhante, captured by a British anti...
This article examines the journey undertaken by the slave ship Brilhante, captured by a British anti...
This article examines the journey undertaken by the slave ship Brilhante, captured by a British anti...
This article reconstructs and interprets the early history of the Liberated African villages of Sier...
This article reconstructs and interprets the early history of the Liberated African villages of Sier...
The British Empire formally emancipated its slaves in the Caribbean on 1 August 1834, then in South ...
Few could have foreseen the consequences when the British Parliament, in 1807, passed the Slave Trad...