Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Maps, Figures, and Tables
- Contributors
- Series Editors' Introduction
- 1 Dependence, Servility, and Coerced Labor in Time and Space
- PART I SLAVERY IN AFRICA AND ASIA MINOR
- 2 Enslavement in the Ottoman Empire in the Early Modern Period
- 3 Slavery in Islamic Africa, 1400–1800
- 4 Slavery in Non-Islamic West Africa, 1420–1820
- 5 Slaving and Resistance to Slaving in West Central Africa
- 6 White Servitude
- PART II SLAVERY IN ASIA
- PART III SLAVERY AMONG THE INDIGENOUS AMERICANS
- PART IV SLAVERY AND SERFDOM IN EASTERN EUROPE
- PART V SLAVERY IN THE AMERICAS
- PART VI CULTURAL AND DEMOGRAPHIC PATTERNS IN THE AMERICAS
- PART VII LEGAL STRUCTURES, ECONOMICS, AND THE MOVEMENT OF COERCED PEOPLES IN THE ATLANTIC WORLD
- PART VIII SLAVERY AND RESISTANCE
- Index
6 - White Servitude
from PART I - SLAVERY IN AFRICA AND ASIA MINOR
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 September 2011
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Maps, Figures, and Tables
- Contributors
- Series Editors' Introduction
- 1 Dependence, Servility, and Coerced Labor in Time and Space
- PART I SLAVERY IN AFRICA AND ASIA MINOR
- 2 Enslavement in the Ottoman Empire in the Early Modern Period
- 3 Slavery in Islamic Africa, 1400–1800
- 4 Slavery in Non-Islamic West Africa, 1420–1820
- 5 Slaving and Resistance to Slaving in West Central Africa
- 6 White Servitude
- PART II SLAVERY IN ASIA
- PART III SLAVERY AMONG THE INDIGENOUS AMERICANS
- PART IV SLAVERY AND SERFDOM IN EASTERN EUROPE
- PART V SLAVERY IN THE AMERICAS
- PART VI CULTURAL AND DEMOGRAPHIC PATTERNS IN THE AMERICAS
- PART VII LEGAL STRUCTURES, ECONOMICS, AND THE MOVEMENT OF COERCED PEOPLES IN THE ATLANTIC WORLD
- PART VIII SLAVERY AND RESISTANCE
- Index
Summary
Despite marked geographical and temporal differences across the Western Hemisphere, white servitude remained a distinct and significant phenomenon to the end of the early modern period. The area is defined broadly to include the Americas, Europe, the Middle East, and Africa, and the specific cases of Russia and Eastern Europe are covered in greater detail in other chapters in this volume. White servitude was present to some degree throughout this vast area, but in a highly asymmetrical pattern of distribution. The largest concentrations were found around the Mediterranean, in Russia, and in the Middle East. Slavery proper was characterized by a lifetime of enforced labor, together with a chattel status that was passed on to descendants. Servitude is defined more widely to include serfdom, penal labor, the transportation of destitute minors, and, with reservations, indentured labor.
Free labor in the modern sense scarcely existed in Christian Europe before the nineteenth century, and yet the continent's experience was very diverse. Serfdom virtually disappeared from Western Europe, whereas it intensified and expanded in the east. Chattel slavery persisted in southwestern and central Europe, and yet it all but vanished in northwestern Europe. Russia's chattel slaves were all technically transformed into serfs by 1725, but at a time when the latter status was fast sinking to approximate that of slaves. Penal servitude was on the increase everywhere in Europe, and the lot of impoverished children and other marginal social groups worsened.
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- Information
- The Cambridge World History of Slavery , pp. 132 - 160Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2011
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