Blacks in Latin America.
Publié le 03/05/2013
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Throughout Latin America and the Caribbean the slave population declined at the astonishing rate of 2 to 4 percent a year; thus, by the time slavery was abolished, theoverall slave population in many places was far less than the total number of slaves imported.
The British colony of Jamaica, for example, imported more than 600,000slaves during the 18th century; yet, in 1838, the slave population numbered little more than 300,000.
The French colony of Saint-Domingue (present-day Haiti)imported more than 800,000 Africans during the 18th century, but had only 480,000 slaves in 1790, on the eve of the Haitian Slave Revolt.
Between 1810 and 1870,the Spanish colony of Cuba acquired about 600,000 slaves; in 1880, however, the Cubans had only 200,000 slaves and an entire Afro-Cuban population of 450,000.Altogether, the 4.7 million Africans imported to the Caribbean over the centuries had diminished to about 2 million in 1880.
E Blacks in Colonial Society
In Latin America society was, in general, a three-tiered structure of castes, subdivided into classes.
At the top were the Europeans; in the middle were the freenonwhites; and at the bottom were slaves and Native Americans.
Each caste had its own set of legal rights and social privileges, which varied from place to place.
In thesugar-producing areas and other plantation-based economic units of Brazil, the Caribbean, and the lowlands of Mexico, Colombia, and Peru, the rights of slaves as wellas free persons of color tended to be legally circumscribed.
The greater the demand for labor, the more severe the coercion and discrimination exercised against theAfrican sector of the population.
In the coffee, cattle, and fishing areas of southern Brazil, Puerto Rico, eastern Cuba, the interior of Argentina, and Venezuela, socialmobility tended to be greater and internal class and caste distinctions more relaxed and less formal.
In the towns and cities Africans filled occupational roles just as didother free members of society, although they tended to be concentrated in the more menial and unskilled tasks.
The majority of the black population in Latin America and the Caribbean spent their lives in domestic service or as agricultural laborers.
About 20 percent—both slaveand free—were sailors, artisans, nursemaids, wet nurses, merchants, small shopkeepers, mining or sugar experts, or itinerant street vendors.
Slavery was never only aform of labor organization or only an economic enterprise.
It was a socioeconomic complex held together by law and custom.
Regardless of their conditions, their hopesfor freedom were strong, and slaves often revolted.
III EMANCIPATION
Throughout the history of slavery in the Americas, some masters voluntarily manumitted (freed) their slaves.
In the Spanish colonies, slaves could purchase their freedom on a time-purchase plan called coartación. A similar scheme prevailed in Brazil and the sugar colonies of the Caribbean.
Almost everywhere, female urban slaves constituted the majority of those who benefited from voluntary manumissions and self-purchase.
The children of these women were also free.
In addition, somefree white fathers emancipated their children born of slave mothers; the state also emancipated slaves from time to time for a variety of reasons.
A The Free Blacks
Because slavery played such an important role in the New World economy between 1600 and 1850, it overshadowed by far the number of Africans who came to theAmericas as free persons.
The first group of free, or semifree, Africans arrived in the early 16th century with the original European colonists.
The second came duringthe 19th century, mainly as part of a British-sponsored attempt to provide an alternative source to African slave labor.
Besides these free immigrants—of whom about50,000 settled in the British and French West Indies—each slave society contained, almost from its beginning, an ever-expanding component of blacks who had beenfreed by manumission.
By the beginning of the 19th century this free population had become a fixture of every slave society in the Americas.
In the New Granada provinces of what today arethe independent states of Panama, Colombia, Venezuela, and Ecuador, the free black population in 1789 was 420,000, whereas African slaves numbered only 20,000.Free blacks also outnumbered slaves in Peru, Argentina, and Brazil.
In Puerto Rico they numbered nearly half the total population in 1812.
In Cuba, by contrast, freeblacks made up only 15 percent in 1827; in Saint-Domingue the ratio was even lower—5 percent in 1789—and in Jamaica it was a mere 3 percent in 1800.
Thus, inplantation societies, opportunities for emancipation did not come easily, whereas in regions where the economy was more diversified, the free black and mulattopopulation expanded considerably.
B The Campaign Against the Slave Trade
By the end of the 18th century, the possibility of a general emancipation of all slaves began to emerge as a preoccupation of every slave society.
By the 16th centurySpanish missionaries such as Antonio Montesino and Bartolomé de Las Casas had become critical of slavery, and in the 17th century English Quakers ( see Society of Friends) opposed both slavery and the slave trade.
General disapproval developed only during the 18th century, however, when the rational attitudes of theEnlightenment combined with British Evangelical Protestantism to form the intellectual preconditions for the abolitionist movement.
The British abolitionists, aware that their compatriots transported the greatest number of African slaves to the New World, concentrated their efforts against the slavetrade rather than slavery itself, feeling that the termination of the trade would eventually lead to the end of the institution.
The abolitionist attack was spearheaded byGranville Sharp, a humanitarian who in 1772 persuaded the British courts to declare that slavery could not exist in England.
The ruling immediately affected the morethan 15,000 slaves brought into the country by their colonial masters, who valued them at approximately £700,000 (averaging £47 each, or one and one-half times theaverage yearly income of a London laborer of the period).
In 1776 British philosopher and economist Adam Smith declared in his classic economic study, The Wealth of Nations, that slavery was uneconomical because the plantation system was a wasteful use of land and because slaves cost more to maintain than free laborers.
By the 1780s, slavery was being attacked, directly and indirectly, from several sources.
Evangelicals condemned it on the grounds of Christian charity and theassumption of a natural law of common humanity.
Economists opposed slavery because it wasted valuable resources.
Political philosophers saw it as the basis of unjustprivilege and unequal distribution of social and corporate responsibility.
In 1787 Thomas Clarkson, an English cleric, joined Granville Sharp and Josiah Wedgwood, theEnglish potter, to form a society for the abolition of the slave trade.
The society recruited William Wilberforce as its parliamentary spokesman and in 1788 succeeded ingetting Prime Minister William Pitt to set up a select committee of the Privy Council to investigate the slave trade.
The year before, the society had established SierraLeone in West Africa as a refuge for the “London black poor,” and it achieved other successes.
C Abolition of the Slave Traffic
A bill designed to restrict the number of slaves carried by each ship, based on the ship’s tonnage, was enacted by Parliament on June 17, 1788; and that year theFrench abolitionists, inspired by their English counterparts, founded the Société des Amis des Noirs (Society of the Friends of Blacks).
Finally in 1807, the BritishParliament passed an act prohibiting British subjects from engaging in the slave trade after March 1, 1808—16 years after the Danes had abolished their trade.
In 1811slave trading was declared a felony punishable by transportation (exile to a penal colony) for all British subjects or foreigners caught trading in British possessions. Britain then assumed most of the responsibility for abolishing the transatlantic slave trade, partly to protect its sugar colonies.
In 1815 Portugal accepted £750,000 torestrict the trade to Brazil; and in 1817 Spain accepted £400,000 to abandon the trade to Cuba, Puerto Rico, and Santo Domingo.
In 1818 Holland and France abolishedthe trade.
After 1824, slave trading was declared tantamount to piracy, and until 1837 participants faced the penalty of death..
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