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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A Census Philip D. Curtin. decrease among the slave population were 11.7 per cent . This is not only far higher than the rates of natural decrease commonly found in the Caribbean ; it is higher than the Cuban rates for periods ...
... decline in the rate of natural decrease on Jamaica as well . The development of the Leewards over 1707-33 thus appears similar to the Jamaican pattern of 1703-21 , when the annual increase was only 3.0 per cent and the natural decrease ...
... natural decrease of 5.4 per cent until 1735 for Martinique and until 1778 for Guadeloupe . After 1736 , the slave population of Martinique grew much more slowly . Its growth rate of 0.8 per cent over the period 1736-87 was nearly the ...
Table des matières
of the Literature | 3 |
The Hispanic Trade | 15 |
ropeans | 51 |
Droits d'auteur | |
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