Black Londoners have lived in the city for centuries. This collection brings 10 Black London lives together in an accessible volume to share the diversity of their experiences in the eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries with new readers. Drawing on the records of the Old Bailey criminal courthouse, these ten carefully selected trials have been chosen to show some of the breadth of Black experience in London during the age of enslavement (c. 1720-1840). The volume includes Black victims, witnesses, and defendants; men, women, and children; sailors, servants, and entertainers; locals, immigrants, and visitors. Some were treated well by the justice system, and others were met with cruelty. Each had their own experience. While the volume...
The City of London had two summary courts in the 18th Century, at Guildhall and Mansion House. In th...
This learning package, written by Professor Ian Grosvenor for the Connecting Histories project, prov...
In civil cases that took place in southern courts from the end of the Civil War to the mid-twentieth...
This dataset brings together all 698 known references to ‘Black’ or possibly Black African heritage ...
Using the records of the Guildhall and Mansion House justice rooms, this article explores the summar...
The Social Life of Black Thought in the Long Eighteenth Century moves from the framework of social d...
This study of Africans in Britain 1500-1640 employs evidence from a wide range of primary sources in...
In the eighteenth and nineteenth century, the carceral system in England shifted away from corporal ...
The book Blackamoores Africans in Tudor England: Their Presence Status and Origins is now the leadin...
Known among the black community of Newport, Rhode Island for the almost 200 year life of their exist...
Containing an urgently needed archival database of historical evidence, this volume includes both a ...
Between 1700 and 1900 the British government stopped punishing the bodies of London’s convicts and i...
This study of Africans in Britain 1500-1640 employs evidence from a wide range of primary sources in...
London Lives is a fascinating new study which exposes, for the first time, the lesser-known experien...
An analysis of newspaper advertisements in eighteenth century Britain offering enslaved people for s...
The City of London had two summary courts in the 18th Century, at Guildhall and Mansion House. In th...
This learning package, written by Professor Ian Grosvenor for the Connecting Histories project, prov...
In civil cases that took place in southern courts from the end of the Civil War to the mid-twentieth...
This dataset brings together all 698 known references to ‘Black’ or possibly Black African heritage ...
Using the records of the Guildhall and Mansion House justice rooms, this article explores the summar...
The Social Life of Black Thought in the Long Eighteenth Century moves from the framework of social d...
This study of Africans in Britain 1500-1640 employs evidence from a wide range of primary sources in...
In the eighteenth and nineteenth century, the carceral system in England shifted away from corporal ...
The book Blackamoores Africans in Tudor England: Their Presence Status and Origins is now the leadin...
Known among the black community of Newport, Rhode Island for the almost 200 year life of their exist...
Containing an urgently needed archival database of historical evidence, this volume includes both a ...
Between 1700 and 1900 the British government stopped punishing the bodies of London’s convicts and i...
This study of Africans in Britain 1500-1640 employs evidence from a wide range of primary sources in...
London Lives is a fascinating new study which exposes, for the first time, the lesser-known experien...
An analysis of newspaper advertisements in eighteenth century Britain offering enslaved people for s...
The City of London had two summary courts in the 18th Century, at Guildhall and Mansion House. In th...
This learning package, written by Professor Ian Grosvenor for the Connecting Histories project, prov...
In civil cases that took place in southern courts from the end of the Civil War to the mid-twentieth...