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Mutiny on the Amistad: the saga of a slave revolt and its impact on American abolition, law, and diplomacy.

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Published for the first time in the UK to coincide with Steven Spielberg's forthcoming movie Amistad, Mutiny on the Amistad presents the first full-scale treatment of the only instance in history where African blacks, seized by slave dealers, won their freedom and returned home.

Howard Jones describes how, in 1839, Joseph Cinqué led a revolt on the Spanish slave ship, the Amistad, in the Caribbean.

Allowing only the captain and firstmate to live in order to steer the ship back to Sierra Leone, the Africans were tricked and taken to New York.

The seizure of the ship by an American naval vessel near Montauk, Long Island, the arrest of the Africans in Connecticut, and the Spanish protest against the violation of their property rights created an internationalcontroversy.The Amistad affair united Lewis Tappan and other abolitionists who put the `law of nature' on trial in the United States by their refusal to accept a legal system that claimed to dispense justice while permitting artificial distinctions based on race or colour.

The mutiny resulted in a trial before the U.S. Supreme Court that pitted former President John Quincy Adams against the federal government.

Jones vividly recaptures this compelling drama-the most famous slavery case before DredScott-that climaxed in the court's ruling to free the captives and allow them to return to Africa.

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£27.40
Product Details
Oxford University Press
0198020880 / 9780198020882
eBook (Adobe Pdf)
05/05/1994
English
271 pages
Copy: 10%; print: 10%