The study examines the economic, political, and social repercussions of the Haitian Revolution (1791-1804) on the slaveholding societies of Puerto Rico, Cuba, Jamaica, Louisiana, Venezuela, and several cities in the United States. The focus is on the emigres who fled Hispaniola due to the events that enveloped the adjoining French and Spanish colonies. Special attention is paid to Louisiana and Cuba, both recipients of large numbers of emigres, and the effect of the Napoleonic invasion of Spain on both these societies. In both territories, the St. Dominguans augmented an already large population of free people of color. In Puerto Rico a similar situation occurred: the French contingent on the island was made up mostly of emigres from St. Do...
On 8 February 1822, Haitian President Jean-Pierre Boyer entered Santo Domingo and ended the short-li...
This dissertation is a social history of the approximately 200,000 individuals who migrated seasonal...
In the wake of the Seven Years’ War (1756-1763), the Caribbean islands of Dominica, Grenada, St. Vin...
The study examines the economic, political, and social repercussions of the Haitian Revolution (1791...
This thesis examines how the slave uprising in the French Caribbean sugar colony of Saint-Domingue (...
This thesis examines how the slave uprising in the French Caribbean sugar colony of Saint-Domingue (...
Using two Atlantic World events— the Haitian Revolution and Nat Turner’s Rebellion— as temporal boo...
This study helps to broaden a growing body of literature by examining the growth of an urban Jamaica...
This dissertation examines the ways that slaves and free blacks participated in and shaped the Bourb...
This report focuses on how Cuban local and metropolitan authorities handled the mass migration of re...
In the late 18th century, Saint-Domingue was the richest Caribbean colony and the corner stone of Fr...
This dissertation combines history, anthropology, and literary criticism in analyzing how, at the en...
With the discovery of the New World and economic shifts towards mercantilism, competition between Eu...
The Fear of French Negroes is an interdisciplinary study that explores how people of African descent...
The crisis of French colonial society during the Revolutionary and Napoleonic eras produced fragment...
On 8 February 1822, Haitian President Jean-Pierre Boyer entered Santo Domingo and ended the short-li...
This dissertation is a social history of the approximately 200,000 individuals who migrated seasonal...
In the wake of the Seven Years’ War (1756-1763), the Caribbean islands of Dominica, Grenada, St. Vin...
The study examines the economic, political, and social repercussions of the Haitian Revolution (1791...
This thesis examines how the slave uprising in the French Caribbean sugar colony of Saint-Domingue (...
This thesis examines how the slave uprising in the French Caribbean sugar colony of Saint-Domingue (...
Using two Atlantic World events— the Haitian Revolution and Nat Turner’s Rebellion— as temporal boo...
This study helps to broaden a growing body of literature by examining the growth of an urban Jamaica...
This dissertation examines the ways that slaves and free blacks participated in and shaped the Bourb...
This report focuses on how Cuban local and metropolitan authorities handled the mass migration of re...
In the late 18th century, Saint-Domingue was the richest Caribbean colony and the corner stone of Fr...
This dissertation combines history, anthropology, and literary criticism in analyzing how, at the en...
With the discovery of the New World and economic shifts towards mercantilism, competition between Eu...
The Fear of French Negroes is an interdisciplinary study that explores how people of African descent...
The crisis of French colonial society during the Revolutionary and Napoleonic eras produced fragment...
On 8 February 1822, Haitian President Jean-Pierre Boyer entered Santo Domingo and ended the short-li...
This dissertation is a social history of the approximately 200,000 individuals who migrated seasonal...
In the wake of the Seven Years’ War (1756-1763), the Caribbean islands of Dominica, Grenada, St. Vin...