This article examines the journey undertaken by the slave ship Brilhante, captured by a British anti-slave trade patrol off the coast of Brazil in 1838. The ship and its crew were engaged in slave trafficking in contravention of international treaty agreements. In accordance with prize law the Brilhante was condemned by the Anglo-Brazilian mixed commission court in Rio de Janeiro and the slaves on-board were freed and apprenticed for a prescribed number of years. This article argues that during their apprenticeships not only were these Africans treated in the same way as slaves, but they formed similar bonds for survival. Both ethnic solidarity and shipmate bonds, which transcended ethnic boundaries, allowed them to forge new identities. Th...
The article examines the relationships between the Brazil-bound transatlantic slave trade, manumissi...
The paper analyzes four autobiographies that report the experiences of Africans in the Atlantic slav...
The case of the African “colonists” of Montevideo illustrates the rebirthof slave trading networks b...
This article examines the journey undertaken by the slave ship Brilhante, captured by a British anti...
In the mid nineteenth century, the Anglo-Portuguese Mixed Commission in Luanda liberated 137 African...
This thesis explores how anti-slave-trade laws shaped the opportunities and limitations for enslaved...
This paper examines the history of the Africans liberated from the slave trade by the Mixed Commissi...
This article presents fragments of the life of Duarte José Martins da Costa, a sailor whose experien...
From 1807 onwards, bilateral slave-trade treaties stipulated how naval squadrons would rescue slaves...
“Freedom’s Edge” explores how enslaved people in the South Atlantic world engaged with the law to ac...
This article explores slave resistance in Angola by focusing on slave flights and the formation of r...
In the first decades of the nineteenth century, bilateral agreements initiated by Great Britain led ...
One of the main features of slavery in Brazil was that slaves had a better chance of achieving freed...
In 1807, the British Empire ended its legal involvement in the transatlantic slave trade. The relati...
O artigo procura mostrar como se construiu a hegemonia portuguesa no contrabando de escravos para o ...
The article examines the relationships between the Brazil-bound transatlantic slave trade, manumissi...
The paper analyzes four autobiographies that report the experiences of Africans in the Atlantic slav...
The case of the African “colonists” of Montevideo illustrates the rebirthof slave trading networks b...
This article examines the journey undertaken by the slave ship Brilhante, captured by a British anti...
In the mid nineteenth century, the Anglo-Portuguese Mixed Commission in Luanda liberated 137 African...
This thesis explores how anti-slave-trade laws shaped the opportunities and limitations for enslaved...
This paper examines the history of the Africans liberated from the slave trade by the Mixed Commissi...
This article presents fragments of the life of Duarte José Martins da Costa, a sailor whose experien...
From 1807 onwards, bilateral slave-trade treaties stipulated how naval squadrons would rescue slaves...
“Freedom’s Edge” explores how enslaved people in the South Atlantic world engaged with the law to ac...
This article explores slave resistance in Angola by focusing on slave flights and the formation of r...
In the first decades of the nineteenth century, bilateral agreements initiated by Great Britain led ...
One of the main features of slavery in Brazil was that slaves had a better chance of achieving freed...
In 1807, the British Empire ended its legal involvement in the transatlantic slave trade. The relati...
O artigo procura mostrar como se construiu a hegemonia portuguesa no contrabando de escravos para o ...
The article examines the relationships between the Brazil-bound transatlantic slave trade, manumissi...
The paper analyzes four autobiographies that report the experiences of Africans in the Atlantic slav...
The case of the African “colonists” of Montevideo illustrates the rebirthof slave trading networks b...