The Atlantic Slave Trade: A CensusUniversity of Wisconsin Press, 1969 - 338 pages Curtin combines modern research and statistical methods with his broad knowledge of the field to present the first book-length quantitative analysis of the Atlantic slave trade. Its basic evidence suggests revision of currently held opinions concerning the place of the slave trade in the economies of the Old World nations and their American colonies. |
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... Rinchon's data for that period . Meyer's total estimate of slaves landed in the Americas by ships from Nantes came to 115,500 , as against 109,018 for Rinchon's list with supplementary estimates based on tonnage.3 In order to make the ...
... data cease to be a reliable guide to origins of slaves transported by the French slave trade . Gaston Martin was forced to assign 70 per cent to the category " other and unknown . " While Rinchon's unknown category came to only 3.2 per ...
... Rinchon's data are far more complete than that of Gaston Martin - listing , for example , 195 ships for the 1760's compared with only 141 in Gaston Martin's survey . Since Rinchon's more thorough listing appears to be complete or nearly ...
Table des matières
A Review | 3 |
The Colonies of the North | 51 |
The Fifteenth Sixteenth | 95 |
Droits d'auteur | |
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