33896nas# 22039011i 450 UON0008499920231205102444.1240144-039X20020107a1980 |0itac50 baengGB|||| |||||aT|||||||||Slavery and abolitionA journal of comparative studiesEditor: John Ralph WillisVol. 1n. 1 (may 1980)- London : Frank Cass, 1980- v.21 cmQuadrimestraleP. 57-71UON00160907P. 263-275UON00159658P. 79-94UON00159509P. 25-45UON00159354P. 175-187UON00159431P. 166-193UON00160928P. 114-145UON00159650P. 24-33UON00159524P. 151-159UON00159502P. 1-28UON00160904P. 69-80UON00159648P. 29-50UON00156670P. 69-86UON00156674P. 1-28UON00156575P. 51-68UON00156671P. 44-59UON00160931P. 107-125UON00160933P. 60-72UON00160932P. 1-43UON00160930P. 102-128UON00160970P. 126-150UON00160934P. 187-211UON00160937P. 172-186UON00160936P. 85-101UON00160969P. 23-39UON00160965P. 1-22UON00160960P. 151-171UON00160935P. 40-63UON00160967P. 64-84UON00160968P. 45-59UON00160919P. 42-56UON00160906P. 144-170UON00160911P. 1-20UON00160916P. 93-102UON00160923P. 105-127UON00160909P. 131-145UON00160926P. 71-92UON00160921P. 21-44UON00160918P. 171-182UON00160915P. 72-84UON00160908P. 103-130UON00160925P. 60-70UON00160920P. 128-143UON00160910P. 146-165UON00160927P. 29-41UON00160905P. 204-215UON00159359P. 21-41UON00159229P. 183-203UON00159357P. 88-122UON00159234P. 313-335UON00159394P. 166-182UON00159344P. 294-312UON00159392P. 1-6UON00159201P. 42-64UON00159231P. 247-271UON00159389P. 65-87UON00159232P. 147-165UON00159236P. 272-293UON00159390P. 7-20UON00159228P. 129-147UON00159360P. 241-256UON00159436P. 99-117UON00159356P. 2-24UON00159353P. 257-272UON00159437P. 118-128UON00159358P. 148-159UON00159424P. 160-174UON00159428P. 46-58UON00159355P. 215-240UON00159434P. 273-289UON00159439P. 3-24UON00159457P. 131-151UON00159513P. 57-78UON00159507P. 173-184UON00159520P. 152-172UON00159518P. 112-128UON00159511P. 23-33UON00159504P. 95-111UON00159510P. 99-121UON00159499P. 41-58UON00159460P. 139-150UON00159501P. 11-22UON00159503P. 37-56UON00159505P. 122-138UON00159500P. 25-40UON00159459P. 244-266UON00159546P. 34-49UON00159528P. 50-72UON00159530P. 189-221UON00159544P. 3-23UON00159521P. 105-117UON00159538P. 154-168UON00159543P. 118-140UON00159539P. 141-153UON00159541P. 87-104UON00159536P. 222-243UON00159545P. 41-55UON00159566P. 106-125UON00159626P. 19-40UON00159564P. 214-231UON00159631P. 56-63UON00159568P. 3-18UON00159563P. 64-78UON00159569P. 199-213UON00159630P. 81-105UON00159623P. 173-198UON00159628P. 140-152UON00159640P. 211-227UON00159642P. 153-162UON00159641P. 243-253UON00159644P. 111-139UON00159639P.5-108UON00159635P. 228-242UON00159643P. 2-30UON00159645P. 209-226UON00159651P. 227-244UON00159652P. 53-68UON00159647P. 31-52UON00159646P. 83-113UON00159649P. 245-262UON00159657P. 46-64UON00159664P. 276-291UON00159670P. 25-25UON00159662P. 339-344UON00159673P. 178-198UON00159667P. 3-17UON00159660P. 292-338UON00159672P. 132-177UON00159666P. 115-131UON00159665P. 18-24UON00159661P. 263-275UON001596691-26UON00393724pp. 91-107UON00393758pp. 27-52UON00393736pp. 109-127UON00393763pp. 75-89UON00393755pp. 53-73UON00393752pp. 451-466UON00395364pp. 395-409UON00395359pp. 379-393UON00395358pp. 345-362UON00395267pp. 363-377UON00395268pp. 411-428UON00395361pp. 467-481UON00395365pp. 311-326UON00395129pp. 483-499UON00394319pp. 429-449UON00395363pp. 501-525UON00394320pp. 527-545UON00394322001UON001609072001 America's captive freemen in north Africathe comparative method in abolitionist persuasionLofti Ben Rejeba.1988:v.9:n.1 (1988)001UON001596582001 ˆThe ‰European cowrie tradeMarion Johnson, Jan Hogendorn and Joanne LynchP. 263-275001UON001595092001 From Land to Sea: runaway Barbados slave and servants, 1630-1700Hilary Becklesa.1985:v.6:n.3 (1985)001UON001593542001 From slave Colonies to penal colonies: the West Indian convict transportees to AustraliaIan Duffielda.1986:v.7:n.1 (1986)001UON001594312001 Labour control and resistance in Belize in the century after 1838O. Nigel BollandP. 175-187001UON001609282001 Madagascar and Mozambique in the slave trade of the western Indian Ocean 1800-1861Gwyn CampbellP. 166-193001UON001596502001 Ningi raids and slavery in nineteenth century Sokoto CaliphateAdell Patton, Jr.a.1981:v.2:n.2 (1981)001UON001595242001 ˆThe ‰Portuguese contribution to the Cuban slave and Coolie tradfes in nineteenth centuryGervase Clarence-Smitha.1984:v.5:n.1 (1984)001UON001595022001 ˆThe ‰quaker petition of 1790: a challenge to democracy in Early AmericaStuart E. KneeP. 151-159001UON001609042001 Slavery, amelioration, and sunday markets in Antigua, 1823-1831David Barry Gaspara.1988:v.9:n.1 (1988)001UON001596482001 Slavery in Bamabara societySegou 1712-1861David C. ConradP. 69-80001UON001566702001 To save them from themselvesProposals to enslave the British Poor, 1698-1755Michal J. Rozbickia.2001:v.22:n.2 (2001)001UON001566742001 ˆA ‰comparative exploration of narrative ambiguities in Frederick Douglass's two versions of "The heroic slave" (1853, 1863?)Celeste-Marie Berniera.2001:v.22:n.2 (2001)001UON001565752001 Domination and fabricationRe-thinking Stanley Elkins' SlaveryRichard H. Kinga.2001:v.22:n.2 (2001)001UON001566712001 Pirates, sugar, debtors, and slavespolitical economy and the case for gradual abolition in New YorkDavid Gellmana.2001:v.22:n.2 (2001)001UON001609312001 Anti-slavery sentiment in children's literature, 1750-1850J. R. Oldfielda.1989:v.10:n.1 (1989)001UON001609332001 "By farr the most profitable trade": slave trading in british colonial north AmericaSteven Deylea.1989:v.10:n.2 (1989)001UON001609322001 Classical antiquity and the proslavery argumentJ. Drew Harringtona.1989:v.10:n.1 (1989)001UON001609302001 ˆThe ‰Development and execution of Frederick Lugard's policies toward slavery in northern NigeriaJan Hogendorn and Paul Lovejoya.1989:v.10:n.1 (1989)001UON001609702001 Diplomacy versus humanitarianismBritain and consular manumission in Hijaz, 1921-1936Suzanne Miersa.1989:v.10:n.3 (1989)001UON001609342001 Economic marginality and the rise of the free population of colour in Mauritius, 1767-1830Richard B. Allena.1989:v.10:n.2 (1989)001UON001609372001 ˆThe ‰Effects of abolition of slavery on Jamaican Livestock Farms (Pens), 1834-1845Verene A. Shepherda.1989:v.10:n.2 (1989)001UON001609362001 ˆThe ‰emergence of a peasantry in the Bahamas during slaveryHoward Johnsona.1989:v.10:n.2 (1989)001UON001609692001 Manumission in a society withouth slave laweighteenth century EnglandSeymour Dreschera.1989:v.10:n.3 (1989)001UON001609652001 ˆThe ‰Manumission of Russian slavesRichard Helliea.1989:v.10:n.3 (1989)001UON001609602001 Paths out of slavery on the aboriginal nortyh Pacific Coast of north AmericaLeland Donalda.1989:v.10:n.3 (1989)001UON001609352001 Political economy and cultural theory in Tocqueville's abolitionismMatthew Mancinia.1989:v.10:n.2 (1989)001UON001609672001 Slave manumission in Suriname, 1760-1828Rosemary Brana-Shutea.1989:v.10:n.3 (1989)001UON001609682001 Slaves, freedmen and the politics of freddom in Brazilthe experience of blacks in the City of RioSidney Chalhouba.1989:v.10:n.3 (1989)001UON001609192001 ˆThe ‰Black slaves of Turkish Arabia during the 19th centuryAlbertine Jwaideh and J.W. Coxa.1988:v.9:n.3 (1988)001UON001609062001 Cassius M. Clay on slavery and race: a reinterpretationStanley Harrolda.1988:v.9:n.1 (1988)001UON001609112001 Continuity not changethe incidence of Unrest among ex-slaves in the British West Indies, 1838-1876Michael Cratona.1988:v.9:n.2 (1988)001UON001609162001 ˆThe ‰Economics of the Indian Ocean and Red Sea slave trades in the 19th century: an overviewWilliam Gervase Clarence-Smitha.1988:v.9:n.3 (1988)001UON001609232001 Ethiopian slave exports at Matamma, Massawa and Tajura, c.1830-1885Abdussamad H. Ahmada.1988:v.9:n.3 (1988)001UON001609092001 From Indian to slaveforced native labour and colonial society in Sao Paulo during the seventeenth centuryJohn M. Monteiroa.1988:v.9:n.2 (1988)001UON001609262001 Localisation and social composition of the East African slave trade, 1858-1873A. Sheriffa.1988:v.9:n.3 (1988)001UON001609212001 ˆThe ‰Nile valley system and Red Sea slave trade 1820-1880Janet J. Ewalda.1988:v.9:n.3 (1988)001UON001609182001 ˆThe ‰nineteenth century islamic slave trade from East Africa (Swahili and Red Sea Coasts)a tentative censusRalph A. Austena.1988:v.9:n.3 (1988)001UON001609152001 Olmsted in Appalachiaa connecticut yankee encounters slavery and racism in the southern HighlandsJohn C. Inscoea.1988:v.9:n.2 (1988)001UON001609082001 Planter combinations and black labour in the American south, 1865-1880Ralph Shlomowitza.1988:v.9:n.1 (1988)001UON001609252001 Slavery and the slave trade in southern Ethiopia in the 19th centuryTimothy Fernyhougha.1988:v.9:n.3 (1988)001UON001609202001 Slaves and slave traders in the Persian Gulf, 18th and 19th centuries: an assessmentThomas M. Ricksa.1988:v.9:n.3 (1988)001UON001609102001 ˆThe ‰Slaving capital of the world: Liverpool and national opinion in the age of abolitionSeymour Dreschera.1988:v.9:n.2 (1988)001UON001609272001 ˆTHe ‰Structures of the slave trade in central Africa in the 19th centuryFrançois Renaulta.1988:v.9:n.3 (1988)001UON001609052001 ˆThe ‰William abolition thesis before WilliamsWilliam Darity, Jr.a.1988:v.9:n.1 (1988)001UON001593592001 Alexis de Tocqueville and the abolition of slaveryRobert A. Stronga.1987:v.8:n.2 (1987)001UON001592292001 Aristotle and the anonymous opponents of slaveryGiuseppe Cambianoa.1987:v.8:n.1 (1987)001UON001593572001 Black tobacco factory workers and social conflict in antebellum RichmondWere slavery and urban industry really compatible?Rodney D. Greena.1987:v.8:n.2 (1987)001UON001592342001 Circe's pigsFrom slavery to serfdom in the later roman worldC. R. Whittakera.1987:v.8:n.1 (1987)001UON001593942001 Fertility differentials on three slave plantations in SurinameHumprey E. Lamura.1987:v.8:n.3 (1987)001UON001593442001 Marginality and free coloured identity in caribbean slave societyArnold A. Sioa.1987:v.8:n.2 (1987)001UON001593922001 Michael Willis and the british roots of canadian antislaveryAllen P. Stouffera.1987:v.8:n.3 (1987)001UON001592012001 Moses Finley and slaveryA personal noteArnaldo Momiglianoa.1987:v.8:n.1 (1987)001UON001592312001 On the roman slave supply and slavebreedingK. R. Bradleya.1987:v.8:n.1 (1987)001UON001593892001 Prisons, workhouses, and the control of slave labour in Low Country Georgia 1763-1815Betty Wooda.1987:v.8:n.3 (1987)001UON001592322001 Slavery and the roman familyRichard Sallera.1987:v.8:n.1 (1987)001UON001592362001 Slaves and the law in the towns of St. Croix 1802-1807N.A.T. Halla.1987:v.8:n.2 (1987)001UON001593902001 Social protest and labour bargainibgThe changing nature of slaves' responses to plantation life in eighteenth-century BarbadosHilary Beckles and Karl Watsona.1987:v.8:n.3 (1987)001UON001592282001 War, piracy and slavery in the greek worldYvon Garlana.1987:v.8:n.1 (1987)001UON001593602001 Agricultural adaptation and race control in the American South: the failure of the Ruffin reformsW.M. Mathewa.1986:v.7:n.2 (1986)001UON001594362001 Analysing a regional slave trade: the West Indies and Virginia 1698-1775Susan Westburya.1986:v.7:n.3 (1986)001UON001593562001 Anti-slavery and ultra-radicalism in early nineteenth-century England: the case of Robert WedderburnIain McCalmana.1986:v.7:n.2 (1986)001UON001593532001 ˆThe ‰decline thesis of british slavery since econocideSeyumour Dreschera.1986:v.7:n.1 (1986)001UON001594372001 Fluctuations in the age and sex rations of slaves in the nineteenth-century transatlantic slave trafficDavid Eltisa.1986:v.7:n.3 (1986)001UON001593582001 Habeas Corpus, extradition and a fugitive slave in CanadaDonald V. Macdougalla.1986:v.7:n.2 (1986)001UON001594242001 Lamu (Kenya), slave trade, and british efforts to suppressPatricia Romero Curtina.1986:v.7:n.2 (1986)001UON001594282001 Maroon women as Ancestors, priests and mediums in SurinamSilvia W. de Groota.1986:v.7:n.2 (1986)001UON001593552001 Social control and the Colonial state: the reorganization of the Police Force in the Bahamas, 1888-1893Howard Johnsona.1986:v.7:n.1 (1986)001UON001594342001 ˆThe ‰transportation of slaves from Virginia, 1801-1865Philip J. Schwarza.1986:v.7:n.3 (1986)001UON001594392001 White welfare and black strategies: the dynamics of race and poor relief in early New York, 1700-1825Robert E. Craya.1986:v.7:n.3 (1986)001UON001594572001 "Booty capitalism" and capitalism's booty: slaves and slavery in ancient Rome and the American SouthBarry A. Croucha.1985:v.6:n.1 (1985)001UON001595132001 Cimarrones and Palenques: Runaways and resistance in Colonial ColombiaAnthony McFarlanea.1985:v.6:n.3 (1985)001UON001595072001 Colonial South Carolina runawaystheir significance for slave culturePhilip Morgana.1985:v.6:n.3 (1985)001UON001595202001 ˆA ‰comparison between the history of Maroon communities in Surinam and JamaicaSilvia W. de Groota.1985:v.6:n.3 (1985)001UON001595182001 ˆThe ‰Maroons of Jamaica, 1730-1830: livelihood, demography and healthRichard B. Sheridana.1985:v.6:n.3 (1985)001UON001595112001 On the Eve of the Haitian revolution: slave runaways in Saint Domingue in the year 1790David Geggusa.1985:v.6:n.3 (1985)001UON001595042001 Runaway slaves and social bandits in Southern Angola, 1875-1913W. G. Clarence-Smitha.1985:v.6:n.3 (1985)001UON001595102001 Runaway slaves in nineteenth-century BarbadosGad Heumana.1985:v.6:n.3 (1985)001UON001594992001 Slave birth, death and disease on Golden Grove plantation , Jamaica, 1765-1810Betty Wood and T.R. Claytona.1985:v.6:n.2 (1985)001UON001594602001 Slave coast of EuropeDaniel Evansa.1985:v.6:n.1 (1985)001UON001595012001 Slavery in eighteenth-century Rhode Island: evidence from the census of 1774Louis P. Masura.1985:v.6:n.2 (1985)001UON001595032001 Some thoughts on resistance to enslavement in AfricaRichard Rathbonea.1985:v.6:n.3 (1985)001UON001595052001 They are indeed the Constant Plague of their tyrants: Slave defence of a moral economy in colonial North Carolina, 1748-1772Marvin L. Michael Kay and Lorin Lee Carya.1985:v.6:n.3 (1985)001UON001595002001 Toussaint l'ouverture and the war economy of Saint-Domingue, 1796-1802Mats Lundahla.1985:v.6:n.2 (1985)001UON001594592001 Women, and the comparative study of American Negro slaveryMichael Mullina.1985:v.6:n.1 (1985)001UON001595462001 ˆAn ‰"apple of discord"the woman question at the world's anti-slavery convention of 1840Donald R. Kennona.1984:v.5:n.3 (1984)001UON001595282001 Black into withe in nineteenth century Spanish America: Afro-American assimilation in Argentina and Costa RicaLowell Gudmundsona.1984:v.5:n.1 (1984)001UON001595302001 Changing attitudes in a expanding empire: tne anti-slavery movement, 1760-1783Paul Thomasa.1984:v.5:n.1 (1984)001UON001595442001 ˆThe ‰historical roots of the plantation modelMichael Cratona.1984:v.5:n.3 (1984)001UON001595212001 Land tenure in the free villages of Trelawny, Jamaica: a case study in the Carribean peasant reponse to emancipationJean Bessona.1984:v.5:n.1 (1984)001UON001595382001 Literary images of slavery and resistencethe case of Uncle Tom's Cabin and Cecilia ValdesJacqueline Kayea.1984:v.5:n.2 (1984)001UON001595432001 "On home colonization" by Elijah CoffinThomas D. Hamma.1984:v.5:n.2 (1984)001UON001595392001 Recurring themeswhite images of black life during and after slaveryJames Walvina.1984:v.5:n.2 (1984)001UON001595412001 ˆThe ‰share system of Bahamas in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuriesHoward Johnsona.1984:v.5:n.2 (1984)001UON001595362001 Slaverythe underside of freedomOrlando Pattersona.1984:v.5:n.2 (1984)001UON001595452001 Towards emancipationslave women and resistance to coercive labour regimes in the British West Indian colonies, 1790-1838Barbara Busha.1984:v.5:n.3 (1984)001UON001595662001 American views on "Biblical slavery": 1835-1865, a comparative study. "Cursed be Canaan, a servant of servants shall he be unto his Brethren" - Genesis IX, 25Ron Bartoura.1983:v.4:n.1 (1983)001UON001596262001 ˆThe ‰edges of slavery in the old Southor, do exceptions prove rules?Peter Parisha.1983:v.4:n.2 (1983)001UON001595642001 French views on slavery and abolitionism in the United States, 1830-1848Lawrence C. Jenningsa.1983:v.4:n.1 (1983)001UON001596312001 Marronage and the maintenance of public order in Mauritius, 1721-1835Richard B. Allena.1983:v.4:n.3 (1983)001UON001595682001 Resistence to oppression: black women's reponse to slavery in the United StatesMary Ellisona.1983:v.4:n.1 (1983)001UON001595632001 ˆA ‰selfish pursuit in a slave uprising of third/Ninth century IraqDionisius A. Agiusa.1983:v.4:n.1 (1983)001UON001595692001 Trespassers in the Land of their birth: blacks and landownership in South Carolina and Mississippi during the civil war and reconstruction, 1861-1877Kevern J. Verneya.1983:v.4:n.1 (1983)001UON001596302001 ˆA ‰whig view of slavery, development, and the World marketJ. Budziszewskia.1983:v.4:n.3 (1983)001UON001596232001 Williams and Drescherabolition and emancipationWalter E. Minchintona.1983:v.4:n.2 (1983)001UON001596282001 Women and slaveryGerda Lernera.1983:v.4:n.3 (1983)001UON001596402001 From gradualism to immediatismanother lookDuncan Macleoda.1982:v.3:n.2 (1982)001UON001596422001 Initiatives and organisation of the black, Poor 1786-1787Stephen J. Braidwooda.1982:v.3:n.3 (1982)001UON001596412001 ˆA ‰new money supply series for West Africa in the era of the slave tradethe import of the Cowrie Shell from EuropeJan Hogendorn and Marion Johnsona.1982:v.3:n.2 (1982)001UON001596442001 Planter comment on slave revolts in 18th century JamaicaClare Taylora.1982:v.3:n.3 (1982)001UON001596392001 Rights in men and rights in Landslavery, labor and smallholder agriculture in northern NigeriaLouise D. Lennihana.1982:v.3:n.2 (1982)001UON001596352001 Survey of international archives I. The library company of Philadelphia and the historical society of Pennsylvaniaa.1982:v.3:n.1 (1982)001UON001596432001 ˆThe ‰times and American slavery in the 1850sMartin Crawforda.1982:v.3:n.3 (1982)001UON001596452001 Indian merchants in East Africa. Part. II: British imperialism and the transformation of the slave economyLawrence J. Skaraia.1981:v.2:n.1 (1981)001UON001596512001 Parliamentary reform, methodism and anti-slavery politics, 1829-1833Roger Ansteya.1981:v.2:n.3 (1981)001UON001596522001 ˆThe ‰Rhode Island slave trade: a trading advantage in AfricaAlison Jonesa.1981:v.2:n.3 (1981)001UON001596472001 Slave dealers, women, pregnancy, and abortionthe story of a circassian slave-girl in Mind-nineteenth century CairoEhud R. Toledanoa.1981:v.2:n.1 (1981)001UON001596462001 ˆA ‰"Supply-side" aspect of the African slave trade: the cowrie production andexports of the MaldivesJan S. Hogendorna.1981:v.2:n.1 (1981)001UON001596492001 Tuareg slavery and the slave tradePriscilla Ellen Starretta.1981:v.2:n.2 (1981)001UON001596572001 White "Ladies", coloured "favourites" and black "wenches"some considerations on sex, race and class factors in social relations in white Creole society in the british CaribbeanBarbara Busha.1981:v.2:n.3 (1981)001UON001596642001 Captain Charles Stuart and the British and the American abolition movements 1830-34Anthony J. Barkera.1980:v.1:n.1 (1980)001UON001596702001 Charles George Gordon and the problem of slavery in the SudanHaim Shakeda.1980:v.1:n.3 (1980)001UON001596622001 Chattel slavery in the Ottoman EmpireAlan Fishera.1980:v.1:n.1 (1980)001UON001596732001 Ethiopian and other African slaves in Greece during the Ottoman occupationRichard Pankhursta.1980:v.1:n.3 (1980)001UON001596672001 ˆThe ‰"First wheel of commerce"Newport, Rhode Isoland and the slave trade, 1760-1776Elaine F. Cranea.1980:v.1:n.2 (1980)001UON001596602001 Genesis, Judaism and the "Sons of Ham"Ephraim Isaaca.1980:v.1:n.1 (1980)001UON001596722001 Indian merhcants in East Africa. Part I: the triangular trade and the slave economyLawrence J. Sakaraia.1980:v.1:n.3 (1980)001UON001596662001 MawlasFreed slaves and converts in early IslamDaniel Pipesa.1980:v.1:n.2 (1980)001UON001596652001 Model of the World and categorial modelsthe "Enslavade barbarian" as a mobile classificatory labelPaulo Fernando de Moraes Fariasa.1980:v.1:n.2 (1980)001UON001596612001 Noah's maledictionEdward Wilmont Blydena.1980:v.1:n.1 (1980)001UON001596692001 Slave-owner and anti-slaverHenry Richard Vassall Fox, 3rd Lord Holland, 1800-1840V.E. Chancellora.1980:v.1:n.3 (1980)001UON003937242001 Being Yoruba in nineteenth-century Rio de JaneiroSandra Lauderdale Grahama. 2011:v. 32:n. 1 (2011:Mar)001UON003937582001 ˆ'‰Freedom narratives' of transatlantic slaveryPaul E. Lovejoya. 2011:v. 32:n. 1 (2011:Mar)001UON003937362001 His brothers' keeper: John Brown, moral stewardship and interracial abolitionismW. Caleb McDaniela. 2011:v. 32:n. 1 (2011:Mar)001UON003937632001 Protecting freeborn Muslims: The Sokoto Caliphate's attempts to prevent illegal enslavement and its acceptance of the strategy of ransomingJennifer Lofkrantza. 2011:v. 32:n. 1 (2011:Mar)001UON003937552001 ˆThe ‰significance of group manumissions in post-revolutionary rural MarylandSean Condona. 2011:v. 32:n. 1 (2011:Mar)001UON003937522001 ˆ'A ‰species of slavery': Richard Price's rational dissent and antislaveryAnthony Pagea. 2011:v. 32:n. 1 (2011:Mar)001UON003953642001 Bondsmen, freedmen, and maritime industrial transportation, c. 1840-1900Janet J. Ewalda. 2010:v. 31:n. 3 (2010:Sep)001UON003953592001 Different slave journeys: Enslaved african seamen on board of portuguese ships, c. 1760-1820sMariana P. Candidoa. 2010:v. 31:n. 3 (2010:Sep)001UON003953582001 Eighteenth century 'Prize Negroes': From Britain to AmericaCharles R. Foya. 2010:v. 31:n. 3 (2010:Sep)001UON003952672001 Enslaved pearl divers in the sixteenth century Caribbean Molly A. Warsha. 2010:v. 31:n. 3 (2010:Sep)001UON003952682001 Facilitating the slave trade: Company slaves at Cape Coast Castle, 1750-1807Ty M. Reesea. 2010:v. 31:n. 3 (2010:Sep)001UON003953612001 Gorge: An african seaman and his flights from 'Freedom' back to 'Slavery' in the early nineteenth centuryWalter Hawthornea. 2010:v. 31:n. 3 (2010:Sep)001UON003953652001 ˆ'‰I espied a Chinaman': Chinese sailors and the fracturing of the Nineteenth century pacific maritime labourJohn T. Gridera. 2010:v. 31:n. 3 (2010:Sep)001UON003951292001 Maritime slaveryPhilip D. Morgana. 2010:v. 31:n. 3 (2010:Sep)001UON003952602001 Mediterranean slavery, new world transfornations: Galley slaves in the Spanish Caribbean, 1578-1635David Wheata. 2010:v. 31:n. 3 (2010:Sep)001UON003943192001 Reporting atrocities: A comparison of the 'Zong' and the trial of Captain John KimberSrividhya Swaminathana. 2010:v. 31:n. 4 (2010:Dec)001UON003953632001 Saltwater slavers and captives in the Sulu Zone, 1768-1878James Francis Warrena. 2010:v. 31:n. 3 (2010:Sep)001UON003943202001 ˆ'The ‰slavery of East and West': Abolitionists and 'Unfree' labour in India, 1820-1833Andrea Majora. 2010:v. 31:n. 4 (2010:Dec)001UON003943222001 'Their coats were tied up like men': Women rebels in Antigua's 1858 uprisingNatasha Lightfoota. 2010:v. 31:n. 4 (2010:Dec)SCHIAVITU'UONC021092RIGBLondonUONL003044WILLISJohn RalphUONV044115Frank Cass & CompanyUONV247026650ITSOL20240220RICASIBA - SISTEMA BIBLIOTECARIO DI ATENEOUONSI1(1980)-10(1989); 13(1992)-33(2012);A PER Afr 118 ;UON00084999SIBA - SISTEMA BIBLIOTECARIO DI ATENEOSI 1(1980)-10(1989); 13(1992)-33(2012);SI A PER Afr 118 33 SI 4963 7 33 SI A PER Afr 118 01 SI AA 6036 7 01 SI A PER Afr 118 02 SI AA 6037 7 02 SI A PER Afr 118 03 SI AA 6038 7 03 SI A PER Afr 118 04 SI AA 6619 7 04 SI A PER Afr 118 05 SI AA 6627 7 05 SI A PER Afr 118 06 SI AA 7419 7 06 SI A PER Afr 118 07 SI AA 7997 7 07 SI A PER Afr 118 08 SI AA 9264 7 08 SI A PER Afr 118 09 SI AA 10441 7 09 SI A PER Afr 118 10 SI AA 11463 7 10 SI A PER Afr 118 13 SI AA 12593 7 13 SI A PER Afr 118 14 SI AA 15821 7 14 SI A PER Afr 118 15 SI AA 16946 7 15 SI A PER Afr 118 16 SI AA 17842 7 16 SI A PER Afr 118 17 SI AA 18540 7 17 SI A PER Afr 118 18 SI AA 19585 7 18 SI A PER Afr 118 19 SI AA 21147 7 19 SI A PER Afr 118 20 SI AA 21703 7 20 SI A PER Afr 118 21 SI AA 23166 7 21 SI A PER Afr 118 22 SI AA 24448 7 22 SI A PER Afr 118 23 SI AA 25086 7 23 SI AA 26772 7 25 SI AA 28285 7 27 SI AA 28703 7 28 SI AA 29242 7 29 SI AA 29833 7 30 SI A PER Afr 118 24 SI AA 25673 7 24 SI A PER Afr 118 26 SI AA 27340 7 26 SI A PER Afr 118 31 SI AA 30114 7 31 SI A PER Afr 118 32 SI AA 30704 7 32 SIBA - SISTEMA BIBLIOTECARIO DI ATENEOSI2012680 1J 20121213 Slavery and abolition1325853UNIOR00868nam0-22002891i-450 99000548382040332120240527113250.0000548382FED01000548382(Aleph)000548382FED0100054838219990530d1958----km-y0itay50------bafrey-------001yy<<L'>>etrangerBruxellesEditions de la Librairie Encyclopedique19582 v.25 cmRecueils de la Société Jean Bodin pour l'histoire comparative des institutions9Société Jean BodinITUNINARICAUNIMARCBK990005483820403321ST.MED.MOD. 3096 (1)ST.MED.MOD.FLFBCST.MED.MOD. 3096 (2)ST.MED.MOD.FLFBCFLFBCÉtranger"182401UNINA