The African Observer, Bände 1-12Enoch Lewis I. Ashmead, printer, 1970 - 384 Seiten |
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Seite 90
... become immediately free . * If a man espoused a captive taken in war , she was entitled to all the pri- vileges of a wife , and her children were to be treated in all respects as though she had been originally free . In case she became ...
... become immediately free . * If a man espoused a captive taken in war , she was entitled to all the pri- vileges of a wife , and her children were to be treated in all respects as though she had been originally free . In case she became ...
Seite 166
... become the rule , and the rule itself be transformed into a rare exception . It is a humiliating re- flection , that a comparison of our ser- vile codes with those of the least civi- lized nations of antiquity , should so frequently ...
... become the rule , and the rule itself be transformed into a rare exception . It is a humiliating re- flection , that a comparison of our ser- vile codes with those of the least civi- lized nations of antiquity , should so frequently ...
Seite 360
... becoming common to a whole nation , and may account for the fact in either of two ways . A whole tribe appears , in some instances , to have deviated from its original charac- ter , or to have become distinguished from another branch of ...
... becoming common to a whole nation , and may account for the fact in either of two ways . A whole tribe appears , in some instances , to have deviated from its original charac- ter , or to have become distinguished from another branch of ...
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Abschnitt 2 | 26 |
Abschnitt 3 | 33 |
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admitted Africa African slave trade appears authority born Carolina cause character claim coast colonies court crimes Damel death declared dollars effect Egypt emancipation evidence evils existing favour feelings females free coloured free labour Free white freedom held human important increase Indian slavery inhabitants islands Jamaica Joe Johnson judge justice land less liable liberty Lord Lord Stowel males manumissions master ment moral mulatto nations native nature negro negro slavery nerally number of slaves observed offence owner Peter Hook poor population possession present principle probably produce proved provisions punishment purchase race racter Senegal servants servitude Shendy ship shore Sierra Leone sion slave labour slave trade slave-holding soil sold South Carolina species supposed testimony tion tribes ture United vessel villein villenage Virginia West Indian white person