「slavery」の共起表現一覧(1語右で並び替え)3ページ目

slavery

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  • rge Griffin was an African American born into slavery in Maryland sometime in the mid-19th century.
  • that this was the first time congress banned slavery in a territory,
  • ves in 1872, one year before the abolition of slavery in Puerto Rico.
  • stoms, the maror symbolizes the bitterness of slavery in Egypt.
  • His case is considered to have ended slavery in the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, althoug
  • J'ouvert coincide with the emancipation from slavery in 1838.
  • tate v. Mann as a source for her depiction of slavery in her novel Dred.
  • He also introduced the first bill to abolish slavery in the Territory.
  • ed by Oscar Micheaux, on the subject of white slavery in New York City.
  • expected to shed new light on the history of slavery in Philadelphia and the region.
  • ongregants and colleagues were sympathetic to slavery in what was then a slave state.
  • Born in slavery in Richmond, Virginia, he also was a man of h
  • Slavery in Georgia is known to have been practiced by
  • re taken (and are discussed in the History of slavery in the United States article), including the
  • Harris was born into slavery in Granville County, North Carolina but becam
  • He wrote, "I am no friend to slavery in the abstract, and still less friendly to t
  • ut the active position of Friends in opposing slavery, in relations with the native peoples of Nort
  • e rise to a significant legal case related to slavery in Regina v Inhabitants of Thames Ditton of 1
  • Rose Fortune was born into slavery in the British colony of Virginia.
  • Congress was debating the extension of slavery in the western territories during his term, l
  • illiams freed the family, but never mentioned slavery in his decision.
  • n separate him from the weaker apologists for slavery in earlier decades.
  • Slavery in the Cherokee Nation: The Keetoowah Society
  • A museum dedicated to the history of slavery in the area is located near the train tracks
  • Although there had been slavery in Canada, an 1803 ruling by Chief Justice Wi
  • Printer and Publisher (1961); Jews and Negro Slavery in the Old South, 1789-1865 (1961); The Ameri
  • This new constitution enshrined slavery in the proposed state and protected the right
  • His works on slavery in the French colonies (1847) and on slavery
  • In total, 3,452 residents were sold into slavery in the slave markets of Istanbul (Constantino
  • His own writings have been focused on slavery in Muslim Africa, Muslims in the United State
  • In 1847 Charles Sumner spoke on "White Slavery in the Barbary States."
  • he Barnburners were against the permission of slavery in new Territories or States, but were now th
  • ed in government task forces on the legacy of slavery in Maryland, on the impact of cults in instit
  • ut who is better known for his role in ending slavery in Martinique.
  • Angolan slavery in the United States had its stronghold betwe
  • Indian Slavery in Colonial Times Within the Present Limits o
  • eptember last, on the subject of abolition of slavery in that department and the fatal results to b
  • Koti, July 1, is the Emancipation Day (end of slavery) in Suriname.
  • Concerning slavery, in the 1722 re-edition, Beverley says that w
  • The repartimiento was not slavery, in that the worker is not owned outright-bei
  • d States Constitution permanently prohibiting slavery in the United States.
  • if the United States Congress decided to ban slavery in the new territories being added to the cou
  • setts, ordered that Burns be forced back into slavery in Virginia, outraging abolitionists and the
  • bill and reaffirmed the constitutionality of slavery in a series of 28 resolutions passed on June
  • ance of the economic and financial decline of slavery in the West Indies *1, as opposed to public o
  • marked the end of the American Civil War and slavery in the United States.
  • of the 200th anniversary of the abolition of slavery in the UK and took as its theme the stories o
  • evolutionary constitution in France abolished slavery in principle in 1789.
  • s book, "Lost People: Magic and the Legacy of Slavery in Madagascar" contains a detailed recounting
  • uccessful in preventing the legitimization of slavery in the Illinois constitution.
  • was fourteen years old and forced into sexual slavery in a Nazi labour camp.
  • ryland Society for Promoting the Abolition of Slavery in 1791.
  • The exact origins of slavery in the Danubian Principalities are not known.
  • a presented the argument for the abolition of slavery in Puerto Rico.
  • econd on sex trafficking and 'underage sexual slavery' in Cambodia.
  • The historical record of slavery in New Paltz begins in 1674, three years befo
  • Her parents were born in the last years of slavery in Tennessee.
  • d editorials that attacked the institution of slavery in the southern United States.
  • Eighth Streets in commemoration of the end of slavery in the British West Indies.
  • clude the Tallmadge Amendment, but prohibited slavery in the territories of the Louisiana Purchase
  • money to qualified recipients fighting sexual slavery in the field
  • ne of the central figures in the abolition of slavery in England and the British Empire at the clos
  • ffended him, captivating & carrying them into slavery in another hemisphere or to incur miserable d
  • l other Nanzaticos over age 12 were sold into slavery in the West Indies under a 1665 law that held
  • ir ownership included, until the abolition of slavery in British colonies in 1838, several hundred
  • Peter Spencer (1782 - 1843) was born under slavery in Kent County, Maryland, in 1782 and grew up
  • period of the agitation for the abolition of slavery in England, where Philip's charges against th
  • notably underlines the progress made against slavery in the new Constitution: "It is a matter both
  • aveholders, Randolph had long been opposed to slavery in theory.
  • The Netherlands abolished slavery in 1863 and imported indentured labour force
  • s story concerns a young man who is sold into slavery in order to provide economic relief for his s
  • to send a former slave, Thomas Sims, back to slavery in compliance with the Fugitive Slave Law of
  • African-American background, he was born into slavery in Virginia.
  • The fight against slavery in Central New York and the Finger Lakes regi
  • novel acts as an allegory for the history of slavery in the United States, in a manner similar to
  • Reflections on Slavery: in Reply to Certain Passages of a Speech Rec
  • It abolished slavery in the new Arizona Territory, but did not abo
  • Estimates for the prevalence of slavery in the Roman Empire vary, with some estimatin
  • The history of slavery in Missouri began in 1720, when a man named P
  • d Future Prospects (London, 1882) and Alleged Slavery in Queensland (1883).
  • She also bought many people out of slavery in the Congo.
  • Joseph Hayne Rainey was born into slavery in Georgetown, South Carolina.
  • d in the antebellum period of US history when slavery in the United States of America was still leg
  • t Congress did not have the power to prohibit slavery in the territories, making the already repeal
  • There shall be no slavery in this State, and no involuntary servitude,
  • ithin the colonies, a step toward phasing out slavery in British North America.
  • rted to be brought from 1848 (official end of slavery in French colonies).
  • Long an opponent of slavery, in June 1799 he gave evidence before a commi
  • e reforms that would lead to the abolition of slavery in 1888.
  • llegations that it was carrying children into slavery in Gabon.
  • xhibition has a broad focus on the history of slavery in addition to materials relating to the life
  • New York Burning: Liberty and Slavery in an Eighteenth-Century City, 2005
  • a black maid, James Monroe's refusal to halt slavery in Washington, the aftermath of the American
  • Governor Thomas C. Fletcher ended slavery in Missouri on January 11, 1865, by executive
  • ated by a law designed to gradually eliminate slavery in Connecticut.
  • A long essay on slavery in the first series of Friends in Council was
  • t to the United States Constitution outlawing slavery in 1865 and the abolishment of slavery in Bra
  • In it he laid out a plan to end slavery in Virginia because "the abolition of slavery
  • The History of slavery in Virginia can be traced back to the very fo
  • d G. Loring's decision to order him back into slavery in Virginia, outraged Abolitionists and many
  • This amendment would formally protect slavery in those states in which it already existed,
  • Main article: History of slavery in Nebraska
  • reed by the Kansas-Nebraska Act, the issue of slavery in the new state was to be determined by popu
  • on of the slave-trade and of the abolition of slavery in the United States."
  • This document banned slavery in Kansas.
  • His hatred of slavery in Kentucky and his failure to convince the s
  • One of the earliest opponents of slavery in British colonies in America, Matlack felt
  • and orator Booker T. Washington was born into slavery in 1856.
  • she was currently leading a revolution to end slavery in her lands, which was a common practice amo
  • nspired health care, education and the end of slavery in central Africa, regarded Dick's Philosophy
  • Citing the debate over the institution of slavery in America as a secondary cause of schism, Cr
  • nishment of Slaves"), an image of the African slavery in the Americas as printed by the Romanian-la
  • from the Northern Baptists over the issue of Slavery in the United States, which Fuller and the So
  • rudential motives" that made the abolition of slavery inadvisable, the Telegraph condemned slavery
  • rojects aimed to abolish each aspect of human slavery including sex slavery, labor slavery, child s
  • is affirmed that their interest in keeping up slavery induced the scientific men of that country to
  • as a background for social life in Cuba, with slavery, injustice, crises and personal tragedies, fo
  • Anti Slavery International
  • he first petition against the introduction of slavery into Georgia.
  • By the 1850s the issues of the expansion of slavery into the western territories and the threat o
  • A motion to insert the Wilmot Proviso banning slavery into the treaty failed 15-38 on sectional lin
  • during their efforts to prevent the spread of slavery into Kansas, a series of events referred to a
  • 1848 election to oppose further expansion of slavery into the western territories.
  • s, Jefferson's beliefs include the ideas that slavery is demoralizing to both White and Black socie
  • We of the South contend that slavery is right, and that this is a confederate Repu
  • t said, "The anti-slavery party contends that slavery is wrong in itself, and the Government is a c
  • veals how the trafficking of young women into slavery is a big business which operates throughout E
  • Gerald of Wales remarked: "The madness of slavery is over, the time of liberty has been granted
  • ... Slavery is an institution sanctioned by the Bible, he
  • Taxation as slavery is the belief that taxation results in an unf
  • past, and argued that to understand American slavery is a moral question that cannot be reduced to
  • Up from Slavery is the 1901 autobiography of Booker T. Washin
  • Slavery is directly prohibited;
  • Slavery is abolished in France.
  • Born into slavery, Isaiah was afforded an education due to his
  • In 1834, students at the school debated the slavery issue for 18 consecutive nights and many of t
  • He became the symbol of the slavery issue for the M.E.
  • r Whigs who wanted to avoid disunion over the slavery issue.
  • r, the party was permanently divided over the slavery issue.
  • d was up to a Congress sharply divided on the slavery issue.
  • he Democrats had hammered Southern Whigs over slavery issues.
  • The civil war wasnt started over slavery, it was indeed about the southern states bein
  • Slavery: Its Origin, Nature, and History, 1861
  • de was abolished in Washington, D.C. (but not slavery itself), and the Fugitive Slave Act was stren
  • avoid judgments regarding the institution of slavery itself, but upheld the decision of the Shelby
  • personhood and civil death that long outlives slavery itself.
  • les, elected in 1822 and a strong opponent of slavery; John Reynolds, governor from 1830 to 1834; T
  • of the Free Soil faction of Whigs opposed to slavery, Johnston faced the federal Fugitive Slave Ac
  • American Slavery Justified (1861)
  • Captives and Cousins: Slavery, Kinship, and Community in the Southwest Bord
  • but, increasingly shocked by the brutality of slavery, later gave up the trade and became an Anglic
  • o the Democratic Party, but his opposition to slavery led him to his abandon the party for nearly t
  • However, his life-long opposition to slavery led him to join the Free Soil Party.
  • sman Tony Hall (D-OH) as historic Apology for Slavery legislation was announced at the U.S. Capitol
  • ise, if the people of the territory supported slavery, legislation would provide for its continued
  • laves of bankers and pay the cost of your own slavery, let them continue to create money."
  • Slavery: Lincoln stated emphatically that he had "...
  • Protection of slavery: Lincoln explicitly stated that he had no obj
  • The Whigs, divided over the issue of slavery, lost several seats and began to disintegrate
  • texts explore broad-ranging themes as satire, slavery, marriage, witchcraft and piracy.
  • not subject to Reconstruction, but the end of slavery meant heightened racial tensions as free blac
  • sba's proud defiance and refusal to submit to slavery might have inspired that song's famous refrai
  • n the nobility of labor and the evils of wage slavery, monopoly, and accumulation.
  • e of the painful nature of the experiences of slavery, most slaves repressed these memories in an a
  • rleans, capturing and selling into plantation slavery most of the tribe and its smaller allies.
  • ttee in Belfast during the height of the anti slavery movement, wearing the famous Wedgewood brooch
  • seyside Maritime Museum and the International Slavery Museum.
  • 010 called "From Africa to America: drumming, slavery, music".
  • including forced labour and practices akin to slavery, must face their responsibility and work to s
  • Kansas and did not advocate the abolition of slavery nationwide.
  • ns, but this first one, when I was fresh from slavery, naturally touched me the most deeply.
  • s that Las Casas first concern was not to end slavery necessarily, but to end the physical abuse an
  • er Whig who was also opposed the extension of slavery, Newell was nominated at a joint convention i
  • e said that Douglas was personally opposed to slavery, none has presented "extensive arguments to j
  • e abolitionist North, not all of them loathed slavery, nor were all convinced that a civil war woul
  • ection is made, it feels obvious, and neither slavery nor vampirism reveals anything in particular
  • ith the divisive question of the expansion of slavery, Northerners and Southerners, in effect, were
  • the use of the cars on account of color where slavery obtained which was the subject of discussion
  • ent and the consequences of five centuries of slavery of the Romani people in the historical Romani
  • The Act Against Slavery of 1793 legislated the gradual abolition of s
  • llegory of the liberation of the man from his slavery of daily life.
  • A Dialogue concerning the Slavery of the Africans, showing it to be the Duty an
  • and perspective, and shall not be subject to slavery of any kind or manner.
  • omen in crime and colonial-era rebellion, and slavery of indigenous groups in the New World.
  • His 'Observations on the Slavery of the Africans' (1811), which argued for a b
  • African Americans as Juneteenth, the day that slavery officially ended in several southern states,
  • He spoke about slavery often and worked hard to persuade others to o
  • Those captured were sold into slavery on the Barbary Coast.
  • mself to be a slave trader and sold Mary into slavery on an American southern plantation.
  • e, condemning the apologists and defenders of slavery on the one hand and the Garrisonian extremist
  • He was born into slavery on February 12, 1864, in Huntsville, Texas, t
  • rights activism against human trafficking and slavery on a community level.
  • and leader Booker T. Washington was born into slavery on April 5, 1856.
  • Born into slavery on February 27, 1841, his mother was Rosa Bur
  • from 1800-06, during which period he reformed slavery on the island, prohibiting the killing of sla
  • New York Slaves Electrosexual Slavery on Music from Rock Machine (LP, Rock Machine
  • Sam Houston gave a speech there against slavery on 22 February 1855, and an Egyptian mummy wa
  • n these slave industries, and help to abolish slavery, once and for all.
  • Until 1861 Archbishop Purcell condemned slavery only in the "abstract," emphasizing the "prud
  • Main article: Yorke-Talbot slavery opinion
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