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Slave rebellion

A slave rebellion is an armed uprising by enslaved people, as a way of fighting for their freedom. Rebellions of enslaved people have occurred in nearly all societies that practice slavery or have practiced slavery in the past. A desire for freedom and the dream of successful rebellion is often the greatest object of song, art, and culture amongst the enslaved population. Many of the events, however, are often violently opposed and suppressed by slaveholders.

The most successful slave rebellion in history was the 18th-century Haitian Revolution, led by Toussaint Louverture and later Jean-Jacques Dessalines who won the war against their French colonial rulers, which established the modern independent state of Haiti from the former French colony of Saint-Domingue. Another famous historic slave rebellion was led by the Roman slave Spartacus (c. 73–71 BC). In the ninth century, the poet-prophet Ali bin Muhammad led imported East African slaves in Iraq during the Zanj Rebellion against the Abbasid Caliphate; Nanny of the Maroons was an 18th-century leader who rebelled against the British in Jamaica; and the Quilombo dos Palmares of Brazil flourished under Ganazumba (Ganga Zumba). The 1811 German Coast Uprising in the Territory of Orleans was the largest rebellion in the continental United States; Denmark Vesey rebelled in South Carolina, and Madison Washington during the Creole case in the 19th century the United States.

The Mamluk Sultanate reigned for centuries out of a slave rebellion[dubious ] in Egypt. It gave birth to both the Bahri dynasty and Burji dynasty and their countless artistic and scientific achievements. Among many accomplishments, the Mamluks were responsible for turning back the Mongol conquest.

Ancient Sparta had a special type of serf called helots who were often treated harshly, leading them to rebel.[1] According to Herodotus (IX, 28–29), helots were seven times as numerous as Spartans. Every autumn, according to Plutarch (Life of Lycurgus, 28, 3–7), the Spartan ephors would pro forma declare war on the helot population so that any Spartan citizen could kill a helot without fear of blood or guilt in order to keep them in line (crypteia).

In the Roman Empire, though the heterogeneous nature of the slave population worked against a strong sense of solidarity, slave revolts did occur and were severely punished.[2] The most famous slave rebellion in Europe was led by Spartacus in Roman Italy, the Third Servile War. This war resulted in the 6000 surviving rebel slaves being crucified along the main roads leading into Rome.[3] This was the third in a series of unrelated Servile Wars fought by slaves against the Romans.

The English peasants' revolt of 1381 led to calls for the reform of feudalism in England and an increase in rights for serfs. The Peasants' Revolt was one of several popular revolts in late medieval Europe. Richard II agreed to reforms including fair rents and the abolition of serfdom. Following the collapse of the revolt, the king's concessions were quickly revoked, but the rebellion is significant because it marked the beginning of the end of serfdom in medieval England.[4]

In Russia, the slaves were usually classified as kholops. A kholop's master had unlimited power over his life. Slavery remained a major institution in Russia until 1723, when Peter the Great converted the household slaves into house serfs. Russian agricultural slaves were formally converted into serfs earlier in 1679.[5] During the 16th and 17th centuries, runaway serfs and kholops known as Cossacks, ("outlaws") formed autonomous communities in the southern steppes. There were numerous rebellions against slavery and serfdom, most often in conjunction with Cossack uprisings, such as the uprisings of Ivan Bolotnikov (1606–1607), Stenka Razin (1667–1671),[6] Kondraty Bulavin (1707–1709), and Yemelyan Pugachev (1773–1775), often involving hundreds of thousands and sometimes millions.[7] Between the end of the Pugachev rebellion and the beginning of the 19th century, there were hundreds of outbreaks across Russia.[8]

Middle East

The Zanj Rebellion was the culmination of a series of small revolts. It took place near the city of Basra, in southern Iraq over fifteen years (869−883 AD). It grew to involve over 500,000 slaves, who were imported from across the Muslim empire.

The Mamluk Sultanate reigned for centuries out of a slave rebellion[dubious ] in Egypt. It gave birth to both the Bahri dynasty and Burji dynasty and their countless artistic and scientific achievements. Among many accomplishments, the Mamluks were responsible for turning back the Mongol conquest.

Europe

In the 3rd century BCE, Drimakos (or Drimachus) led a slave revolt on the slave entrepot of Chios, took to the hills and directed a band of runaways in operations against their ex-masters.[9][10]

The Servile Wars (135 to 71 BCE) were a series of slave revolts within the Roman Republic.

Other slave revolts occurred elsewhere.

A number of slave revolts occurred in the Mediterranean area during the early modern period:

  • 1748: Hungarian, Georgian and Maltese slaves on board a galley named Lupa revolted and sailed the ship to Malta.[11]
  • 1749: Conspiracy of the Slaves – Muslim slaves in Malta planned to rebel and take over the island, but plans leaked out beforehand and the would-be rebels were arrested and many were executed.[11]
  • 1760: Christian slaves on board the Ottoman ship Corona Ottomana revolted and sailed the ship to Malta.[11]

São Tomé and Príncipe

On 9 July 1595, Rei Amador, and his people, the Angolars, allied with other enslaved Africans of its plantations, marched into the interior woods and battled against the Portuguese. It is said that day, Rei Amador and his followers raised a flag in front of the settlers and proclaimed Rei Amador as king of São Tomé and Príncipe, making himself as "Rei Amador, liberator of all the black people".

Between 1595 and 1596, part of the island of São Tomé was ruled by the Angolars, under the command of Rei Amador. On 4 January 1596, he was captured, sent to prison and was later executed by the Portuguese. Still today, they remember him fondly and consider him a national hero of the islands.

In the first decades of the 17th century, there were frequent slave revolts in the Portuguese colony of São Tomé and Príncipe, off the African shore, which damaged the sugar crop cultivation there.

South America and the Caribbean

December 25, 1521 rebellion in Diego Colón de Toledo's plantation in what is known today as Dominican Republic is the first known slave rebellion of the region.[12] Despite the suppression of this revolt, many of the slaves successfully escaped, which led to the establishment of the first Maroon communities of the Americas. It would also open the doors for more slave revolts to transpire in the region. In 1532, Sebastián Lemba, of the Lemba tribe, rebelled against the Spanish colonists and for the next 15 years, attacked various other villages on the island liberating other slaves and ransacking from the Spaniards. Other leaders such as Juan Vaquero, Diego del Guzmán, Fernando Montoro, Juan Criollo, and Diego del Campo followed in Lemba's footsteps. Dominican slave revolts continued throughout the 18th and 19th century such as the slave insurrections of Hincha and Samaná in the spring of 1795, the revolt of Nigua in 1796, the Gambia revolt of 1802, and the revolt led by José Leocadio, Pedro de Seda, and Pedro Henríquez in 1812.[13]

Between 1538 and 1542, a Guaraní slave from present-day Paraguay named Juliana killed her Spanish master and urged other indigenous women to do the same, ending up executed by order of Álvar Núñez Cabeza de Vaca.[14][15] Her rebellion is regarded as one of the earliest recorded indigenous uprisings against the Spanish colonization of the Americas.[16][17]

Quilombo dos Palmares in Brazil, 1605 to 1694, led by Zumbi dos Palmarés.

San Basilio de Palenque in Colombia, 16th century to the present, led by Benkos Biohó.

St. John, 1733, in what was then the Danish West Indies. The St. John's Slave Rebellion is one of the earliest and longest lasting slave rebellions in the Americas. It ended with defeat, however, and many rebels, including one of the leaders Breffu, committed suicide rather than being recaptured.[18]

The most successful slave uprising was the Haitian Revolution, which began in 1791 and was eventually led by Toussaint L'Ouverture, culminating in the independent black republic of Haiti.[19]

Panama also has an extensive history of slave rebellions going back to the 16th century. Slaves were brought to the isthmus from many regions in Africa, including the modern day countries of the Congo, Senegal, Guinea, and Mozambique. Immediately before their arrival on shore, or very soon after, many enslaved Africans revolted against their captors or participated in mass maroonage or desertion. The freed Africans founded communities in the forests and mountains, organized guerrilla bands known as Cimarrones. They began a long guerrilla war against the Spanish Conquistadores, sometimes in conjunction with nearby indigenous communities like the Kuna and the Guaymí. Despite massacres by the Spanish, the rebels fought until the Spanish crown was forced to concede to treaties that granted the Africans a life without Spanish violence and incursions. The leaders of the guerrilla revolts included Felipillo, Bayano, Juan de Dioso, Domingo Congo, Antón Mandinga, and Luis de Mozambique.

In the 1730s, the militias of the Colony of Jamaica fought the Jamaican Maroons for a decade, before agreeing to sign peace treaties in 1739 and 1740, which recognised their freedom in five separate Maroon Towns.

Tacky's War (1760) was a slave uprising in Jamaica, which ran from May to July before it was put down by the British colonial government.

The Suriname slave rebellion was marked by constant guerrilla warfare by Maroons and in 1765-1793 by the Aluku. This rebellion was led by Boni.

The Berbice Slave Rebellion in Guyana in 1763 was led by Cuffy.

Cuba had slave revolts in 1795, 1798, 1802, 1805, 1812 (the Aponte revolt), 1825, 1827, 1829, 1833, 1834, 1835, 1838, 1839–43 and 1844 (the La Escalera conspiracy and revolt).

Revolts on the Caribbean Islands

Vincent Brown, a professor of History and of African and African-American Studies at Harvard, has made a study of the Transatlantic Slave Trade. In 2013, Brown teamed up with Axis Maps to create an interactive map of Jamaican slave uprisings in the 18th century called, “Slave Revolt in Jamaica, 1760-1761, A Cartographic Narrative.”[20] Brown's efforts have shown that the slave insurrection in Jamaica in 1760-61 was a carefully planned affair and not a spontaneous, chaotic eruption, as was often argued (due in large part to the lack of written records produced by the insurgents).[21] Tacky's War was a widespread slave uprising across Jamaica in the 1760s.

Later, in 1795, several slave rebellions broke out across the Caribbean, influenced by the Haitian Revolution[citation needed]:

  • In Jamaica, the descendants of Africans who fought and escaped from slavery and established free communities in the mountainous interior of Jamaica (Maroons), fought to preserve their freedom from British colonialists, in what came to be known as the Second Maroon War. However, this featured just one of the five Maroon towns in Jamaica.
  • In Dominica there was the Colihault Uprising.
  • In Saint Lucia there was the Bush War in 1795.
  • In the Saint Vincent islands the Second Carib War broke out.
  • In Grenada there was the Fedon Rebellion.[22]
  • Curaçao had a slave revolt in 1795, led by Tula.
  • In Venezuela, the insurrection led by José Leonardo Chirino occurred in 1795.
  • In Barbados, a slave revolt occurred in 1816, led by Bussa.
  • In Guyana there was the Demerara Rebellion of 1795.[23]
  • In the British Virgin Islands, minor slave revolts occurred in 1790, 1823 and 1830.
  • In Cuba, there were several revolts starting in 1825 with an uprising in Guamacaro and ending with the revolts of 1843 in Matanzas. These revolts have been widely studied by scholars such as Robert L. Paquette, Gloria García, Manuel Barcia, Aisha K. Finch and Michele Reid-Vazquez.
  • In the Danish West Indies an 1848 slave revolt led to emancipation of all slaves in the Danish West Indies.
  • In Puerto Rico in 1821, Marcos Xiorro planned and conspired to lead a slave revolt against the sugar plantation owners and the Spanish Colonial government. Even though the conspiracy was unsuccessful, Xiorro achieved legendary status among the slaves and is part of Puerto Rico's folklore.[24]
  • The St. Joseph Mutiny of 1837, in British Trinidad, was led by ex-slaves (including many Africans captured by British ships from illegal slavers) who had been forcibly conscripted into the British Army.[25]

Brazil

Many slave rebellions occurred in Brazil, most famously the Malê Revolt of 1835[26] by the predominantly Muslim West African slaves at the time. The term malê was commonly used to refer to Muslims at the time from the Yoruba word imale.

North America

Numerous slave rebellions and insurrections took place in North America during the 17th, 18th, and 19th centuries. There is documentary evidence of more than 250 uprisings or attempted uprisings involving ten or more slaves. One of the first was at San Miguel de Gualdape, the first European settlement in what would become the United States. Three of the best known in the United States during the 19th century are the revolts by Gabriel Prosser in Virginia in 1800, Denmark Vesey in Charleston, South Carolina in 1822, and Nat Turner's Slave Rebellion in Southampton County, Virginia, in 1831.

Drapetomania was a supposed mental illness invented by American physician Samuel A. Cartwright in 1851 that allegedly caused black slaves to run away. Today, drapetomania is considered an example of pseudoscience, and part of the edifice of scientific racism.

Slave resistance in the antebellum South did not gain the attention of academic historians until the 1940s, when historian Herbert Aptheker started publishing the first serious scholarly work [27] on the subject. Aptheker stressed how rebellions were rooted in the exploitative conditions of the Southern slave system. He traversed libraries and archives throughout the South, managing to uncover roughly 250 similar instances.

The 1811 German Coast Uprising, which took place in rural southeast Louisiana, at that time the Territory of Orleans, early in 1811, involved up to 500 insurgent slaves. It was suppressed by local militias and a detachment of the United States Army. In retaliation for the deaths of two white men and the destruction of property, the authorities killed at least 40 black men in a violent confrontation (the numbers cited are inconsistent); at least 29 more were executed (combined figures from two jurisdictions, St. Charles Parish and Orleans Parish). There was a third jurisdiction for a tribunal and what amounted to summary judgments against the accused, St. John the Baptist Parish. Fewer than 20 men are said to have escaped; some of those were later caught and killed, on their way to freedom.

Although only involving about seventy slaves and free blacks, Turner's 1831 rebellion is considered to be a significant event in American history. The rebellion caused the slave-holding South to go into a panic. Fifty-five men, women, and children were killed, and enslaved blacks were freed on multiple plantations in Southampton County, Virginia, as Turner and his fellow rebels attacked the white institution of plantation slavery. Turner and the other rebels were eventually stopped by state militias.[28] The rebellion resulted in the hanging of about 56 slaves, including Nat Turner himself. Up to 200 other blacks were killed during the hysteria which followed, few of whom likely had anything to do with the uprising.[29] Fears afterwards led to new legislation passed by Southern states prohibiting the movement, assembly, and education of slaves, and reducing the rights of free people of color. In addition, the Virginia legislature considered[when?] abolishing slavery to prevent further rebellions. In a close vote, however, the state decided to keep slaves.

The abolitionist John Brown had already fought against pro-slavery forces in Bleeding Kansas for several years when he decided to lead a raid on a Federal arsenal in Harpers Ferry, Virginia. This raid was a joint attack by freed blacks and white men who had corresponded with slaves on plantations in order to create a general uprising among slaves. Brown carried hundreds of copies of the constitution for a new republic of former slaves in the Appalachians. But they were never distributed, and the slave uprisings that were to have helped Brown did not happen. Some believe that he knew the raid was doomed but went ahead anyway, because of the support for abolition it would (and did) generate. The U.S. military, led by Lieutenant Colonel Robert E. Lee, easily overwhelmed Brown's forces. But directly following this, slave disobedience and the number of runaways increased markedly in Virginia.[30]

The historian Steven Hahn proposes that the self-organized involvement of slaves in the Union Army during the American Civil War composed a slave rebellion that dwarfed all others.[31] Similarly, tens of thousands of slaves joined British forces or escaped to British lines during the American Revolution, sometimes using the disruption of war to gain freedom. For instance, when the British evacuated from Charleston and Savannah, they took 10,000 slaves with them. They also evacuated slaves from New York, taking more than 3,000 for resettlement to Nova Scotia, where they were recorded as Black Loyalists and given land grants.[32]

North American slave revolts

Africa

In 1808 and 1825, there were slave rebellions in the Cape Colony, newly acquired by the British. Although the slave trade was officially abolished in the British Empire by the Slave Trade Act of 1807, and slavery itself a generation later with the Slavery Abolition Act 1833, it took until 1850 to be halted in the territories which were to become South Africa. [39]

Slave ship revolts

There are 485 recorded instances of slaves revolting on board slave ships.[40] A few of these ships endured more than one uprising during their career.[40]

Most accounts of revolts aboard slave ships are given by Europeans. There are few examples of accounts by slaves themselves. William Snelgrave reported that the slaves who revolted on the British ship Henry in 1721 claimed that those who had captured them were "Rogues to buy them" and that they were bent on regaining their liberty.[41] Another example that Richardson gives is that of James Towne who gives the account of slaves stating that Europeans did not have the right to enslave and take them away from their homeland and "wives and children".[42]

Richardson compares several factors that contributed to slave revolts on board ships: conditions on the ships, geographical location, and proximity to the shore.[41] He suggests that revolts were more likely to occur when a ship was still in sight of the shore. The threat of attack from the shore by other Africans was also a concern. If the ship was hit by disease and a large portion of the crew had been killed, the chances of insurrection were higher.[41] Where the slaves were captured also had an effect on the number of insurrections.[41] In many places, such as the Bight of Benin and the Bight of Biafra, the percentage of revolts and the percentage of the slave trade match up.[41] Yet ships taking slaves from Senegambia experienced 22 percent of shipboard revolts while only contributing to four and a half percent of the slave trade.[42] Slaves coming from West Central Africa accounted for 44 percent of the trade while only experiencing 11 percent of total revolts.[42]

Lorenzo J. Greene gives many accounts of slave revolts on ships coming out of New England. These ships belonged to Puritans who controlled much of the slave trade in New England.[43] Most revolts on board ships were unsuccessful. The crews of these ships, while outnumbered, were disciplined, well fed, and armed with muskets, swords, and sometimes cannons, and they were always on guard for resistance.[44] The slaves on the other hand were the opposite, armed only with bits of wood and the chains that bound them.[45]

However, some captives were able to take over the ships that were their prisons and regain their freedom. On October 5, 1764 the New Hampshire ship Adventure captained by John Millar was successfully taken by the enslaved aboard.[44] The slaves on board revolted while the ship was anchored off the coast and all but two of the crew, including Captain Millar, had succumbed to disease.[46] Another successful slave revolt occurred six days after the ship Little George had left the Guinea coast. The ship carried ninety-six slaves, thirty-five of which were male.[44] The slaves attacked in the early hours of the morning, easily overpowering the two men on guard. The slaves were able to load one of the cannons on board and fire it at the crew. After taking control of the ship they sailed it up the Sierra Leone River and escaped.[44] After having defended themselves with muskets for several days below decks the crew lowered a small boat into the river to escape. After nine days of living on raw rice they were rescued.[47]

Mariana P. Candido notes that enslaved Africans worked on the ships that transported other Africans into slavery. These men, 230 in all,[48] were used onboard slave ships for their ability to communicate with the slaves being brought on board and to translate between Captain and slaver.[49] Enslaved sailors were able to alleviate some of the fears that newly boarded slaves had, such as fear of being eaten.[50] This was a double-edged sword. The enslaved sailors sometimes joined other slaves in the revolts against the captain they served. In 1812 enslaved sailors joined a revolt on board the Portuguese ship Feliz Eugenia just off the coast of Benguela.[48] The revolt took place below decks. The sailors, along with many of the children who were on board, were able to escape using small boats.[51]

See also

Bibliography

  • Herbert Aptheker, American Negro Slave Revolts, 6. ed., New York: International Publ., 1993 - classic
  • Matt D. Childs, The 1812 Aponte Rebellion in Cuba and the Struggle Against African Slavery, Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 2006
  • David P. Geggus, ed., The Impact of the Haitian Revolution in the Atlantic World, Columbia: University of South Carolina Press, 2001
  • Eugene D. Genovese, From Rebellion to Revolution: Afro-American Slave Revolts in the Making of the Modern World, Louisiana State University Press 1980
  • Joao Jose Reis, Slave Rebellion in Brazil: The Muslim Uprising of 1835 in Bahia (Johns Hopkins Studies in Atlantic History and Culture), Johns Hopkins Univ Press 1993
  • Rodriguez, Junius P., ed. Encyclopedia of Slave Resistance and Rebellion. Westport, CT: Greenwood, 2007.
  • Rodriguez, Junius P., ed. Slavery in the United States: A Social, Political, and Historical Encyclopedia. Santa Barbara, CA: ABC-CLIO, 2007.
  • Urbainczky, Theresa Slave Revolts in Antiquity (University of California Press, Berkley), 2008

References and notes

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  2. ^ "Resisting Slavery in Ancient Rome By Professor Keith Bradle". Bbc.co.uk. from the original on 2009-02-02. Retrieved 2013-10-04.
  3. ^ "The Sicilian Slave Wars and Spartacus". Ancienthistory.about.com. from the original on 2013-10-04. Retrieved 2013-10-04.
  4. ^ . Webcitation.org. Archived from the original on October 23, 2009. Retrieved 2013-10-04.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  5. ^ "Ways of ending slavery". Britannica.com. 1910-01-31. from the original on 2013-03-09. Retrieved 2013-10-04.
  6. ^ "Russia before Peter the Great". Fsmitha.com. from the original on 2004-12-08. Retrieved 2013-10-04.
  7. ^ "Rebellions". Schools.cbe.ab.ca. from the original on 2018-05-02. Retrieved 2013-10-04.
  8. ^ Aptheker, Herbert; Woodward, C. Vann. "The Slave Revolts". Nybooks.com. from the original on 2009-01-12. Retrieved 2013-10-04. {{cite magazine}}: Cite magazine requires |magazine= (help)
  9. ^ Cartledge, Paul A.; Harvey, F. David, eds. (1985). Crux: Essays in Greek History Presented to G.E.M. De Ste. Croix on His 75th Birthday. History of Political Thought. Vol. 6 (Reprint ed.). Duckworth. p. 39. ISBN 9780715620922. from the original on 2022-09-14. Retrieved 2018-11-14. [Drimakos] took to the mountains of Chios and organized a band of runaways to carry out guerilla operations against the landed property of their former masters.
  10. ^ Urbainczyk, Theresa (2008). "Maintaining resistance". Slave Revolts in Antiquity. London: Routledge (published 2016). pp. 30–31. ISBN 9781315478807. from the original on 2022-09-14. Retrieved 2018-11-14.
  11. ^ a b c Castillo, Dennis Angelo (2006). The Maltese Cross: A Strategic History of Malta. Westport: Greenwood Publishing Group. p. 91. ISBN 9780313323294. from the original on 2022-09-14. Retrieved 2017-08-22.
  12. ^ Deive, Carlos Esteban (1989). Los guerrilleros negros: esclavos fugitivos y cimarrones en Santo Domingo (in Spanish). Santo Domingo, República Dominicana: Fundación Cultural Dominicana. OCLC 21435953. from the original on 2020-07-21. Retrieved 2020-07-20.
  13. ^ Ricourt, Milagros (2016). The Dominican Racial Imaginary Surveying the Landscape of Race and Nation in Hispaniola. Rutgers University Press. ISBN 978-0-8135-8450-8. OCLC 1020852484.
  14. ^ Colmán Gutiérrez, Andrés (December 5, 2020). "En busca de la India Juliana". Última Hora (in Spanish). Asunción. from the original on April 23, 2022. Retrieved December 12, 2021.
  15. ^ Schvartzman, Gabriela (September 19, 2020). "Relatos sobre la India Juliana. Entre la construcción de la memoria y la ficción histórica". Periódico E'a (in Spanish). Asunción: Atycom. from the original on April 8, 2022. Retrieved December 12, 2021.
  16. ^ Aquino González, Romina (February 20, 2020). "Las Kuña: cerveza como símbolo cultural". Última Hora (in Spanish). from the original on January 18, 2022. Retrieved January 16, 2022.
  17. ^ Viveros, Diana (April 28, 2011). "Personajes históricos del Paraguay: India Juliana". Periódico E'a (in Spanish). Asunción: Atycom. from the original on January 19, 2022. Retrieved January 19, 2022.
  18. ^ Holly Kathryn Norton (2013). Estate by Estate: The Landscape of the 1733 St. Jan Slave Rebellion (PhD). Syracuse University. p. 90. ProQuest 1369397993.
  19. ^ "An Historical Account of the Black Empire of Hayti: Comprehending a View of the Principal Transactions in the Revolution of Saint Domingo: with Its Ancient and Modern State". World Digital Library. from the original on 19 December 2013. Retrieved 23 April 2013.
  20. ^ "Axismaps.com". from the original on 2021-04-13. Retrieved 2014-03-05.
  21. ^ . Archived from the original on 2014-03-18. Retrieved 2014-03-05.
  22. ^ "The fédons of Grenada, 1763-1814" 2008-08-31 at the Wayback Machine. Posted by Curtis Jacobs. Retrieved March 10, 2013, to 18: 25 pm.
  23. ^ McGowan, Winston (2006). . Starbucks News. Archived from the original on September 27, 2007. Retrieved December 7, 2006.
  24. ^ "Slave revolts in Puerto Rico: conspiracies and uprisings, 1795-1873"; by: Guillermo A. Bar alt; Publisher Markus Wiener Publishers; ISBN 1-55876-463-1, ISBN 978-1-55876-463-7
  25. ^ August, Thomas (1991). "Rebels with a cause: The St. Joseph Mutiny of 1837". Slavery & Abolition. 12 (2): 73–91. doi:10.1080/01440399108575034.
  26. ^ "A Continuity of the 19th Century Jihaad Movements of Western Sudan". Muhammad Sharif. from the original on 2007-02-28. Retrieved 2006-12-02.
  27. ^ Shapiro, Herbert. "The Impact of the Aptheker Thesis: A Retrospective View of American Negro Slave Revolts". Science and Society. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  28. ^ Aptheker, Herbert (1983). American Negro Slave Revolts. International Publishers. p. 324. ISBN 9780717806058.
  29. ^ "Nat Turner's Rebellion". PBS. from the original on August 7, 2011. Retrieved November 15, 2014.
  30. ^ Louis A. DeCaro Jr., John Brown – The Cost of Freedom: Selections from His Life & Letters (New York: International Publishers, 2007), p. 16.
  31. ^ Hahn, Steven (2004). "The Greatest Slave Rebellion in Modern History: Southern Slaves in the American Civil War". southernspaces.org. from the original on April 16, 2021. Retrieved August 22, 2010.
  32. ^ Peter Kolchin, American Slavery: 1619–1877, New York: Hill and Wang, 1993, pp. 73–77
  33. ^ Joseph Cephas Carroll, Slave Insurrections in the United States, 1800–1865, p. 13
  34. ^ a b Sherman, Joan R (1997). Black Bard of North Carolina : George Moses Horton and His Poetry. Chapel Hill, North Carolina: University of North Carolina Press. p. 4. ISBN 0807823414.
  35. ^ Rasmussen, Daniel (2011). American Uprising: The Untold Story of America's Largest Slave Revolt. HarperCollins. p. 288. ISBN 9780061995217.
  36. ^ J.B. Bird, author and designer. "Black Seminole slave rebellion, introduction - Rebellion". Johnhorse.com. from the original on 2006-08-28. Retrieved 2013-10-04. {{cite web}}: |author= has generic name (help)
  37. ^ "Unidentified Young Man". World Digital Library. 1839–1840. from the original on 2013-09-27. Retrieved 2013-07-28.
  38. ^ . Digital.library.okstate.edu. Archived from the original on 2012-11-03. Retrieved 2013-10-04.
  39. ^ Giliomee, Hermann (2003). "The Afrikaners", Chapter 4 - Masters, Slaves and Servants, the fear of gelykstelling, Page 93,94
  40. ^ a b Richardson, David (January 2001). "Shipboard Revolts, African Authority, and the Atlantic Slave Trade". The William and Mary Quarterly. 3. 58 (1): 72. doi:10.2307/2674419. JSTOR 2674419. PMID 18634185.
  41. ^ a b c d e Richardson, David (January 2001). "Shipboard Revolts, African Authority, and the Atlantic Slave Trade". The William and Mary Quarterly. 3. 58 (1): 69–92. doi:10.2307/2674419. JSTOR 2674419. PMID 18634185.
  42. ^ a b c Richardson, David (2001). "Shipboard Revolts, African Authority, and the Atlantic Slave Trade". The William and Mary Quarterly. 58 (1): 69–92. doi:10.2307/2674419. JSTOR 2674419. PMID 18634185.
  43. ^ Greene, Lorenzo. Mutiny on Slave Ships. p. 346.
  44. ^ a b c d Greene, Lorenzo. Mutiny on Slave Ships.
  45. ^ Greene. Mutiny on Slave Ships. p. 347.
  46. ^ Greene. Mutiny on Slave Ships. p. 349.
  47. ^ Greene. Mutiny on Slave Ships. p. 351.
  48. ^ a b Candido, Mariana P. (September 2010). "Different Slave Journeys: Enslaved African Seamen on Board Portuguese Ships c. 1760-1820s". 31 (3): 400. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  49. ^ "Candido": 397. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  50. ^ Candido, Mariana P. (September 2010). "Different Slave Journeys: Enslaved African Seamen on Board Portuguese Ships c. 1760-1820s". 31 (3). {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  51. ^ "Candido": 398. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)

Further reading

  • ""New York: The Revolt of 1712". PBS.

External links

  • "Bahia Revolt". africanholocaust.net.
  • Hart, Richard (Ex-Attorney General of Grenada). "Invisible Abolitionists". brh.org.uk. Audio on slave revolts in the Caribbean
  • . The Slave Rebellion Website. Archived from the original on 2016-03-17. Retrieved 2016-03-25.
  • "Rebellion: John Horse and the Black Seminoles, First Black Rebels to Beat American Slavery". johnhorse.com. These maroons affiliated with Seminole Indians in Florida led a slave rebellion that would be the largest in U.S. history.
  • "Welcome to Encyclopædia Britannica's Guide to Black History". Encyclopædia Britannica.

slave, rebellion, slave, rebellion, armed, uprising, enslaved, people, fighting, their, freedom, rebellions, enslaved, people, have, occurred, nearly, societies, that, practice, slavery, have, practiced, slavery, past, desire, freedom, dream, successful, rebel. A slave rebellion is an armed uprising by enslaved people as a way of fighting for their freedom Rebellions of enslaved people have occurred in nearly all societies that practice slavery or have practiced slavery in the past A desire for freedom and the dream of successful rebellion is often the greatest object of song art and culture amongst the enslaved population Many of the events however are often violently opposed and suppressed by slaveholders The most successful slave rebellion in history was the 18th century Haitian Revolution led by Toussaint Louverture and later Jean Jacques Dessalines who won the war against their French colonial rulers which established the modern independent state of Haiti from the former French colony of Saint Domingue Another famous historic slave rebellion was led by the Roman slave Spartacus c 73 71 BC In the ninth century the poet prophet Ali bin Muhammad led imported East African slaves in Iraq during the Zanj Rebellion against the Abbasid Caliphate Nanny of the Maroons was an 18th century leader who rebelled against the British in Jamaica and the Quilombo dos Palmares of Brazil flourished under Ganazumba Ganga Zumba The 1811 German Coast Uprising in the Territory of Orleans was the largest rebellion in the continental United States Denmark Vesey rebelled in South Carolina and Madison Washington during the Creole case in the 19th century the United States The Mamluk Sultanate reigned for centuries out of a slave rebellion dubious discuss in Egypt It gave birth to both the Bahri dynasty and Burji dynasty and their countless artistic and scientific achievements Among many accomplishments the Mamluks were responsible for turning back the Mongol conquest Ancient Sparta had a special type of serf called helots who were often treated harshly leading them to rebel 1 According to Herodotus IX 28 29 helots were seven times as numerous as Spartans Every autumn according to Plutarch Life of Lycurgus 28 3 7 the Spartan ephors would pro forma declare war on the helot population so that any Spartan citizen could kill a helot without fear of blood or guilt in order to keep them in line crypteia In the Roman Empire though the heterogeneous nature of the slave population worked against a strong sense of solidarity slave revolts did occur and were severely punished 2 The most famous slave rebellion in Europe was led by Spartacus in Roman Italy the Third Servile War This war resulted in the 6000 surviving rebel slaves being crucified along the main roads leading into Rome 3 This was the third in a series of unrelated Servile Wars fought by slaves against the Romans The English peasants revolt of 1381 led to calls for the reform of feudalism in England and an increase in rights for serfs The Peasants Revolt was one of several popular revolts in late medieval Europe Richard II agreed to reforms including fair rents and the abolition of serfdom Following the collapse of the revolt the king s concessions were quickly revoked but the rebellion is significant because it marked the beginning of the end of serfdom in medieval England 4 In Russia the slaves were usually classified as kholops A kholop s master had unlimited power over his life Slavery remained a major institution in Russia until 1723 when Peter the Great converted the household slaves into house serfs Russian agricultural slaves were formally converted into serfs earlier in 1679 5 During the 16th and 17th centuries runaway serfs and kholops known as Cossacks outlaws formed autonomous communities in the southern steppes There were numerous rebellions against slavery and serfdom most often in conjunction with Cossack uprisings such as the uprisings of Ivan Bolotnikov 1606 1607 Stenka Razin 1667 1671 6 Kondraty Bulavin 1707 1709 and Yemelyan Pugachev 1773 1775 often involving hundreds of thousands and sometimes millions 7 Between the end of the Pugachev rebellion and the beginning of the 19th century there were hundreds of outbreaks across Russia 8 Contents 1 Middle East 2 Europe 3 Sao Tome and Principe 4 South America and the Caribbean 4 1 Revolts on the Caribbean Islands 4 2 Brazil 5 North America 5 1 North American slave revolts 6 Africa 7 Slave ship revolts 8 See also 9 Bibliography 10 References and notes 10 1 Further reading 11 External linksMiddle East EditThis section needs expansion You can help by adding to it March 2013 The Zanj Rebellion was the culmination of a series of small revolts It took place near the city of Basra in southern Iraq over fifteen years 869 883 AD It grew to involve over 500 000 slaves who were imported from across the Muslim empire The Mamluk Sultanate reigned for centuries out of a slave rebellion dubious discuss in Egypt It gave birth to both the Bahri dynasty and Burji dynasty and their countless artistic and scientific achievements Among many accomplishments the Mamluks were responsible for turning back the Mongol conquest Europe EditThis section needs expansion You can help by adding to it March 2013 In the 3rd century BCE Drimakos or Drimachus led a slave revolt on the slave entrepot of Chios took to the hills and directed a band of runaways in operations against their ex masters 9 10 The Servile Wars 135 to 71 BCE were a series of slave revolts within the Roman Republic The First and Second Servile War occurred in Sicily The Third Servile War 73 to 71 BCE occurred in mainland Italy Spartacus an escaped gladiator supposedly from Thrace became the most prominent of the rebel leaders Marcus Licinius Crassus suppressed the insurgents Many modern rebels such as the Spartacus League have since regarded Spartacus as a heroic figure Other slave revolts occurred elsewhere Eumenes III king of Pergamon from 133 to 129 BCE promised freedom to slaves to draw support against the Roman Republic A number of slave revolts occurred in the Mediterranean area during the early modern period 1748 Hungarian Georgian and Maltese slaves on board a galley named Lupa revolted and sailed the ship to Malta 11 1749 Conspiracy of the Slaves Muslim slaves in Malta planned to rebel and take over the island but plans leaked out beforehand and the would be rebels were arrested and many were executed 11 1760 Christian slaves on board the Ottoman ship Corona Ottomana revolted and sailed the ship to Malta 11 Sao Tome and Principe EditOn 9 July 1595 Rei Amador and his people the Angolars allied with other enslaved Africans of its plantations marched into the interior woods and battled against the Portuguese It is said that day Rei Amador and his followers raised a flag in front of the settlers and proclaimed Rei Amador as king of Sao Tome and Principe making himself as Rei Amador liberator of all the black people Between 1595 and 1596 part of the island of Sao Tome was ruled by the Angolars under the command of Rei Amador On 4 January 1596 he was captured sent to prison and was later executed by the Portuguese Still today they remember him fondly and consider him a national hero of the islands In the first decades of the 17th century there were frequent slave revolts in the Portuguese colony of Sao Tome and Principe off the African shore which damaged the sugar crop cultivation there South America and the Caribbean EditDecember 25 1521 rebellion in Diego Colon de Toledo s plantation in what is known today as Dominican Republic is the first known slave rebellion of the region 12 Despite the suppression of this revolt many of the slaves successfully escaped which led to the establishment of the first Maroon communities of the Americas It would also open the doors for more slave revolts to transpire in the region In 1532 Sebastian Lemba of the Lemba tribe rebelled against the Spanish colonists and for the next 15 years attacked various other villages on the island liberating other slaves and ransacking from the Spaniards Other leaders such as Juan Vaquero Diego del Guzman Fernando Montoro Juan Criollo and Diego del Campo followed in Lemba s footsteps Dominican slave revolts continued throughout the 18th and 19th century such as the slave insurrections of Hincha and Samana in the spring of 1795 the revolt of Nigua in 1796 the Gambia revolt of 1802 and the revolt led by Jose Leocadio Pedro de Seda and Pedro Henriquez in 1812 13 Between 1538 and 1542 a Guarani slave from present day Paraguay named Juliana killed her Spanish master and urged other indigenous women to do the same ending up executed by order of Alvar Nunez Cabeza de Vaca 14 15 Her rebellion is regarded as one of the earliest recorded indigenous uprisings against the Spanish colonization of the Americas 16 17 Quilombo dos Palmares in Brazil 1605 to 1694 led by Zumbi dos Palmares San Basilio de Palenque in Colombia 16th century to the present led by Benkos Bioho St John 1733 in what was then the Danish West Indies The St John s Slave Rebellion is one of the earliest and longest lasting slave rebellions in the Americas It ended with defeat however and many rebels including one of the leaders Breffu committed suicide rather than being recaptured 18 The most successful slave uprising was the Haitian Revolution which began in 1791 and was eventually led by Toussaint L Ouverture culminating in the independent black republic of Haiti 19 Panama also has an extensive history of slave rebellions going back to the 16th century Slaves were brought to the isthmus from many regions in Africa including the modern day countries of the Congo Senegal Guinea and Mozambique Immediately before their arrival on shore or very soon after many enslaved Africans revolted against their captors or participated in mass maroonage or desertion The freed Africans founded communities in the forests and mountains organized guerrilla bands known as Cimarrones They began a long guerrilla war against the Spanish Conquistadores sometimes in conjunction with nearby indigenous communities like the Kuna and the Guaymi Despite massacres by the Spanish the rebels fought until the Spanish crown was forced to concede to treaties that granted the Africans a life without Spanish violence and incursions The leaders of the guerrilla revolts included Felipillo Bayano Juan de Dioso Domingo Congo Anton Mandinga and Luis de Mozambique In the 1730s the militias of the Colony of Jamaica fought the Jamaican Maroons for a decade before agreeing to sign peace treaties in 1739 and 1740 which recognised their freedom in five separate Maroon Towns Tacky s War 1760 was a slave uprising in Jamaica which ran from May to July before it was put down by the British colonial government The Suriname slave rebellion was marked by constant guerrilla warfare by Maroons and in 1765 1793 by the Aluku This rebellion was led by Boni The Berbice Slave Rebellion in Guyana in 1763 was led by Cuffy Cuba had slave revolts in 1795 1798 1802 1805 1812 the Aponte revolt 1825 1827 1829 1833 1834 1835 1838 1839 43 and 1844 the La Escalera conspiracy and revolt Revolts on the Caribbean Islands Edit Demerara rebellion of 1823 Vincent Brown a professor of History and of African and African American Studies at Harvard has made a study of the Transatlantic Slave Trade In 2013 Brown teamed up with Axis Maps to create an interactive map of Jamaican slave uprisings in the 18th century called Slave Revolt in Jamaica 1760 1761 A Cartographic Narrative 20 Brown s efforts have shown that the slave insurrection in Jamaica in 1760 61 was a carefully planned affair and not a spontaneous chaotic eruption as was often argued due in large part to the lack of written records produced by the insurgents 21 Tacky s War was a widespread slave uprising across Jamaica in the 1760s Later in 1795 several slave rebellions broke out across the Caribbean influenced by the Haitian Revolution citation needed In Jamaica the descendants of Africans who fought and escaped from slavery and established free communities in the mountainous interior of Jamaica Maroons fought to preserve their freedom from British colonialists in what came to be known as the Second Maroon War However this featured just one of the five Maroon towns in Jamaica In Dominica there was the Colihault Uprising In Saint Lucia there was the Bush War in 1795 In the Saint Vincent islands the Second Carib War broke out In Grenada there was the Fedon Rebellion 22 Curacao had a slave revolt in 1795 led by Tula In Venezuela the insurrection led by Jose Leonardo Chirino occurred in 1795 In Barbados a slave revolt occurred in 1816 led by Bussa In Guyana there was the Demerara Rebellion of 1795 23 In the British Virgin Islands minor slave revolts occurred in 1790 1823 and 1830 In Cuba there were several revolts starting in 1825 with an uprising in Guamacaro and ending with the revolts of 1843 in Matanzas These revolts have been widely studied by scholars such as Robert L Paquette Gloria Garcia Manuel Barcia Aisha K Finch and Michele Reid Vazquez In the Danish West Indies an 1848 slave revolt led to emancipation of all slaves in the Danish West Indies In Puerto Rico in 1821 Marcos Xiorro planned and conspired to lead a slave revolt against the sugar plantation owners and the Spanish Colonial government Even though the conspiracy was unsuccessful Xiorro achieved legendary status among the slaves and is part of Puerto Rico s folklore 24 The St Joseph Mutiny of 1837 in British Trinidad was led by ex slaves including many Africans captured by British ships from illegal slavers who had been forcibly conscripted into the British Army 25 Brazil Edit Many slave rebellions occurred in Brazil most famously the Male Revolt of 1835 26 by the predominantly Muslim West African slaves at the time The term male was commonly used to refer to Muslims at the time from the Yoruba word imale North America EditThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Slave rebellion news newspapers books scholar JSTOR November 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message Numerous slave rebellions and insurrections took place in North America during the 17th 18th and 19th centuries There is documentary evidence of more than 250 uprisings or attempted uprisings involving ten or more slaves One of the first was at San Miguel de Gualdape the first European settlement in what would become the United States Three of the best known in the United States during the 19th century are the revolts by Gabriel Prosser in Virginia in 1800 Denmark Vesey in Charleston South Carolina in 1822 and Nat Turner s Slave Rebellion in Southampton County Virginia in 1831 Drapetomania was a supposed mental illness invented by American physician Samuel A Cartwright in 1851 that allegedly caused black slaves to run away Today drapetomania is considered an example of pseudoscience and part of the edifice of scientific racism Slave resistance in the antebellum South did not gain the attention of academic historians until the 1940s when historian Herbert Aptheker started publishing the first serious scholarly work 27 on the subject Aptheker stressed how rebellions were rooted in the exploitative conditions of the Southern slave system He traversed libraries and archives throughout the South managing to uncover roughly 250 similar instances The 1811 German Coast Uprising which took place in rural southeast Louisiana at that time the Territory of Orleans early in 1811 involved up to 500 insurgent slaves It was suppressed by local militias and a detachment of the United States Army In retaliation for the deaths of two white men and the destruction of property the authorities killed at least 40 black men in a violent confrontation the numbers cited are inconsistent at least 29 more were executed combined figures from two jurisdictions St Charles Parish and Orleans Parish There was a third jurisdiction for a tribunal and what amounted to summary judgments against the accused St John the Baptist Parish Fewer than 20 men are said to have escaped some of those were later caught and killed on their way to freedom Although only involving about seventy slaves and free blacks Turner s 1831 rebellion is considered to be a significant event in American history The rebellion caused the slave holding South to go into a panic Fifty five men women and children were killed and enslaved blacks were freed on multiple plantations in Southampton County Virginia as Turner and his fellow rebels attacked the white institution of plantation slavery Turner and the other rebels were eventually stopped by state militias 28 The rebellion resulted in the hanging of about 56 slaves including Nat Turner himself Up to 200 other blacks were killed during the hysteria which followed few of whom likely had anything to do with the uprising 29 Fears afterwards led to new legislation passed by Southern states prohibiting the movement assembly and education of slaves and reducing the rights of free people of color In addition the Virginia legislature considered when abolishing slavery to prevent further rebellions In a close vote however the state decided to keep slaves The abolitionist John Brown had already fought against pro slavery forces in Bleeding Kansas for several years when he decided to lead a raid on a Federal arsenal in Harpers Ferry Virginia This raid was a joint attack by freed blacks and white men who had corresponded with slaves on plantations in order to create a general uprising among slaves Brown carried hundreds of copies of the constitution for a new republic of former slaves in the Appalachians But they were never distributed and the slave uprisings that were to have helped Brown did not happen Some believe that he knew the raid was doomed but went ahead anyway because of the support for abolition it would and did generate The U S military led by Lieutenant Colonel Robert E Lee easily overwhelmed Brown s forces But directly following this slave disobedience and the number of runaways increased markedly in Virginia 30 The historian Steven Hahn proposes that the self organized involvement of slaves in the Union Army during the American Civil War composed a slave rebellion that dwarfed all others 31 Similarly tens of thousands of slaves joined British forces or escaped to British lines during the American Revolution sometimes using the disruption of war to gain freedom For instance when the British evacuated from Charleston and Savannah they took 10 000 slaves with them They also evacuated slaves from New York taking more than 3 000 for resettlement to Nova Scotia where they were recorded as Black Loyalists and given land grants 32 North American slave revolts Edit See also Negro Fort and Igbo Landing This section needs expansion You can help by adding to it May 2020 Santo Domingo Slave Revolt 1521 San Miguel de Gualdape Rebellion 1526 Bayano Wars 1548 Gaspar Yanga s Revolt c 1570 near the Mexican city of Veracruz the group escaped to the highlands and built a free colony Gloucester County Conspiracy 1663 33 New York Slave Revolt of 1712 Samba Rebellion 1731 Stono Rebellion 1739 New York Conspiracy of 1741 alleged During the American Revolutionary War slaves reacted to Dunmore s Proclamation and the Philipsburg Proclamation fleeing and sometimes taking up arms in the British military against their former masters for example in the Ethiopian Regiment Pointe Coupee Slave Conspiracy of 1791 Pointe Coupee Slave Conspiracy of 1795 Gabriel s Rebellion 1800 Rebellions in a dozen North Carolina counties May and June 1802 34 Chatham Manor Rebellion 1805 Slaves in three North Carolina counties conspire to poison their owners in some cases successfully 1805 34 German Coast uprising 1811 35 Aponte Conspiracy 1812 George Boxley Rebellion 1815 Denmark Vesey s Rebellion 1822 Nat Turner s Rebellion 1831 Baptist War 1831 Black Seminole Slave Rebellion 1835 1838 36 Amistad seizure 1839 37 Creole case 1841 the most successful slave revolt in US history 1842 Slave Revolt in the Cherokee Nation 38 John Brown s raid on Harpers Ferry 1859 failed attempt to organize a slave rebellion Africa EditIn 1808 and 1825 there were slave rebellions in the Cape Colony newly acquired by the British Although the slave trade was officially abolished in the British Empire by the Slave Trade Act of 1807 and slavery itself a generation later with the Slavery Abolition Act 1833 it took until 1850 to be halted in the territories which were to become South Africa 39 Slave ship revolts EditSee also United States v The Amistad There are 485 recorded instances of slaves revolting on board slave ships 40 A few of these ships endured more than one uprising during their career 40 Most accounts of revolts aboard slave ships are given by Europeans There are few examples of accounts by slaves themselves William Snelgrave reported that the slaves who revolted on the British ship Henry in 1721 claimed that those who had captured them were Rogues to buy them and that they were bent on regaining their liberty 41 Another example that Richardson gives is that of James Towne who gives the account of slaves stating that Europeans did not have the right to enslave and take them away from their homeland and wives and children 42 Richardson compares several factors that contributed to slave revolts on board ships conditions on the ships geographical location and proximity to the shore 41 He suggests that revolts were more likely to occur when a ship was still in sight of the shore The threat of attack from the shore by other Africans was also a concern If the ship was hit by disease and a large portion of the crew had been killed the chances of insurrection were higher 41 Where the slaves were captured also had an effect on the number of insurrections 41 In many places such as the Bight of Benin and the Bight of Biafra the percentage of revolts and the percentage of the slave trade match up 41 Yet ships taking slaves from Senegambia experienced 22 percent of shipboard revolts while only contributing to four and a half percent of the slave trade 42 Slaves coming from West Central Africa accounted for 44 percent of the trade while only experiencing 11 percent of total revolts 42 Lorenzo J Greene gives many accounts of slave revolts on ships coming out of New England These ships belonged to Puritans who controlled much of the slave trade in New England 43 Most revolts on board ships were unsuccessful The crews of these ships while outnumbered were disciplined well fed and armed with muskets swords and sometimes cannons and they were always on guard for resistance 44 The slaves on the other hand were the opposite armed only with bits of wood and the chains that bound them 45 However some captives were able to take over the ships that were their prisons and regain their freedom On October 5 1764 the New Hampshire ship Adventure captained by John Millar was successfully taken by the enslaved aboard 44 The slaves on board revolted while the ship was anchored off the coast and all but two of the crew including Captain Millar had succumbed to disease 46 Another successful slave revolt occurred six days after the ship Little George had left the Guinea coast The ship carried ninety six slaves thirty five of which were male 44 The slaves attacked in the early hours of the morning easily overpowering the two men on guard The slaves were able to load one of the cannons on board and fire it at the crew After taking control of the ship they sailed it up the Sierra Leone River and escaped 44 After having defended themselves with muskets for several days below decks the crew lowered a small boat into the river to escape After nine days of living on raw rice they were rescued 47 Mariana P Candido notes that enslaved Africans worked on the ships that transported other Africans into slavery These men 230 in all 48 were used onboard slave ships for their ability to communicate with the slaves being brought on board and to translate between Captain and slaver 49 Enslaved sailors were able to alleviate some of the fears that newly boarded slaves had such as fear of being eaten 50 This was a double edged sword The enslaved sailors sometimes joined other slaves in the revolts against the captain they served In 1812 enslaved sailors joined a revolt on board the Portuguese ship Feliz Eugenia just off the coast of Benguela 48 The revolt took place below decks The sailors along with many of the children who were on board were able to escape using small boats 51 See also EditHistory of slavery Labour revolt List of revolutions and rebellions Slave shipBibliography EditHerbert Aptheker American Negro Slave Revolts 6 ed New York International Publ 1993 classic Matt D Childs The 1812 Aponte Rebellion in Cuba and the Struggle Against African Slavery Chapel Hill University of North Carolina Press 2006 David P Geggus ed The Impact of the Haitian Revolution in the Atlantic World Columbia University of South Carolina Press 2001 Eugene D Genovese From Rebellion to Revolution Afro American Slave Revolts in the Making of the Modern World Louisiana State University Press 1980 Joao Jose Reis Slave Rebellion in Brazil The Muslim Uprising of 1835 in Bahia Johns Hopkins Studies in Atlantic History and Culture Johns Hopkins Univ Press 1993 Rodriguez Junius P ed Encyclopedia of Slave Resistance and Rebellion Westport CT Greenwood 2007 Rodriguez Junius P ed Slavery in the United States A Social Political and Historical Encyclopedia Santa Barbara CA ABC CLIO 2007 Urbainczky Theresa Slave Revolts in Antiquity University of California Press Berkley 2008References and notes Edit Sparta A Military City State Ancienthistory about com Archived from the original on 2005 11 07 Retrieved 2013 10 04 Resisting Slavery in Ancient Rome By Professor Keith Bradle Bbc co uk Archived from the original on 2009 02 02 Retrieved 2013 10 04 The Sicilian Slave Wars and Spartacus Ancienthistory about com Archived from the original on 2013 10 04 Retrieved 2013 10 04 Chronology Of Slavery Webcitation org Archived from the original on October 23 2009 Retrieved 2013 10 04 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint unfit URL link Ways of ending slavery Britannica com 1910 01 31 Archived from the original on 2013 03 09 Retrieved 2013 10 04 Russia before Peter the Great Fsmitha com Archived from the original on 2004 12 08 Retrieved 2013 10 04 Rebellions Schools cbe ab ca Archived from the original on 2018 05 02 Retrieved 2013 10 04 Aptheker Herbert Woodward C Vann The Slave Revolts Nybooks com Archived from the original on 2009 01 12 Retrieved 2013 10 04 a href Template Cite magazine html title Template Cite magazine cite magazine a Cite magazine requires magazine help Cartledge Paul A Harvey F David eds 1985 Crux Essays in Greek History Presented to G E M De Ste Croix on His 75th Birthday History of Political Thought Vol 6 Reprint ed Duckworth p 39 ISBN 9780715620922 Archived from the original on 2022 09 14 Retrieved 2018 11 14 Drimakos took to the mountains of Chios and organized a band of runaways to carry out guerilla operations against the landed property of their former masters Urbainczyk Theresa 2008 Maintaining resistance Slave Revolts in Antiquity London Routledge published 2016 pp 30 31 ISBN 9781315478807 Archived from the original on 2022 09 14 Retrieved 2018 11 14 a b c Castillo Dennis Angelo 2006 The Maltese Cross A Strategic History of Malta Westport Greenwood Publishing Group p 91 ISBN 9780313323294 Archived from the original on 2022 09 14 Retrieved 2017 08 22 Deive Carlos Esteban 1989 Los guerrilleros negros esclavos fugitivos y cimarrones en Santo Domingo in Spanish Santo Domingo Republica Dominicana Fundacion Cultural Dominicana OCLC 21435953 Archived from the original on 2020 07 21 Retrieved 2020 07 20 Ricourt Milagros 2016 The Dominican Racial Imaginary Surveying the Landscape of Race and Nation in Hispaniola Rutgers University Press ISBN 978 0 8135 8450 8 OCLC 1020852484 Colman Gutierrez Andres December 5 2020 En busca de la India Juliana Ultima Hora in Spanish Asuncion Archived from the original on April 23 2022 Retrieved December 12 2021 Schvartzman Gabriela September 19 2020 Relatos sobre la India Juliana Entre la construccion de la memoria y la ficcion historica Periodico E a in Spanish Asuncion Atycom Archived from the original on April 8 2022 Retrieved December 12 2021 Aquino Gonzalez Romina February 20 2020 Las Kuna cerveza como simbolo cultural Ultima Hora in Spanish Archived from the original on January 18 2022 Retrieved January 16 2022 Viveros Diana April 28 2011 Personajes historicos del Paraguay India Juliana Periodico E a in Spanish Asuncion Atycom Archived from the original on January 19 2022 Retrieved January 19 2022 Holly Kathryn Norton 2013 Estate by Estate The Landscape of the 1733 St Jan Slave Rebellion PhD Syracuse University p 90 ProQuest 1369397993 An Historical Account of the Black Empire of Hayti Comprehending a View of the Principal Transactions in the Revolution of Saint Domingo with Its Ancient and Modern State World Digital Library Archived from the original on 19 December 2013 Retrieved 23 April 2013 Axismaps com Archived from the original on 2021 04 13 Retrieved 2014 03 05 Colorlines com Archived from the original on 2014 03 18 Retrieved 2014 03 05 The fedons of Grenada 1763 1814 Archived 2008 08 31 at the Wayback Machine Posted by Curtis Jacobs Retrieved March 10 2013 to 18 25 pm McGowan Winston 2006 The 1763 and 1823 slave rebellions Starbucks News Archived from the original on September 27 2007 Retrieved December 7 2006 Slave revolts in Puerto Rico conspiracies and uprisings 1795 1873 by Guillermo A Bar alt Publisher Markus Wiener Publishers ISBN 1 55876 463 1 ISBN 978 1 55876 463 7 August Thomas 1991 Rebels with a cause The St Joseph Mutiny of 1837 Slavery amp Abolition 12 2 73 91 doi 10 1080 01440399108575034 A Continuity of the 19th Century Jihaad Movements of Western Sudan Muhammad Sharif Archived from the original on 2007 02 28 Retrieved 2006 12 02 Shapiro Herbert The Impact of the Aptheker Thesis A Retrospective View of American Negro Slave Revolts Science and Society a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Aptheker Herbert 1983 American Negro Slave Revolts International Publishers p 324 ISBN 9780717806058 Nat Turner s Rebellion PBS Archived from the original on August 7 2011 Retrieved November 15 2014 Louis A DeCaro Jr John Brown The Cost of Freedom Selections from His Life amp Letters New York International Publishers 2007 p 16 Hahn Steven 2004 The Greatest Slave Rebellion in Modern History Southern Slaves in the American Civil War southernspaces org Archived from the original on April 16 2021 Retrieved August 22 2010 Peter Kolchin American Slavery 1619 1877 New York Hill and Wang 1993 pp 73 77 Joseph Cephas Carroll Slave Insurrections in the United States 1800 1865 p 13 a b Sherman Joan R 1997 Black Bard of North Carolina George Moses Horton and His Poetry Chapel Hill North Carolina University of North Carolina Press p 4 ISBN 0807823414 Rasmussen Daniel 2011 American Uprising The Untold Story of America s Largest Slave Revolt HarperCollins p 288 ISBN 9780061995217 J B Bird author and designer Black Seminole slave rebellion introduction Rebellion Johnhorse com Archived from the original on 2006 08 28 Retrieved 2013 10 04 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a author has generic name help Unidentified Young Man World Digital Library 1839 1840 Archived from the original on 2013 09 27 Retrieved 2013 07 28 Slave Revolt of 1842 Digital library okstate edu Archived from the original on 2012 11 03 Retrieved 2013 10 04 Giliomee Hermann 2003 The Afrikaners Chapter 4 Masters Slaves and Servants the fear of gelykstelling Page 93 94 a b Richardson David January 2001 Shipboard Revolts African Authority and the Atlantic Slave Trade The William and Mary Quarterly 3 58 1 72 doi 10 2307 2674419 JSTOR 2674419 PMID 18634185 a b c d e Richardson David January 2001 Shipboard Revolts African Authority and the Atlantic Slave Trade The William and Mary Quarterly 3 58 1 69 92 doi 10 2307 2674419 JSTOR 2674419 PMID 18634185 a b c Richardson David 2001 Shipboard Revolts African Authority and the Atlantic Slave Trade The William and Mary Quarterly 58 1 69 92 doi 10 2307 2674419 JSTOR 2674419 PMID 18634185 Greene Lorenzo Mutiny on Slave Ships p 346 a b c d Greene Lorenzo Mutiny on Slave Ships Greene Mutiny on Slave Ships p 347 Greene Mutiny on Slave Ships p 349 Greene Mutiny on Slave Ships p 351 a b Candido Mariana P September 2010 Different Slave Journeys Enslaved African Seamen on Board Portuguese Ships c 1760 1820s 31 3 400 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Candido 397 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Candido Mariana P September 2010 Different Slave Journeys Enslaved African Seamen on Board Portuguese Ships c 1760 1820s 31 3 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Candido 398 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Further reading Edit New York The Revolt of 1712 PBS External links Edit Bahia Revolt africanholocaust net Hart Richard Ex Attorney General of Grenada Invisible Abolitionists brh org uk Audio on slave revolts in the Caribbean Home The Slave Rebellion Website Archived from the original on 2016 03 17 Retrieved 2016 03 25 Rebellion John Horse and the Black Seminoles First Black Rebels to Beat American Slavery johnhorse com These maroons affiliated with Seminole Indians in Florida led a slave rebellion that would be the largest in U S history Welcome to Encyclopaedia Britannica s Guide to Black History Encyclopaedia Britannica Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Slave rebellion amp oldid 1149110483, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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