「slavery」の共起表現一覧(1語右で並び替え)4ページ目

slavery

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  • bert J. Walker, although a strong defender of slavery, opposed the blatant injustice of the Constit
  • r children that were unacceptable to them, to slavery or infanticide.
  • doctrines that were either completely free of slavery or focused on anti-slavery.
  • d, but those who didn't were either sold into slavery or slaughtered.
  • Scottish coal workers existed in "a state of slavery or bondage" and sought to address this.
  • nd provided, That the further introduction of slavery or involuntary servitude be prohibited, excep
  • ng to take a firm stand either for or against slavery or its expansion, the issue could be pushed a
  • ocus on the failings of U.S. history, such as slavery or the killings of Native Americans, before i
  • (e.g., trade in women and children for sexual slavery, or kidnapping for body parts)
  • isingenuous to romanticize one incarnation of slavery over another and that neither environment was
  • Worse than Slavery: Parchman Farm and the Ordeal of Jim Crow.
  • The slavery party had lost its majority status in the 180
  • July 9 Act Against Slavery passed into law, making Upper Canada the firs
  • rnors, Truitt was concerned about issues like slavery, penal reform, and public education.
  • of slaves speaking for themselves during the slavery period of Thomas Jefferson, Robert E. Lee, He
  • Slavery persisted into the Sengoku period (1467-1615)
  • lamenting that it is unlikely to happen while slavery persists.
  • With the 19th century abolition of slavery, plantations continued to grow cane, but suga
  • oast, who kidnapped Christians for ransom and slavery, Pope Pius VII said that the United States “h
  • onalizing' of some of the consequences of the slavery practiced in the Southern states, and hence t
  • e liberation of Texas' African-Americans from slavery presented.
  • s over the issue of the westward expansion of slavery, previously resolved by the Missouri Compromi
  • forty-six years and an outspoken opponent of slavery prior to and during the Civil War.
  • Southern families owned slaves at the peak of slavery prior to the Civil War.
  • Defending Slavery: Proslavery Thought in the Old South.
  • mon 18th century topics such as privateering, slavery, prostitution, dowries, homosexuality, debtor
  • slavery tract, An Inquiry into the History of Slavery, published in 1841.
  • declaring, in his inaugural address, that the slavery question would "be speedily and finally settl
  • is caused by "long continued agitation of the slavery question" and "actual and threatened aggressi
  • pported the right of each state to decide the slavery question, but argued that somehow that right
  • plit of the Democratic Party in 1848 over the slavery question, a large part of the Barnburner fact
  • h Hards and Softs favored a compromise on the slavery question: to maintain the status quo and to l
  • ance and heroism, film explores the themes of slavery, racism, misogyny and harsh frontier life.
  • constituent member, and the Union states; the slavery regime also became harsher against both slave
  • able to the state, including a prohibition on slavery, religious freedom, and declaring the public
  • ports statehood for the District of Columbia, slavery reparations, electoral reforms including inst
  • The Northwest Ordinance of 1787 prohibited slavery, restricted primogeniture, mandated universal
  • orn stated that "We are told that this crime [ slavery] rests upon a historical right!
  • Dusti "New York Slaves" (Electrosexual Slavery) Rock Machine Records
  • als with a "precious" value led inexorably to slavery), Sartre attempted to show how what we call c
  • s lyrics talk about world issues such as war, slavery, sex, and drugs but it also talks about not g
  • Slavery, Sexuality, and the Inclusive Community' The
  • 2009), Darwin's Sacred Cause: how a hatred of slavery shaped Darwin's views on human evolution, Hou
  • After the abolition of slavery, sharecropping was the primary means of incom
  • During her time in slavery, she cohabited with her white slave owner, Sa
  • Before she is sold into slavery, she is rescued by an African American milita
  • As she led more individuals out of slavery, she was named "Moses" by abolitionist Willia
  • Mexico, the legislature formally approved of slavery shortly before the Civil War.
  • The Paraguayan War contributed to end slavery, since slaves enlisted in exchange for freedo
  • would not therefore reduce the human race to slavery, since he himself, when we had been enslaved
  • local white population accustomed to African slavery since the early 18th century.
  • Slavery, slave trade, slave auctions and the every da
  • Born and reared in slavery, somehow prior to his matriculating at Wheato
  • remembered for debating Abraham Lincoln over slavery stands atop a 46 ft column of white marble fr
  • He was a very staunch slavery supporter before the American Civil War in So
  • fled north because of their opposition to the slavery system prevalent in South Carolina at the tim
  • the second of his three books on contemporary slavery that focuses on bonded labor.
  • it permanently removed the divisive issue of slavery that caused secession, an issue that Lincoln
  • r case of human trafficking, rape, and sexual slavery that took place in Jalgaon, Maharashtra, Indi
  • d praising President Lincoln's role in ending slavery that became a small book, Lincoln and Slavery
  • erned by events-of declaring the abolition of slavery; that he would be of little use without the f
  • s he "would get entirely clear of the evil of slavery, that he could improve his financial situatio
  • Published as Introduction to Technological Slavery: The Collected Writings of Theodore J. Kaczyn
  • With the abolishment of slavery, the planters were not as profitable and many
  • Canadians were largely opposed to slavery, the preservation of which was one of the mai
  • He was an advocate for the abolition of slavery, the education of women, Catholic rights, cha
  • Shortly after the release of Mental Slavery, the band split up, but reformed in 1997, rel
  • From Freedom to Slavery: The Rebirth of Tyranny in America (St.
  • On the issue of slavery, the Reverend John Weiss was an outspoken abo
  • e 1830s, in anticipation of emancipation from slavery, the Jamaican Baptist congregations, deacons
  • American Slavery: The Peculiar Institution, 1850-1860 (how nin
  • Trapped in a state of de facto slavery, they decide to strike for better food after
  • Cuney was technically born into slavery though he was never made to serve as such.
  • when a number of burning issues, particularly slavery, threatened to divide the Presbyterian Church
  • n 1878, Nabuco began his public fight against slavery through his political activity and in his wri
  • is book covers the arc of U.S. relations from slavery through the post-civil rights era.
  • ication of the Thirteenth Amendment abolished slavery throughout the United States.
  • He campaigned openly for the abolition of slavery throughout his political career, and on sever
  • roduced a constitutional amendment to abolish slavery throughout the United States.
  • The origin of Gwo Ka goes back to slavery time in the 18th Century.
  • orrow: Black Women, Work, and the Family From Slavery to the Present.
  • the Frisii and a few survivors were sold into slavery to tell their tale.
  • ndred married women were to be handed over in slavery to the Romans.
  • slaved by neighboring enemy tribes, sold into slavery to other colonies, or enslaved by the white s
  • written on topics ranging from car racing to slavery to Jewish lending to voting rules in condomin
  • ransition of African Americans from a life of slavery to a free life.
  • le the latter was opposed to the extension of slavery to the territories.
  • early 1980s, the party added 'ending women's slavery' to its programme for Democratic Revolution.
  • Party refused to add the support of extending slavery to the western territories, the party split.
  • of 1854, Pettit argued in favor of expanding slavery to Kansas, and famously said that Jefferson's
  • hts movement, ranging from the abolishment of slavery to more modern themes such the GLBT movement.
  • Utah Territory and New Mexico Territory with slavery to be decided by popular sovereignty.
  • He was sold into slavery to the Portuguese in the town of Azemmour, a
  • imaginable from sentencing entire sectors to slavery, to calling down Exterminatus (often a virus
  • h money (as a gambler) to buy his wife out of slavery to an American soldier's dream of marrying "p
  • On the expansion of slavery to new territories, Johnson was a champion of
  • cians and, proving troublesome, was sold into slavery to a Frisian merchant who, when his identity
  • k Political Struggles in the Rural South from Slavery to the Great Migration than it is in Hahn's f
  • rrow; and The Story of Archer Alexander: From Slavery to Freedom.
  • From the era of slavery to the present day, this book presents the fi
  • il War westward expansion, to the debate over slavery, to the Civil War, to the Industrial Revoluti
  • nd Moldavia, the work was an investigation of slavery, to which Roma people were subjected in both
  • The Soft Cage: Surveillance in America From Slavery to the War on Terror (2003) ISBN 0465054854
  • so, which would have restricted the spread of slavery to new states.
  • era in the 1850s who opposed the extension of slavery to Kansas.
  • to distinguish him), who had been freed from slavery to the Saracens by St. John's father.
  • illiam Walker, an American with a tendency to slavery, took advantage of.
  • a stage set which largely emulated the World Slavery Tour.
  • g their age, and helping to protect them from slavery, trafficking, forced marriage or serving as a
  • e Americans, European explorers and settlers, slavery, transportation by plank roads and steamboat,
  • n of British Nationals (usually sailors) from slavery under the terms of an Anglo/Moroccan treaty.
  • is a former slave who has been released from slavery, usually by legal means.
  • il War did not begin until April 12, 1861 and slavery was not completely abolished until 1865 after
  • erred to a swift dance during the period when slavery was legal in the region.
  • had been freed or not was irrelevant because slavery was no longer constitutional.
  • Slavery was abolished by the Netherlands in Suriname
  • While slavery was originally banned in the colony by James
  • The question of slavery was one of the burning issues of the day, and
  • The Republicans also argued that slavery was economically inefficient, compared to fre
  • This approval of slavery was reaffirmed and extended in the Romanus Po
  • Abdah thought that slavery was wrong and agreed to transport Bok to the
  • d have been commercially unwise to plead that slavery was unlawful.
  • the whole his assessment was that plantation slavery was not very profitable, had about reached it
  • ice Roger B. Taney, the court determined that slavery was protected by the Constitution, and the fe
  • Cotton" became a dominant economic force, and slavery was sustained as a key institution of Souther
  • Slavery was abolished for Puerto Rico (but not for Cu
  • e cited as authority for the proposition that slavery was unlawful.
  • The imagery of wage slavery was widely used by labor organizations during
  • In 1590, slavery was officially banned under Toyotomi Hideyosh
  • 13 - September 30, 1872), born Jarm Logue, in slavery, was an African American abolitionist and bis
  • Slavery was a benign institution, and the slaves were
  • ar Crimes Tribunal on Japan's Military Sexual Slavery was a people's tribunal convened to gather te
  • book which investigated the case for whether slavery was scripturally justified by the bible.
  • d Border Ruffians from nearby Missouri, where slavery was legal, to move to Kansas in order to ensu
  • ed Ford in civil court to free his family, as slavery was illegal in the territory.
  • The Highlanders' petition was successful and slavery was not introduced until ten years later in 1
  • School ("manumit" in Latin means freedom from slavery) was an "experimental" Christian socialist bo
  • reluctant to move to the new territory until slavery was actually approved by the settlers, settle
  • e; Bradwell ruled that a marriage made during slavery was valid and survived emancipation and that
  • Slavery was officially abolished in most of the Briti
  • Spooner's The Unconstitutionality of Slavery was cited in the 2008 District of Columbia v.
  • The matter of slavery was a major religious and social issue in Qui
  • The maintenance and re-imposition of slavery was far more influenced by Britain and her al
  • plantation in Montserrat to demonstrate that slavery was unnecessary, and named it Olveston, now a
  • the Angolan tribes more prominent in the U.S. slavery was Ndongo and Mbumbus.. Thus, in states like
  • e the Shang dynasty starting from the 18th BC slavery was present in China.
  • Slavery was perhaps the most significant economic ins
  • Slavery was officially abolished by the Thirteenth Am
  • issippi River, those parts of Tennessee where slavery was most prevalent prior to the Civil War.
  • Amendment to the U.S. Constitution abolishing slavery was ratified in late 1865.
  • regions of North Carolina and Virginia where slavery was largely nonexistent and the causes favori
  • The definition of slavery was further refined and extended by a 1956 Su
  • nd in 1774 his sermon at the New Room against slavery was disturbed by explosion.
  • ding ships bound for the United States, where slavery was still practised.
  • represents: a place where those who resisted slavery were publicly hung.
  • nd fauna of the area and his recollections of slavery were later published in his book Letters from
  • when the population of 100,000 (two thirds in slavery) were in semi revolt against the crown.
  • ebate, the Southerners who urged secession if slavery were restricted in any of the new territories
  • Other social and environmental issues such as slavery, whaling, Manifest Destiny, uncontrolled urba
  • This phrase originated in the US during slavery, when Africans and African Americans were den
  • who was most influential in the abolition of slavery, which became his life's work.
  • s family were Quakers and strongly opposed to slavery, which led his father Aaron Lindley to become
  • Jacob Raphall that supported the existence of slavery, which Einhorn called a "deplorable farce" an
  • t the society should support the abolition of slavery, which was still an important part of the Ame
  • soned though highly delayed statement against slavery, which became a national best seller, even as
  • Women's Tribunal on Japan's WWII Military Sex Slavery which convicted Japan's wartime era leadershi
  • which Yarico is a Native American, sold into slavery while bearing Inkle's child.
  • e controlled by AI "managers" to the point of slavery, while all humans in the utopian society acce
  • Haitian cultural identity as African through slavery, while the neighboring Dominican Republic pri
  • silent movie about an English noble sold into slavery who escapes and turns himself into a pirate k
  • the great evangelical and campaigner against slavery, William Wilberforce and Martin Stafford Smit
  • of the Jews with the tribulations of American slavery, with both to be ended by example of God's co
  • iries contributed greatly to the abolition of slavery with the Slavery Abolition Act 1833.
  • nthropology was prominent in the debate about slavery, with the scientific, monogenist works of the
  • y as it was followed by private ownership and slavery, with the inequality that they entailed.
  • the Fugitive Slave Law left those who opposed slavery with the immediate choice of either defying w
  • usic review by Thom Jurek states "Volunteered Slavery, with its beat/African chanted poetry and pos
  • ots, emphasising its dedication to abolishing slavery within the existing laws of the United States
  • This compensated emancipation put an end to slavery within the capital city, and Philip Reid beca
  • rk, due in part to Hicks's efforts, abolished slavery within its borders on July 4, 1827.
  • nd exclusive jurisdiction over the subject of slavery within its own territory, and possessed full
  • hed it in holding that Congress could not ban slavery within a territory.
  • mark in 1993 for its role in the abolition of slavery, women's suffrage, and the civil rights movem
  • European diseases, and many were forced into slavery working in the Caribbean.
  • , economic and legal analysis of contemporary slavery worldwide, focusing on sex trafficking, its m
  • not to take away the south's slaves, but that slavery would not move west.
  • ulation of Kansas Territory to choose whether slavery would be legal, the Company is noted less for
  • were suggesting to the English colonists that slavery would discourage potential settlers from emig
  • States could determine whether slavery would be legal within their borders.
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