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- Date sent: Thu, 9 May 1996 15:13:42 -0700
-
- Name: Roxanne Jantzi
- Email: Roxanne_Jantzi@sfu.ca
- Language: English
- Subject: History 208
- Title: How Some Black Slaves were able to free themselves in Colonial America.
- Grade: 67%
- System: Macintosh
- Age: 25
- Country: Canada
- Comments:(A) Best not attribute moral responsibility to a place. Better -
- Spaniards and Portugeuse of the colonial era...... etc.
- (B) First, Lima was not in the mineral zone; it was in the Andes
- mountains. Secondly, you seems to be mixing 2 things here: the better
- chances of slaves in cities and the need for them in the mining industry.
- Given your emphasis on urban black slaves maybe a bit more, just by way of
- contrast, could have been said about plantation slaves - perhaps most
- notable in the Sugar plantations of Brazil. Also I think the essay could
- have been set better in terms of other discussions/readings/lectures on the
- casta system and issues of ranking and
- Date :Nov 15 1995
-
-
-
- The history of Blacks under the yoke of slavery is not a kind one.
- Colonial (A) Latin America was the first and perhaps the worst perpetrator
- in the crime of slavery. Brought from across the sea to work without wages
- and to suffer horrible treatment the African element of Latin American
- society lived a life of extreme diadvantage. Eventually the restrictions
- placed upon Blacks and the measure of prejudice against them lessened in
- severity. These changes in views and attitudes came slowly but surely when
- the Blacks and Spanish whites lived and worked in close proximity with one
- another. Despite the wishes of the Crown the people of White and Black
- mixed together commonly ( prof switched "mixed together" and "commonly".
- It was in the urban environment that this intermingling of peoples was
- bound to happen and where Blacks enjoyed the most opportunities for
- freedom.
- Black slaves in colonial Latin America suffered under extreme
- prejudice and institutionalized inequality. Transplanted from their
- homeland and lacking a common culture or language, Black slaves were
- forcibly integrated into an oppressive Spanish Colonial society and
- economy. However, certain environments for Black slaves were less
- oppressive than others. The urban landscape afforded Black with some
- opportunity to better their position i the Americas. Close contact with
- the Spanish commoner and the enormous physical presence of Blacks, free and
- slave, gave many Black Americans the chance to rise out of bondage into
- self determination.
- Lima, Peru was a prime example of this dynamic. Here Black slave
- labor was in even higher demand than was usual for most of Latin America
- due to the extremely high mortality rate of the Indian populations upon
- contact with Euorpean and Afican disease. The Indians that survived were
- reluctant to leave the village after the extreme decline in population and
- the widespread abuse of the mita system. As a result, Black labor was in
- more demand than it ever was and especially in the urban centres. Because
- Lima was located in a mineral rich coastal area (B) the potential for
- economic development was immense if enough labor could be found.
- Lima developed one of the largest populations in the New World with
- over half of its inhabitants from the Black or Mulatto caste. The economy
- of Peru was administered and much of its business and trades were performed
- in the capital city of Lima. Lima was a busy coastal seaport that linked
- with Pacific trade routes, processed precious metals, defended the high
- seas against Dutch and Portuguese invasion, housed the administration of
- the colony, enjoyed a construction boom and all of the other economic
- amenities associated with a growing metropolis.
- The needy state of the labor market in Lima provided Black slaves
- with opportunities to learn skilled trades through apprenticeships and
- experience. With labor in such high demand, slaveowners were more willing
- to provide their slaves with incentives to work and to learn skilles
- trades. Better wages, options to buy freedom through a percentage of their
- wages. The prospect of eventual freedom and equal wages strenghthened
- black economic independence and social status.
- "...Slaves and freemen in urban areas gained access to most manual trades,
- despite discriminatory laws...These positions in the urban economy gave
- slaves opportunities to earn and accumulate money, which led to manumission
- and the growth of a free black community."
- The use of Black labor, free or slave, was widespread throughout
- the colony but especially so in the urban areas. Crown corporations made
- use of Black skilled and unskilled slave labor. The Church also saw the
- benefits of using black labor in for skill required functions. Slaves were
- desperately needed to perform labor in nearly every aspect of Lima's
- economy except the most exclusive. Despite the fact that the presence of
- Blacks in great quantities was necessary and welcomed by business the
- Spanish elite of the society remained apprehensive. The colonial
- government were well aware of the possible problems that a large Black
- population in the city would have on their racial caste society. Laws were
- passed that were intended to segregate the races and prevent race mixing.
- These laws could not control the tide of popular reality which was that the
- races were already mixing and that the urban labor of Black people was
- necessary for the economy.
- Another characteristic of Peruvian slave labor was the existence in
- every region and every craft of free black and mulatto workers employed
- alongside slaves. For the Black slave to know and come in regular contact
- with Blacks who had freed themselves from enslavement must have been
- inspirational for them. The existence of these role model for liberty must
- have spurred an even greater resolve among Blacks to eventually secure a
- measure of self-determination.
- Race mixture contributed greatly to the number of free colored
- people. When the number of mixed race people escalated the strict
- impositions of teh state soon became difficult to uphold. The mixture of
- African and Native was impossible to prevent despite the wishes of the
- crown. Relations between white Spaniards, usually men, and black
- mistresses were commonplace in the early colonial period. The resulting
- offspring were in a state of legal ambiguity in the context of the slave
- caste system. This was quite significant because they were a growing
- percentage of the urban population.
- "In their eyes and in the view of society at large race mixture produced
- types who combined the worst defects and vices of both parents. So strong
- was the prejudice that this view tended to become a self-fulfilling
- prophecy."
- Despite this viewpoint urban slaves and colored people of mixed
- parentage were becoming more important to the society as a whole and more
- readily acceptable to the white population. The seeming generosity of some
- masters allowed black artisans to apply a portion of wages towards freedom.
- Slaveowners would lease out their slaves to certain businesses for profit.
-
- "Complex web of direct ownership, rentals, and self-employment made the
- slaves an extremely mobile and adjustable labor force."
- While being of great benefit to business the increased numbers of
- mestizos was testament to the fact that the Black population was also
- accepted by a great number of Spanish peoples. Color was gradually
- becoming less important in defining social status. The adherence to
- European or Spanish culture and tradition was now becoming the yardstick
- for social acceptance. Because a majority of the urban Black slaves were
- employed domestically a familiarity with Spanish culture already existed
- among many Blacks.
- Despite the successes that some Urban Blacks could achieve, the
- majority of the Black population, both urban and rural, suffered throughout
- Latin America. The Urban environment was not a haven for Black people but
- at least it allowed for some of the Black population to become more than
- just slaves. The reality of the demographics and needs of business
- demanded the presence of Blacks in the urban landscape. The presence of
- large numbers of Blacks working and living in close proximity to the
- Spanish commoner and the Spanish elite ran in direct conflict with the
- state position on racial intermixing and racial prejudice. The position of
- the State was frequently ignored by the general populace in the face of the
- physical reality.
- Slave ownership in Peru would become a model for all Spanish and
- most of Portuguese America as well. The same pattern of Black urbanization
- and social mixing was eventually experienced throughout Latin America.
-
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