Difference between revisions of "Fugitives from Slavery in Jamaica (Q968610)"
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Sophie Alegi (talk | contribs) (Created claim: hasExternalReference (P21): https://repository.upenn.edu/mead/44/) |
(Created claim: hasDescription (P66): We created two datasets about fugitives and captives in eighteenth-century Jamaica, one of the most violent systems of racial bondage in the Atlantic World. To produce the first dataset as an Excel file, we organized and recorded information contained in hundreds of newspaper advertisements offering rewards for the return of escaped slaves in Jamaica between 1718 and 1795.) |
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We created two datasets about fugitives and captives in eighteenth-century Jamaica, one of the most violent systems of racial bondage in the Atlantic World. To produce the first dataset as an Excel file, we organized and recorded information contained in hundreds of newspaper advertisements offering rewards for the return of escaped slaves in Jamaica between 1718 and 1795. | |||
Property / hasDescription: We created two datasets about fugitives and captives in eighteenth-century Jamaica, one of the most violent systems of racial bondage in the Atlantic World. To produce the first dataset as an Excel file, we organized and recorded information contained in hundreds of newspaper advertisements offering rewards for the return of escaped slaves in Jamaica between 1718 and 1795. / rank | |||
Normal rank |
Latest revision as of 15:34, 6 July 2023
FSJ
- FSJ
Language | Label | Description | Also known as |
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English |
Fugitives from Slavery in Jamaica
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FSJ
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Statements
Fugitives from Slavery in Jamaica
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Anthony W. Wood
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Billy G. Smith
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1718
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1795
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We created two datasets about fugitives and captives in eighteenth-century Jamaica, one of the most violent systems of racial bondage in the Atlantic World. To produce the first dataset as an Excel file, we organized and recorded information contained in hundreds of newspaper advertisements offering rewards for the return of escaped slaves in Jamaica between 1718 and 1795.
0 references