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Preface; 1. 'Opening' of a legal trade; 2. Parliament versus Cortes; 3. Legality and illegality; 4. The treaty of 1817; 5. Enforcement and re-enforcement: the attempt to make the slave trade prohibition effective; 6. The treaty of 1835; 7. An abolitionist era; 8. The Turnbull affair; 9. The Escalera conspiracy; 10. The penal law of 1845; 11. Free trade and annexationism; 12. The failure of the penal law; 13. A new class of slaves; 14. The abolition of the Cuban slave trade; Abbreviations; Notes; Bibliography; Index.
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Add Odious Commerce : Britain, Spain and the Abolition of the Cuban Slave Trade, The Atlantic slave trade brought to Cuba the African slaves who created the dramatic transformation of the island from a relative backwater of Spain's colonial empire in the mid-eighteenth century to the world's richest plantation colony one hundred years, Odious Commerce : Britain, Spain and the Abolition of the Cuban Slave Trade to the inventory that you are selling on WonderClubX
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Add Odious Commerce : Britain, Spain and the Abolition of the Cuban Slave Trade, The Atlantic slave trade brought to Cuba the African slaves who created the dramatic transformation of the island from a relative backwater of Spain's colonial empire in the mid-eighteenth century to the world's richest plantation colony one hundred years, Odious Commerce : Britain, Spain and the Abolition of the Cuban Slave Trade to your collection on WonderClub |