Th is article deals with the process of abolishing the transatlantic slave trade in Angola in the fi rst half of the nineteenth century. It breaks down the Angolan slave trade into three macro-regions: Luanda, Benguela, and “northern Angola” (Cabinda and Ambriz). It argues that in order to understand the impact of abolitionism on the ground, scholars need to take into account local conditions, such as the supply of slaves to the coast, the participation of local elites in the business of slaving, and Angola’s close ties to Brazil. Th e article demonstrates that abolitionism policies only became eff ective with the participation of Portugal in the 1840s and the naval operations that ended shipments of slaves from Luanda, the largest slave po...
This paper examines the relations between Bahia and Costa da Mina at the dawn of the Second Slavery ...
From 1807 onwards, bilateral slave-trade treaties stipulated how naval squadrons would rescue slaves...
Abstract: The Kwango River has long been viewed as the limit of the transatlantic traders' access to...
This article explores slave resistance in Angola by focusing on slave flights and the formation of r...
The article explores the reorganization of the Portuguese slave trade in Angola in the early eightee...
This article uses demographic data from nineteenth-century Angola to evaluate, within a West Central...
This article deals with the conquest of Ambriz in the 1850s. It places it in the broader conquest of...
With overall slave export figures for the " Angola coast " of south western Africa relatively well e...
In this essay we use new and overlooked sources to provide a chronology for the early slave trade fr...
During the period between the XVIth and the XIXth centuries, the region currently called Angola was ...
The Portuguese colony of Angola was a major eighteenth-century slaving hub with an intense history o...
This article analyzes the end of the transatlantic slave trade in Angola and the Kongo by reconstruc...
Defence date: 18 October 2019Examining Board Prof Regina Grafe, European University Institute, (Sup...
This article deals with the social and economic ties that underpinned the slave trade from Angola to...
ABSTRACT The Transatlantic slave trade was closely related to the exchange of manufactured goods bet...
This paper examines the relations between Bahia and Costa da Mina at the dawn of the Second Slavery ...
From 1807 onwards, bilateral slave-trade treaties stipulated how naval squadrons would rescue slaves...
Abstract: The Kwango River has long been viewed as the limit of the transatlantic traders' access to...
This article explores slave resistance in Angola by focusing on slave flights and the formation of r...
The article explores the reorganization of the Portuguese slave trade in Angola in the early eightee...
This article uses demographic data from nineteenth-century Angola to evaluate, within a West Central...
This article deals with the conquest of Ambriz in the 1850s. It places it in the broader conquest of...
With overall slave export figures for the " Angola coast " of south western Africa relatively well e...
In this essay we use new and overlooked sources to provide a chronology for the early slave trade fr...
During the period between the XVIth and the XIXth centuries, the region currently called Angola was ...
The Portuguese colony of Angola was a major eighteenth-century slaving hub with an intense history o...
This article analyzes the end of the transatlantic slave trade in Angola and the Kongo by reconstruc...
Defence date: 18 October 2019Examining Board Prof Regina Grafe, European University Institute, (Sup...
This article deals with the social and economic ties that underpinned the slave trade from Angola to...
ABSTRACT The Transatlantic slave trade was closely related to the exchange of manufactured goods bet...
This paper examines the relations between Bahia and Costa da Mina at the dawn of the Second Slavery ...
From 1807 onwards, bilateral slave-trade treaties stipulated how naval squadrons would rescue slaves...
Abstract: The Kwango River has long been viewed as the limit of the transatlantic traders' access to...