This research demonstrates a diasporic connection between slavery on both sides of the Atlantic, English and African interactions on the Gold Coast, and slave resistance in Jamaica from 1655 to the middle of the eighteenth century. This article transfers the site of ‘seasoning,’ the process by which enslaved peoples became physically and socially acclimatised to slavery, from New World plantations to the homelands of Africans held in bondage. In turn, a challenge is presented to the notion that ‘seasoning’ led toward greater acceptance of slavery. Furthermore, this article explains what people subjugated in early colonial Jamaica from the Gold Coast of West Africa envisaged of their English masters and connects their expectations to their ...
This thesis examines the planter class in Jamaica in the period before the end of slavery in 1834 a...
In the wake of the Seven Years’ War (1756-1763), the Caribbean islands of Dominica, Grenada, St. Vin...
The aim of this article is to demonstrate how African Jamaicans (slaves or former slaves) retained t...
As the Asante emerged in the 18th century as a political dominant state and continued to expand and ...
Focussing on the early nineteenth century, this article examines the ways in which white slaveholder...
textAfricans forcibly brought to the Americas during slavery came from very diverse cultural groups,...
The Atlantic slave economy was crucial to Britain’s colonial enterprise during the eighteenth centur...
The present level of scholarly research into the different aspects of Igbo experience in slavery in ...
The success of the English colony of Barbados in the seventeenth century, with its lucrative sugar p...
The aim of this article is to demonstrate how African Jamaicans (slaves or former slaves) retained t...
How did British-American planters forcibly integrate newly purchased Africans into existing slave co...
© the various contributors 2010. All rights reserved. This article reviews scholarship on the histor...
Field of study: History.Dr. Theodore Koditschek, Thesis Advisor."May 2017."[ACCESS RESTRICTED TO THE...
Across human history, alcohol has operated as a driving force behind the development of economies, s...
This study uses the archaeological record and historic data specific to two early nineteenth-century...
This thesis examines the planter class in Jamaica in the period before the end of slavery in 1834 a...
In the wake of the Seven Years’ War (1756-1763), the Caribbean islands of Dominica, Grenada, St. Vin...
The aim of this article is to demonstrate how African Jamaicans (slaves or former slaves) retained t...
As the Asante emerged in the 18th century as a political dominant state and continued to expand and ...
Focussing on the early nineteenth century, this article examines the ways in which white slaveholder...
textAfricans forcibly brought to the Americas during slavery came from very diverse cultural groups,...
The Atlantic slave economy was crucial to Britain’s colonial enterprise during the eighteenth centur...
The present level of scholarly research into the different aspects of Igbo experience in slavery in ...
The success of the English colony of Barbados in the seventeenth century, with its lucrative sugar p...
The aim of this article is to demonstrate how African Jamaicans (slaves or former slaves) retained t...
How did British-American planters forcibly integrate newly purchased Africans into existing slave co...
© the various contributors 2010. All rights reserved. This article reviews scholarship on the histor...
Field of study: History.Dr. Theodore Koditschek, Thesis Advisor."May 2017."[ACCESS RESTRICTED TO THE...
Across human history, alcohol has operated as a driving force behind the development of economies, s...
This study uses the archaeological record and historic data specific to two early nineteenth-century...
This thesis examines the planter class in Jamaica in the period before the end of slavery in 1834 a...
In the wake of the Seven Years’ War (1756-1763), the Caribbean islands of Dominica, Grenada, St. Vin...
The aim of this article is to demonstrate how African Jamaicans (slaves or former slaves) retained t...