The British did not initiate, but they came to dominate the Atlantic slave trade. Few expressed moral or ethical doubts about slavery. The Anglican church, was directly involved in slavery. When a Christian voice was raised against the slave trade, it was led by Quakers who also played a critical role in the campaign to end the slave trade
New Scholarship Produces a More Nuanced Look at Quakers and Antislavery “Go to a free state and live...
This dissertation argues that transatlantic abolitionists used the Bible to condemn American slavery...
This thesis is an examination of slave abolitionists in Liverpool and Manchester and their shared hi...
The earliest records of Britain’s involvement in the slave trade date back to as early as 1562, howe...
This dissertation re-contextualizes the Quakers’ history as anti-slavery pioneers by exploring the c...
Slavery existed in most ancient cultures and continues to exist indirectly in some societies in its ...
Quaker protests against slavery started as early as 1682, in Germantown, Pennsylvania, and continued...
Slavery existed in most ancient cultures and continues to exist indirectly in some societies in its ...
Historical discourse has long existed around the causes behind the abolition of the British slave tr...
This thesis interrogated the relationship between abolition and the evangelical revival in Britain t...
This thesis explores the late-eighteenth-century movement to end Britain’s transatlantic slave trade...
Long before the Quaker anti-slavery societies of antebellum America worked to abolish slavery, the R...
When the nineteenth century dawned, Great Britain�s trade with Africa was practically identical with...
An article by Victor B. Howard published in the June 1972 issue of Church History, pages 208-224
This article reviews scholarship on the transatlantic slave trade. The foundations of a slave trade ...
New Scholarship Produces a More Nuanced Look at Quakers and Antislavery “Go to a free state and live...
This dissertation argues that transatlantic abolitionists used the Bible to condemn American slavery...
This thesis is an examination of slave abolitionists in Liverpool and Manchester and their shared hi...
The earliest records of Britain’s involvement in the slave trade date back to as early as 1562, howe...
This dissertation re-contextualizes the Quakers’ history as anti-slavery pioneers by exploring the c...
Slavery existed in most ancient cultures and continues to exist indirectly in some societies in its ...
Quaker protests against slavery started as early as 1682, in Germantown, Pennsylvania, and continued...
Slavery existed in most ancient cultures and continues to exist indirectly in some societies in its ...
Historical discourse has long existed around the causes behind the abolition of the British slave tr...
This thesis interrogated the relationship between abolition and the evangelical revival in Britain t...
This thesis explores the late-eighteenth-century movement to end Britain’s transatlantic slave trade...
Long before the Quaker anti-slavery societies of antebellum America worked to abolish slavery, the R...
When the nineteenth century dawned, Great Britain�s trade with Africa was practically identical with...
An article by Victor B. Howard published in the June 1972 issue of Church History, pages 208-224
This article reviews scholarship on the transatlantic slave trade. The foundations of a slave trade ...
New Scholarship Produces a More Nuanced Look at Quakers and Antislavery “Go to a free state and live...
This dissertation argues that transatlantic abolitionists used the Bible to condemn American slavery...
This thesis is an examination of slave abolitionists in Liverpool and Manchester and their shared hi...