Browse

Early Modern (1450 CE - 1800 CE)

thumbnail of the god krishna
Source

Bhakti Poets: Poem, Mirabai

Bhakti poets—who were in some cases lower-caste Hindu women—and their audiences drew emotional sustenance from these verses, which expressed a pure devotion to Hindu deities.

Source

The Revolt from An Historical Account of the Black Empire of Hayti

Rainsford’s detailed contemporary account of the revolt emphasizes the strenuous yet ultimately unsuccessful mobilization of colonial French resources.

Source

Ogé’s Rebellion in An Historical Account of the Black Empire of Hayti

Rainsford’s sympathy for the revolt in Haiti did not seem to extend to the influence of ideas imported from revolutionary France, which appear to have been at the heart of Ogé’s rebellion.

Source

Barnave, "Speech for the Colonial Committee of the National Assembly" (8 March 1790)

Here Antoine–Pierre Barnave, a well–connected and influential lawyer from Grenoble, represented those interests that wanted to hold onto France’s rich colonial possessions.

Source

Letter from Monseron de l’Aunay to the Marquis de Condorcet, President of the Society of Friends of the Blacks (24 December 1789)

This letter appears in the Journal of Paris as part of a debate over a performance of a play by Olympe de Gouges, the noted feminist, that concerns the abolition of the slave trade.

Source

A Divided Elite from An Historical Account of the Black Empire of Hayti

In this excerpt, Rainsford describes the divisive effects of the Declaration of Rights of the Blacks among the various racial/social groupings.

Source

Declaration of the Independence of the Blacks of St. Domingo

This important and revealing document evokes both the contemporary situation in the colonies and the political developments taking place in Paris. It comes from Marcus Rainsford’s supportive account of the Haitian Revolution.

Source

Discontent Spreads from An Historical Account of the Black Empire of Hayti

Rainsford wrote one of the first favorable accounts of the Haitian Revolution. He blamed the colonists for refusing to alter the slave system.

Source

A Female Writer’s Response to the American Champion or a Well–Known Colonist

Better known for her defense of the rights of women, Olympe de Gouges defended the rights of the downtrodden in general. Here she points out the cruelty of slavery and expresses the hope that the slave trade will be abandoned.

Source

A Left–Wing Newspaper Continues the Attack on Slavery (October 1790)

In this article, the influential newspaper The Revolutions of Paris asks if Africans and their descendants are "Born to Slavery?" as part of a general consideration of the situation in the French colonies.