Record ID | marc_openlibraries_phillipsacademy/PANO_FOR_IA_05072019.mrc:38173750:5403 |
Source | marc_openlibraries_phillipsacademy |
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LEADER: 05403cam a2200529Ia 4500
001 2663776
003 NOBLE
005 20111215010005.0
008 061031s2006 enkab 001 0 eng
010 $a2005931807
020 $a031241501X (pbk.)
020 $a9780312415013 (pbk.)
020 $a1403971579
020 $a9781403971579
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050 4 $aF1923$b.D84 2006
050 00 $aF2151$b.D86 2006b
082 04 $a972.9403$222
100 1 $aDubois, Laurent,$d1971-
245 10 $aSlave revolution in the Caribbean, 1789-1804 :$ba brief history with documents /$cLaurent Dubois and John D. Garrigus.
250 $a1st ed.
260 $aBoston :$bBedford/St. Martin's,$cc2006.
300 $axii, 212 p. :$bill., maps ;$c22 cm.
490 1 $aBedford series in history and culture
504 $aIncludes bibliographical references (p. 202-205) and index.
505 0 $aPt. one: Introduction: Slave revolution in the Caribbean -- Pt. two: Documents: 1. French Caribbean in the eighteenth century -- The code noir, 1685 -- Prophesies of slave revolutions, 1771 and 1780 -- Médéric-Louise-Elie Moreau de Saint-Méry, Description...of the French part of the Island of Saint-Domingue, 1797 -- 2. Revolution begins, 1789-1791-- Slave revolt in Martinique, 1789 -- Address of the Free Citizens of Color, 1789 -- Abbé Grégoire, Letter to those who love mankind, 1790 -- Decree of the National Assembly, March 8 and instructions of March 28, 1790 -- The uprising of Vincent Ogé, 1790 -- Julien Raimond, Observations on the origin and progression of the white colonists' prejudice against men of color, 1791 -- Law on the Colonies, National Assembly, 1791 -- 3. From slave revolution to emancipation, 1791-1794 -- Hérard Dumesle, Voyage to the North of Haiti, 1824 -- Antoine Dalmas, History of the Revolution of Saint-Domingue, 1814 -- A plantation manager describes the insurrection, 1791 -- Reports on the insurrection from the Philadelphia General Advertiser, 1791 -- Jean-François and Biassou, Letters, 1791 -- A prisoner in the camps of the insurgents, 1791 -- Olympe de Gouges, Preface to The Slavery of the Blacks, 1792 -- Jean-Paul Marat, from The Friend of the People, 1792 -- Thomas Clarkson, The true state of the case, respecting the insurrection at S. Domingo, 1792 -- Decree of the National Assembly, 1792 -- Slave revolt in Guadeloupe, 1793 -- Petition of Laurent Jolicoeur, 1793 -- Decree of General Liberty proclaimed by Légér Félicité Sonthonax, 1793 -- Bramante Lazzary and Macaya respond to emancipation, 1793 -- The abolition of slavery by the National Convention, 1794 -- 4. Defining emancipation, 1794-1798 -- Proclamations of Victor Hugues, 1794 -- Geneviévé Labothiére purchases her brother's freedom, 1796-1801 -- The plantation policies of Etienne Polverel, 1794 -- Jean-Baptiste Belley, The Truth about the Planters, or the system of the Hotel Massiac, exposed by Gouli, 1795 -- Toussaint Louverture, A Refutation of some assertions in a speech pronounced in the Corps Législatif...by Vienot Vaublanc, 1797 -- Law on the Colonies, 1798 -- Etienne Laveaux celebrates the anniversary of abolition, 1798 -- 5. Haitian revolution and the United States -- Thomas Jefferson responds to the events in Saint-Domingue, 1797-1801 -- Refugees in Charleston, 1799 -- Charles Brockton Brown, St. Domingo, 1804 -- Toussaint Louverture's Constitution, 1801 -- 6. War and independence -- Proclamation of Louis Delgrés, 1802 -- Report of the General Ménard, 1802 -- Instructions from Bonaparte and letters of Leclerc, 1802-1803 -- Mary Hassal, Secret history; or the Horrors of St. Domingo, 1808 -- Letter from Marie-Rose Masson to the Marquis de Gallifet, 1802 -- Letter from Brigadier General Cangé to Delpech, 1802 -- The Haitian Declaration of Independence, 1804 -- The Haitian Constitution, 1805.
520 $aIn the French Caribbean, between 1789 and 1804, slave revolutionaries transformed some of the richest plantation colonies in the world into zones of liberty and equality. [This book] provides students of Atlantic, U.S., and Caribbean history with a selection of primary sources that tell the story of this revolution and introduce some of its most famous - as well as some of its little-known - protagonists. -Pref.
520 $aContains primary source material.
650 0 $aSlave insurrections$zWest Indies, French$vSources.
650 0 $aSlave insurrections$zCaribbean Area.
650 0 $aSlave insurrections$zCaribbean Area$vSources.
651 0 $aWest Indies, French$xHistory$vSources.
651 0 $aHaiti$xHistory$yRevolution, 1791-1804.$0(NOBLE)24211
655 7 $aQuelle.$2swd
700 1 $aGarrigus, John D.
830 0 $aBedford series in history and culture.$0(NOBLE)30122
902 $a120229
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947 $aBib Record Notification
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901 $a2663776$bIII$c2663776$tbiblio
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