「slavery」の共起表現一覧(1語右で並び替え)2ページ目

slavery

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  • cking for the purpose of illegal adoption and slavery, as well as having many city officials on the
  • ring the Civil War, local politics split over slavery as many had ties to Southern cotton.
  • American Slavery As It Is: Testimony of a Thousand Witnesses i
  • we may find ourselves in the same bondage and slavery as is the rest of Ireland in the South and We
  • y is from humiliation, as partnership is from slavery, as pleasure is from pain."
  • tion...I cannot shut my eyes to the fact that slavery as understood by the ancients does not exist
  • Harper's idea of slavery as a social good put him on par with Thomas R
  • ntained that the territory could not restrict slavery, as under the earlier Missouri Compromise, wh
  • American Slavery As It Is: Testimony of a Thousand Witnesses w
  • ongol invasion of Europe and considered their slavery as a vestige of that era, the Romanians takin
  • ng of the Brothels", he was involved in white slavery as well as prostitution as a partner with Col
  • iversity's inaction stems from the history of slavery at the Chinsegut Hill property.
  • Boyd was born into slavery at the B. A. Gray plantation in Noxubee Count
  • warrior who was taken prisoner and sold into slavery at Barbados, where his grandfather was born.
  • Slavery at common law
  • Beyond Slavery, Authors Frederick Cooper, Thomas Cleveland H
  • g her slaves in the 1780s, sixty years before slavery became illegal in the State of Connecticut.
  • ures significantly in the history of American slavery because of Eli Whitney's invention of the cot
  • In New France, slavery becomes legal.
  • oon found himself involved in the question of slavery, becoming the editor of a Jacksonville abolit
  • ciety is also influenced by a long history of slavery before its abolition during the French coloni
  • The Cherokee Nation had allowed slavery before the war.
  • Like nearly every other defender of slavery before 1840, Harper nominally conceded that s
  • e been the only British colony to have banned slavery before legalizing it (1735) with the help of
  • gnated year 1808 approached, those opposed to slavery began making plans for legislation that would
  • and Political Life in the History of Atlantic Slavery: Between Resistance and Oblivion".
  • Her first book Democracy After Slavery: Black Publics and Peasant Radicalism in Hait
  • ing is the most profitable form of modern-day slavery, bonded labor is the most prevalent form.
  • He wrote on temperance, slavery, British India, peace, capital punishment, sa
  • Ultimately, his views on slavery brought a storm of controversy as the nation
  • tegration of the Whig Party over the issue of slavery, Burton moved to the more “states rights” Dem
  • houses were at odds not only on the issue of slavery, but also on the parliamentary question of th
  • ement to argue not simply against involuntary slavery but against any explicit or implied contractu
  • “ultra”, advocating not only the abolition of slavery, but also full civil equality for blacks.
  • a thing as a Republic in this country without slavery, but there can never be such a thing as a Rep
  • h v Gould (1705-07) 2 Salk 666 (antagonism to slavery), but see 91 ER 566
  • As a group they sell Joseph into slavery, but as individuals they deal with the follow
  • ey recommended against having restrictions on slavery but for including the Thomas amendment.
  • entatives, he was known for his opposition to slavery but also served as a member of the Washington
  • ting that Phillips not only spoke out against slavery but also of the corruption of Tammany Hall.
  • one of the 3,000 black Americans who escaped slavery by being transported by the British to Nova S
  • drenched people has been reduced once more to slavery by the armed might of foreigners.
  • 25 that some local newspapers were promoting slavery by running sex adverts for foreign women.
  • Joseph sold into slavery by his brothers (Konstantin Flavitsky, 1855).
  • he Pulitzer Prize for General Non-Fiction for Slavery by Another Name: The Re-Enslavement of Black
  • woman named Onoto (Loy), who is rescued from slavery by a fugitive of European ancestry named Greg
  • cribes Adams as if he we some big opponent of slavery by looking at his actions in the House.
  • opted when his father's family was freed from slavery by Quakers before the Civil War) did his unde
  • lity, which was famously described as 'soccer slavery' by Jimmy Hill.
  • ames Condon, but were “now held in a state of slavery by one Henry Clay (Secty of State) contrary t
  • The abolition of slavery by Great Britain helped reduce legal trade in
  • t of this, he was given his full freedom from slavery by the Virginia legislature in 1792: “In cons
  • The abolition of slavery by France in 1848 created a crisis in its thr
  • f original documents and personal narratives, Slavery by Another Name unearths the lost stories of
  • Tumen - A Mayan from the Yucatan sold into slavery by pirates.
  • A documentary film based on Slavery by Another Name is currently in production.
  • un created and conducted the "Military Sexual Slavery by Japan on-the-Spot Survey".
  • young girl, Chiyo Sakamoto, who is sold into slavery by her family.
  • women are forced into prostitution or sexual slavery by an occupying power, as in the case of Japa
  • Smith was trying to reduce other colonists to slavery by extending their period of indenture indefi
  • nsists that Adams agree to the removal of the slavery clause from the Declaration.
  • be heard in the countries inflicted with the slavery commerce, which tore so many men and women, m
  • Her interest in vice and white slavery continued to be a preoccupation, and she atte
  • However, slavery continued in the United States until the end
  • The 1926 Slavery Convention or the Convention to Suppress the
  • With the 1926 Slavery Convention, concrete rules and articles were
  • Having noted that the Slavery Convention, 1926, provides that all necessary
  • tment to pacifism and his growing belief that slavery could not be destroyed without violence.
  • Garrett, on the other hand, believed slavery could only be abolished through a civil war a
  • l; that wars are brutal and unnecessary; that slavery could be sanctioned by no constitution, state
  • of Dred Scott v. Sandford, which stated that slavery could not legally be excluded from U.S. terri
  • ponse stated that despite the court's ruling, slavery could be prevented from any territory by the
  • exhibition, Lest We Forget: The Triumph over Slavery, created by the Schomburg Center for Research
  • er of seats in the North due to the impending slavery crisis, but remained the largest party in the
  • It samples the Burning Spear song ' Slavery Days'.
  • "I And I Survive ( Slavery Days)"
  • In her 1895 lecture entitled Sex Slavery, de Cleyre condemns ideals of beauty that enc
  • During the heated slavery debates in Congress, Senator Charles Sumner o
  • House Divided: The Antebellum Slavery Debates in America, 1776-1865 (2003)
  • They sold the captives into slavery, destined for markets from Boston to the Barb
  • slavery), develop a deep and venomous hatred of the p
  • n violence against free blacks and support of slavery did the Irish gain acceptance as white.
  • at they had a legal right to purchase slaves, slavery died out in Nova Scotia early in the 19th cen
  • His Slavery Discussed in Occasional Essays from 1833 to 1
  • Old man born in slavery displays the horn formerly used to call slave
  • s rights, particularly honor killings, sexual slavery, domestic violence, workplace discrimination,
  • Born into slavery, Dorsey enlisted in the United States Colored
  • The Annekes were vocal opponents of slavery during the American Civil War, and Fritz serv
  • ich fought for the freedom of the people from slavery during British rule.
  • - March 8, 1909) was a Southern US critic of slavery during the 1850s.
  • ; supporting Abraham Lincoln and abolition of slavery during the American Civil War, the Chartist c
  • Gurney campaigned against slavery during trips to North America and the West In
  • Her family escaped slavery during the American Revolution and settled in
  • g Free is a 2000 film about a horse born into slavery during the Great War.
  • tivist whose investigations into Japanese war slavery during World War II led to the creation of Th
  • Societies after Slavery, Editors Rebecca J. Scott, Thomas C. Holt, Fr
  • died before the non-denominational causes of slavery emancipation and missionary work overseas bec
  • When slavery ended, Sampson attempted to start a family fa
  • Despite slavery era statutes that outlawed black literacy he
  • philosophical discussions regarding American slavery, Eugene and Julia are allowed to marry.
  • ailors described their captivity as a form of slavery, even though Barbary Coast imprisonment was d
  • em of bondage that is more cruel than African slavery ever was, since it claims to hold body and so
  • oyal females of Chahar (Mongols) were sold to slavery except these Qing / Manchu princesses.
  • story of Mormons in America, In Old Virginia: Slavery, Farming and Society in the Journal of John W
  • An Imperfect Union: Slavery, Federalism, and Comity.
  • His Memoir on Slavery, first given as a lecture in 1838, and reprin
  • ivilians, shipped to the Colony and sold into slavery following Cromwell's bloody adventure in Irel
  • hels (called Kharabat) and forced into sexual slavery for many years.
  • lvania Society for Promoting the Abolition of Slavery, for the Relief of Free Negros unlawfully Hel
  • eer African Baptists who had become free from slavery, for support in establishing chapels and educ
  • en, was visited with such severe sentences as slavery for life.
  • own as Bleeding Kansas, when abolitionist and slavery forces battled to control the territory.
  • Douai advocated in favor of establishing a slavery free state in the territory of western Texas.
  • Historical Sketch of Slavery, from the Earliest Periods (1859)
  • first instance of Congressional exclusion of slavery from public territory acquired since the Nort
  • men and African-American men), the banning of slavery from the state, and a basic framework for the
  • of 1850 though they opposed the exclusion of slavery from the territories on the theory that such
  • urs, the family's request for a loan from the slavery fund of the Danish Kingdom was rejected.
  • rather than to express comment on legality of slavery generally.
  • s have fallen under the category of 'contract slavery', given the legal and employment conditions t
  • the Jewish people, such as taking them out of slavery, giving them the Torah and Shabbat, and had G
  • Slavery greatly increased the likelihood of secession
  • oper decided to sail to England in 1835 where slavery had been abolished two years prior.
  • Later, after the days of slavery had ended, Congo Square became a place where
  • Slavery had been theoretically abolished by President
  • Slavery had in theory been made illegal in 1807 in th
  • olonies (mainly Cuba and Puerto Rico, because slavery had been abolished in metropolis in 1837) as
  • Never has slavery had a more indomitable foe or freedom a truer
  • Slavery had been a legal institution in the region of
  • Slavery had existed on a small scale in Connecticut s
  • Since slavery had been abolished in 1896 and the French had
  • family, with black and white branches due to slavery, have continued to hold reunions at Cooleemee
  • Born into slavery, he became Atlanta's first black millionaire.
  • Upon being set free from him slavery, he was ordained priest by Saint Lupus at Sen
  • After escaping from slavery, he became a leader of the abolitionist movem
  • Opposed to slavery, he would become a Republican when that party
  • pleased his congregation by his opposition to slavery, he was not settled as a minister until 1853.
  • Church South broke with the Church North over slavery, he remained with the M.E.
  • 1844, when the Methodist church divided over slavery, he was a member of the General Conference, t
  • missionaries were part of the trade of white slavery he got those accusations halted as well.
  • Though he defended slavery, he supported the Union during the American C
  • An early opponent to the institution of slavery, he published a pamphlet entitled, "A Dialogu
  • Although arrested briefly for white slavery, Heitler continued to run independently of Ja
  • heir attempts to capture her, her opinions on slavery, her pride in having learned to read, and her
  • 's attention focused on the war and issues of slavery, her popularity and prominence in the cultura
  • ng of free blacks, who were then pressed into slavery, his house became popularly known as The Old
  • nds Antilles might feel offended by the Dutch slavery history connected to this emblem and regard t
  • he document may appear to be tolerant towards slavery, however Said begins it with Surat Al-Mulk, a
  • Its condemnation of slavery, however, anticipates the work of later Afric
  • areness of the need to eradicate all forms of slavery, human trafficking and exploitation.
  • when the author was in the North, argued that slavery hurt the economic prospects of non-slaveholde
  • [financially], they will crawl back into the slavery I have sought to picture here."
  • that the Massachusetts Constitution had made slavery illegal in 1780.
  • eized control of the ship had been taken into slavery illegally.
  • of Africans and the African diaspora, through slavery, imperialism, colonialism, invasion, oppressi
  • n of Hindu out-caste society, degraded by the slavery imposed on them by the Hindus for many ages.
  • -freed serfs were merely being sold into wage slavery in the onset of the industrial revolution, an
  • known celebration commemorating the ending of slavery in the United States and has been an African
  • The French sold him into slavery in the West Indies.
  • Malone was born into slavery in antebellum Alabama.
  • which strengthened the economic foundation of slavery in the United States (regardless of whether W
  • Johnson was born in slavery in Wake County, North Carolina.
  • n gin, a labor-saving device, helped preserve slavery in the U.S. Before the 1790s, slave labor was
  • onist cause and significant in the history of slavery in the United States.
  • liam Wilberforce's political fight to abolish slavery in Britain, with Sewell playing Wilberforce's
  • Nero Hawley (1742-1817), born into slavery in North Stratford, now Trumbull, Connecticut
  • The case helped to end slavery in Massachusetts.
  • He died knowing that legal slavery in America had ended.
  • oric of Sensibility: Argument, Sentiment, and Slavery in the Late Eighteenth Century".
  • m and a number of other Native Americans into slavery in Spain for £20 apiece.
  • Lost People: Magic and the Legacy of Slavery in Madagascar
  • achusetts in 1783 which effectively abolished slavery in that state.
  • ed an essay which argued for the abolition of slavery in Cuba.
  • He denounced the Wilmot Proviso to prohibit slavery in territories.
  • Blake was born into slavery in South Santee, South Carolina.
  • rom Saratoga, New York, who was captured into slavery in 1841 and brought to Louisiana.
  • t Congress did not have authority to prohibit slavery in territories, and that those provisions of
  • They were sold into slavery in Arkansas, but later rescued.
  • would have led to the gradual elimination of slavery in the Missouri territory.
  • In 1863, he still defended slavery in his sermons.
  • In 1861, Raphall published his views that slavery in a treatise called "The Bible View of Slave
  • He campaigned against slavery in the Chamber of Deputies from 1878, and he
  • Born into slavery in Massachusetts in 1753 to slaves Mingo and
  • With the end of slavery in the state, Indiana became a border state w
  • y were intended for the conflicts fought over slavery in the Kansas Territory leading up to its ind
  • were John Anthony Copeland, who was born into slavery in 1808, near Raleigh, North Carolina, and De
  • to raise European humanitarian concern about slavery in East Africa and criticised the paternalist
  • resolution guaranteeing non-interference with slavery in any state.
  • onists that it was a universal restoration of slavery in the French colonies is incorrect.
  • Although Bigler opposed slavery in principle, he supported the federal govern
  • can Anti-Slavery Group, which works to oppose slavery in Sudan, Mauritania, and elsewhere, and The
  • est Ordinance prohibited further expansion of slavery in the region, but allowed for the continuati
  • rsett's Case in 1772 had virtually eliminated slavery in England.
  • He advocated an end to slavery in the west for economic and social reasons,
  • ola, Fishing in Angola, Mining in Angola, and Slavery in Angola
  • rch 1862, Arnold introduced a bill to abolish slavery in U.S. territories, which became law in June
  • ny Thousands Gone: The First Two Centuries of Slavery in North America.
  • olen from Saratoga, New York into 12 years of slavery in Louisiana before he was eventually freed a
  • Margaret Garner, who attempted to escape from slavery in 1856.
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