Reorienting the "origins debate": Anglo-American trafficking in enslaved people, c. 1615–1660.
Autor: | Roper, L. H. |
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Zdroj: | Atlantic Studies; Dec2023, Vol. 20 Issue 4, p540-557, 18p |
Abstrakt: | This article argues that trafficking in enslaved Africans and Natives constituted a chief element in English overseas colonization and was a primary component of English overseas trade from the mid-1610s. The managers of this commerce seamlessly translated Atlantic slavery into the Anglophone world decades before the establishment of the Royal African Company in 1672. Accordingly, there was never a transition in planter labor preferences from indentured servitude to slavery. Only access to supplies of enslaved Africans determined the number of Africans in Anglo-America while the act of trafficking in human beings automatically relegated those enslaved to inferior status. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR] |
Databáze: | Complementary Index |
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