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The American Revolution did more for the world than to cement the independence of 13 British colonies in North America from their mother country. The ideals and freedoms fought for by the founders of the United States spread throughout the wider Atlantic World and the world, spawning numerous other "revolutions," including the Haitian Revolution that began in 1791. Join Professor Bob Allison (Chair, Suffolk University Department of History, Language and Global Culture) in conversation with Professor Ashli White of the University of Miami, author of "Encountering Revolution; Haiti and the Making of the Early Republic."
Alex Dupuy, Wesleyan University.
More videos with Dupuy: [a]www.choices.edu%2Fscholar%2Falex-dupuy[/a]
This video is part of the following Choices Program curriculum unit:
The Haitian Revolution - [a]www.choices.edu%2Fthe-haitian-revolution[/a]
Perspectives from history. Choices for today.
www.choices.edu
History and Current Issues curriculum for the secondary classroom.
Authentic revolution of human history
(1492) - Christopher Columbus lands on the island of Hispaniola and begins enslaving its people. European diseases and brutal working conditions bring the indigenous population to the brink of extinction. Over the next three hundred years, hundreds of thousands of slaves are imported to meet the needs of their European colonizers. (1791-1804) - Fueled by the ideals of the French Revolution, the Haitian Revolution begins when slaves and those of mixed race rise up against their oppressors in one of the largest and most successful slave rebellions in history. (January 1, 1804) - Haiti wins its independence and becomes the first nation to be founded by former slaves. Fearing the spread of slave revolts, European powers and the United States pursue a policy of isolation towards Haiti. (1862) - The U.S. officially recognizes Haitian sovereignty during its own struggle to end slavery, the American Civil War.
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We answer your questions, correct small hiccups we made, and expand on the stories that were too wild, weird, or complicated to fit into the main series. Welcome to this episode of Lies! What about the Polish troops that helped the revolution? Where did we get our numbers from? How does Walpole fit into all of this???
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Why was the Haitian Revolution, one that was led and won by African slaves, mostly ignored by the United States?
This week, we'll take a brief look at the Haitian Revolution and how America reacted to it. We'll learn about the revolution's origins, why the slaves rose up against their masters, the leader of the revolution, how the slaves won their independence, and the response from the United States under the presidencies of John Adams and Thomas Jefferson.
Learn more about the Haitian Revolution:
https://history.state.gov/mile....stones/1784-1800/hai
http://avalon.law.yale.edu/18t....h_century/rightsof.a
https://www.amazon.com/Avengers-New-World-Haitian-Revolution/dp/0674018265/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1537371528&sr=8-1&keywords=avengers+of+the+new+world
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The Louisiana Purchase Lecture Series, lecture five: “The Impact of the Haitian Revolution on LA” by John O’Connor.
Held at the University of New Orleans's Earl K. Long Library on September 17, 2002.
The Haitian Revolution was a violent conflict with several factions, foreign intervention, uprisings and the first and only successful slave rebellion in human history.
The French Revolution broke out amidst the social change through the Enlightenment across Europe and the Americas, Saint Domingue had been ruled by France since 1625 and participated in the Trans-Atlantic Slave Trade heavily, with four racial-classes forming, the Grand Blancs, the Petite Blancs, the Free People of Color, and Slaves, these groups had overlapping ideologies but yet wished for different types of reforms or in the case of the Grand Blancs maintaining of the status quo, as such, during the Revolution these groups allied with each other yet also fought each other all in different areas at the exact same time, the Slaves rebelled against and fought all sides over their corrosive and cruel treatment and as such they conducted a violent guerilla war in which over time the Slaves consolidated their power under Toussaint Louverture, Napoleon would later send genocidal subordinates to re-establish their control over Hispaniola and capture Louverture, but would re-establish slavery in Guadalope, in response, the Slaves would rebel one final time and establish the first black nation on Earth from a European Power.
Music: Mark Petrie - Makalu (Epic Dark Massive Hybrid Action): https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iQ6TJPd4W-Y
Mark Petrie - Destiny Falls: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MgiL3QY394Y
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Anthony Bogues, Brown University.
More videos with Bogues: [a]www.choices.edu%2Fbogues[/a]
This video is part of the following Choices Program curriculum unit:
Climate Change and Questions of Justice - [a]www.choices.edu%2Fclimate-change[/a]
Racial Slavery in the Americas: Resistance, Freedom, and Legacies - [a]www.choices.edu%2Fracial-slavery[/a]
Perspectives from history. Choices for today.
www.choices.edu
History and Current Issues curriculum for the secondary classroom.
Haiti is the first Black-led republic, but now it’s often characterized as “poor,” “dangerous” and “unstable.” What has contributed to Haiti’s misery? What is missing in this conversation?
#Haiti #France #Colonialism
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Listen to "Crête-à-Pierrot" the theme track of our series on the slave revolt that blossomed into becoming a full-on nation, the Haitian Revolution.
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The Haitian Revolution 1791 1804
Melvyn Bragg and his guests discuss the Haitian Revolution. In 1791 an uprising began in the French colonial territory of St Domingue. Partly a consequence of the French Revolution and partly a backlash against the brutality of slave owners, it turned into a complex struggle involving not just the residents of the island but French, English and Spanish forces. By 1804 the former slaves had won, establishing the first independent state in Latin America and the first nation to be created as a result of a successful slave rebellion. But the revolution also created one of the world's most impoverished societies, a legacy which Haiti has struggled to escape.
with; Kate Hodgson, Postdoctoral Research Fellow in French at the University of Liverpool; Tim Lockley, Reader in American Studies at the University of Warwick; and Karen Salt, Fellow in History in the School of Language and Literature at the University of Aberdeen. Producer: Luke Mulhall.
READING LIST:
Joan Dayan, Haiti, History and the Gods (University of California Press, 1998)
Laurent Dubois, Avengers of the New World: The Story of the Haitian Revolution (Harvard University Press, 2004)
Carolyn E. Fick, The Making of Haiti: The Saint-Domingue Revolution from Below (University of Tennessee Press, 1990)
John D. Garrigus, Before Haiti: Race and Citizenship in French Saint-Domingue (Palgrave Macmillan, 2006)
David P. Geggus, Haitian Revolutionary Studies (Indiana University Press, 2002)
David P. Geggus (ed.), The Impact of the Haitian Revolution in the Atlantic World (University of South Carolina Press, 2001)
Malick Ghachem, The Old Regime and the Haitian Revolution (Cambridge University Press, 2012)
C. L. R. James, The Black Jacobins: Toussaint L’Ouverture and the San Domingo Revolution (first published 1938; Penguin, 2001)
Madison Smartt Bell, Toussaint Louverture: A Biography (Vintage, 2007)
Michel-Rolph Trouillot, Silencing the Past: Power and the Production of History (Beacon Press, 1997)
https://www.patreon.com/ancientaccounts (If you wanna toss a couple of bucks my way)
This video is intented to be a crash course in the Hatian Revolution mostly just for my own amusement but also could help AP Euro Students. This only covers the prelude to the revolution, so not Toussiant L'overture or his successor Jean-Jacques Dessalines. I did record the audio but had to cut the animation down to this length cause time constraints.
The Haitian Revolution is a significant event because it was the catalyst for countries all over the world to fight for their freedom. In this video, we dig deeper the reason the revolution started. allyship and Haiti's contribution to the world.
Black Canadian Content Creators Podcast- https://www.youtube.com/playli....st?list=PLPL1G4PbxTq
Chonilla Podcast- http://chonillanetwork.com
#thehaitianrevolution #fidikulcha #charismaggietv
Intro and outro music- https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pgo60eP8NoE
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Wondershare Filmora https://shareasale.com/r.cfm?b=1530677&u=2385690&m=44487&urllink=&afftrack=
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With the end of slavery in French colonies and the withdrawal of Spanish troops from the conflict, it looked like everything was going Toussaint L'Ouverture's way. There was just one little thorn in his side... André Rigaud. There had been a long-standing rivalry between the two men. But as the conflict with external powers seems to come to an end, this internal struggle is about to become explosive. And thus began The War of Knives.
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And here we come full circle. After fighting France for their freedom, then uniting against international powers, you would expect that the fighting would be over for Haiti. But Napoleon Bonaparte had different plans. He would send 80,000 men under the command of Charles Leclerc to fight and arrest Louverture. But Louverure's words will prove to be prophetic. And when the diplomatic Louverture is removed from the picture, France will have to reckon with the wrath of Dessalines.
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♪ Get the intro music here!
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*Music by Demetori: http://bit.ly/1AaJG4H
♪ Outro music: "Crête-à-Pierrot" by Tiffany Román
http://www.tiffanyromanlouk.com
Christopher Columbus landed on the Caribbean island of Hispaniola during his first transatlantic voyage in 1492 and the island and its population were soon exploited for their gold. However, by the 17th century Spanish interest in the island had waned and French settlers soon rose to dominance with the creation of large sugar plantations.
By the outbreak of the French Revolution in 1789 the plantations on Saint-Domingue were producing 60% of the world’s coffee and 40% of all the sugar imported by Britain and France. This economy was built on the slave labour of approximately 500,000 black Africans who lived in incredibly harsh conditions where they were regularly subjected to extreme cruelty at the hands of their masters.
Tensions between the different groups in the colony had often led to violence, and there had been several uprisings prior to the Haitian Revolution that began on 22 August 1791. Influenced in part by the new ideology expressed in the Declaration of the Rights of Man, the slaves of Saint-Domingue rose against the plantation owners on an unprecedented scale and had seized control of a third of the entire island by 1792.
Desperate to end the revolt and regain control over the island’s wealth the French National Assembly abolished slavery, although Napoleon later attempted to reintroduce it to the colonies. He failed to do so in Saint-Domingue which declared independence on 1 January 1804 under the name Haiti, making it the first country to be established by former slaves.