「Slaves」の共起表現一覧(1語右で並び替え)2ページ目
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However, the law permitted the use of | slaves at the salt works since the labor was so arduo |
ison Hemings and Israel Jefferson, both former | slaves at Monticello, published newspaper interviews |
power to transform helpless animals into robot | slaves at an astounding rate. |
They established facilities for the newly free | slaves at the Fort Monroe Contraband Camp, located ou |
He gave Wallace a job teaching freed | slaves at a school he set up on his plantation. |
nding when Louis DuBois, purchased two African | slaves at a public auction held in Kingston, then cal |
than one-third of all Southern families owned | slaves at the peak of slavery prior to the Civil War. |
The | slaves attached to the temple alone numbered not less |
prohibiting the military from sending escaped | slaves back into slavery. |
u, with bringing large numbers of captives and | slaves back across the Sahara to form the Gnawa. |
Historically, | slaves became freedmen either by manumission (granted |
Reverend James M. Nabrit, Sr., a son of former | slaves, became President of the American Baptist Inst |
ron Albert Mossell I (1824-?), the grandson of | slaves, became a brickmaker and in Hamilton went to s |
known about her than any other of Washington's | slaves because she was twice interviewed by abolition |
The House of Fear, where | slaves become beasts - similar to the House of Pain l |
ctims, mostly teenagers, whom they kept as sex | slaves before killing them. |
Although Quakers had released their | slaves before the revolution, and worked to change th |
The prize was preparing to load more | slaves before getting under way for America. |
When | slaves began escaping to Union lines at the fort, Gen |
had grown substantially as freed and fugitive | slaves began to unite with the city's substantial Qua |
during the early years of the War, emboldened | slaves began fleeing behind Union lines to secure the |
the Soldiers' Aid Society, Emancipation of the | Slaves, Beginning of the War in Ohio and the End of t |
d to have served as a hiding place for escaped | slaves being transported on the Underground Railroad. |
slave pen built in 1830 that was used to house | slaves being shipped to auction. |
fiscation Act issued on July 17th declared all | slaves belonging to a rebel were free. |
By 1850 Luke Pryor was recorded with 39 | slaves between the ages of 70 years old and as young |
se of Rankin v. Lydia concerning the status of | slaves born in the Northwest Territory where the Ordi |
This law granted freedom to | slaves born after September 17, 1868, slaves who serv |
Ramsay had witnessed of the conditions of the | slaves both at sea and on the plantations horrified h |
an Isaac ben Abravanel, having seen many black | slaves both in his native Portugal and in Spain, merg |
the border states, War Democrats, emancipated | slaves, Britain, and France. |
diumistic overtones inherited from the African | slaves brought to the country in colonial times. |
of cumbia music also originally of the African | slaves brought to Ecuador and Colombia. |
tinique's population is descended from African | slaves brought to work on sugar plantations during th |
The Barnes | slaves, brought from Ireland, would be hidden in the |
re Spanish Floridians and about 10,000 African | slaves, brought by the Anglo-Floridian farm owners in |
eedi are said to be the descendants of African | slaves brought from Zanzibar and maintain their disti |
er estimates there were as many as fifty black | slaves brought by Confederate officials and troops, i |
rs of this new congregation (most of whom were | slaves) built their current church building on Frankl |
tore up railroads and burned crossties, freed | slaves, burned Confederate storehouses, destroyed loc |
e master insisted that he marry another of the | slaves, but Malchus, faithful to his monastic vocatio |
e it clear they would never sell land to freed | slaves, but provide only tied accommodation at the re |
Not as | slaves, but as Freemen our money we'll give. |
nflicted cruel or unusual punishments on their | slaves, but it only provides for fines, and does not |
Brownrigg led a boarding party to release the | slaves but bin Hattam's men then attacked the sailors |
ffice he promised not to take away the south's | slaves, but that slavery would not move west. |
gislature repealed laws against the traffic of | slaves, but prohibited the importation of slaves unde |
om these ostraca we can see that they were not | slaves but well cared for state employees who held so |
e it clear they would never sell land to freed | slaves, but provide only tied accommodation at the re |
e plantation was worked by approximately 1,000 | slaves, but Yulee was an absentee owner, spending mos |
ividuals, out of a population of 190,000, were | slaves, but this is believed to have been a relativel |
e adequate ministration and education to freed | slaves, but was largely unsuccessful. |
Moran), sailing to what is now Nigeria to buy | slaves but, increasingly shocked by the brutality of |
2,000 acres (8.1 km2) and 20 African-American | slaves by the end of the first decade of the 19th cen |
Civil War had been briefly reserved for freed | slaves by General Sherman's Special Field Orders, No. |
a specific area reserved for the execution of | slaves by crucifixion. |
by Great Britain helped reduce legal trade in | slaves by putting the British navy into action agains |
Benjamin Gould (WBG) escaped with seven other | slaves by rowing a small boat 28 nautical miles (52 k |
by a desire to free Christian captives held as | slaves by the Muslims and to curtail Muslim piracy "f |
Spain) managed to escape, later to be taken as | slaves by another Mayan chief named Xamanzana who was |
mong Dhers there were three principal class of | slaves called Holiyas, Yemaru and Paleru. |
Such | slaves came to be called "contraband," a term emphasi |
tes like Virginia or Maryland, the majority of | slaves came from within the boundaries of the modern |
u, and at one point, nearly 10,000 newly-freed | slaves camped out on the plantation's lands. |
s, numbering at this time, 151 souls, so these | slaves can come out and be refreshed in body and soul |
States rules that Blacks are not citizens and | slaves can not sue for freedom, driving the country f |
ourished through trade, especially that of the | slaves captured in their many wars. |
nominal purpose of the mission was to free the | slaves captured and sold by Turkmen raiders from the |
March 2, 1807 - Act Prohibiting Importation of | Slaves, ch. |
frequently associated with the rattling of the | slaves' chains. |
One of these | slaves, Charity, is the feature of new research surro |
D. and Cindaulor Berry, Elender Butler and two | slaves, Charles and Elizer. |
histories of LaLaurie's poor treatment of her | slaves circulated in Louisiana during the nineteenth |
His | slaves cleared the land and were responsible for the |
The importation of African | slaves, common to most Caribbean islands, began early |
ter Linebaugh: The Many-Headed Hydra: Sailors, | Slaves, Commoners, and the Hidden History of the Revo |
trict to its "Seven to Save" list, since freed | slaves congregated and lived around a nearby African |
Given the power to confiscate | slaves, Congress proclaimed: “That every person who s |
Throughout the next 125 years, references to | slaves continually appeared in the historical records |
However, it is evident that | slaves continued to be used to propel the industry, e |
f the South became furious over this matter as | slaves continued to escape to Florida.:18-22 |
Although the | slaves continued to die over the next month, most rec |
n Franklin Butler, in May 1861, declared black | slaves contraband of war. |
marched to Alexandria, Louisiana, hauling off | slaves, cotton, and cattle from a rich agricultural a |
egislated the gradual abolition of slavery: no | slaves could be imported; slaves already in the provi |
2 he devised a manumission scheme by which his | slaves could buy their freedom. |
hn Munroe Brazealle was still a slave and that | slaves could not inherit property. |
tains a concealed compartment in which escaped | slaves could be hidden. |
se frontier elements with stereotypes of black | slaves, creating a new character who lives "On de Ohi |
strates the fields and the river that escaping | slaves crossed to reach freedom. |
s were beheaded, plebeians thrown to lions and | slaves crucified |
n to Mont Royal to help Madeline and the freed | slaves defeat the Ku Klux Klan. |
The next year a riot broke out by newly-freed | slaves demanding the franchise. |
ifficulty with the Bishop, insurrection of the | slaves, depreciation in the value of property occurri |
At the first shots, many of the galley | slaves deserted their positions and fled below decks, |
The | slaves developed the notable and distinct Gullah/Geec |
bmission of the slave perfect", but noted that | slaves did have legal right of protection from person |
ounter-example to slaveholders' arguments that | slaves did not have the intellectual capacity to func |
Some | slaves did choose to stay with their former owners bu |
Many | slaves died of disease in the crowded holds of the sl |
Two of Cooley's black | slaves disappeared. |
The number of | slaves dropped off dramatically and there were only t |
Centuries ago, Jefferson's | slaves dug a 300 meter long cut into the red clay hil |
long one, beginning with folktales told by the | slaves during the colonial period. |
l creature developed to frighten superstitious | slaves during the American Civil War. |
larly focused on rural slavery and the life of | slaves during the early Cape colonial period. |
However, his contact with the | slaves during the outbreak caused him to contract opt |
de of town which in which the African-American | slaves dwelt was called the "Negro Quarters" or simpl |
ver, to suggest Andrew may have first acquired | slaves earlier than 1842. |
New York | Slaves Electrosexual Slavery on Music from Rock Machi |
Most | slaves engaged in agriculture were to be found on far |
raguayan War contributed to end slavery, since | slaves enlisted in exchange for freedom. |
was also through Lagos that the first African | slaves entered post-medieval Europe. |
istory: Between 1842 and 1873, 221,000 African | slaves entered Cuba. |
"an obscure and humble person" who had had his | slaves enticed away by a group of armed Bretons. |
e was part of the Underground Railroad helping | slaves escape to the North and that the tunnel still |
stop on the Underground Railroad, which helped | slaves escape from the South. |
e in the Underground Railroad that helped many | slaves escape from the South. |
ty of the claim that the song was used to help | slaves escape to the North and to freedom. |
und Railroad had previously supported fugitive | slaves escape from Southern slaveholding states to fr |
earthquake saw much more death as thousands of | slaves escaped in the chaos, the local economy collap |
Henson's settlement offered former | slaves escaped from the U.S. the chance to start a ne |
An estimated 25,000 | slaves escaped in South Carolina; 30,000 in Virginia, |
During the war, tens of thousands of | slaves escaped, having a substantial economic effect |
At the young age of 17, Silas was escorting | slaves, escapees from Missouri, north to freedom. |
or Underground Railroad route used by fugitive | slaves escaping from the South on their journey north |
1945, | Slaves et Germains, Paris, Librairie Armand Colin, 19 |
esbyterian, Wesleyans, and Moravian-affiliated | slaves, except insofar that there was a higher level |
century, newspapers reported that 65,000 white | slaves existed. |
The work focuses on the afflictions that | slaves faced, such as their diet, clothing, housing, |
t temporarily paralyses the Daleks and the Pig | Slaves, facilitating an escape. |
ual tribute to the emperor consisting of fifty | slaves, fifty horses and 3,000 pounds of gold. |
te Park contains the nation's only monument to | slaves fighting on the Confederate side of the Americ |
merican to teach openly in a school for former | slaves, first black Army nurse |
Plantation | slaves first discovered that molasses, a by-product o |
l city, as a haven for chiefly former American | slaves first relocated to Nova Scotia by the British |
The term "contraband" in referring escaped | slaves first enters the Official Records in U.S. Navy |
perated an Underground Railroad station to aid | slaves fleeing to freedom. |
royed by a fire allegedly set by freed African | slaves following the American Civil War but its thick |
partnership in 1841, by which Bryan furnished | slaves for Woodlands. |
to employ the assistance of a large number of | slaves for labour; although they did not need to pay |
from a slaveholder, he insisted on paying the | slaves for their work in attending him. |
seffer characteristics and sound, just like in | Slaves for Life." |
to assist in preparing a group of 520 African | slaves for emancipation. |
he government could not ban the importation of | slaves for 20 years after the adoption of the Constit |
There, Beale argued, they would “be held as | slaves for life." |
Women became | slaves for life, sometimes because of a single act or |
w managed to reach the shore, but were held as | slaves for 18 months until ransomed with other Europe |
re both unfit for prison and thereby ideal sex | slaves for both black and white inmates. |
f direct involvement in the procurement of sex | slaves for a local brothel in Bosnia. |
ee of Albany and had actively assisted escaped | slaves for nearly 30 years, starting in 1831. |
Some women were kept as personal | slaves for years after the genocide, forced to move t |
acres (2.0 km2), buildings, livestock, and two | slaves for the Eaton Charity School to serve the poor |
sieging Uspe in 49 AD (The town offered 10,000 | slaves for their capitulation but the assault continu |
tion of lands and dwellings and enumeration of | slaves for the second division of Georgia on July 17, |
error of a creature named Krayn, who kidnapped | slaves for his own profit-and killed anyone who got i |
She and her friend Naya Nuki were used as | slaves for the Hidatsas. |
urie's slave quarters, claimed that two of the | slaves found in the LaLaurie mansion had died since t |
ty School, a school for the children of former | slaves founded by the American Missionary Association |
ty had been founded during the 1870s by former | slaves freed from a plantation near Plaquemine. |
Aid Society in 1863 to offer assistance to the | slaves freed during the war. |
lion in compensation in over 40,000 awards for | slaves freed in the colonies of the Caribbean, Maurit |
s court, Moses comes before Rameses to win the | slaves' freedom, turning his staff into a snake to sh |
Collins and his partners brought in | slaves from Africa to dig a canal from Lake Phelps to |
e been actively involved with the smuggling of | slaves from Southern ports by ship to Providence, RI, |
In August 1779, he received a shipment of 30 | slaves from Jamaica, including Marie Rose (1768 - Aug |
th, and Nelly Lewis inherited about 35 "dower" | slaves from Mount Vernon. |
regiment, the 58th Indiana, blocked the former | slaves from getting on the pontoon. |
This authorized the capture and purchase of | slaves from Africa for transportation as labor to Mar |
ed Philippe Francois Renault brought about 500 | slaves from Santo Domingo to work in lead mines in th |
She has inherited her | slaves from her father and believes thoroughly in the |
At the same time that the importation of | slaves from Africa was being restricted or eliminated |
on on the Underground Railroad, where fugitive | slaves from the South stopped for food and shelter. |
few years the fort became a colony for escaped | slaves from Pensacola and Georgia. |
Built by | slaves from native limestone, The Greek Revival struc |
pedient, to prevent the further importation of | slaves from any of the West India Islands, from the c |
Slaves from the American South sung this song as a wo | |
Muslims first came to Suriname as | slaves from Africa, however they converted to Christi |
About 400 | slaves from the plantation, including Blake, were tak |
t Nigeria) was a recipe taken to Brazil by the | slaves from the West African coast. |
within the Khazar realm may have been foreign | slaves from Byzantine Constantinople and/or other lan |
He sent a large sum of money to Havana to buy | slaves from the British and Dutch. |
The first Englishman recorded to have taken | slaves from Africa was John Lok, a London trader who, |
n her marriage, Nelly Lewis inherited about 80 | slaves from her father's estate. |
Because Fort Mose became a haven for escaped | slaves from the English colonies to the north, it is |
55, Ellis worked as a slave trader, purchasing | slaves from Africa and shipping them to Jamaica. |
They imported | slaves from Africa to the maritime provinces of Sri L |
He tried to recruit | slaves from Orange, Spotsylvania, and Louisa counties |
the U.S. Census list him as owner of 59 black | slaves, from infants to age 85, in Ward 2 of Charlest |
began as a community of freed African-American | slaves from Alabama. |
arly work, Las Casas advocated importing Black | slaves from Africa to relieve the suffering Indians, |
n from the increasing numbers of newly arrived | slaves from Africa, and the economic impact caused by |
In the same year, the French imported African | slaves from Santo Domingo to work in the lead mines. |
hickasaw, and the unique phrasing vocalized by | slaves from Africa. |
pean immigration wave and large importation of | slaves from Africa helped increase the population of |
preventing slave hunters from removing escaped | slaves from the state. |
feared that the impending desertion of African | slaves from the plantations would result in enormous |
Some of these volunteers were escaped | slaves from the Underground Railroad, and some were f |
magistrate in the Kenya Slave courts, freeing | slaves from Arab slavers on the East African coast an |
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