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Nantes slave trade

The Nantes slave trade resulted in the deportation, from the late 17th to the beginning of the 19th century, of more than 500,000 black African slaves into French ownership in the Americas, mainly in the Antilles. With 1,744 slave voyages, Nantes, France, was the principal French slave-trading port for the duration of this period. The Slave Trade was explicitly encouraged by the royal family and described by the church as an "ordinary occupation."[1]

18th century view of Nantes port from l'île Gloriette, attributed to Nicolas Ozanne.
Reconstruction of the steerage of a slave-ship featured in the "Les Anneaux de la Mémoire" exhibition at the Château des ducs de Bretagne in Nantes (1992–1994).

The town was the last centre for slave trade in France, until the abolishment of the practice in 1831, with the prohibition of the slave trade.[2]

Context edit

The transatlantic slave trade, between Europe and America, deported 12 to 13 million Africans, the majority of those from the end of the 17th century onwards. In 1997, the historian Hugh Thomas claimed that 13,000,000 slaves left Africa as a result of the slave trade, of which 11,328,000 arrived at their destination, over 54,200 voyages.[3] Every large European port was involved in the slave trade, although to varying degrees. English ports were at the forefront; with 4,894 expeditions departing from Liverpool and 2,704 from London.

Metropolitan France launched around 4,200 slave-ships and finds itself third place amongst slave-trading nations, after Great Britain and Portugal.[4] The town of Nantes alone organised 1,744 expeditions, or 41.3% of the total for France. The following towns, in order of importance, together made up 33.5% of French slave voyages: Bordeaux, La Rochelle and Le Havre.[5]

The importance of Nantes in the slave trade can be explained as very important: the town benefits from its proximity with Lorient, the home of the French East India Company, which allowed the supply of Indiennes and money cowries, which were highly appreciated by slave merchants.[6] This situation compensated for the shallow draft of the Loire estuary, which was limited to eleven feet and so allowed only for ships at a maximum of 150–170 tonnes in fully loaded conditions to reach Nantes. The Gironde estuary, however, had a draft of 14 to 16 feet, as a result of which 250 vessels could reach Bordeaux, a port situated far from the major routes between London and the Po Valley, capable of exporting the riches offered by the Aquitaine Basin.[7] Nantes entered the slave trade relatively late, in 1707. The ship-owners found the triangular trade much more profitable than direct trade, which consisted in undertaking journeys between Europe and the Americas, as at the turn of the 17th century the port dealt mainly in interregional and European trade (encompassing the Iberian Peninsula, the British Isles and the North Sea), of which the majority of the traffic dealt in traditional commerce, in use since the medieval period, with products such as flour, wine and salt.[8] 

Timeline of the slave trade in Nantes edit

Beginning edit

The first ship in Nantes to be utilised in the slave trade was most likely the Hercule in 1707, launched by the compagnie du Sénégal and belonging to the Montaudouin family.[8][9]

Then, after a 4-year pause (between 1707 and 1711), traffic began again in 1712 with 7 ships. Over the following 15 years the number of slave-ships launched increased:

Annual number of slave-ships launched from Nantes

1713 1715 1716 1717 1718 1719 1720 1721 1722 1723 1727 1728
14 20 2 11 12 9 20 16 11 24 6 10

From the 1730s onwards, the tonnage of Nantes slave-ships was constantly growing, going from a little over 1,000 tonnes in 1735 to 6,000 tonnes in 1740.[10]

1740 to 1752 edit

The years which followed were much more chaotic: the War of the Austrian Succession, in which France participated, hindered maritime commerce – which was, at the time, the main battleground for the Anglo-French rivalry. Therefore, the tonnage of slave-ships in Nantes was extremely low, never surpassing 500 tonnes, during the three years of the conflict (1745, 1746 and 1747). The Treaty of Aix-la-Chapelle, signed in 1748, allowed a gradual increase in commercial activity again, with more than 1,000 tonnes passing through the port. The following year, however, this tonnage reached a record number of 9,000 tonnes.[10]

The years 1750 and 1751 saw a lull in activity, due notably to the fact that ship-owners in Nantes were waiting to discover the results of their post-war investments.[11] A slave-ship's voyage through a system of triangular trade between Europe, Africa and the Americas generally took between 14 and 18 months.[8]

1752 to 1763 edit

As reassured Nantes ship-owners saw, over the years 1752, 1753 and 1754 their tonnage surpassed 5,000 tonnes. This was considered a period of strong commercial activity, as from 1735 to 1759 this number would only be exceeded five times. In 1755, trade slowed and reached only 3,000 tonnes, before completely crashing between 1756 and 1763 as a result of the Seven Years' War, during which the British captured the French possessions of Gorée and Saint-Louis in Senegal, both of which were major players in the French slave trade; the French colony of Guadeloupe fell in 1759.[8]

1763 to 1793 edit

The signing of the Treaty of Paris in 1763 allowed trade in Nantes to re-establish itself to a high level of activity, even if the 699 expeditions organised during the following 30 years would represent less than half of the French slave trade as a whole during this period, whereas Nantes had accounted for over 50% before the conflict. From then on until the first abolition of slavery in 1793, this share would continue to fall. 

Nantes' share of traffic in the French slave trade
Period Percentage
of trade from Nantes
[12]
1763–1766 49.3%
1767–1771 42.5%
1772–1778 34.4%
1783–1789 34.3%
1789–1793 36.1%

This loss of market-share is explained by several factors, notably: 

  • by the loss of the exclusive privilege in the trade of slaves from the African coast which had been held by the French East India Company to encourage their participation in the trade, until 31 July 1767. On 30 September 1767, Channel ports (Saint-Malo, Le Havre and Honfleur) were granted exemption from the tax of 10 livres tournois per slave sold in the Antilles. The exemption was extended to La Rochelle on 4 February 1768 and to Bordeaux on 21 March of the same year.
  • by the change of business by ship owners in La Rochelle into the slave trade, seeking to compensate for the fall in fur trade as France lost control of Canada, and so went into competition with their Loire counterparts.[13]

However, even if the number of slave voyages fell from an average of 29 per year (between 1763 and 1766), to 22.2 (between 1767 and 1771) and 20.6 (between 1772 and 1778, i.e. the beginning of the American Revolutionary War), the overall tonnage fell more slowly (from an average of 3,954 tonnes per year between 1763 and 1766, to 3,556 tonnes between 1772 and 1778), which means that while ship-owners in Nantes deployed less ships, they used vessels with a greater capacity. The average capacity of a slave-ship went from 140 tonnes after the Seven Years' War, to 175.5 tonnes between 1772 and 1778.

After American independence, 32 ships were launched on average per year between 1783 and 1788, making 193 ships departing from Nantes during this period, against 116 from Bordeaux, 111 from Le Havre and 75 from La Rochelle. During the first two years of the French Revolution, 89 slave-ships were launched from Nantes (46 in 1789 and 43 in 1790). Between 1789 and 1793, the port of Nantes accounted for 36.1% of slave trade traffic with 152 ships: as much as the output of their main rivals, Bordeaux and Le Havre, put together.

During the same period, the number of slaves transported by Nantes ships numbered 200,000. These slaves were taken mainly from the Gulf of Guinea (principally the region of Calabar, on the south east coast of what is now Nigeria) and the "Angola coast" (now part of Angola and the Republic of the Congo[14]),[15] numbered as follows :

Number of slaves transported by Nantes slave-ships[16]
Period Number of slaves
1763–1766 32,300
1767–1771 33,854
1772–1778 35,161
1783–1788 55,932
1789–1793 38,361

Nantes traders were not only capable of adapting to market conditions in both America and Africa, but were also capable of changing the point of sale according to competition. It was, nevertheless, in Saint-Domingue that they sold the majority of their human cargo. Making use of a network of relations across the island, it became the exclusive domain of Loire slave traders. Cap Français (now Cap-Haïtien) and Port-au-Prince were the main points of sale and welcomed, respectively, 30 and 25% of Nantes slave-ships. The latter dealt with 46.8% of the supply of provisions to Port-au-Prince, 60.7% in Léogâne, 64.7% in  Cayes and  81.6% in Saint-Marc.[17]

The August 1793 decree for the abolition of slavery put an end to all slave trade activity across all French territory for nine years.

1802 to 1830 edit

The re-establishment of slavery by Napoléon Bonaparte in 1802, revived slave trade activity for 15 years (accounting for 70% of national trade, with more than 300 expeditions),[18] however, this was achieved illegally, as the French Royal Navy fought successfully against illegal traffickers throughout the 1820s until the prohibition of the trade in 1831 which eventually led to the definitive abolition of slavery instigated by Victor Schlœlcher on 27 April 1848.

Economic effect edit

The 18th century undeniably marked the peak of Nantes trade and the town's development which saw its population double, rising from 40,000 to 80,000 inhabitants over the course of the century[19]

Maritime trade edit

Naturally, the trade's greatest impact was on port activity, even if transatlantic ships (including not only slave-ships, but those involved in direct trade with the American isles, and Privateers) never accounted for more than 25.4% of the total tonnage entering Nantes port in 1772.[20]

Triangular trade also stimulated the rise of "direct" trade between Nantes and the islands, as at the end of their circuit the slave traders themselves only brought back the commodities derived from the sale of slaves in "plantation colonies", such as sugar and coffee, therefore requiring other ships to come from Nantes and load up the surplus.[8]

Commodities brought back to Nantes port from the colonies were varied: sugar, coffee, cotton and indigo were unloaded on the new Fosse quay which from then on took over the majority of port-activity from the former "port au Vin" (now the Place du Commerce). These products were resold with substantial profits, whether to fuel the interior French market or to supply the burgeoning local industry.[21] Sugar (mainly raw or brown sugar, destined for the national market) was, by far, the most greatly imported product in Nantes, amounting to 22,605,000 lbs in 1786, making up 60.8% of the total value of imported merchandise.[22]

The commercial activity produced by triangular trade generated the success of maritime commerce within the kingdom of France and with the rest of the European continent. As a result, the tonnage directed towards foreign ports increased from 8,352 tx in 1702, to 30,428 tx in 1772 (a ratio of 1:3.6), while the tonnage delivered to French ports during the same period passed from 32,276 tx to 61,686 tx (1:1.9),[23] making Nantes therefore the first port of French commerce.

Industry edit

The slave trade increased the wealth of great merchant and ship-owning families, which they invested in as much in agricultural land, in property (in hôtels particuliers or Lustschloss), as in the growing industry which developed alongside traditional artisanal industry.[24] As a result, in 1775, no less than 17 factories were in business in the city.[25]

Triangular trade throughout the 18th century also benefited the development of Shipbuilding. The 18th century was marked by notable growth in the size of Nantes boatyards, which expanded from 3,230 m2 (34,800 sq ft) at the turn of the century, to 50,067 m2 (538,920 sq ft) in 1780,[26] as these became the first French merchant ship builders.[27]

Memorial edit

A memorial to acknowledge the role of France in the New World slave trade was dedicated in Nantes in 2012.[28]

See also edit

Notes and references edit

  1. ^ Nantes Opens Memorial to Slave Trade DER Siegel. April 24, 2012
  2. ^ "Nantes, la traite négrière et l'esclavage".
  3. ^ Cf. Hugh Thomas, "La traite des Noirs, 1440–1870", éd. R. Laffont pour la traduction française, Paris 2006, pp.870–871 : "Statistiques approximatives". See also the note dedicated to these statistics, pp. 933–935, where the author retraces the succession of estimations since 1950.
  4. ^ Mettas, Jean; Daget, Serge (1984). Répertoire des expéditions négrières françaises au XVIIIe siècle. L'Hartmann. p. 972.
  5. ^ http://hgc.ac-creteil.fr/spip/La-traite-des-Noirs-en-30 22 February 2011 at the Wayback Machine Académie de Créteil : La traite des Noirs en 30 questions par Éric Saugera
  6. ^ Vindt, Gérard; Consil, Jean-Michel (June 2013). "Nantes, Bordeaux et l'économie esclavagiste – Au XVIIIe siècle, les villes de Nantes et de Bordeaux profitent toutes deux de la "traite négrière" et de l'économie esclavagiste". Alternatives économiques. 325: 17–21.
  7. ^ Meyer 1977, p. 117
  8. ^ a b c d e "L'esclavage à Nantes". outremer44.free.fr.
  9. ^ Meyer 1977, p. 136
  10. ^ a b Michon 2007, p. 6
  11. ^ Michon 2007, p. 7
  12. ^ Weber, p. 26
  13. ^ Weber, p. 27
  14. ^ Michon 2007, p. 7
  15. ^ "La traite à la " côte d'Angole "". histoire-image.org. 29 April 2007.
  16. ^ Michon 2007
  17. ^ Michon 2007, pp. 37–38
  18. ^ Traite négrière à Nantes – 150 ans d’une histoire noire
  19. ^ Michon 2008, p. 75.
  20. ^ Michon 2008, p. 76.
  21. ^ Leroux 1984, p. 55
  22. ^ Meyer 1977, p. 139
  23. ^ Michon 2008, pp. 76–78.
  24. ^ Leroux 1984, p. 57
  25. ^ Meyer 1977, p. 194
  26. ^ La construction navale sur le site du conseil général de Loire-Atlantique.
  27. ^ Bruno Cailleton, La construction navale et civile dans l’amirauté de Nantes au XVIIIe siècle, Hérault Cholet 2000 in site du Maillé-Brézé.
  28. ^ Rubin, Alissa J. (30 October 2018). "They Threw Themselves Into the Sea, 14 Black Women, All Together". New York Times. p. A6. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 3 August 2018.

Bibliography edit

  • Leroux, Émilienne (1984). Histoire d'une ville et ses habitants - Nantes - Des origines à 1914. ACL. ISBN 2-86723-000-4.
  • Meyer, Jean (1977). Histoire de Nantes (in French). Toulouse. ISBN 2-7089-4717-6.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  • Michon, Bernard (2007). (PDF). Centre national de la recherche scientifique. Les Cahiers des Anneaux de la Mémoire, n° 10 : Les Ports et la traite négrière, Nantes, p. 34-63 (in French). Archived from the original (PDF) on 14 September 2011. Retrieved 5 August 2020.
  • Michon, Bernhard (2008). "Nantes au temps de l'apogée négrier : la place de la traite dans le commerce nantais" (PDF). Le Boucan (in French).
  • Weber, Jacques. (PDF). Centre national de la recherche scientifique (in French). Archived from the original (PDF) on 14 September 2011. Retrieved 5 August 2020.

nantes, slave, trade, resulted, deportation, from, late, 17th, beginning, 19th, century, more, than, black, african, slaves, into, french, ownership, americas, mainly, antilles, with, slave, voyages, nantes, france, principal, french, slave, trading, port, dur. The Nantes slave trade resulted in the deportation from the late 17th to the beginning of the 19th century of more than 500 000 black African slaves into French ownership in the Americas mainly in the Antilles With 1 744 slave voyages Nantes France was the principal French slave trading port for the duration of this period The Slave Trade was explicitly encouraged by the royal family and described by the church as an ordinary occupation 1 18th century view of Nantes port from l ile Gloriette attributed to Nicolas Ozanne Reconstruction of the steerage of a slave ship featured in the Les Anneaux de la Memoire exhibition at the Chateau des ducs de Bretagne in Nantes 1992 1994 The town was the last centre for slave trade in France until the abolishment of the practice in 1831 with the prohibition of the slave trade 2 Contents 1 Context 2 Timeline of the slave trade in Nantes 2 1 Beginning 2 2 1740 to 1752 2 3 1752 to 1763 2 4 1763 to 1793 2 5 1802 to 1830 3 Economic effect 3 1 Maritime trade 3 2 Industry 4 Memorial 5 See also 6 Notes and references 7 BibliographyContext editMain article Triangular TradeThe transatlantic slave trade between Europe and America deported 12 to 13 million Africans the majority of those from the end of the 17th century onwards In 1997 the historian Hugh Thomas claimed that 13 000 000 slaves left Africa as a result of the slave trade of which 11 328 000 arrived at their destination over 54 200 voyages 3 Every large European port was involved in the slave trade although to varying degrees English ports were at the forefront with 4 894 expeditions departing from Liverpool and 2 704 from London Metropolitan France launched around 4 200 slave ships and finds itself third place amongst slave trading nations after Great Britain and Portugal 4 The town of Nantes alone organised 1 744 expeditions or 41 3 of the total for France The following towns in order of importance together made up 33 5 of French slave voyages Bordeaux La Rochelle and Le Havre 5 The importance of Nantes in the slave trade can be explained as very important the town benefits from its proximity with Lorient the home of the French East India Company which allowed the supply of Indiennes and money cowries which were highly appreciated by slave merchants 6 This situation compensated for the shallow draft of the Loire estuary which was limited to eleven feet and so allowed only for ships at a maximum of 150 170 tonnes in fully loaded conditions to reach Nantes The Gironde estuary however had a draft of 14 to 16 feet as a result of which 250 vessels could reach Bordeaux a port situated far from the major routes between London and the Po Valley capable of exporting the riches offered by the Aquitaine Basin 7 Nantes entered the slave trade relatively late in 1707 The ship owners found the triangular trade much more profitable than direct trade which consisted in undertaking journeys between Europe and the Americas as at the turn of the 17th century the port dealt mainly in interregional and European trade encompassing the Iberian Peninsula the British Isles and the North Sea of which the majority of the traffic dealt in traditional commerce in use since the medieval period with products such as flour wine and salt 8 Timeline of the slave trade in Nantes editBeginning edit The first ship in Nantes to be utilised in the slave trade was most likely the Hercule in 1707 launched by the compagnie du Senegal and belonging to the Montaudouin family 8 9 Then after a 4 year pause between 1707 and 1711 traffic began again in 1712 with 7 ships Over the following 15 years the number of slave ships launched increased Annual number of slave ships launched from Nantes 1713 1715 1716 1717 1718 1719 1720 1721 1722 1723 1727 172814 20 2 11 12 9 20 16 11 24 6 10From the 1730s onwards the tonnage of Nantes slave ships was constantly growing going from a little over 1 000 tonnes in 1735 to 6 000 tonnes in 1740 10 1740 to 1752 edit The years which followed were much more chaotic the War of the Austrian Succession in which France participated hindered maritime commerce which was at the time the main battleground for the Anglo French rivalry Therefore the tonnage of slave ships in Nantes was extremely low never surpassing 500 tonnes during the three years of the conflict 1745 1746 and 1747 The Treaty of Aix la Chapelle signed in 1748 allowed a gradual increase in commercial activity again with more than 1 000 tonnes passing through the port The following year however this tonnage reached a record number of 9 000 tonnes 10 The years 1750 and 1751 saw a lull in activity due notably to the fact that ship owners in Nantes were waiting to discover the results of their post war investments 11 A slave ship s voyage through a system of triangular trade between Europe Africa and the Americas generally took between 14 and 18 months 8 1752 to 1763 edit As reassured Nantes ship owners saw over the years 1752 1753 and 1754 their tonnage surpassed 5 000 tonnes This was considered a period of strong commercial activity as from 1735 to 1759 this number would only be exceeded five times In 1755 trade slowed and reached only 3 000 tonnes before completely crashing between 1756 and 1763 as a result of the Seven Years War during which the British captured the French possessions of Goree and Saint Louis in Senegal both of which were major players in the French slave trade the French colony of Guadeloupe fell in 1759 8 1763 to 1793 edit The signing of the Treaty of Paris in 1763 allowed trade in Nantes to re establish itself to a high level of activity even if the 699 expeditions organised during the following 30 years would represent less than half of the French slave trade as a whole during this period whereas Nantes had accounted for over 50 before the conflict From then on until the first abolition of slavery in 1793 this share would continue to fall Nantes share of traffic in the French slave trade Period Percentage of trade from Nantes 12 1763 1766 49 3 1767 1771 42 5 1772 1778 34 4 1783 1789 34 3 1789 1793 36 1 This loss of market share is explained by several factors notably by the loss of the exclusive privilege in the trade of slaves from the African coast which had been held by the French East India Company to encourage their participation in the trade until 31 July 1767 On 30 September 1767 Channel ports Saint Malo Le Havre and Honfleur were granted exemption from the tax of 10 livres tournois per slave sold in the Antilles The exemption was extended to La Rochelle on 4 February 1768 and to Bordeaux on 21 March of the same year by the change of business by ship owners in La Rochelle into the slave trade seeking to compensate for the fall in fur trade as France lost control of Canada and so went into competition with their Loire counterparts 13 However even if the number of slave voyages fell from an average of 29 per year between 1763 and 1766 to 22 2 between 1767 and 1771 and 20 6 between 1772 and 1778 i e the beginning of the American Revolutionary War the overall tonnage fell more slowly from an average of 3 954 tonnes per year between 1763 and 1766 to 3 556 tonnes between 1772 and 1778 which means that while ship owners in Nantes deployed less ships they used vessels with a greater capacity The average capacity of a slave ship went from 140 tonnes after the Seven Years War to 175 5 tonnes between 1772 and 1778 After American independence 32 ships were launched on average per year between 1783 and 1788 making 193 ships departing from Nantes during this period against 116 from Bordeaux 111 from Le Havre and 75 from La Rochelle During the first two years of the French Revolution 89 slave ships were launched from Nantes 46 in 1789 and 43 in 1790 Between 1789 and 1793 the port of Nantes accounted for 36 1 of slave trade traffic with 152 ships as much as the output of their main rivals Bordeaux and Le Havre put together During the same period the number of slaves transported by Nantes ships numbered 200 000 These slaves were taken mainly from the Gulf of Guinea principally the region of Calabar on the south east coast of what is now Nigeria and the Angola coast now part of Angola and the Republic of the Congo 14 15 numbered as follows Number of slaves transported by Nantes slave ships 16 Period Number of slaves1763 1766 32 3001767 1771 33 8541772 1778 35 1611783 1788 55 9321789 1793 38 361Nantes traders were not only capable of adapting to market conditions in both America and Africa but were also capable of changing the point of sale according to competition It was nevertheless in Saint Domingue that they sold the majority of their human cargo Making use of a network of relations across the island it became the exclusive domain of Loire slave traders Cap Francais now Cap Haitien and Port au Prince were the main points of sale and welcomed respectively 30 and 25 of Nantes slave ships The latter dealt with 46 8 of the supply of provisions to Port au Prince 60 7 in Leogane 64 7 in Cayes and 81 6 in Saint Marc 17 The August 1793 decree for the abolition of slavery put an end to all slave trade activity across all French territory for nine years 1802 to 1830 edit The re establishment of slavery by Napoleon Bonaparte in 1802 revived slave trade activity for 15 years accounting for 70 of national trade with more than 300 expeditions 18 however this was achieved illegally as the French Royal Navy fought successfully against illegal traffickers throughout the 1820s until the prohibition of the trade in 1831 which eventually led to the definitive abolition of slavery instigated by Victor Schlœlcher on 27 April 1848 Economic effect editThe 18th century undeniably marked the peak of Nantes trade and the town s development which saw its population double rising from 40 000 to 80 000 inhabitants over the course of the century 19 Maritime trade edit Naturally the trade s greatest impact was on port activity even if transatlantic ships including not only slave ships but those involved in direct trade with the American isles and Privateers never accounted for more than 25 4 of the total tonnage entering Nantes port in 1772 20 Triangular trade also stimulated the rise of direct trade between Nantes and the islands as at the end of their circuit the slave traders themselves only brought back the commodities derived from the sale of slaves in plantation colonies such as sugar and coffee therefore requiring other ships to come from Nantes and load up the surplus 8 Commodities brought back to Nantes port from the colonies were varied sugar coffee cotton and indigo were unloaded on the new Fosse quay which from then on took over the majority of port activity from the former port au Vin now the Place du Commerce These products were resold with substantial profits whether to fuel the interior French market or to supply the burgeoning local industry 21 Sugar mainly raw or brown sugar destined for the national market was by far the most greatly imported product in Nantes amounting to 22 605 000 lbs in 1786 making up 60 8 of the total value of imported merchandise 22 The commercial activity produced by triangular trade generated the success of maritime commerce within the kingdom of France and with the rest of the European continent As a result the tonnage directed towards foreign ports increased from 8 352 tx in 1702 to 30 428 tx in 1772 a ratio of 1 3 6 while the tonnage delivered to French ports during the same period passed from 32 276 tx to 61 686 tx 1 1 9 23 making Nantes therefore the first port of French commerce Industry edit The slave trade increased the wealth of great merchant and ship owning families which they invested in as much in agricultural land in property in hotels particuliers or Lustschloss as in the growing industry which developed alongside traditional artisanal industry 24 As a result in 1775 no less than 17 factories were in business in the city 25 Triangular trade throughout the 18th century also benefited the development of Shipbuilding The 18th century was marked by notable growth in the size of Nantes boatyards which expanded from 3 230 m2 34 800 sq ft at the turn of the century to 50 067 m2 538 920 sq ft in 1780 26 as these became the first French merchant ship builders 27 Memorial editMain article Memorial to the Abolition of SlaveryA memorial to acknowledge the role of France in the New World slave trade was dedicated in Nantes in 2012 28 See also editBristol slave tradeNotes and references edit Nantes Opens Memorial to Slave Trade DER Siegel April 24 2012 Nantes la traite negriere et l esclavage Cf Hugh Thomas La traite des Noirs 1440 1870 ed R Laffont pour la traduction francaise Paris 2006 pp 870 871 Statistiques approximatives See also the note dedicated to these statistics pp 933 935 where the author retraces the succession of estimations since 1950 Mettas Jean Daget Serge 1984 Repertoire des expeditions negrieres francaises au XVIIIe siecle L Hartmann p 972 http hgc ac creteil fr spip La traite des Noirs en 30 Archived 22 February 2011 at the Wayback Machine Academie de Creteil La traite des Noirs en 30 questions par Eric Saugera Vindt Gerard Consil Jean Michel June 2013 Nantes Bordeaux et l economie esclavagiste Au XVIIIe siecle les villes de Nantes et de Bordeaux profitent toutes deux de la traite negriere et de l economie esclavagiste Alternatives economiques 325 17 21 Meyer 1977 p 117 a b c d e L esclavage a Nantes outremer44 free fr Meyer 1977 p 136 a b Michon 2007 p 6 Michon 2007 p 7 Weber p 26 Weber p 27 Michon 2007 p 7 La traite a la cote d Angole histoire image org 29 April 2007 Michon 2007 Michon 2007 pp 37 38 Traite negriere a Nantes 150 ans d une histoire noire Michon 2008 p 75 Michon 2008 p 76 Leroux 1984 p 55 Meyer 1977 p 139 Michon 2008 pp 76 78 Leroux 1984 p 57 Meyer 1977 p 194 La construction navale sur le site du conseil general de Loire Atlantique Bruno Cailleton La construction navale et civile dans l amiraute de Nantes au XVIIIe siecle Herault Cholet 2000 in site du Maille Breze Rubin Alissa J 30 October 2018 They Threw Themselves Into the Sea 14 Black Women All Together New York Times p A6 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 3 August 2018 Bibliography editLeroux Emilienne 1984 Histoire d une ville et ses habitants Nantes Des origines a 1914 ACL ISBN 2 86723 000 4 Meyer Jean 1977 Histoire de Nantes in French Toulouse ISBN 2 7089 4717 6 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Michon Bernard 2007 La traite negriere nantaise au milieu du s XVIII 1748 1751 PDF Centre national de la recherche scientifique Les Cahiers des Anneaux de la Memoire n 10 Les Ports et la traite negriere Nantes p 34 63 in French Archived from the original PDF on 14 September 2011 Retrieved 5 August 2020 Michon Bernhard 2008 Nantes au temps de l apogee negrier la place de la traite dans le commerce nantais PDF Le Boucan in French Weber Jacques La traite negriere nantaise de 1763 a 1793 PDF Centre national de la recherche scientifique in French Archived from the original PDF on 14 September 2011 Retrieved 5 August 2020 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Nantes slave trade amp oldid 1196404775, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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