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Danish West Indies

The Danish West Indies (Danish: Dansk Vestindien) or Danish Virgin Islands (Danish: Danske Jomfruøer) or Danish Antilles were a Danish colony in the Caribbean, consisting of the islands of Saint Thomas with 32 square miles (83 km2); Saint John (Danish: St. Jan) with 19 square miles (49 km2); and Saint Croix with 84 square miles (220 km2). The islands have belonged to the United States as the Virgin Islands since they were purchased in 1917. Water Island was part of the Danish West Indies until 1905, when the Danish state sold it to the East Asiatic Company, a private shipping company.

Danish West Indies
Dansk Vestindien
1672–1917
Flag
StatusColony of Denmark–Norway (1672–1814)
Colony of Denmark
CapitalCharlotte Amalie (1672–1754,1871–1917)
Christiansted (1754–1871)
Common languagesDanish
English
English Creole
Dutch
Dutch Creole
Governor-General 
• 1756–66
Christian Leberecht von Prøck (first)
• 1916–17
Henri Konow (last)
History 
• Danish West India Company takes possession of Saint Thomas
1672
1685–1754
• Saint John colonized and claimed
1717–1718
• Danish West India Company purchases Saint Croix from French West India Company
1733
31 March 1917
Area
[1]400 km2 (150 sq mi)
Population
• 1911[1]
27,000
CurrencyRigsdaler (1754–1849)
Daler (1849–1917)

The Danish West India-Guinea Company annexed uninhabited St. Thomas[2] in 1672; annexed St. John in 1718; and bought St. Croix from France (King Louis XV) on June 28, 1733. When the Danish West India-Guinea Company went bankrupt in 1754, King Frederik V of Denmark–Norway assumed direct control of the three islands. Britain occupied the Danish West Indies in 1801–1802 and 1807–1815 during the Napoleonic Wars.

Danish colonizers in the West Indies aimed to exploit the profitable triangular trade, involving the export of firearms and other manufactured goods to Africa in exchange for slaves, who were then transported to the Caribbean to work the sugar plantations. Caribbean colonies, in turn, exported sugar, rum and molasses to Denmark. The economy of the Danish West Indies depended on slavery. After a rebellion, slavery was officially abolished in 1848, leading to the near economic collapse of the plantations.

In 1852, the Danish parliament first debated the sale of the increasingly unprofitable colony. Denmark tried several times to sell or exchange the Danish West Indies in the late 19th and early 20th centuries: to the United States and to the German Empire, respectively. The islands were eventually sold to the United States for $25 million (equivalent to $571,040,000 in 2022) which took over the administration on 31 March 1917 and renamed the territory the United States Virgin Islands.

History edit

Foundation edit

 
Map of the Danish West Indies

Merchants in Copenhagen asked King Christian IV for permission to establish a West Indian trading company in 1622, but, by the time an eight-year monopoly on trade with the West Indies, Virginia, Brazil and Guinea was granted on 25 January 1625, the failure of the Danish East India and Iceland Companies and the beginning of Danish involvement in the Thirty Years' War dried up any interest in the idea. Prince Frederick organized a trading mission to Barbados in 1647 under Gabriel Gomez and the de Casseres brothers, but it and a 1651 expedition of two ships were unsuccessful. It was not until Erik Smit's private 1652 expedition aboard the Fortuna was successful that interest in the West Indies' trade grew into an interest in the creation of a new Danish colony.[3]

Smit's 1653 expedition and a separate expedition of five ships were quite successful, but Smit's third expedition found his two vessels captured for a loss of 32,000 rigsdaler. Two years later, a Danish flotilla was destroyed by a hurricane in August. Smit returned from his fourth expedition in 1663 and formally proposed the settlement of St. Thomas to the king in April 1665. After only three weeks' deliberation, the scheme was approved and Smit was named governor. Settlers departed aboard the Eendragt on 1 July, but the expedition was ill-starred: The ship hit two large storms and suffered from fire before reaching its destination, and then it was raided by English privateers prosecuting the Second Anglo-Dutch War, in which Denmark was allied with the Netherlands. Smit died of illness, and a second band of privateers stole the ship and used it to trade with neighboring islands. Following a hurricane and a renewed outbreak of disease, the colony collapsed, with the English departing for the nearby French colony on Saint Croix, the Danes fleeing to Saint Christopher, and the Dutch assisting their countrymen on Ter Tholen in stealing everything of value, particularly the remaining Danish guns and ammunition.[3]

Danish West India Company edit

 
Christiansted, the main town of St. Croix in the former Danish West Indies

The Danes formed a Board of Trade in 1668 and secured a commercial treaty with Britain, providing for the unmolested settlement of uninhabited islands, in July 1670. The Danish West India Company was organized in December and formally chartered by King Christian V the next year on 11 March 1671.[4] Jørgen Iversen Dyppel, a successful trader on Saint Christopher, was made governor and the king provided convicts from his jails and two vessels for the establishment of the colony, the yacht Den forgyldte Krone[a][5] and the frigate Færøe.[b][6] Den forgyldte Krone was ordered to run ahead and wait but ended up returning to Denmark after the Færøe under Capt. Zacharias Hansen Bang was delayed for repairs in Bergen. The Færøe completed her mission alone, establishing a settlement on St. Thomas on 25 May 1672. From an original contingent of 190 – 12 officials, 116 company "employees" (indentured servants), and 62 felons and former prostitutes – only 104 remained, 9 having escaped and 77 having died in transit. Another 75 died within the first year, leaving only 29 to carry on the colony.[3]

In 1675, Iversen claimed St. John and placed two men there; in 1684, Governor Esmit granted it to two English merchants from Barbados but their men were chased off the island by two British sloops sent by Governor Stapleton of the British Leeward Islands. Further instructions in 1688 to establish a settlement on St. John seem not to have been acted on until Governor Bredal made an official establishment on 25 March 1718.[3]

The islands quickly became a base for pirates attacking ships in the vicinity and also for the Brandenburg African Company. Governor Lorentz raised enormous taxes upon them and seized warehouses and cargoes of tobacco, sugar, and slaves in 1689 only to have his actions repudiated by the authorities in Copenhagen; his hasty action to seize Crab Island prohibited the Brandenburgers from establishing their own Caribbean colony, however. Possession of the island was subsequently disputed with the Scottish in 1698 and fully lost to the Spanish in 1811.

St. Croix was purchased from the French West India Company in 1733. In 1754, the islands were sold to the Danish king, Frederick V of Denmark, becoming royal Danish colonies.

Later history (1801–1917) edit

 
Two-daler banknote from Saint Croix in the Danish West Indies (1898)
 
A racist cartoon published in the Danish magazine Klods-Hans on January 1917 about the treaty of the Danish West Indies. It depicts Woodrow Wilson as having "adopted" the three islands of St. Thomas, St. John and St. Croix (depicted as pickaninnies) from Denmark.

The first British invasion and occupation of the Danish West Indies occurred during the French Revolutionary Wars, when at the end of March 1801 a British fleet arrived at St Thomas. The Danes accepted the Articles of Capitulation the British proposed and the British occupied the islands without a shot being fired. The British occupation lasted until April 1802, when the British returned the islands to Denmark.

The second British invasion of the Danish West Indies took place during the Napoleonic Wars in December 1807 when a British fleet captured St Thomas on 22 December and Saint Croix on 25 December. The Danes did not resist and the invasion was bloodless. This British occupation of the Danish West Indies lasted until 20 November 1815, when Britain returned the islands to Denmark.

By the 1850s, the Danish West Indies had a total population of about 41,000 people. The government of the islands was under a governor-general, whose jurisdiction extended to the other Danish colonies of the group. However, because the islands formerly belonged to Great Britain, the inhabitants were English in customs and in language. The islands of that period consisted of:[7]

  • St. Thomas had a population of 12,800 people and had sugar and cotton as its chief exports.[8] St. Thomas city was the capital of the island, then a free port, and the chief station of the steam-packets between Southampton, in England, and the West Indies.
  • St. John had a population of about 2,600 people.[9]
  • St. Croix, though inferior to St. Thomas in commerce, was of greater importance in extent and fertility, and, with 25,600 people,[10] was the largest in population.

The United States had been interested in the islands since at least the 1860s when President Andrew Johnson came close to obtaining St. Thomas and St. John, as Denmark agreed to sell in 1867 for $7.5 million and the local population approved the transfer in a plebiscite, but the US Senate never voted on the treaty and it expired.[11] The Danish Parliament rejected both a convention and a treaty in 1902.[12]

The United States acted again in 1915 because of the islands' strategic position near the approach to the Panama Canal and because of a fear that Germany might seize them to use as U-boat bases during World War I. A referendum was held in Denmark itself on the future of the islands, which had become both a financial burden and a strategic concern. On 17 January 1917, according to the Treaty of the Danish West Indies, the Danish government sold the islands to the United States for $25 million ($571 million in current prices), when the United States and Denmark exchanged their respective treaty ratifications and with the US removing its objections to Denmark taking control of the whole of Greenland. Danish administration ended on 31 March 1917, when the United States took formal possession of the territory and renamed it the United States Virgin Islands.[13]

At the time of the U.S. purchase of the Danish West Indies in 1917, the colony did not include Water Island, which had been sold by Denmark to the East Asiatic Company, a private shipping company, in 1905. The company eventually sold the island to the United States in 1944, during the German occupation of Denmark.[14]

Postage stamps edit

St Thomas was a hub of the West Indies packet trade from 1851 to 1885. Denmark issued stamps for the Danish West Indies from 1856 onward.

 
View over Charlotte Amalie

Religion edit

The Danish West Indies were inhabited by many different cultures, and each had its own traditions and religions. The king and the church worked closely together to maintain law and order; the church was responsible for people's moral upbringing, and the king led the civil order. There was no state-sponsored religion in Denmark until 1849, but in the Danish West Indies there had always been a great deal of religious freedom. Danish authorities tended to be lenient towards religious beliefs, but required that all citizens had to observe Danish holidays. Freedom of religion was partially granted to help settle the islands, as there was a shortage of willing settlers from Europe. This worked to an extent, seeing that a large proportion of settlers were in fact Dutch and British natives fleeing religious persecution.[15]

Jews began settling the colony in 1655, and by 1796 the first synagogue was inaugurated. In its heyday in the mid-19th century, the Jewish community made up half of the white population.[16] One of the earliest colonial governors, Gabriel Milan, was a Sephardic Jew.

In spite of a general tolerance for religion, many African religions were not recognized because they typically revolved around belief in animism and magic, beliefs that were consistently met with scorn, and were regarded as immoral and subservient. A widespread viewpoint was that if one could convert slaves to Christianity, they could have a better life, and therefore many slaves were converted.[15]

By 1900, with a population of 30,000, a fourth of the people were Roman Catholics, while most of the rest were Anglicans, Moravians, or other Protestants. For decades, the Moravians had organized missions and also taken charge of the educational system.[17]

Slavery edit

Chattel slavery was practiced in the Danish West Indies from at least the 1670s until the abolition of slavery in 1848. Most slaves worked on plantations, particularly in sugar production, though some also worked at the harbors.

Demographics edit

Slaves outnumbered whites on all islands, often by large margins. On Saint Thomas, population expansion was recorded as 422 blacks and 317 whites in 1688, 555 blacks and 383 whites in 1699,[clarification needed] and 3,042 blacks and 547 whites in 1715 (a ratio of more than 5:1), and by 1755 slaves outnumbered whites 12:1. On Saint John, there were 677 blacks and 123 whites in 1728, 1086 blacks and 208 whites in 1733 (a ratio of more than 5:1), and by 1770 slaves outnumbered whites 19:1. On Saint Croix in 1797, there were 25,452 slaves and 2,223 whites (a ratio of more than 11:1) as well as 1,164 freedmen, and in 1815 there were 24,330 slaves and 180 whites (a ratio of more than 135:1) as well as 2,480 freedmen. At that time, freedmen (many of whom had purchased their freedom) also outnumbered whites on Saint Thomas and Saint John.[18]

Slave trade edit

Trading African slaves was part of the transatlantic slave trade by Denmark–Norway around 1671, when the Danish West India Company was chartered, until 1 January 1803, when the 1792 law to abolish the slave trade came into effect.[19]

By 1778, it was estimated that the Danes were bringing about 3,000 Africans to the Danish West Indies yearly for enslavement.[20] These transports continued until the end of 1802, when a 1792 law by Crown Prince Regent Frederik that banned the trade of slaves came into effect.[21]

Slave codes edit

Laws and regulations in the Danish West Indies were based on Denmark's laws, but the local government was allowed to adapt them to match local conditions. For example, things like animals, land, and buildings were regulated according to Danish law, but Danish law did not regulate slavery. Slaves were treated as common property, and therefore did not necessitate specific laws.

 
The Høgensborg estate on Sankt Croix, 1833

In 1733, differentiation between slaves and other property was implied by a regulation that stated that slaves had their own will and thus could behave inappropriately or be disobedient. There was a general consensus that if the slaves were punished too hard or were malnourished, the slaves would start to rebel. This was borne out by the 1733 slave insurrection on St. John, where many plantation owners and their families were killed by the Akwamu, including Breffu, before it was suppressed later the following year.[22] In 1755 Frederick V of Denmark issued more new Regulations, in which slaves were guaranteed the right not to be separated from their children and the right to medical support during periods of illness or old age. However, the colonial government had the ability to amend laws and regulations according to local conditions, and thus the regulations were never enacted in the colony, on grounds that it was more disadvantageous than advantageous.[23]

1733 slave insurrection edit

The 1733 slave insurrection on St. John, which lasted from November 1733 until August 1734, was one of the earliest and longest slave rebellions in the Americas. The insurrection started on 23 November 1733, when 150 slaves, primarily Akwamus, revolted against plantation owners and managers. The slaves captured the fort in Coral Bay and took control of most of the island.[24]

Planters regained control by the end of May 1734, after the Akwamu were defeated by several hundred better-armed French and Swiss troops sent in April from Martinique, a French colony. Colony militia continued to hunt down maroons and finally declared the rebellion at an end in late August 1734.[25]

Emancipation edit

 
Emancipation proclamation, 1848

By the 1830s and 1840s, the sugar beet industry had reduced the profitability of sugarcane. The British Slavery Abolition Act of 1833 emancipated slaves in the neighboring British West Indies, fully effective as of 1840. Abolition in the Danish West Indies was discussed, with Governor von Scholten, who had been seeking reforms since 1830, in favor of emancipation.[26][27] Scholarly consensus suggests von Scholten's views were influenced by his free-colored mistress Anna Heegaard.[28][29][30]

King Christian VIII supported the gradual abolition of slavery and ruled in 1847 that every child born of an unfree woman should be free from birth, and that slavery would end entirely after 12 years. That ruling satisfied neither the slaves nor the plantation owners.[31]

Meanwhile, on 27 April 1848, France signed a law to abolish slavery in their colonies within two months, but a slave insurrection on Martinique led to immediate abolition on Martinique on 22 May and Guadeloupe on 27 May.[32]

The slaves in the Danish West Indies did not want to wait for their freedom, either. On 2 July 1848, freedman John Gottlieb (also known as "Moses Gottlieb" or "General Buddhoe") and Admiral Martin King (among others) led a slave rebellion, taking over Frederiksted, Saint Croix.[33] That evening, hundreds of slaves gathered peaceably outside Fort Frederik refusing to work the next day and demanding freedom. By 10 a.m. the following morning, about 8,000 slaves had joined.[34]

 
The conch blower in the "Freedom Statue" depicts the slaves' call to action in 1848

On the afternoon of 3 July 1848 (now known as Emancipation Day), Peter von Scholten, in order to end the rebellion and prevent bloodshed and damages, went to Frederiksted and announced an immediate and total emancipation of all slaves. He then went to Christiansted, where a second rebellion had formed and some fires had been set, and had notices disseminated to the other islands. General Buddhoe worked with the governor and other officials to end the riots and violence that had broken out on a few estates.[35]

In the aftermath, Buddhoe is said to have been jailed and exiled to Trinidad.[35] Governor von Scholten also fared poorly. As governor, he did not actually have the authority to end slavery, but had found himself in a situation where he needed to take immediate action that could not wait for communicating with Denmark. For his actions, he was called back to Denmark to face a trial for treason. He was first denied his pension, but later cleared of the charges.[36]

When Denmark abolished slavery in 1848, many plantation owners wanted full reimbursement on the grounds that their assets were damaged by the loss of the slaves, and by the fact that they would have to pay for labor in the future. The Danish government paid fifty dollars for every slave the plantation owners had owned and recognized that the slaves' release had caused a financial loss for the owners.[23]

Post-slavery edit

The lives of the formerly enslaved people changed very little because many continued to be bound to the plantation system through contractual servitude.[37] Most were bound to serve the plantations where they had previously been enslaved. As employees, former slaves were not the plantation owners' responsibility and did not receive food or care from their employers. As part of a sharecropping system, some formerly enslaved people received a small hut, a little land, and some money; however, this one-time compensation did not change the harsh working conditions.

The Fireburn labor riot, considered to be the largest labor revolt in Danish colonial history, took place on October 1, 1878.[38] The revolt began because the formerly enslaved continued to live and work in slave-like conditions even though three decades had passed since the abolition of slavery. Mary Leticia Thomas, today referred to as Queen Mary of St. Croix, spearheaded the revolt alongside three other women: Axeline ‘Agnes’ Elizabeth Salomon, Matilde McBean and Susanna ‘Bottom Belly’ Abrahamsson.[39] The Fireburn uprising and its leaders continue to have a meaningful role in St. Croix.

2017 marked the 100th anniversary of the sale of the colony by Denmark to the United States. With this centennial, conversations on the legacy of Danish–Norwegian colonization and slavery were reignited in the Scandinavian mainstream.[40][41] For example, the artists Jeannette Ehlers and La Vaughn Belle unveiled Denmark's first statue of a black woman, I Am Queen Mary, to memorialize Denmark's colonial impact.

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Also translated as the Golden Crown and the Gilded Crown.
  2. ^ Also written Færø, Fero, Faero, and Pharaoh.

References edit

  1. ^ a b "Dansk Vestindia". Caplex. Retrieved 21 May 2010.
  2. ^ Dookhan, Isaac (1994) [1974]. "Danish Colonial Expansion". A History of the Virgin Islands of the United States. Kingston, Jamaica: Canoe Press. p. 40. ISBN 9789768125057. Retrieved 7 September 2017. The Danes found no one living on St. Thomas when they landed. The English settlers who had occupied the island after the end of the first Danish settlement, had left six or seven weeks before, though the reason for their departure is not known. [...] Denmark's long association with the Virgin Islands began with this occupation of St. Thomas in 1672.
  3. ^ a b c d Dookhan, Isaac. A History of the Virgin Islands of the United States. Canoe Press, 1974. ISBN 9789768125057.
  4. ^ Westergaard, Waldemar (1917). The Danish West Indies Under Company Rule (1671-1754): With a Supplementary Chapter, 1755-1917. New York: Macmillan Company. pp. 31–32. OCLC 1533021. Retrieved 17 March 2021.
  5. ^ Marcussen, Jørgen. "De Vestindiske Øer - kronologisk historisk oversigt" ["The West Indies: A Chronological Historical Overview"]. (in Danish)
  6. ^ Orlogsmuseet. "Færøe ex-Agathe (1653) 26 October 2007 at the Wayback Machine".
  7. ^ Stewart, K. J., (1864). A Geography for Beginners. Richmond, Va: J W Randolph.
  8. ^ "The Danish West Indies". National Museum of Denmark. Retrieved 15 June 2022.
  9. ^ DK (30 March 2017). What's Where on Earth? Atlas: The World as You've Never Seen It Before!. Dorling Kindersley Limited. ISBN 9780241308691.
  10. ^ "The Danish West Indies". National Museum of Denmark. Retrieved 15 June 2022.
  11. ^ David M. Pletcher (1998). The Diplomacy of Trade and Investment: American Economic Expansion in the Hemisphere, 1865–1900. University of Missouri Press. p. 160. ISBN 978-0-8262-1127-9.
  12. ^ Dänisch-Westindien (Amerikanische Jungferninseln), 9. Januar 1868 : Abtretung an die USA Direct Democracy (in German)
  13. ^ Simonsen, Gunvor (2021). "Digital Resources: Study of Danish Activities in the Caribbean". Oxford Research Encyclopedia of Latin American History. doi:10.1093/acrefore/9780199366439.013.763. ISBN 9780199366439. Retrieved 19 May 2021.
  14. ^ . Archived from the original on 24 January 2021. Retrieved 24 February 2021.
  15. ^ a b "History: St. Croix, United States Virgin Islands 14 January 2012 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved On 14 January 2012
  16. ^ "Historical Synagogue".
  17. ^ Latourette, Kenneth Scott (1961). Christianity in a Revolutionary Age. Vol. III: The Nineteenth Century Outside Europe: The Americas, the Pacific, Asia and Africa. New York: Harper & Brothers. pp. 278–79. LCCN 58010370. OCLC 382082. Retrieved 17 March 2021.
  18. ^ "Timeline of the Virgin Islands" (PDF). Sara Smollett. Retrieved 3 July 2020.
  19. ^ Gøbel, Erik (2011). "Danish Shipping Along the Triangular Route, 1671–1802: Voyages and conditions on board". Scandinavian Journal of History. 36 (2): 135–155. doi:10.1080/03468755.2011.564065. S2CID 143440637.
  20. ^ Kitchin, Thomas (1778). The Present State of the West-Indies: Containing an Accurate Description of What Parts Are Possessed by the Several Powers in Europe. London: R. Baldwin. p. 21.
  21. ^ Gøbel, Erik (2011). "Danish Shipping Along the Triangular Route, 1671–1802: Voyages and conditions on board". Scandinavian Journal of History. 36 (2): 135–155. doi:10.1080/03468755.2011.564065. S2CID 143440637.
  22. ^ Holly Kathryn Norton (2013). Estate by Estate: The Landscape of the 1733 St. Jan Slave Rebellion (PhD). Syracuse University. p. 90. ProQuest 1369397993.
  23. ^ a b Trolle Gronemann, Signe; Vindberg, Rikke (2005). . SurtSødt (in Danish). Archived from the original on 26 June 2013.
  24. ^ Sebro, Louise (2013), "The 1733 Slave Revolt on the Island of St. John: Continuity and Change from Africa to the Americas", Scandinavian Colonialism and the Rise of Modernity, Contributions to Global Historical Archaeology, Springer New York, vol. 37, pp. 261–274, doi:10.1007/978-1-4614-6202-6_15, ISBN 978-1-4614-6201-9
  25. ^ . St. John Off the Beaten Track. Sombrero Publishing Co. 2000. Archived from the original on 21 June 2008. Retrieved 19 July 2008.
  26. ^ "A Brief History of the Danish West Indies". Danish National Archives. Retrieved 3 July 2020.
  27. ^ Exec. Order No. 2017-06-26 (June 26, 2017; in English) Governor of the United States Virgin Islands. Retrieved on 3 July 2020.
  28. ^ "Anna Heegaard, mistress of Governor General Peter von Scholten". St. Croix Landmarks Society. from the original on 4 July 2020. Retrieved 3 July 2020.
  29. ^ Dookhan, Isaac (1994) [1974]. A History of the Virgin Islands of the United States. Kingston, Jamaica: Canoe Press. p. 173. ISBN 9789768125057.
  30. ^ Hall, Neville A. T. (1992). Higman, Barry W. (ed.). Slave Society in the Danish West Indies: St. Thomas, St. John, and St. Croix. Mona, Jamaica: University of the West Indies Press. p. 175. ISBN 9789764100294. Retrieved 7 September 2017.
  31. ^ "The emancipation of the enslaved in 1848". Danish National Archives. Retrieved 3 July 2020.
  32. ^ "Monument to Abolition of Slavery". Slavery and Remembrance. Retrieved 3 July 2020.
  33. ^ "The slave rebellion on St. Croix and Emancipation". Danish National Archives. Retrieved 3 July 2020.
  34. ^ . African American Information Service. Archived from the original on 4 July 2020. Retrieved 3 July 2020.
  35. ^ a b "General Buddhoe~Liberator of the Virgin Islands". A People's Historical Journey to Self Determination and Decolonization 2020. Retrieved 3 July 2020.
  36. ^ Bricka, C.F. (1901). Dansk Biografisk Lexikon. Copenhagen: Gyldendal. pp. 255–256.
  37. ^ "Embodying A Hero: Connecting to the past, present and future". I Am Queen Mary. Retrieved 28 July 2021.
  38. ^ "The Three Rebel Queens". The Danish West-Indies: Sources of History. Rigsarkivet. Retrieved 28 July 2021.
  39. ^ Witcombe, Nicola. . Nordics Info. Aarhus University. Archived from the original on 28 July 2021. Retrieved 28 July 2021.
  40. ^ Danbolt, Mathias; Wilson, Michael K. (26 April 2018). "A monumental Challenge to Danish History". Kunstkritikk. Retrieved 28 July 2021.
  41. ^ Keskinen, Suvi (3 March 2020). "Racism and colonial legacies in multicultural Nordic societies". Raster.fi. Anti-Racist Research Network. Retrieved 28 July 2021.

Further reading edit

  • Andersen, Astrid Nonbo. ""We Have Reconquered the Islands": Figurations in Public Memories of Slavery and Colonialism in Denmark 1948–2012." International Journal of Politics, Culture, and Society 26, no. 1 (2013): 57–76. online
  • Armstrong, Douglas V., et al. "Variation in venues of slavery and freedom: interpreting the late eighteenth-century cultural landscape of St. John, Danish West Indies using an archaeological GIS." International Journal of Historical Archaeology 13.1 (2009): 94–111.
  • Blaagaard, Bolette B. "Whose freedom? whose memories? commemorating Danish colonialism in St. Croix." Social Identities 17.1 (2011): 61–72.
  • Christensen, Rasmus. "‘Against the Law of God, of nature and the secular world’: conceptions of sovereignty in early colonial St. Thomas, 1672–1680." Scandinavian Journal of History (2021): 1–17.
  • Gøbel, Erik. "Danish trade to the West Indies and Guinea, 1671–1754." Scandinavian Economic History Review 31.1 (1983): 21–49. online
  • Green-Pedersen, Sv E. "The scope and structure of the Danish Negro slave trade." Scandinavian Economic History Review 19.2 (1971): 149–197. online
  • Hall, Neville A. T. "Maritime maroons: grand marronage from the Danish West Indies." in Origins of the Black Atlantic (Routledge, 2013) pp. 55–76. online
  • Hall, Neville A. T. "Slave laws of the Danish Virgin Islands in the later eighteenth century." Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences 292.1 (1977): 174–186.
  • Hall, Neville A. T. "Anna Heegaard – Enigma." Caribbean Quarterly 22.2–3 (1976): 62–73. online
  • Hvid, Mirjam Louise. "Indentured servitude and convict labour in the Danish–Norwegian West Indies, 1671–1755." Scandinavian Journal of History 41.4–5 (2016): 541–564.
  • Jensen, Niklas Thode; Simonsen, Gunvor (2016). "Introduction: The historiography of slavery in the Danish–Norwegian West Indies, c. 1950-2016". Scandinavian Journal of History. 41 (4–5): 475–494. doi:10.1080/03468755.2016.1210880.
  • Mulich, Jeppe. "Microregionalism and intercolonial relations: the case of the Danish West Indies, 1730–1830." Journal of Global History 8.1 (2013): 72–94. online[dead link]
  • Odewale, Alicia, H. Thomas Foster, and Joshua M. Torres. "In Service to a Danish King: Comparing the Material Culture of Royal Enslaved Afro-Caribbeans and Danish Soldiers at the Christiansted National Historic Site." Journal of African Diaspora Archaeology and Heritage 6.1 (2017): 19–54.
  • Richards, Helen. "Distant garden: Moravian missions and the culture of slavery in the Danish West Indies, 1732–1848." Journal of Moravian History (2007): 55–74. online
  • Roopnarine, Lomarsh. "Contract labor migration as an agent of revolutionary change in the Danish West Indies." Labor History 61.5–6 (2020): 692–705.
  • Roopnarine, Lomarsh. Indian Indenture in the Danish West Indies, 1863–1873 (Springer, 2016).
  • Simonsen, Gunvor. "Sovereignty, Mastery, and Law in the Danish West Indies, 1672–1733." Itinerario 43.2 (2019): 283–304.
  • Simonsen, Gunvor. Slave Stories: Law, Representation, and Gender in the Danish West Indies. (ISD LLC, 2017) online.
  • Sircar, Kumar K. "Emigration of Indian Indentured Labour to the Danish West Indian Island of St. Croix 1863–68." Scandinavian Economic History Review 19.2 (1971): 133–148. online

External links edit

  • The Danish West-Indies, a primary source search portal maintained by the Danish National Archives.
  • World Statesman
  • Transfer Day. From the website of Denmark's consulate on Virgin Islands on the transfer of the Virgin Islands from Denmark to the United States in 1917.
  • Reminiscences of a 46 years' residence in the island of St. Thomas, in the West Indies, by Johan Peter Nissen, (1838), a history of the Danish West Indies from 1792 to 1838.

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You can help expand this article with text translated from the corresponding article in Danish September 2020 Click show for important translation instructions Machine translation like DeepL or Google Translate is a useful starting point for translations but translators must revise errors as necessary and confirm that the translation is accurate rather than simply copy pasting machine translated text into the English Wikipedia Do not translate text that appears unreliable or low quality If possible verify the text with references provided in the foreign language article You must provide copyright attribution in the edit summary accompanying your translation by providing an interlanguage link to the source of your translation A model attribution edit summary is Content in this edit is translated from the existing Danish Wikipedia article at da Dansk Vestindien see its history for attribution You should also add the template Translated da Dansk Vestindien to the talk page For more guidance see Wikipedia Translation The Danish West Indies Danish Dansk Vestindien or Danish Virgin Islands Danish Danske Jomfruoer or Danish Antilles were a Danish colony in the Caribbean consisting of the islands of Saint Thomas with 32 square miles 83 km2 Saint John Danish St Jan with 19 square miles 49 km2 and Saint Croix with 84 square miles 220 km2 The islands have belonged to the United States as the Virgin Islands since they were purchased in 1917 Water Island was part of the Danish West Indies until 1905 when the Danish state sold it to the East Asiatic Company a private shipping company Danish West IndiesDansk Vestindien1672 1917FlagStatusColony of Denmark Norway 1672 1814 Colony of DenmarkCapitalCharlotte Amalie 1672 1754 1871 1917 Christiansted 1754 1871 Common languagesDanishEnglishEnglish CreoleDutchDutch CreoleGovernor General 1756 66Christian Leberecht von Prock first 1916 17Henri Konow last History Danish West India Company takes possession of Saint Thomas1672 Brandenburger Company St Thomas lease1685 1754 Saint John colonized and claimed1717 1718 Danish West India Company purchases Saint Croix from French West India Company1733 Treaty of the Danish West Indies31 March 1917Area 1 400 km2 150 sq mi Population 1911 1 27 000CurrencyRigsdaler 1754 1849 Daler 1849 1917 Succeeded byUnited States Virgin IslandsThe Danish West India Guinea Company annexed uninhabited St Thomas 2 in 1672 annexed St John in 1718 and bought St Croix from France King Louis XV on June 28 1733 When the Danish West India Guinea Company went bankrupt in 1754 King Frederik V of Denmark Norway assumed direct control of the three islands Britain occupied the Danish West Indies in 1801 1802 and 1807 1815 during the Napoleonic Wars Danish colonizers in the West Indies aimed to exploit the profitable triangular trade involving the export of firearms and other manufactured goods to Africa in exchange for slaves who were then transported to the Caribbean to work the sugar plantations Caribbean colonies in turn exported sugar rum and molasses to Denmark The economy of the Danish West Indies depended on slavery After a rebellion slavery was officially abolished in 1848 leading to the near economic collapse of the plantations In 1852 the Danish parliament first debated the sale of the increasingly unprofitable colony Denmark tried several times to sell or exchange the Danish West Indies in the late 19th and early 20th centuries to the United States and to the German Empire respectively The islands were eventually sold to the United States for 25 million equivalent to 571 040 000 in 2022 which took over the administration on 31 March 1917 and renamed the territory the United States Virgin Islands Contents 1 History 1 1 Foundation 1 2 Danish West India Company 1 3 Later history 1801 1917 2 Postage stamps 3 Religion 4 Slavery 4 1 Demographics 4 2 Slave trade 4 3 Slave codes 4 4 1733 slave insurrection 4 5 Emancipation 4 6 Post slavery 5 See also 6 Notes 7 References 8 Further reading 9 External linksHistory editSee also History of the United States Virgin Islands and Danish colonization of the Americas Foundation edit nbsp Map of the Danish West IndiesMerchants in Copenhagen asked King Christian IV for permission to establish a West Indian trading company in 1622 but by the time an eight year monopoly on trade with the West Indies Virginia Brazil and Guinea was granted on 25 January 1625 the failure of the Danish East India and Iceland Companies and the beginning of Danish involvement in the Thirty Years War dried up any interest in the idea Prince Frederick organized a trading mission to Barbados in 1647 under Gabriel Gomez and the de Casseres brothers but it and a 1651 expedition of two ships were unsuccessful It was not until Erik Smit s private 1652 expedition aboard the Fortuna was successful that interest in the West Indies trade grew into an interest in the creation of a new Danish colony 3 Smit s 1653 expedition and a separate expedition of five ships were quite successful but Smit s third expedition found his two vessels captured for a loss of 32 000 rigsdaler Two years later a Danish flotilla was destroyed by a hurricane in August Smit returned from his fourth expedition in 1663 and formally proposed the settlement of St Thomas to the king in April 1665 After only three weeks deliberation the scheme was approved and Smit was named governor Settlers departed aboard the Eendragt on 1 July but the expedition was ill starred The ship hit two large storms and suffered from fire before reaching its destination and then it was raided by English privateers prosecuting the Second Anglo Dutch War in which Denmark was allied with the Netherlands Smit died of illness and a second band of privateers stole the ship and used it to trade with neighboring islands Following a hurricane and a renewed outbreak of disease the colony collapsed with the English departing for the nearby French colony on Saint Croix the Danes fleeing to Saint Christopher and the Dutch assisting their countrymen on Ter Tholen in stealing everything of value particularly the remaining Danish guns and ammunition 3 Danish West India Company edit Main article Danish West India Company Further information Sugar production in the Danish West Indies nbsp Christiansted the main town of St Croix in the former Danish West IndiesThe Danes formed a Board of Trade in 1668 and secured a commercial treaty with Britain providing for the unmolested settlement of uninhabited islands in July 1670 The Danish West India Company was organized in December and formally chartered by King Christian V the next year on 11 March 1671 4 Jorgen Iversen Dyppel a successful trader on Saint Christopher was made governor and the king provided convicts from his jails and two vessels for the establishment of the colony the yacht Den forgyldte Krone a 5 and the frigate Faeroe b 6 Den forgyldte Krone was ordered to run ahead and wait but ended up returning to Denmark after the Faeroe under Capt Zacharias Hansen Bang was delayed for repairs in Bergen The Faeroe completed her mission alone establishing a settlement on St Thomas on 25 May 1672 From an original contingent of 190 12 officials 116 company employees indentured servants and 62 felons and former prostitutes only 104 remained 9 having escaped and 77 having died in transit Another 75 died within the first year leaving only 29 to carry on the colony 3 In 1675 Iversen claimed St John and placed two men there in 1684 Governor Esmit granted it to two English merchants from Barbados but their men were chased off the island by two British sloops sent by Governor Stapleton of the British Leeward Islands Further instructions in 1688 to establish a settlement on St John seem not to have been acted on until Governor Bredal made an official establishment on 25 March 1718 3 The islands quickly became a base for pirates attacking ships in the vicinity and also for the Brandenburg African Company Governor Lorentz raised enormous taxes upon them and seized warehouses and cargoes of tobacco sugar and slaves in 1689 only to have his actions repudiated by the authorities in Copenhagen his hasty action to seize Crab Island prohibited the Brandenburgers from establishing their own Caribbean colony however Possession of the island was subsequently disputed with the Scottish in 1698 and fully lost to the Spanish in 1811 St Croix was purchased from the French West India Company in 1733 In 1754 the islands were sold to the Danish king Frederick V of Denmark becoming royal Danish colonies Later history 1801 1917 edit nbsp Two daler banknote from Saint Croix in the Danish West Indies 1898 nbsp A racist cartoon published in the Danish magazine Klods Hans on January 1917 about the treaty of the Danish West Indies It depicts Woodrow Wilson as having adopted the three islands of St Thomas St John and St Croix depicted as pickaninnies from Denmark The first British invasion and occupation of the Danish West Indies occurred during the French Revolutionary Wars when at the end of March 1801 a British fleet arrived at St Thomas The Danes accepted the Articles of Capitulation the British proposed and the British occupied the islands without a shot being fired The British occupation lasted until April 1802 when the British returned the islands to Denmark The second British invasion of the Danish West Indies took place during the Napoleonic Wars in December 1807 when a British fleet captured St Thomas on 22 December and Saint Croix on 25 December The Danes did not resist and the invasion was bloodless This British occupation of the Danish West Indies lasted until 20 November 1815 when Britain returned the islands to Denmark By the 1850s the Danish West Indies had a total population of about 41 000 people The government of the islands was under a governor general whose jurisdiction extended to the other Danish colonies of the group However because the islands formerly belonged to Great Britain the inhabitants were English in customs and in language The islands of that period consisted of 7 St Thomas had a population of 12 800 people and had sugar and cotton as its chief exports 8 St Thomas city was the capital of the island then a free port and the chief station of the steam packets between Southampton in England and the West Indies St John had a population of about 2 600 people 9 St Croix though inferior to St Thomas in commerce was of greater importance in extent and fertility and with 25 600 people 10 was the largest in population The United States had been interested in the islands since at least the 1860s when President Andrew Johnson came close to obtaining St Thomas and St John as Denmark agreed to sell in 1867 for 7 5 million and the local population approved the transfer in a plebiscite but the US Senate never voted on the treaty and it expired 11 The Danish Parliament rejected both a convention and a treaty in 1902 12 The United States acted again in 1915 because of the islands strategic position near the approach to the Panama Canal and because of a fear that Germany might seize them to use as U boat bases during World War I A referendum was held in Denmark itself on the future of the islands which had become both a financial burden and a strategic concern On 17 January 1917 according to the Treaty of the Danish West Indies the Danish government sold the islands to the United States for 25 million 571 million in current prices when the United States and Denmark exchanged their respective treaty ratifications and with the US removing its objections to Denmark taking control of the whole of Greenland Danish administration ended on 31 March 1917 when the United States took formal possession of the territory and renamed it the United States Virgin Islands 13 At the time of the U S purchase of the Danish West Indies in 1917 the colony did not include Water Island which had been sold by Denmark to the East Asiatic Company a private shipping company in 1905 The company eventually sold the island to the United States in 1944 during the German occupation of Denmark 14 Postage stamps editMain article Postage stamps and postal history of the Danish West Indies St Thomas was a hub of the West Indies packet trade from 1851 to 1885 Denmark issued stamps for the Danish West Indies from 1856 onward nbsp View over Charlotte AmalieReligion editThe Danish West Indies were inhabited by many different cultures and each had its own traditions and religions The king and the church worked closely together to maintain law and order the church was responsible for people s moral upbringing and the king led the civil order There was no state sponsored religion in Denmark until 1849 but in the Danish West Indies there had always been a great deal of religious freedom Danish authorities tended to be lenient towards religious beliefs but required that all citizens had to observe Danish holidays Freedom of religion was partially granted to help settle the islands as there was a shortage of willing settlers from Europe This worked to an extent seeing that a large proportion of settlers were in fact Dutch and British natives fleeing religious persecution 15 Jews began settling the colony in 1655 and by 1796 the first synagogue was inaugurated In its heyday in the mid 19th century the Jewish community made up half of the white population 16 One of the earliest colonial governors Gabriel Milan was a Sephardic Jew In spite of a general tolerance for religion many African religions were not recognized because they typically revolved around belief in animism and magic beliefs that were consistently met with scorn and were regarded as immoral and subservient A widespread viewpoint was that if one could convert slaves to Christianity they could have a better life and therefore many slaves were converted 15 By 1900 with a population of 30 000 a fourth of the people were Roman Catholics while most of the rest were Anglicans Moravians or other Protestants For decades the Moravians had organized missions and also taken charge of the educational system 17 Slavery editChattel slavery was practiced in the Danish West Indies from at least the 1670s until the abolition of slavery in 1848 Most slaves worked on plantations particularly in sugar production though some also worked at the harbors Demographics edit Slaves outnumbered whites on all islands often by large margins On Saint Thomas population expansion was recorded as 422 blacks and 317 whites in 1688 555 blacks and 383 whites in 1699 clarification needed and 3 042 blacks and 547 whites in 1715 a ratio of more than 5 1 and by 1755 slaves outnumbered whites 12 1 On Saint John there were 677 blacks and 123 whites in 1728 1086 blacks and 208 whites in 1733 a ratio of more than 5 1 and by 1770 slaves outnumbered whites 19 1 On Saint Croix in 1797 there were 25 452 slaves and 2 223 whites a ratio of more than 11 1 as well as 1 164 freedmen and in 1815 there were 24 330 slaves and 180 whites a ratio of more than 135 1 as well as 2 480 freedmen At that time freedmen many of whom had purchased their freedom also outnumbered whites on Saint Thomas and Saint John 18 Slave trade edit Main article Danish slave trade Trading African slaves was part of the transatlantic slave trade by Denmark Norway around 1671 when the Danish West India Company was chartered until 1 January 1803 when the 1792 law to abolish the slave trade came into effect 19 By 1778 it was estimated that the Danes were bringing about 3 000 Africans to the Danish West Indies yearly for enslavement 20 These transports continued until the end of 1802 when a 1792 law by Crown Prince Regent Frederik that banned the trade of slaves came into effect 21 Slave codes edit Laws and regulations in the Danish West Indies were based on Denmark s laws but the local government was allowed to adapt them to match local conditions For example things like animals land and buildings were regulated according to Danish law but Danish law did not regulate slavery Slaves were treated as common property and therefore did not necessitate specific laws nbsp The Hogensborg estate on Sankt Croix 1833In 1733 differentiation between slaves and other property was implied by a regulation that stated that slaves had their own will and thus could behave inappropriately or be disobedient There was a general consensus that if the slaves were punished too hard or were malnourished the slaves would start to rebel This was borne out by the 1733 slave insurrection on St John where many plantation owners and their families were killed by the Akwamu including Breffu before it was suppressed later the following year 22 In 1755 Frederick V of Denmark issued more new Regulations in which slaves were guaranteed the right not to be separated from their children and the right to medical support during periods of illness or old age However the colonial government had the ability to amend laws and regulations according to local conditions and thus the regulations were never enacted in the colony on grounds that it was more disadvantageous than advantageous 23 1733 slave insurrection edit Main article 1733 slave insurrection on St John The 1733 slave insurrection on St John which lasted from November 1733 until August 1734 was one of the earliest and longest slave rebellions in the Americas The insurrection started on 23 November 1733 when 150 slaves primarily Akwamus revolted against plantation owners and managers The slaves captured the fort in Coral Bay and took control of most of the island 24 Planters regained control by the end of May 1734 after the Akwamu were defeated by several hundred better armed French and Swiss troops sent in April from Martinique a French colony Colony militia continued to hunt down maroons and finally declared the rebellion at an end in late August 1734 25 Emancipation edit nbsp Emancipation proclamation 1848By the 1830s and 1840s the sugar beet industry had reduced the profitability of sugarcane The British Slavery Abolition Act of 1833 emancipated slaves in the neighboring British West Indies fully effective as of 1840 Abolition in the Danish West Indies was discussed with Governor von Scholten who had been seeking reforms since 1830 in favor of emancipation 26 27 Scholarly consensus suggests von Scholten s views were influenced by his free colored mistress Anna Heegaard 28 29 30 King Christian VIII supported the gradual abolition of slavery and ruled in 1847 that every child born of an unfree woman should be free from birth and that slavery would end entirely after 12 years That ruling satisfied neither the slaves nor the plantation owners 31 Meanwhile on 27 April 1848 France signed a law to abolish slavery in their colonies within two months but a slave insurrection on Martinique led to immediate abolition on Martinique on 22 May and Guadeloupe on 27 May 32 The slaves in the Danish West Indies did not want to wait for their freedom either On 2 July 1848 freedman John Gottlieb also known as Moses Gottlieb or General Buddhoe and Admiral Martin King among others led a slave rebellion taking over Frederiksted Saint Croix 33 That evening hundreds of slaves gathered peaceably outside Fort Frederik refusing to work the next day and demanding freedom By 10 a m the following morning about 8 000 slaves had joined 34 nbsp The conch blower in the Freedom Statue depicts the slaves call to action in 1848On the afternoon of 3 July 1848 now known as Emancipation Day Peter von Scholten in order to end the rebellion and prevent bloodshed and damages went to Frederiksted and announced an immediate and total emancipation of all slaves He then went to Christiansted where a second rebellion had formed and some fires had been set and had notices disseminated to the other islands General Buddhoe worked with the governor and other officials to end the riots and violence that had broken out on a few estates 35 In the aftermath Buddhoe is said to have been jailed and exiled to Trinidad 35 Governor von Scholten also fared poorly As governor he did not actually have the authority to end slavery but had found himself in a situation where he needed to take immediate action that could not wait for communicating with Denmark For his actions he was called back to Denmark to face a trial for treason He was first denied his pension but later cleared of the charges 36 When Denmark abolished slavery in 1848 many plantation owners wanted full reimbursement on the grounds that their assets were damaged by the loss of the slaves and by the fact that they would have to pay for labor in the future The Danish government paid fifty dollars for every slave the plantation owners had owned and recognized that the slaves release had caused a financial loss for the owners 23 Post slavery edit The lives of the formerly enslaved people changed very little because many continued to be bound to the plantation system through contractual servitude 37 Most were bound to serve the plantations where they had previously been enslaved As employees former slaves were not the plantation owners responsibility and did not receive food or care from their employers As part of a sharecropping system some formerly enslaved people received a small hut a little land and some money however this one time compensation did not change the harsh working conditions The Fireburn labor riot considered to be the largest labor revolt in Danish colonial history took place on October 1 1878 38 The revolt began because the formerly enslaved continued to live and work in slave like conditions even though three decades had passed since the abolition of slavery Mary Leticia Thomas today referred to as Queen Mary of St Croix spearheaded the revolt alongside three other women Axeline Agnes Elizabeth Salomon Matilde McBean and Susanna Bottom Belly Abrahamsson 39 The Fireburn uprising and its leaders continue to have a meaningful role in St Croix 2017 marked the 100th anniversary of the sale of the colony by Denmark to the United States With this centennial conversations on the legacy of Danish Norwegian colonization and slavery were reignited in the Scandinavian mainstream 40 41 For example the artists Jeannette Ehlers and La Vaughn Belle unveiled Denmark s first statue of a black woman I Am Queen Mary to memorialize Denmark s colonial impact See also edit nbsp Denmark portal nbsp Norway portal nbsp Caribbean portalKingdom of Denmark Denmark Greenland Faroe Islands List of governors of the Danish West Indies 1868 Danish West Indies status referendum 1916 Danish West Indies status referendum 1916 Danish West Indian Islands sale referendum Danish India Danish Gold Coast Danish slave trade Estate Rust Op Twist Grove Place U S Virgin IslandsNotes edit Also translated as the Golden Crown and the Gilded Crown Also written Faero Fero Faero and Pharaoh References edit a b Dansk Vestindia Caplex Retrieved 21 May 2010 Dookhan Isaac 1994 1974 Danish Colonial Expansion A History of the Virgin Islands of the United States Kingston Jamaica Canoe Press p 40 ISBN 9789768125057 Retrieved 7 September 2017 The Danes found no one living on St Thomas when they landed The English settlers who had occupied the island after the end of the first Danish settlement had left six or seven weeks before though the reason for their departure is not known Denmark s long association with the Virgin Islands began with this occupation of St Thomas in 1672 a b c d Dookhan Isaac A History of the Virgin Islands of the United States Canoe Press 1974 ISBN 9789768125057 Westergaard Waldemar 1917 The Danish West Indies Under Company Rule 1671 1754 With a Supplementary Chapter 1755 1917 New York Macmillan Company pp 31 32 OCLC 1533021 Retrieved 17 March 2021 Marcussen Jorgen De Vestindiske Oer kronologisk historisk oversigt The West Indies A Chronological Historical Overview in Danish Orlogsmuseet Faeroe ex Agathe 1653 Archived 26 October 2007 at the Wayback Machine Stewart K J 1864 A Geography for Beginners Richmond Va J W Randolph The Danish West Indies National Museum of Denmark Retrieved 15 June 2022 DK 30 March 2017 What s Where on Earth Atlas The World as You ve Never Seen It Before Dorling Kindersley Limited ISBN 9780241308691 The Danish West Indies National Museum of Denmark Retrieved 15 June 2022 David M Pletcher 1998 The Diplomacy of Trade and Investment American Economic Expansion in the Hemisphere 1865 1900 University of Missouri Press p 160 ISBN 978 0 8262 1127 9 Danisch Westindien Amerikanische Jungferninseln 9 Januar 1868 Abtretung an die USA Direct Democracy in German Simonsen Gunvor 2021 Digital Resources Study of Danish Activities in the Caribbean Oxford Research Encyclopedia of Latin American History doi 10 1093 acrefore 9780199366439 013 763 ISBN 9780199366439 Retrieved 19 May 2021 Water Island History the Military History of Water Island Archived from the original on 24 January 2021 Retrieved 24 February 2021 a b History St Croix United States Virgin Islands Archived 14 January 2012 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved On 14 January 2012 Historical Synagogue Latourette Kenneth Scott 1961 Christianity in a Revolutionary Age Vol III The Nineteenth Century Outside Europe The Americas the Pacific Asia and Africa New York Harper amp Brothers pp 278 79 LCCN 58010370 OCLC 382082 Retrieved 17 March 2021 Timeline of the Virgin Islands PDF Sara Smollett Retrieved 3 July 2020 Gobel Erik 2011 Danish Shipping Along the Triangular Route 1671 1802 Voyages and conditions on board Scandinavian Journal of History 36 2 135 155 doi 10 1080 03468755 2011 564065 S2CID 143440637 Kitchin Thomas 1778 The Present State of the West Indies Containing an Accurate Description of What Parts Are Possessed by the Several Powers in Europe London R Baldwin p 21 Gobel Erik 2011 Danish Shipping Along the Triangular Route 1671 1802 Voyages and conditions on board Scandinavian Journal of History 36 2 135 155 doi 10 1080 03468755 2011 564065 S2CID 143440637 Holly Kathryn Norton 2013 Estate by Estate The Landscape of the 1733 St Jan Slave Rebellion PhD Syracuse University p 90 ProQuest 1369397993 a b Trolle Gronemann Signe Vindberg Rikke 2005 Begivenheder 1733 SurtSodt in Danish Archived from the original on 26 June 2013 Sebro Louise 2013 The 1733 Slave Revolt on the Island of St John Continuity and Change from Africa to the Americas Scandinavian Colonialism and the Rise of Modernity Contributions to Global Historical Archaeology Springer New York vol 37 pp 261 274 doi 10 1007 978 1 4614 6202 6 15 ISBN 978 1 4614 6201 9 St John Slave Rebellion St John Off the Beaten Track Sombrero Publishing Co 2000 Archived from the original on 21 June 2008 Retrieved 19 July 2008 A Brief History of the Danish West Indies Danish National Archives Retrieved 3 July 2020 Exec Order No 2017 06 26 June 26 2017 in English Governor of the United States Virgin Islands Retrieved on 3 July 2020 Anna Heegaard mistress of Governor General Peter von Scholten St Croix Landmarks Society Archived from the original on 4 July 2020 Retrieved 3 July 2020 Dookhan Isaac 1994 1974 A History of the Virgin Islands of the United States Kingston Jamaica Canoe Press p 173 ISBN 9789768125057 Hall Neville A T 1992 Higman Barry W ed Slave Society in the Danish West Indies St Thomas St John and St Croix Mona Jamaica University of the West Indies Press p 175 ISBN 9789764100294 Retrieved 7 September 2017 The emancipation of the enslaved in 1848 Danish National Archives Retrieved 3 July 2020 Monument to Abolition of Slavery Slavery and Remembrance Retrieved 3 July 2020 The slave rebellion on St Croix and Emancipation Danish National Archives Retrieved 3 July 2020 Slave Resistances in Latin America African American Information Service Archived from the original on 4 July 2020 Retrieved 3 July 2020 a b General Buddhoe Liberator of the Virgin Islands A People s Historical Journey to Self Determination and Decolonization 2020 Retrieved 3 July 2020 Bricka C F 1901 Dansk Biografisk Lexikon Copenhagen Gyldendal pp 255 256 Embodying A Hero Connecting to the past present and future I Am Queen Mary Retrieved 28 July 2021 The Three Rebel Queens The Danish West Indies Sources of History Rigsarkivet Retrieved 28 July 2021 Witcombe Nicola The 1878 Fireburn uprising in the Danish West Indies Nordics Info Aarhus University Archived from the original on 28 July 2021 Retrieved 28 July 2021 Danbolt Mathias Wilson Michael K 26 April 2018 A monumental Challenge to Danish History Kunstkritikk Retrieved 28 July 2021 Keskinen Suvi 3 March 2020 Racism and colonial legacies in multicultural Nordic societies Raster fi Anti Racist Research Network Retrieved 28 July 2021 Further reading editAndersen Astrid Nonbo We Have Reconquered the Islands Figurations in Public Memories of Slavery and Colonialism in Denmark 1948 2012 International Journal of Politics Culture and Society 26 no 1 2013 57 76 online Armstrong Douglas V et al Variation in venues of slavery and freedom interpreting the late eighteenth century cultural landscape of St John Danish West Indies using an archaeological GIS International Journal of Historical Archaeology 13 1 2009 94 111 Blaagaard Bolette B Whose freedom whose memories commemorating Danish colonialism in St Croix Social Identities 17 1 2011 61 72 Christensen Rasmus Against the Law of God of nature and the secular world conceptions of sovereignty in early colonial St Thomas 1672 1680 Scandinavian Journal of History 2021 1 17 Gobel Erik Danish trade to the West Indies and Guinea 1671 1754 Scandinavian Economic History Review 31 1 1983 21 49 online Green Pedersen Sv E The scope and structure of the Danish Negro slave trade Scandinavian Economic History Review 19 2 1971 149 197 online Hall Neville A T Maritime maroons grand marronage from the Danish West Indies in Origins of the Black Atlantic Routledge 2013 pp 55 76 online Hall Neville A T Slave laws of the Danish Virgin Islands in the later eighteenth century Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences 292 1 1977 174 186 Hall Neville A T Anna Heegaard Enigma Caribbean Quarterly 22 2 3 1976 62 73 online Hvid Mirjam Louise Indentured servitude and convict labour in the Danish Norwegian West Indies 1671 1755 Scandinavian Journal of History 41 4 5 2016 541 564 Jensen Niklas Thode Simonsen Gunvor 2016 Introduction The historiography of slavery in the Danish Norwegian West Indies c 1950 2016 Scandinavian Journal of History 41 4 5 475 494 doi 10 1080 03468755 2016 1210880 Mulich Jeppe Microregionalism and intercolonial relations the case of the Danish West Indies 1730 1830 Journal of Global History 8 1 2013 72 94 online dead link Odewale Alicia H Thomas Foster and Joshua M Torres In Service to a Danish King Comparing the Material Culture of Royal Enslaved Afro Caribbeans and Danish Soldiers at the Christiansted National Historic Site Journal of African Diaspora Archaeology and Heritage 6 1 2017 19 54 Richards Helen Distant garden Moravian missions and the culture of slavery in the Danish West Indies 1732 1848 Journal of Moravian History 2007 55 74 online Roopnarine Lomarsh Contract labor migration as an agent of revolutionary change in the Danish West Indies Labor History 61 5 6 2020 692 705 Roopnarine Lomarsh Indian Indenture in the Danish West Indies 1863 1873 Springer 2016 Simonsen Gunvor Sovereignty Mastery and Law in the Danish West Indies 1672 1733 Itinerario 43 2 2019 283 304 Simonsen Gunvor Slave Stories Law Representation and Gender in the Danish West Indies ISD LLC 2017 online Sircar Kumar K Emigration of Indian Indentured Labour to the Danish West Indian Island of St Croix 1863 68 Scandinavian Economic History Review 19 2 1971 133 148 onlineExternal links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Danish West Indies The Danish West Indies a primary source search portal maintained by the Danish National Archives World Statesman Transfer Day From the website of Denmark s consulate on Virgin Islands on the transfer of the Virgin Islands from Denmark to the United States in 1917 Reminiscences of a 46 years residence in the island of St Thomas in the West Indies by Johan Peter Nissen 1838 a history of the Danish West Indies from 1792 to 1838 18 19 30 N 64 50 06 W 18 3250 N 64 8350 W 18 3250 64 8350 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Danish West Indies amp oldid 1196415976, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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