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Slavery in the British and French Caribbean

Slavery in the British and French Caribbean refers to slavery in the parts of the Caribbean dominated by France or the British Empire.

Emancipation proclamation of Guadeloupe.

History edit

In the Caribbean, England colonised the islands of St. Kitts and Barbados in 1623 and 1627 respectively, and later, Jamaica in 1655. In these islands and England's other Caribbean colonies, white colonists would gradually introduce a system of slave-based labor to underpin a new economy based on cash crop production.[1]

French Institution of Slavery edit

In the mid-16th century, slaves were trafficked from Africa to the Caribbean by Europeans. Originally, white European indentured servants worked alongside enslaved Africans in the Americas. [2] Francois Bernier, who is considered to have presented the first modern concept of race, published his work “A New Division of the Earth according to the Different Species or Races of Men Who Inhabit It” in 1684, over 100 years after slaves were brought to the "New World" (the Americas).[3]

 
Black slaves serving in a house of Martinique, early 19th century

As of 1778, French slave trade transported approximately 13,000 Africans as slaves to the French West Indies each year.[4] Slavery had been active in French colonies since the early 16th century; it was first abolished by the French government in 1794, whereupon it was replaced by forced labour before being reinstated by Napoleon in 1802.[5] The French slave trade ran along a triangular route, wherein ships would travel from France to colonized African countries, and then to the Caribbean colonies.[6] The triangular setup was intentional, as France aimed to bring the African laborers to the New World, where their labor was of higher value because of the natural and cheap resources cultivated from the land, and then bring the product back to France.[6] In French, the commerce triangulaire referred to this Atlantic economy based on the trafficking of slaves from Africa.[7]

 
Saint-Domingue slave revolt in 1791

In France, the slaving interest was based in Nantes, La Rochelle, Bordeaux, and Le Havre during the years 1763 to 1792. The men involved defended their business against the abolition movement of 1789. They were merchants who specialized in funding and directing cargoes of stolen Black captives to the Caribbean colonies, which had high death rates. Caribbean plantations relied on a continuous supply of newly trafficked slaves. Slaveholding plantation owners were strongly opposed to the application of the Declaration of the Rights of Man and of the Citizen to Black people. While they ridiculed the slaves as "dirty" and "savage", they often took a Black mistress (an enslaved woman forced into sexual services). The French government paid a bounty on each captive sold to the colonies, which made the business profitable and patriotic.[8]

Slave trade edit

Slaves, wealth and goods were moved in an insular, unidirectional fashion to the exclusive benefit of Europe. In fact, the French had a policy called “the Exclusif” (exclusive in English), requiring French colonies to only sell exports to France and purchase imported goods from France.[9] This promoted the concept of “centripetal trade” in which all profit and capital spread amongst the American colonies eventually circulated back into the hands of European powers.[2] The trafficking of slaves was just one fraction of the mercantilist economy. In addition, Europeans brought “pacotille” or “cheaply made European goods” to trade with Africans. This often took the form of colonial products such as sugar, rum, tobacco, coffee, or indigo.[5] Thus African leaders, who themselves were in control of selling African captives with Europeans, did not retain the wealth they acquired in the trafficking of slaves. Rather they were the targeted customers of poorly-made pacotille.[5] Their profits from the trafficking in slaves then circled back to manufacturers in Europe, just as the Exclusif had intended.

The French trans-Atlantic trafficking of slaves has qualities of both an economy of trade and traite. Many historians consider the trafficking in slaves to be “an economy of trade according to “rational” sets of prices, and not as a pure extraction of theft of Africans from Africa by Europeans.” Indeed, the victims of chattel slavery became commodities, given a “rational” price tag. At the time the Dictionnaire universel was written the cost of a slave in a French colony was £19.[10] While this is a somewhat arbitrary number, from an economic standpoint, this is an example of trade in the sense that goods of “similar” value were exchanged. However, the Europeans purchasing slaves directly from Africa bought them for about half the price of slaves in the "New World" with the thought that slaves in Africa did not have environmental factors or technology to be as efficient as slaves in the colonies. Examples of slave prices in Africa include 172 cowries, 1/25 of a horse, and 9000 pounds of sugar. The relativity of the price of a slave contributed to the centripetal force of triangular trade. It drew profits for merchants who bought the same slaves in Africa from Africans for a low cost and then upticked the price for Europeans in the American colonies. While the exchange itself might be considered trade, the power of Europeans to monopolize the trading and trafficking in slaves and control the market poses a strong confounder to the situation, pointing the trans-Atlantic trafficking of slaves from Africa to also be an economy of traite.[2]

General overview edit

 
Hon Stedman Rawlins, slave/plantation owner, Saint Kitts, Old Burying Ground (Halifax, Nova Scotia)

The Lesser Antilles islands of Barbados, St. Kitts, Saint Vincent and the Grenadines, Antigua, Martinique, Guadeloupe, Saint Lucia and Dominica were the first important slave societies of the Caribbean, switching to the institution of slavery by the end of the 17th century as their economies converted from tobacco to sugar production, and as mercantilism became the dominant economic system in Europe. The mercantilism model limited imports and highly valued exports, which largely drove imperial efforts across Europe by utilizing slave labor in order to produce cheap goods to be sold at higher market prices upon their return to Europe. By the middle of the 18th century, British Jamaica and French Saint-Domingue (now Haiti) had become the largest slave societies of the region, rivaling Brazil as a destination for enslaved Africans.

The death rates for Black slaves in these islands were higher than birth rates. The decrease averaged about 3 percent per year in Jamaica and 4 percent a year in the smaller islands. The diary of slaveowner Thomas Thistlewood of Jamaica details violence against enslaved people, and constitutes important historical documentation of the conditions for enslaved people from the Caribbean.

For centuries the institution of slavery made sugarcane production economical. The low level of technology made production difficult and labor-intensive. At the same time, the demand for sugar was rising, particularly in Great Britain. The French colony of Saint-Domingue quickly began to out-produce all of the British islands combined. Though sugar was driven by slavery, rising costs for the British made it easier for the British abolitionists to be heard. Sugar thus became inherently linked to the institution of slavery, and the link was publicized specifically in abolition and anti-sugar movements, but was understood by many French citizens.[11] Voltaire, for example, wrote of a sighting of a maimed slave in Candide, writing: "C'est à ce prix que vous mangez du sucre en Europe" ("this is what it costs for you to eat your sugar in Europe").[12]

In addition to sugar, France additionally capitalized on "pacotille," or cheap goods such as rum, tobacco, coffee and indigo.[5] These cheap products were brought from Europe and traded to African elites in exchange for enslaved people. Profiting from "pacotille" was another method of perpetuating the mercantilism economic model.

Anglo-American institution of slavery edit

The system of African slavery that developed in the Lesser Antilles was an outgrowth of the demand for sugar and other crops. As part of Oliver Cromwell's Western Design, the English captured several Spanish colonial possessions in the West Indies, most prominently Jamaica, which was invaded and occupied in 1655. Colonists soon transformed Jamaica into a center of the Atlantic slave trade.[13]

 
A Linen Market with enslaved Africans. British West Indies, circa 1780

In 1640 the English began sugar production with the help of the Dutch. This started the Anglo-American plantation societies which would later be led by Jamaica after it was fully developed. At its peak production between 1740 and 1807 Jamaica received 33% of the total slaves who were trafficked in order to keep up its production. Other crops besides sugar were also cultivated on the plantations. Tobacco, coffee, and livestock were all produced as well using slave labor. Sugar, however, stands out most prominently due to its exorbitant popularity during the time period and the dangers of its production, which claimed the lives of many slaves.[14]

England had multiple sugar colonies in the Caribbean, especially Jamaica, Barbados, Nevis, and Antigua, which provided a steady flow of sugar to Europe and North America; indentured and slave labor produced the sugar.[15] English involvement in slavery increased as a result of the Treaty of Utrecht, which was signed in 1713.[16] During the negotiations of the treaty, of special importance was the successful secret negotiation with France to obtain a 30-year monopoly on selling African slaves in the Spanish Empire, known as the Asiento de Negros. Queen Anne of Great Britain also allowed her North American colonies like Virginia to make laws that promoted the institution of slavery. Anne had secretly negotiated with the French government to get its approval regarding the asiento, since it had previously been awarded to France to the benefit of French merchants.[17] The British government gave the asiento to the newly-formed South Sea Company.[18] Most of the trafficking of slaves by the South Sea Company involved sales to Spanish colonies in the Caribbean, and to Mexico, as well as sales to British colonies in the Caribbean and in North America.[19] Historian Vinita Ricks says the agreement allotted Queen Anne "22.5% (and King Philip V, of Spain 28%) of all profits [from the asiento] collected for her personal fortune." Ricks concludes that the Queen's "connection to slave trade revenue meant that she was no longer a neutral observer. She had a vested interest in what happened on slave ships."[20][21]

Slaves incoming to the Anglo-American colonies were at high risk both mentally and physically. The Middle Passage alone accounted for roughly 10% of all deaths of trafficked African people. Some experts believe that one out of every three slaves died before ever reaching their African port of departure. The majority of slaves in English and later British colonies originated from Western Central Africa. The conditions suffered by slaves during the voyages were extraordinarily harsh. Slaves were placed in close quarters, fed barely enough to keep them alive, and oftentimes they fell victim to diseases contracted prior to the voyage. The slaves would not see sunlight during this period. They were prone to both weight loss and scurvy.[22]

 
Slaves in the British colony of Antigua, 1823

The living and working conditions in the Lesser Antilles were excruciating for the slaved who were brought in to work the sugar plantations. The average lifespan of a slave after "adjusting" to the climate and environmental conditions of Jamaica was expected to be less than two decades. This was due to their limited familiarity and immune defense against the diseases and illnesses present in Jamaica. Disease decimated incoming slave populations. Attempts were made to help curtail the problem, but ultimately were fruitless.[23]

To help protect their investments, most slave owners would not immediately give the hardest tasks to the newest slaves. Slave owners would also set up a walled area away from the veteran slaves in order to stymie the spread of disease. These areas would contain 100–200 slaves at any time. Later, after new slaves had been purchased, they would be placed into the care of older and more experienced slaves who were already accustomed to the plantations in hopes of increasing their chances for survival. Examples of tasks assigned to new slaves include planting and constructing buildings.[citation needed]

Sugar production in the Lesser Antilles was a very grisly business. On Jamaica from 1829 to 1832 the average mortality rate for slaves on sugar plantations was 35.1 deaths per 1000 enslaved people. The most dangerous part of the sugar plantation was the cane planting. Cane planting during this era consisted of clearing land, digging the holes for the plants, and more. Overseers used the whip in an attempt to both motivate and punish slaves. The slaves themselves were also working and living with barely adequate nourishment and in times of hard work would often be starved. This contributed to low birth rates and the extremely high mortality rates for the slaves. Some experts believe that the average infant mortality at plantations to be 50% or even higher. This extremely high rate of infant mortality meant that the slave population that existed in the Lesser Antilles was not self-sustaining, thus requiring a constant importation of new slaves. Living and working conditions on non-sugar plantations was considered to be better, however, only marginally.[24]

Abolition edit

 
This scene depicts Voltaire's Candide and Cacambo meeting a maimed slave near Suriname. The caption says, "It is at this price that you eat sugar in Europe". The slave who utters the remark has had his hand cut off for getting a finger stuck in a millstone, and his leg cut off for trying to run away.

The institution of Black slavery was first abolished by the French Republic in 1794, but Napoleon revoked that decree in 1802.[25] On March 29, 1815, Napoleon abolished the slave trade but the decree did not come into effect until 1826.[26][27] France re-abolished the institution of slavery in its colonies in 1848 with a general and unconditional emancipation.[28][29]

William Wilberforce's Slave Trade Act 1807 abolished the trafficking of slaves in the British Empire. It was not until the Slavery Abolition Act 1833 that the institution was finally abolished, but on a gradual basis.[30] Since slave owners in the various colonies (not only the Caribbean) were losing their unpaid labourers, the government set aside £20 million for compensation but it did not offer the former slaves any reparations.[31][32]

The colony of Trinidad was left with a shortage of labour. This shortage became worse after the abolition of the institution of slavery in 1833. To deal with this, plantation owners on Trinidad transported indentured servants from the 1810s until 1917. Initially Chinese people, free West African people, and Portuguese people from the island of Madeira were imported, but they were soon supplanted by Indian people who started arriving from 1845. Indentured Indians would prove to be an adequate alternative for the plantations that formerly relied upon slave labour. In addition, numerous former slaves migrated from the Lesser Antilles to Trinidad to work.

In 1811 on the island of Tortola in the British Virgin Islands, Arthur William Hodge, a wealthy slaveholder, plantation owner and Council member, became the first person to be hanged for the murder of an enslaved person.

In 1833, the British Parliament passed the Slavery Abolition Act, permanently abolishing the instutiton of slavery in Britain's overseas colonies. The Act also stipulated that all formerly enslaved people would undergo a system of apprenticeship whereby they would work for their former owners for a period of time; how long this would last would be up to the government authorities in each British colony. On 1 August 1834 in Trinidad, an unarmed group of mainly elderly Black people being addressed by the Governor at Government House about the new apprenticeship laws, began chanting: "Pas de six ans. Point de six ans" ("Not six years. No six years"), drowning out the voice of the Governor. Peaceful protests continued until a resolution to abolish "apprenticeship" was passed and de facto freedom was achieved. This made Trinidad the first British colony with a slave population to completely abolish the institution of slavery.[30] The successful resistance of the implementation of the full six-year term of the Apprenticeship system and Abolition of Slavery in Trinidad was marked by ex-slaves and free people of colour joining in celebrations through the streets in what became known as their annual Canboulay celebrations. This event in Trinidad influenced full emancipation in the other British colonies which was legally granted two years ahead of schedule on 1 August 1838.

After Great Britain abolished the institution of slavery, it began to pressure other nations to do the same. France abolished the institution of slavery in 1848, in its colonies of Guadeloupe, Martinique, French Guiana and Réunion.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "British Involvement in the Transatlantic Slave Trade". The Abolition Project. E2BN – East of England Broadband Network and MLA East of England. 2009. Retrieved 28 June 2014.
  2. ^ a b c Miller, Christopher (2008). The French Atlantic Triangle: Literature and Culture of the Slave Trade. Duke University Press. p. 12. ISBN 978-0-8223-4151-2.
  3. ^ Pierre, Boulle (2003). The color of liberty : histories of race in France. Peabody, Sue., Stovall, Tyler Edward. Durham: Duke University Press. p. 20. ISBN 0-8223-3130-6. OCLC 51519592.
  4. ^ Kitchin, Thomas (1778). The Present State of the West-Indies: Containing an Accurate Description of What Parts Are Possessed by the Several Powers in Europe. London: R. Baldwin. p. 21.
  5. ^ a b c d Yee, Jennifer. 2016. “The Real Cost of Sugar: Ethics, the Slave Trade, and the Colonies.” Pg 60 in The Colonial Comedy: Imperialism in the French Realist Novel. Oxford University Press.
  6. ^ a b Miller, C. L. 2008. “Introduction.” Pg 4 in The French Atlantic triangle: literature and culture of the slave trade. Duke University Press.
  7. ^ Miller, C. L. 2008. “Introduction.” Pg 5 in The French Atlantic triangle: literature and culture of the slave trade. Duke University Press.
  8. ^ Perry Viles, "The Slaving Interest in the Atlantic Ports, 1763–1792," French Historical Studies (1972) 7#4 pp-529-43.
  9. ^ "Haiti: The Revolution of 1791-1803". faculty.webster.edu. Retrieved 2020-12-08.
  10. ^ Eltis, David; Lewis, Frank D.; Richardson, David (2005). "Slave Prices, the African Slave Trade, and Productivity in the Caribbean, 1674-1807". The Economic History Review. 58 (4): 673–700. doi:10.1111/j.1468-0289.2005.00318.x. ISSN 0013-0117. JSTOR 3698795. S2CID 133182974.
  11. ^ Yee, Jennifer. 2016. “The Real Cost of Sugar: Ethics, the Slave Trade, and the Colonies.” Pg 62 in The Colonial Comedy: Imperialism in the French Realist Novel. Oxford University Press
  12. ^ Mander, Jenny. 2019. “Colonialism and Slavery.” Pg 272 in The Cambridge History of French Thought, edited by M. Moriarty and J. Jennings. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
  13. ^ Hilary Beckles and Verene Shepherd, eds. Caribbean slavery in the Atlantic world (2000).
  14. ^ Kenneth Morgan, Slavery, Atlantic trade and the British economy, 1660–1800 (2000).
  15. ^ Richard B. Sheridan (1974). Sugar and Slavery: An Economic History of the British West Indies, 1623–1775. Canoe Press. pp. 415–26. ISBN 9789768125132.
  16. ^ David A. G. Waddel, "Queen Anne's Government and the Slave Trade." Caribbean Quarterly 6.1 (1960): 7–10.
  17. ^ Edward Gregg. Queen Anne (2001), pp. 341, 361.
  18. ^ Hugh Thomas (1997). The Slave Trade: The Story of the Atlantic Slave Trade: 1440 – 1870. Simon and Schuster. p. 236.
  19. ^ Richard B. Sheridan, "Africa and the Caribbean in the Atlantic slave trade." American Historical Review 77.1 (1972): 15–35.
  20. ^ Vinita Moch Ricks (August 2013). Through the Lens of the Transatlantic Slave Trade. p. 77. ISBN 978-1-4835-1364-5.
  21. ^ Herbert S. Klein and Ben Vinson III, eds., African slavery in Latin America and the Caribbean (2007).
  22. ^ K. F. Kiple, The Caribbean Slave: A Biological History (1985).
  23. ^ Keith Mason, "Demography, Disease and Medical Care in Caribbean Slave Societies." (1986): 109–119. DOI: 10.2307/3338787
  24. ^ Kiple, The Caribbean Slave: A Biological History (1985).
  25. ^ "French Revolutionary Wars Timeline: 1794". Emerson Kent. Emerson Kent. 2016. Retrieved February 2, 2017. the first abolition ... revoked in 1802. The second, and final, abolition will be passed in 1848.
  26. ^ "CHRONOLOGY-Who banned slavery when?". Reuters. Thomson Reuters. March 22, 2007. Retrieved February 2, 2017.
  27. ^ "Napoleon's Decree Abolishing the Slave Trade, 1815". Napoleon Series from Waterloo Association. September 2000. Retrieved 30 November 2021.
  28. ^ Oldfield, Dr John (February 17, 2011). "British Anti-slavery". BBC History. BBC. Retrieved January 2, 2017.
  29. ^ Dusenbury, Jonathan (October 10, 2016). "SLAVERY AND THE REVOLUTIONARY HISTORIES OF 1848". Age of Revolutions. Age of Revolutions. Retrieved February 2, 2017. Enter Victor Schoelcher. After returning from Senegal in early March of 1848, the prominent abolitionist persuaded Arago to place him in charge of a commission to end the institution of slavery. On April 27, the commission drafted a decree of general and unconditional emancipation in the colonies.
  30. ^ a b Dryden, John (1992), "Pas de Six Ans!", In: Seven Slaves & Slavery: Trinidad 1777–1838, by Anthony de Verteuil, Port of Spain, pp. 371–379.
  31. ^ "Slavery Abolition Act 1833". 28 August 1833. from the original on 24 May 2008. Retrieved 4 June 2008.
  32. ^ Oldfield, Dr John (February 17, 2011). "British Anti-slavery". BBC History. BBC. Retrieved January 2, 2017. the new legislation called for the gradual abolition of the institution of slavery. Everyone over the age of six on August 1, 1834, when the law went into effect, was required to serve an "apprenticeship" of four years in the case of domestics and six years in the case of field hands

Bibliography edit

 
Slave huts in Bonaire at the Salt evaporation pond)
  • Beckles, Hilary McD., and Andrew Downes. "The Economics of Transition to the Black Labor System in Barbados, 1630–1680," Journal of Interdisciplinary History, Vol. 18, No. 2 (Autumn 1987), pp. 225–247 in JSTOR
  • Brown, Vincent. "The Reaper's Garden" (Harvard University Press, 2008)
  • Bush, Barbara. "Hard Labor: Women, Childbirth, and Resistance in British Caribbean Slave Societies", in David Barry Gaspar and Darlene Clarke Hine, eds, More Than Chattel: Black Women and Slavery in the Americas (Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1996), pp. 193–217.
  • Bush, Barbara. Slave Women in Caribbean society, 1650–1838 (Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1990).
  • Butler, Kathleen Mary. The Economics of Emancipation: Jamaica & Barbados, 1823–1843 (1995) online edition
  • Dunn, Richard S., "The Barbados Census of 1680: Profile of the Richest Colony in English America," William and Mary Quarterly, vol. 26, no. 1 (January 1969), pp. 3–30. in JSTOR
  • Giraldo, Alexander. Obeah: The Ultimate Resistance (2007)
  • Miller, Joseph C., "The Way of Death: West Central Africa," (The University of Wisconsin Press, 1988)
  • Molen, Patricia A. "Population and Social Patterns in Barbados in the Early Eighteenth Century," William and Mary Quarterly, Vol. 28, No. 2 (April 1971), pp. 287–300 in JSTOR
  • Morrissey, Marietta. Slave women in the New World (Kansas: University Press of Kansas, 1989).
  • Ragatz, Lowell Joseph. "Absentee Landlordism in the British Caribbean, 1750–1833," Agricultural History, Vol. 5, No. 1 (January 1931), pp. 7–24 in JSTOR
  • Reddock, Rhoda E. "Women and Slavery in the Caribbean: A Feminist Perspective", Latin American Perspectives, 12:1 (Winter 1985), 63–80.
  • Sainvil, Talisha. Tradition and Women in Resistance (2007) Monday, November 26, 2007.
  • Sheridan; Richard B. Sugar and Slavery: An Economic History of the British West Indies, 1623–1775 (University of the West Indies Press, 1994) online edition
  • Smallwood, Stephanie. "Saltwater Slavery" (First Harvard University Press, 2008)
  • Thomas, Robert Paul. "The Sugar Colonies of the Old Empire: Profit or Loss for Great Britain?" Economic History Review Vol. 21, No. 1 (April 1968), pp. 30–45 in JSTOR
  • Couti, Jacqueline. "Dangerous Créole Liaisons, Sexuality and Nationalism in French Caribbean Discourses from 1806 to 1897" (Liverpool University Press, 2016)

External links edit

  • Phillip, Nicole (2002). Producers, Reproducers, and Rebels: Grenadian Slave Women 1783–1833 – Conference paper published by the University of the West Indies.
  • Watson, Karl (2001). Slavery and Economy in Barbados. In British History: Empire & Sea Power. The BBC, online series.
  • Report of the Brown University Steering Committee on Slavery and Justice
  • Archaeology, plantations and slavery in the French West Indies – Video by Manioc.
  • Slave community foodways on a French colonial plantation : zooarchaeology at Habitation Crève Cœur, Martinique – Video by Manioc.
  • Le cas particulier qui regarde les négresses : The Black Female Body in the Making of Eighteenth-Century French Subjectivity and Citizenship – Video by Manioc.
  • Charles Auguste Bisette and The Police des Noirs in the French Atlantic – Video by Manioc.
  • French Guiana, [s.l. ; s.n., 1919. Manioc
  • Rodway, James. Guiana : British, Dutch and French, London, T. Fisher Unwin, 1912. Manioc
  • Edwards, Bryan. An historical survey of the French colony in the island of St. Domingo : comprehending a short account of its ancient government, political state, population, productions, and exports ; a narrative of the calamities which have desolated the country ever since the year 1789, with some reflections on their causes and probable consequences : and a detail of the military transactions of the British army in that island to the end of 1794, London, John Stockdale, 1797. Manioc

slavery, british, french, caribbean, refers, slavery, parts, caribbean, dominated, france, british, empire, emancipation, proclamation, guadeloupe, this, article, lead, section, short, adequately, summarize, points, please, consider, expanding, lead, provide, . Slavery in the British and French Caribbean refers to slavery in the parts of the Caribbean dominated by France or the British Empire Emancipation proclamation of Guadeloupe This article s lead section may be too short to adequately summarize the key points Please consider expanding the lead to provide an accessible overview of all important aspects of the article May 2022 Contents 1 History 1 1 French Institution of Slavery 1 2 Slave trade 2 General overview 3 Anglo American institution of slavery 4 Abolition 5 See also 6 References 7 Bibliography 8 External linksHistory editIn the Caribbean England colonised the islands of St Kitts and Barbados in 1623 and 1627 respectively and later Jamaica in 1655 In these islands and England s other Caribbean colonies white colonists would gradually introduce a system of slave based labor to underpin a new economy based on cash crop production 1 French Institution of Slavery edit See also Natural person in French law In the mid 16th century slaves were trafficked from Africa to the Caribbean by Europeans Originally white European indentured servants worked alongside enslaved Africans in the Americas 2 Francois Bernier who is considered to have presented the first modern concept of race published his work A New Division of the Earth according to the Different Species or Races of Men Who Inhabit It in 1684 over 100 years after slaves were brought to the New World the Americas 3 nbsp Black slaves serving in a house of Martinique early 19th centuryAs of 1778 French slave trade transported approximately 13 000 Africans as slaves to the French West Indies each year 4 Slavery had been active in French colonies since the early 16th century it was first abolished by the French government in 1794 whereupon it was replaced by forced labour before being reinstated by Napoleon in 1802 5 The French slave trade ran along a triangular route wherein ships would travel from France to colonized African countries and then to the Caribbean colonies 6 The triangular setup was intentional as France aimed to bring the African laborers to the New World where their labor was of higher value because of the natural and cheap resources cultivated from the land and then bring the product back to France 6 In French the commerce triangulaire referred to this Atlantic economy based on the trafficking of slaves from Africa 7 nbsp Saint Domingue slave revolt in 1791In France the slaving interest was based in Nantes La Rochelle Bordeaux and Le Havre during the years 1763 to 1792 The men involved defended their business against the abolition movement of 1789 They were merchants who specialized in funding and directing cargoes of stolen Black captives to the Caribbean colonies which had high death rates Caribbean plantations relied on a continuous supply of newly trafficked slaves Slaveholding plantation owners were strongly opposed to the application of the Declaration of the Rights of Man and of the Citizen to Black people While they ridiculed the slaves as dirty and savage they often took a Black mistress an enslaved woman forced into sexual services The French government paid a bounty on each captive sold to the colonies which made the business profitable and patriotic 8 Slave trade edit Slaves wealth and goods were moved in an insular unidirectional fashion to the exclusive benefit of Europe In fact the French had a policy called the Exclusif exclusive in English requiring French colonies to only sell exports to France and purchase imported goods from France 9 This promoted the concept of centripetal trade in which all profit and capital spread amongst the American colonies eventually circulated back into the hands of European powers 2 The trafficking of slaves was just one fraction of the mercantilist economy In addition Europeans brought pacotille or cheaply made European goods to trade with Africans This often took the form of colonial products such as sugar rum tobacco coffee or indigo 5 Thus African leaders who themselves were in control of selling African captives with Europeans did not retain the wealth they acquired in the trafficking of slaves Rather they were the targeted customers of poorly made pacotille 5 Their profits from the trafficking in slaves then circled back to manufacturers in Europe just as the Exclusif had intended The French trans Atlantic trafficking of slaves has qualities of both an economy of trade and traite Many historians consider the trafficking in slaves to be an economy of trade according to rational sets of prices and not as a pure extraction of theft of Africans from Africa by Europeans Indeed the victims of chattel slavery became commodities given a rational price tag At the time the Dictionnaire universel was written the cost of a slave in a French colony was 19 10 While this is a somewhat arbitrary number from an economic standpoint this is an example of trade in the sense that goods of similar value were exchanged However the Europeans purchasing slaves directly from Africa bought them for about half the price of slaves in the New World with the thought that slaves in Africa did not have environmental factors or technology to be as efficient as slaves in the colonies Examples of slave prices in Africa include 172 cowries 1 25 of a horse and 9000 pounds of sugar The relativity of the price of a slave contributed to the centripetal force of triangular trade It drew profits for merchants who bought the same slaves in Africa from Africans for a low cost and then upticked the price for Europeans in the American colonies While the exchange itself might be considered trade the power of Europeans to monopolize the trading and trafficking in slaves and control the market poses a strong confounder to the situation pointing the trans Atlantic trafficking of slaves from Africa to also be an economy of traite 2 General overview edit nbsp Hon Stedman Rawlins slave plantation owner Saint Kitts Old Burying Ground Halifax Nova Scotia The Lesser Antilles islands of Barbados St Kitts Saint Vincent and the Grenadines Antigua Martinique Guadeloupe Saint Lucia and Dominica were the first important slave societies of the Caribbean switching to the institution of slavery by the end of the 17th century as their economies converted from tobacco to sugar production and as mercantilism became the dominant economic system in Europe The mercantilism model limited imports and highly valued exports which largely drove imperial efforts across Europe by utilizing slave labor in order to produce cheap goods to be sold at higher market prices upon their return to Europe By the middle of the 18th century British Jamaica and French Saint Domingue now Haiti had become the largest slave societies of the region rivaling Brazil as a destination for enslaved Africans The death rates for Black slaves in these islands were higher than birth rates The decrease averaged about 3 percent per year in Jamaica and 4 percent a year in the smaller islands The diary of slaveowner Thomas Thistlewood of Jamaica details violence against enslaved people and constitutes important historical documentation of the conditions for enslaved people from the Caribbean For centuries the institution of slavery made sugarcane production economical The low level of technology made production difficult and labor intensive At the same time the demand for sugar was rising particularly in Great Britain The French colony of Saint Domingue quickly began to out produce all of the British islands combined Though sugar was driven by slavery rising costs for the British made it easier for the British abolitionists to be heard Sugar thus became inherently linked to the institution of slavery and the link was publicized specifically in abolition and anti sugar movements but was understood by many French citizens 11 Voltaire for example wrote of a sighting of a maimed slave in Candide writing C est a ce prix que vous mangez du sucre en Europe this is what it costs for you to eat your sugar in Europe 12 In addition to sugar France additionally capitalized on pacotille or cheap goods such as rum tobacco coffee and indigo 5 These cheap products were brought from Europe and traded to African elites in exchange for enslaved people Profiting from pacotille was another method of perpetuating the mercantilism economic model Anglo American institution of slavery editThe system of African slavery that developed in the Lesser Antilles was an outgrowth of the demand for sugar and other crops As part of Oliver Cromwell s Western Design the English captured several Spanish colonial possessions in the West Indies most prominently Jamaica which was invaded and occupied in 1655 Colonists soon transformed Jamaica into a center of the Atlantic slave trade 13 nbsp A Linen Market with enslaved Africans British West Indies circa 1780In 1640 the English began sugar production with the help of the Dutch This started the Anglo American plantation societies which would later be led by Jamaica after it was fully developed At its peak production between 1740 and 1807 Jamaica received 33 of the total slaves who were trafficked in order to keep up its production Other crops besides sugar were also cultivated on the plantations Tobacco coffee and livestock were all produced as well using slave labor Sugar however stands out most prominently due to its exorbitant popularity during the time period and the dangers of its production which claimed the lives of many slaves 14 England had multiple sugar colonies in the Caribbean especially Jamaica Barbados Nevis and Antigua which provided a steady flow of sugar to Europe and North America indentured and slave labor produced the sugar 15 English involvement in slavery increased as a result of the Treaty of Utrecht which was signed in 1713 16 During the negotiations of the treaty of special importance was the successful secret negotiation with France to obtain a 30 year monopoly on selling African slaves in the Spanish Empire known as the Asiento de Negros Queen Anne of Great Britain also allowed her North American colonies like Virginia to make laws that promoted the institution of slavery Anne had secretly negotiated with the French government to get its approval regarding the asiento since it had previously been awarded to France to the benefit of French merchants 17 The British government gave the asiento to the newly formed South Sea Company 18 Most of the trafficking of slaves by the South Sea Company involved sales to Spanish colonies in the Caribbean and to Mexico as well as sales to British colonies in the Caribbean and in North America 19 Historian Vinita Ricks says the agreement allotted Queen Anne 22 5 and King Philip V of Spain 28 of all profits from the asiento collected for her personal fortune Ricks concludes that the Queen s connection to slave trade revenue meant that she was no longer a neutral observer She had a vested interest in what happened on slave ships 20 21 Slaves incoming to the Anglo American colonies were at high risk both mentally and physically The Middle Passage alone accounted for roughly 10 of all deaths of trafficked African people Some experts believe that one out of every three slaves died before ever reaching their African port of departure The majority of slaves in English and later British colonies originated from Western Central Africa The conditions suffered by slaves during the voyages were extraordinarily harsh Slaves were placed in close quarters fed barely enough to keep them alive and oftentimes they fell victim to diseases contracted prior to the voyage The slaves would not see sunlight during this period They were prone to both weight loss and scurvy 22 nbsp Slaves in the British colony of Antigua 1823The living and working conditions in the Lesser Antilles were excruciating for the slaved who were brought in to work the sugar plantations The average lifespan of a slave after adjusting to the climate and environmental conditions of Jamaica was expected to be less than two decades This was due to their limited familiarity and immune defense against the diseases and illnesses present in Jamaica Disease decimated incoming slave populations Attempts were made to help curtail the problem but ultimately were fruitless 23 To help protect their investments most slave owners would not immediately give the hardest tasks to the newest slaves Slave owners would also set up a walled area away from the veteran slaves in order to stymie the spread of disease These areas would contain 100 200 slaves at any time Later after new slaves had been purchased they would be placed into the care of older and more experienced slaves who were already accustomed to the plantations in hopes of increasing their chances for survival Examples of tasks assigned to new slaves include planting and constructing buildings citation needed Sugar production in the Lesser Antilles was a very grisly business On Jamaica from 1829 to 1832 the average mortality rate for slaves on sugar plantations was 35 1 deaths per 1000 enslaved people The most dangerous part of the sugar plantation was the cane planting Cane planting during this era consisted of clearing land digging the holes for the plants and more Overseers used the whip in an attempt to both motivate and punish slaves The slaves themselves were also working and living with barely adequate nourishment and in times of hard work would often be starved This contributed to low birth rates and the extremely high mortality rates for the slaves Some experts believe that the average infant mortality at plantations to be 50 or even higher This extremely high rate of infant mortality meant that the slave population that existed in the Lesser Antilles was not self sustaining thus requiring a constant importation of new slaves Living and working conditions on non sugar plantations was considered to be better however only marginally 24 Abolition editMain article Abolitionism nbsp This scene depicts Voltaire s Candide and Cacambo meeting a maimed slave near Suriname The caption says It is at this price that you eat sugar in Europe The slave who utters the remark has had his hand cut off for getting a finger stuck in a millstone and his leg cut off for trying to run away The institution of Black slavery was first abolished by the French Republic in 1794 but Napoleon revoked that decree in 1802 25 On March 29 1815 Napoleon abolished the slave trade but the decree did not come into effect until 1826 26 27 France re abolished the institution of slavery in its colonies in 1848 with a general and unconditional emancipation 28 29 William Wilberforce s Slave Trade Act 1807 abolished the trafficking of slaves in the British Empire It was not until the Slavery Abolition Act 1833 that the institution was finally abolished but on a gradual basis 30 Since slave owners in the various colonies not only the Caribbean were losing their unpaid labourers the government set aside 20 million for compensation but it did not offer the former slaves any reparations 31 32 The colony of Trinidad was left with a shortage of labour This shortage became worse after the abolition of the institution of slavery in 1833 To deal with this plantation owners on Trinidad transported indentured servants from the 1810s until 1917 Initially Chinese people free West African people and Portuguese people from the island of Madeira were imported but they were soon supplanted by Indian people who started arriving from 1845 Indentured Indians would prove to be an adequate alternative for the plantations that formerly relied upon slave labour In addition numerous former slaves migrated from the Lesser Antilles to Trinidad to work In 1811 on the island of Tortola in the British Virgin Islands Arthur William Hodge a wealthy slaveholder plantation owner and Council member became the first person to be hanged for the murder of an enslaved person In 1833 the British Parliament passed the Slavery Abolition Act permanently abolishing the instutiton of slavery in Britain s overseas colonies The Act also stipulated that all formerly enslaved people would undergo a system of apprenticeship whereby they would work for their former owners for a period of time how long this would last would be up to the government authorities in each British colony On 1 August 1834 in Trinidad an unarmed group of mainly elderly Black people being addressed by the Governor at Government House about the new apprenticeship laws began chanting Pas de six ans Point de six ans Not six years No six years drowning out the voice of the Governor Peaceful protests continued until a resolution to abolish apprenticeship was passed and de facto freedom was achieved This made Trinidad the first British colony with a slave population to completely abolish the institution of slavery 30 The successful resistance of the implementation of the full six year term of the Apprenticeship system and Abolition of Slavery in Trinidad was marked by ex slaves and free people of colour joining in celebrations through the streets in what became known as their annual Canboulay celebrations This event in Trinidad influenced full emancipation in the other British colonies which was legally granted two years ahead of schedule on 1 August 1838 After Great Britain abolished the institution of slavery it began to pressure other nations to do the same France abolished the institution of slavery in 1848 in its colonies of Guadeloupe Martinique French Guiana and Reunion See also editAmelioration Act 1798 Barbados Cricket Buckle Barbados Slave Code Centre for the Study of the Legacies of British Slavery Code Noir Demerara rebellion of 1823 Antoine Lavalette Jesuit priest slave holder and currency speculator Natural person in French law Slavery in Haiti Slavery in the British Virgin Islands Sugar plantations in the CaribbeanReferences edit British Involvement in the Transatlantic Slave Trade The Abolition Project E2BN East of England Broadband Network and MLA East of England 2009 Retrieved 28 June 2014 a b c Miller Christopher 2008 The French Atlantic Triangle Literature and Culture of the Slave Trade Duke University Press p 12 ISBN 978 0 8223 4151 2 Pierre Boulle 2003 The color of liberty histories of race in France Peabody Sue Stovall Tyler Edward Durham Duke University Press p 20 ISBN 0 8223 3130 6 OCLC 51519592 Kitchin Thomas 1778 The Present State of the West Indies Containing an Accurate Description of What Parts Are Possessed by the Several Powers in Europe London R Baldwin p 21 a b c d Yee Jennifer 2016 The Real Cost of Sugar Ethics the Slave Trade and the Colonies Pg 60 in The Colonial Comedy Imperialism in the French Realist Novel Oxford University Press a b Miller C L 2008 Introduction Pg 4 in The French Atlantic triangle literature and culture of the slave trade Duke University Press Miller C L 2008 Introduction Pg 5 in The French Atlantic triangle literature and culture of the slave trade Duke University Press Perry Viles The Slaving Interest in the Atlantic Ports 1763 1792 French Historical Studies 1972 7 4 pp 529 43 Haiti The Revolution of 1791 1803 faculty webster edu Retrieved 2020 12 08 Eltis David Lewis Frank D Richardson David 2005 Slave Prices the African Slave Trade and Productivity in the Caribbean 1674 1807 The Economic History Review 58 4 673 700 doi 10 1111 j 1468 0289 2005 00318 x ISSN 0013 0117 JSTOR 3698795 S2CID 133182974 Yee Jennifer 2016 The Real Cost of Sugar Ethics the Slave Trade and the Colonies Pg 62 in The Colonial Comedy Imperialism in the French Realist Novel Oxford University Press Mander Jenny 2019 Colonialism and Slavery Pg 272 in The Cambridge History of French Thought edited by M Moriarty and J Jennings Cambridge Cambridge University Press Hilary Beckles and Verene Shepherd eds Caribbean slavery in the Atlantic world 2000 Kenneth Morgan Slavery Atlantic trade and the British economy 1660 1800 2000 Richard B Sheridan 1974 Sugar and Slavery An Economic History of the British West Indies 1623 1775 Canoe Press pp 415 26 ISBN 9789768125132 David A G Waddel Queen Anne s Government and the Slave Trade Caribbean Quarterly 6 1 1960 7 10 Edward Gregg Queen Anne 2001 pp 341 361 Hugh Thomas 1997 The Slave Trade The Story of the Atlantic Slave Trade 1440 1870 Simon and Schuster p 236 Richard B Sheridan Africa and the Caribbean in the Atlantic slave trade American Historical Review 77 1 1972 15 35 Vinita Moch Ricks August 2013 Through the Lens of the Transatlantic Slave Trade p 77 ISBN 978 1 4835 1364 5 Herbert S Klein and Ben Vinson III eds African slavery in Latin America and the Caribbean 2007 K F Kiple The Caribbean Slave A Biological History 1985 Keith Mason Demography Disease and Medical Care in Caribbean Slave Societies 1986 109 119 DOI 10 2307 3338787 Kiple The Caribbean Slave A Biological History 1985 French Revolutionary Wars Timeline 1794 Emerson Kent Emerson Kent 2016 Retrieved February 2 2017 the first abolition revoked in 1802 The second and final abolition will be passed in 1848 CHRONOLOGY Who banned slavery when Reuters Thomson Reuters March 22 2007 Retrieved February 2 2017 Napoleon s Decree Abolishing the Slave Trade 1815 Napoleon Series from Waterloo Association September 2000 Retrieved 30 November 2021 Oldfield Dr John February 17 2011 British Anti slavery BBC History BBC Retrieved January 2 2017 Dusenbury Jonathan October 10 2016 SLAVERY AND THE REVOLUTIONARY HISTORIES OF 1848 Age of Revolutions Age of Revolutions Retrieved February 2 2017 Enter Victor Schoelcher After returning from Senegal in early March of 1848 the prominent abolitionist persuaded Arago to place him in charge of a commission to end the institution of slavery On April 27 the commission drafted a decree of general and unconditional emancipation in the colonies a b Dryden John 1992 Pas de Six Ans In Seven Slaves amp Slavery Trinidad 1777 1838 by Anthony de Verteuil Port of Spain pp 371 379 Slavery Abolition Act 1833 28 August 1833 Archived from the original on 24 May 2008 Retrieved 4 June 2008 Oldfield Dr John February 17 2011 British Anti slavery BBC History BBC Retrieved January 2 2017 the new legislation called for the gradual abolition of the institution of slavery Everyone over the age of six on August 1 1834 when the law went into effect was required to serve an apprenticeship of four years in the case of domestics and six years in the case of field handsBibliography edit nbsp Slave huts in Bonaire at the Salt evaporation pond Beckles Hilary McD and Andrew Downes The Economics of Transition to the Black Labor System in Barbados 1630 1680 Journal of Interdisciplinary History Vol 18 No 2 Autumn 1987 pp 225 247 in JSTOR Brown Vincent The Reaper s Garden Harvard University Press 2008 Bush Barbara Hard Labor Women Childbirth and Resistance in British Caribbean Slave Societies in David Barry Gaspar and Darlene Clarke Hine eds More Than Chattel Black Women and Slavery in the Americas Bloomington Indiana University Press 1996 pp 193 217 Bush Barbara Slave Women in Caribbean society 1650 1838 Bloomington Indiana University Press 1990 Butler Kathleen Mary The Economics of Emancipation Jamaica amp Barbados 1823 1843 1995 online edition Dunn Richard S The Barbados Census of 1680 Profile of the Richest Colony in English America William and Mary Quarterly vol 26 no 1 January 1969 pp 3 30 in JSTOR Giraldo Alexander Obeah The Ultimate Resistance 2007 Miller Joseph C The Way of Death West Central Africa The University of Wisconsin Press 1988 Molen Patricia A Population and Social Patterns in Barbados in the Early Eighteenth Century William and Mary Quarterly Vol 28 No 2 April 1971 pp 287 300 in JSTOR Morrissey Marietta Slave women in the New World Kansas University Press of Kansas 1989 Ragatz Lowell Joseph Absentee Landlordism in the British Caribbean 1750 1833 Agricultural History Vol 5 No 1 January 1931 pp 7 24 in JSTOR Reddock Rhoda E Women and Slavery in the Caribbean A Feminist Perspective Latin American Perspectives 12 1 Winter 1985 63 80 Sainvil Talisha Tradition and Women in Resistance 2007 Monday November 26 2007 Sheridan Richard B Sugar and Slavery An Economic History of the British West Indies 1623 1775 University of the West Indies Press 1994 online edition Smallwood Stephanie Saltwater Slavery First Harvard University Press 2008 Thomas Robert Paul The Sugar Colonies of the Old Empire Profit or Loss for Great Britain Economic History Review Vol 21 No 1 April 1968 pp 30 45 in JSTOR Couti Jacqueline Dangerous Creole Liaisons Sexuality and Nationalism in French Caribbean Discourses from 1806 to 1897 Liverpool University Press 2016 External links editPhillip Nicole 2002 Producers Reproducers and Rebels Grenadian Slave Women 1783 1833 Conference paper published by the University of the West Indies Watson Karl 2001 Slavery and Economy in Barbados In British History Empire amp Sea Power The BBC online series Report of the Brown University Steering Committee on Slavery and Justice Archaeology plantations and slavery in the French West Indies Video by Manioc Slave community foodways on a French colonial plantation zooarchaeology at Habitation Creve Cœur Martinique Video by Manioc Le cas particulier qui regarde les negresses The Black Female Body in the Making of Eighteenth Century French Subjectivity and Citizenship Video by Manioc Charles Auguste Bisette and The Police des Noirs in the French Atlantic Video by Manioc French Guiana s l s n 1919 Manioc Rodway James Guiana British Dutch and French London T Fisher Unwin 1912 Manioc Edwards Bryan An historical survey of the French colony in the island of St Domingo comprehending a short account of its ancient government political state population productions and exports a narrative of the calamities which have desolated the country ever since the year 1789 with some reflections on their causes and probable consequences and a detail of the military transactions of the British army in that island to the end of 1794 London John Stockdale 1797 Manioc Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Slavery in the British and French Caribbean amp oldid 1195836005, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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