enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Decatur slave-ship mutiny - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Decatur_slave-ship_mutiny

    The Decatur slave-ship mutiny was an act of slave rebellion in the United States that occurred in April 1826 on a coastwise slave ship sailing out of Baltimore, Maryland, bound for the New Orleans slave market. The captain and first mate were thrown overboard.

  3. Meermin slave mutiny - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Meermin_slave_mutiny

    A slave mutiny on Meermin, one of the Dutch East India Company's fleet of slave ships, took place in February 1766 and lasted for three weeks. Her final voyage was cut short by the mutiny of the Malagasy captives onboard, who had been sold to Dutch East India Company officials on Madagascar to be enslaved by the company in its Cape Colony in ...

  4. Creole mutiny - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Creole_mutiny

    "The Creole (Richmond Compiler)" Alexandria Gazette, December 20, 1841The Creole mutiny, sometimes called the Creole case, was a slave revolt aboard the American slave ship Creole in November 1841, when the brig was seized by the 128 slaves who were aboard the ship when it reached Nassau in the British colony of the Bahamas where slavery was abolished.

  5. La Amistad - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/La_Amistad

    La Amistad (pronounced [la a.misˈtað]; Spanish for Friendship) was a 19th-century two-masted schooner owned by a Spaniard living in Cuba.It became renowned in July 1839 for a slave revolt by Mende captives who had been captured and sold to European slave traders and illegally transported by a Portuguese ship from West Africa to Cuba, in violation of European treaties against the Atlantic ...

  6. Meermin - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Meermin

    Meermin (Dutch pronunciation: [ˈmeːrmɪn] ⓘ) was an 18th-century Dutch cargo ship of the hoeker [] type, one of many built and owned by the Dutch East India Company.She was laid down in 1759 and fitted out as a slave ship before her maiden voyage in 1761, and her career was cut short by a mutiny of her cargo of Malagasy people.

  7. Research: Wreck of last U.S. slave ship mostly intact on ...

    www.aol.com/research-wreck-last-u-slave...

    Researchers studying the wreckage of the last U.S. slave ship, buried in mud on the Alabama coast since it was scuttled in 1860, have made the surprising discovery that most of the wooden schooner ...

  8. Joseph Cinqué - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Joseph_Cinqué

    Sengbe Pieh (c. 1814 – c. 1879), [1] also known as Joseph Cinqué or Cinquez [2] and sometimes referred to mononymously as Cinqué, was a West African man of the Mende people [citation needed] who led a revolt of many Africans on the Spanish slave ship La Amistad in July 1839.

  9. New museum in Alabama tells history of last known slave ship ...

    www.aol.com/news/museum-alabama-tells-history...

    MOBILE, Ala. (AP) — A museum that tells the history of the Clotilda — the last ship known to transport Africans to the American South for enslavement — opened last Saturday, exactly 163 ...