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The Prince of Slavers

Humphry Morice and the Transformation of Britain's Transatlantic Slave Trade, 1698-1732
Demonstrates why the vast majority of the early independent British slave traders lacked the capital, both financial and informational, to succeed in the slave trade<div><br><div>Analyzes Morice's voluminous surviving papers and&nbsp;offers intriguing insights into his strategy</div><div><br></div><div>Connects Morice’s business practices with the “commodification” of enslaved human beings on the Middle Passage</div></div>

Inhalt

<p>Much scholarship on the British transatlantic slave trade has focused on its peak period in the late eighteenth century and its abolition in the early nineteenth; or on the Royal African Company (RAC), which in 1698 lost the monopoly it had previously enjoyed over the trade.&nbsp;During the early eighteenth-century transition between these two better-studied periods, Humphry Morice was by far the most prolific of the British slave traders.&nbsp; He bears the guilt for trafficking over 25,000 enslaved Africans, and his voluminous surviving papers offer intriguing insights into how he did it. </p><p>Morice’s strategy was well adapted for managing the special risks of the trade, and for duplicating, at lower cost, the RAC’s capabilities for gathering information on what African slave-sellers wanted in exchange.&nbsp; Still, Morice’s transatlantic operations were expensive enough to drive him to a series of increasingly dubious financial manoeuvres throughout the 1720s, and eventually to large-scale fraud in 1731 from the Bank of England, of which he was a longtime director.&nbsp; He died later that year, probably by suicide, and with his estate hopelessly indebted to the Bank, his family, and his ship captains.&nbsp; Nonetheless, his astonishing rise and fall marked a turning point in the development of the brutal transatlantic trade in enslaved Africans.</p><div><p></p></div>

Bibliografische Angaben

Februar 2020, Palgrave Studies in the History of Finance, Englisch
PALGRAVE MACMILLAN
9783030338398

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