「Slaves」の共起表現一覧(2語左で並び替え)
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slaveholders, abolitionists, European-American | slaves, and Midwesterners. |
rleans to Mobile, Alabama, Joyce held about 50 | slaves at the plantation, who cultivated indigo, toba |
ed Philippe Francois Renault brought about 500 | slaves from Santo Domingo to work in lead mines in th |
About 400 | slaves from the plantation, including Blake, were tak |
n her marriage, Nelly Lewis inherited about 80 | slaves from her father's estate. |
an Manor (including its contingent of about 83 | slaves), a plantation located in St. Charles Parish, |
ion of annotated and authenticated accounts of | slaves speaking for themselves during the slavery per |
The Cherokee were forced to adopt their | slaves into the tribe, and to allow settlement of the |
ng "leased" or "rented" some of his adult male | slaves to the Roswell Manufacturing Co. |
The work focuses on the afflictions that | slaves faced, such as their diet, clothing, housing, |
0s with then-surviving former African American | slaves. |
African American | slaves in the Atlanta area became divided in their lo |
ees from the War of 1812 were African American | slaves who fought for the British and were relocated |
a place of refuge for escaped African American | slaves seeking asylum. |
education of freedmen (former African American | slaves). |
the treatment of Indians and African American | slaves he became less critical of whites and changed |
860 there were relatively few African American | slaves in New Mexico, the legislature formally approv |
frican communities from which African American | slaves were taken (and are discussed in the History o |
e Americans, the lives of the African American | slaves who lived there, and the cultural interaction |
d in the Florida Keys in 1700 after delivering | slaves to Jamaica. |
Despite prohibitions against educating | slaves, he was educated surreptitiously and had maste |
Centuries ago, Jefferson's | slaves dug a 300 meter long cut into the red clay hil |
When the laws against aiding escaped | slaves were harshened, part of the Westfield Quaker F |
t some citizens were transported to Albania as | slaves. |
"Passion Play (When All the | Slaves Are Free)" - 5:25 |
The value of all the | slaves in Missouri was estimated by the State Auditor |
As all the | slaves left with nothing it is presumed that the drum |
only with the United States, to free all their | slaves, and it abjured them not to acquire new slaves |
under pain of excommunication that all Indian | slaves in the islands should be set free. |
He stated that he allowed the | slaves on the Atlantic Slave route to play games and |
hat allowed voters the choice of allowing more | slaves to enter the territory. |
The workers in such estates were almost always | slaves. |
that since the harem ladies were almost always | slaves they were never formally married to the sultan |
Although most | slaves lived in rural areas, over 1000 resided in bot |
Although the | slaves continued to die over the next month, most rec |
s cemetery set aside for former American black | slaves, who had converted to Catholicism after escapi |
e of the rights of women, Native Americans and | slaves. |
The culture and religion formed among the | slaves which they used to rebel against the Europeans |
orldwide patron of missionary work among black | slaves. |
Developed among Afro-Cuban | slaves, the religion began as a blending of these Wes |
ed in Mojitos, was a popular drink amongst the | slaves who helped coin the name of the sweet nectar. |
g! award for 'Best British Newcomer', an award | Slaves to Gravity would go on to win in 2008. |
since he was provenient from Bahia, and Bahian | slaves had the fame of being runaways. |
he plantation with three children and eighteen | slaves. |
ter, the first white settlers came and brought | slaves into Peas Creek. |
He was married to a white woman and owned | slaves. |
hat paid tax, two ploughs in lordship and four | slaves. |
f Plains Indians, eastern Indians and fugitive | slaves in an uprising against the federal government. |
There is a small church and four | slaves. |
m to abandon captured livestock and contraband | slaves. |
nto, a vessel trading with Guinea and carrying | slaves to Buenos Aires, he accepted an invitation to |
ed in the summer of 1862 by soldiers and freed | slaves of the Army of the Cumberland, commanded by Un |
ed in the summer of 1862 by soldiers and freed | slaves of the Army of the Cumberland, the fort helped |
ery, and advocated canceling debts and freeing | slaves. |
to be confiscated to the public use; and their | slaves, if any they have, are hereby declared free." |
ited the Little Hunting Creek property and its | slaves. |
mal hides, bear's fat, beans, corn, and Apache | slaves. |
D. and Cindaulor Berry, Elender Butler and two | slaves, Charles and Elizer. |
ecords as living there with his family and two | slaves. |
Men, women and even | slaves were allowed to be initiated. |
then (1086) 7. It supported 40 villagers and 9 | slaves, a mill, a church, 31 ploughs, 40 acres (160,0 |
ned from freed persons of color and plantation | slaves. |
which it remembered the slave gallery and the | slaves who sat there. |
r who in 1514 was granted an estate and Indian | slaves in Cuba. |
school at Camp Shiloh for freedmen and escaped | slaves. |
ulation as large numbers of freed and fugitive | slaves joined other immigrants in Philadelphia. |
nsion on State Street in Boston, and purchased | slaves. |
arly entertained Native Americans and fugitive | slaves in his home (his home was reputed to be a stop |
yone on board except for three sailors and two | slaves. |
rison of Vindolanda, their families, and their | slaves. |
y 1829, they owned 685 acres (2.77 km2) and 24 | slaves. |
is family includes his wife, Rufilla, and many | slaves (servi), some of whom are Britons, others fore |
hn Munroe Brazealle was still a slave and that | slaves could not inherit property. |
Now in demesne 2 ploughs and 4 | slaves and 9 villans with 4 bordars have 5 ploughs. |
Dr. Eugene Walton, "Philip Reid And The | Slaves Who Built The Capitol" Video (25 min.), |
meon English brought three families and thirty | slaves to the area to establish plantations. |
ld be covered with shields, carpets and killed | slaves. |
tive Americans, European settlers, and African | slaves. |
had grown substantially as freed and fugitive | slaves began to unite with the city's substantial Qua |
Slavery was a benign institution, and the | slaves were loyal and faithful to their benevolent ma |
esbyterian, Wesleyans, and Moravian-affiliated | slaves, except insofar that there was a higher level |
f inhabitants of Rome to publicly buy and sell | slaves of both sexes was affirmed. |
tury with a modern cotton plantation and their | slaves through an evolution from the wilderness to a |
t, initiated in 1825 to educate and emancipate | slaves. |
However, there were no plantations and few | slaves in the mountainous western part of the state. |
drew parallels between The Greek Slave and the | slaves who were concurrently working on the plantatio |
orth, moved to Georgia after college and owned | slaves; he fought for the Confederacy and became a Sc |
of 1812 in Jones County, Mississippi and owned | slaves. |
of Andros was colonized by Europeans and their | slaves in the 16th century, the owls coexisted with h |
ve ships, sometimes the whole crew and captive | slaves. |
acres (2.0 km2), buildings, livestock, and two | slaves for the Eaton Charity School to serve the poor |
force, destroying both the strip mines and the | slaves' home planet in the process. |
egiments of over 178,000 free blacks and freed | slaves served during the last two years of the war, a |
isted of specially trained Turkish and foreign | slaves. |
eport had a free population of 2,200 and 1,300 | slaves within the city limits. |
ters, spies, messengers, look outs, and sexual | slaves; or they can be used for political advantage e |
ach with its own councilors, elders, and court | slaves. |
34 smallholders, 41 villagers, 52 sheep and 9 | slaves, the whole area being capable of supporting 64 |
In demesne are 3 ploughs and 7 | slaves and 10 villans and 4 bordars with 6 ploughs. |
is masthead and delivered gifts of animals and | slaves to Constantinople. |
The animals and | slaves would be let up through trapdoors under the sa |
ely, however, that Clarence owned any domestic | slaves at this time, as Somersett's Case in 1772 had |
t specifically stated that it did NOT apply to | slaves in the states of Delaware, Maryland, West Virg |
rgued that Virginia state law did not apply to | slaves outside of Virginian waters, and that the U.S. |
derate cavalry under Wheeler approaching, many | slaves panicked and drowned as they tried to flee by |
acres (20 km²), worked by approximately 1,000 | slaves. |
e plantation was worked by approximately 1,000 | slaves, but Yulee was an absentee owner, spending mos |
There are four | slaves and five female slaves and a mill rendering te |
ounter-example to slaveholders' arguments that | slaves did not have the intellectual capacity to func |
Brown had hoped he would be able to arm the | slaves and lead them against U.S. forces in a rebelli |
This dhow had around 100 | slaves on board and was transporting them between Pem |
or China, begs from Altishahr owned around 600 | slaves who were formal criminals in the eighteenth ce |
Some Gargoyles are identified as Tremere | slaves or Tremere antitribu slaves. |
rom around the world are treated as expendable | slaves. |
rating in the Great Australian Bight as sexual | slaves, and apprehended the culprits, sending them ea |
of young boys in Northern Afghanistan as sex | slaves.) |
there are some estimates of as many as thirty | slaves per household, most families only owned one or |
ctims, mostly teenagers, whom they kept as sex | slaves before killing them. |
, it served as a massive drainage ditch as the | slaves of Somerset Place worked to drain the surround |
is wife and seven children, as well as sixteen | slaves: Amy, Bess, Bristol, Critty, Dick, Dublin, Jac |
a took considerable booty and as many as 6,000 | slaves, whom he brought back to Algiers. |
en into the tribe, the former as child-bearing | slaves and the latter as tribal members. |
his time the numbers reached as much as 60,000 | slaves per year. |
-18th century the plantation had as many as 20 | slaves. |
nd they wanted to take the Israelites as their | slaves. |
Some women were kept as personal | slaves for years after the genocide, forced to move t |
ans "return to the mother," inasmuch as former | slaves were "returned to their mothers, (i.e., freed) |
The Clarks owned as many as sixty-two | slaves, many of whom were hired out to others for the |
been sold by their families to brothels as sex | slaves in big cities. |
fs to Marseilles, France, to be used as galley | slaves. |
000 acres (200 km²) of land and as many as 500 | slaves. |
ee of Albany and had actively assisted escaped | slaves for nearly 30 years, starting in 1831. |
au, a Federal organization that assisted freed | slaves and tried to oversee labor contracts; it also |
Confederate authorities used | slaves as teamsters to transport supplies and as labo |
lion in compensation in over 40,000 awards for | slaves freed in the colonies of the Caribbean, Maurit |
Many others were taken away as | slaves. |
rived, its cargo would be sold or bartered for | slaves. |
be only related to you, And we would be thine | slaves, And so please remove all our other desires, A |
of roughly 100, mostly believed to be African | slaves who were brought over by the earliest settlers |
d control of, and making the children be their | slaves, their is so much the government has hidden ab |
s proposed that all artisans be publicly-owned | slaves. |
defended slavery and advocated the beating of | slaves who absconded from their duties or became idle |
al to Caribbean music as well, because African | slaves were brought to the Caribbean islands, particu |
f Rome, but if they fail, they will become his | slaves. |
rom the battlefield before they can become the | slaves of Israel. |
net X and forced its inhabitants to become sex | slaves. |
within the Khazar realm may have been foreign | slaves from Byzantine Constantinople and/or other lan |
grew, with most early congregants being black | slaves who received day passes from their masters to |
ing class are often treated little better than | slaves. |
e immigrants were often treated no better than | slaves, and Chinese women especially fared worse. |
tionary War began in 1775, black soldiers-both | slaves and freemen-served with white soldiers in inte |
business -- it was a time for free blacks and | slaves alike to come together (from the multi-state a |
ison Hemings and Israel Jefferson, both former | slaves at Monticello, published newspaper interviews |
They were both former | slaves and they are both credited with having moderni |
4-1883), born in Tennessee; they were both the | slaves of Isaac Rollins in Wayne County, Mississippi. |
, when many of the Angolans who were bought as | slaves were exported to the United States. |
Due to Crenshaw's keeping and breeding of | slaves and kidnapping of free blacks, who were then p |
al policy of allowing Americans to bring their | slaves with them from the north, although the importa |
Clotilde, the last ship to bring African | slaves to the United States |
tended to sell the prisoners to the British as | slaves. |
Collins and his partners brought in | slaves from Africa to dig a canal from Lake Phelps to |
rom which slave trader Joseph Bruin imprisoned | slaves. |
partnership in 1841, by which Bryan furnished | slaves for Woodlands. |
on since the structure was supposedly built by | slaves. |
Built by | slaves from native limestone, The Greek Revival struc |
The house was built by | slaves using local flint stones, with a fireplace lar |
traded Katanga's copper principally, but also | slaves and ivory, for gunpowder and firearms-and by a |
Armfield and Franklin to buy African-American | slaves in the mid-Atlantic states (Virginia, Maryland |
But by rallying | slaves and gens de couleur, Hugues was able to retake |
He went accompanied by 300 | slaves on horseback and 300 more on foot, as well as |
New Orleans and the Virgin Islands) by African | slaves. |
The next year a riot broke out by newly-freed | slaves demanding the franchise. |
t Nigeria) was a recipe taken to Brazil by the | slaves from the West African coast. |
ly three feet wide (0.91 m), and made by 1,000 | slaves that belonged to the government. |
It was sung by former | slaves whose owners had abandoned the island before t |
settled after the American Civil War by freed | slaves who were employed by the railroad. |
ergates and earthwork canals, built by African | slaves skilled in rice culture. |
ty had been founded during the 1870s by former | slaves freed from a plantation near Plaquemine. |
The whole house was built by his | slaves out of clay from the land. |
ple of the unfair treatment received by former | slaves in the post-Civil War south. |
long one, beginning with folktales told by the | slaves during the colonial period. |
ins in West Africa and was brought over by the | slaves who (in the early history of the art form) use |
A rural settlement founded by freed | slaves after the American Civil War, Pin Point is 1.6 |
ugh the 1940s as a community founded by former | slaves. |
the Pilgrim Baptist Church founded by escaped | slaves in 1863. |
s plantation for Kentucky accompanied by three | slaves, Moses, Humphrey and Adam, along with an Engli |
or Underground Railroad route used by fugitive | slaves escaping from the South on their journey north |
Florida, run and maintained entirely by freed | slaves, or Freedmen, after the end of the U.S. Civil |
in the nation, having been founded by runaway | slaves prior to and during the Civil War. |
n, introduced predators and hunting by escaped | slaves who took to the mountains are obviously the re |
lsville, Florida - a community formed by freed | slaves in the 1860s. |
A shatra (village) founded by Roma | slaves, as depicted in an 1850s engraving. |
The church was established in 1866 by freed | slaves of the community and members of the white Wood |
uctive power in the universe, crewed by unseen | slaves working deep in the bowels. |
u, with bringing large numbers of captives and | slaves back across the Sahara to form the Gnawa. |
ttacks of Lipan Apaches and to capture runaway | slaves. |
g militia, who forced him to join a caravan of | slaves, stolen produce, livestock and wares that the |
ship to arrive in the Americas with a cargo of | slaves, was abandoned by its captain near Mobile. |
The interior of the cavern was carved by | slaves and laborers over a period of several thousand |
addition, the family frequently caught runaway | slaves and housed them in the cellar until their owne |
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