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  1. Jun 23, 2023 · In this bibliography we will confine ourselves to slave trades in which European and peri-Mediterranean lands served a locus of supply, demand, and/or resale. Most historians of slavery now prefer to look at “types of unfreedom,” in which formal notions of slavery did not always play a part.

  2. Beginning in 1750, the abolitionist movement developed starting from its English origins, combining arguments of an economic, philosophical, and religious nature. Inequalities in development explain the chronological differences between the end of the slave trade and the abolition of slavery.

  3. Sep 29, 2017 · This essay aims at bringing together research on Germany’s colonial past and imperialist endeavors with current trends in scholarship in Atlantic history and slavery studies.

    • Heike Raphael-Hernandez, Pia Wiegmink
    • 2017
  4. Sep 9, 2021 · People enslaved in the Baltic now tended to be traded westward rather than eastward; people enslaved in eastern Europe and the Caucasus tended to pass through the Black Sea into Italian, Mamluk, or Ottoman hands; and people enslaved in the Balkans were trafficked primarily by Venetians or Ottomans.

  5. Mar 10, 2017 · Klein discusses the ongoing challenge of history teaching, analyzing key educational websites on the controversial issue of the Atlantic slave trade and slavery in the Netherlands and England. From the mid-twentieth century onwards, major social and technical changes...

  6. A comparison of the two images suggests that the sketch was drawn from memory, and as such it tells us something both about the circulation of slavery and anti-slavery discourses in continental Europe in the late eighteenth century.

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  8. Dec 20, 2022 · Of the 500 case studies, 180 relate directly to colonial and slavery-era legacies. They range from the island of Gorée in Senegal, to the Coolela Monument in Mozambique, to the Josephine Bonaparte statue in Martinique, to Valongo Wharf in Brazil, and more than a dozen sites in continental Europe.

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