British Caribbean slavery, cornerstone of the British empire, was characterized by extreme & brutal exploitation. It yielded substantial wealth for a privileged few and the British government, but inflicted immense suffering on the majority of enslaved individuals, making them the most overworked & harshly treated people in the eighteenth-century Atlantic world. This history had enduring consequences.

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During the 17th and 18th centuries, a diverse group of individuals, including planters, merchants from the West Indies, Africa, and Britain, as well as ordinary white workers in the West Indies and Britain, heavily invested in the success of English-established plantation societies in the Caribbean.

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Slavery played a central role in making the lands of the Western Hemisphere valuable contributors to the global economy and sought-after markets. Throughout these centuries, the dominant forces moving across the Atlantic were predominantly slaves, their labor output, the resources required by slave societies, as well as the goods and services purchased with the profits from slave-produced goods.

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The plantation system in the eighteenth-century British Caribbean was notorious for its brutality, even in an era accustomed to such cruelty. Inhabitants of plantation societies like Jamaica, Barbados, Antigua, and Grenada endured wretched and abbreviated lives.

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Working in the grueling sugar plantations, they toiled harder than any other group during the period, yet received minimal rewards in return. While plantation owners amassed immense wealth, the enslaved individuals endured abysmal living conditions, facing starvation, brutalization, and traumatic experiences.

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Men were frequently and severely whipped for minor offenses, while women suffered sexual abuse at the hands of white managers. Violence served as the foundation of the British West Indian plantation system, with enslaved people subjected to daily horrors. This violence was prevalent throughout, but especially pronounced during the system's early stages or in frontier regions.

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The peak of violence occurred when the establishment of plantations was exceptionally arduous, the ratio of white managers to enslaved laborers—many of whom were directly brought from Africa—was low, and there were minimal constraints on the behavior of plantation owners enforced by the state.

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The ordeal endured by captives did not cease upon arrival in the Caribbean. The process of transforming captives into slaves involved dehumanizing sales procedures. As ships approached the port, captives were prepared for sale, groomed and polished to fetch the highest prices.

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Plantation owners and overseers used brutal methods to exert control over the enslaved population and extract labor from them. Physical punishment such as whipping, branding, and mutilation were commonly used as disciplinary measures, aiming to break the spirit and will of the enslaved individuals, reducing them to mere property without basic human rights.

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Sexual violence against enslaved women was rampant, with owners and overseers exploiting their positions of power to engage in rape and abuse, shielded by a climate of impunity.

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The plantation system perpetuated the separation of families, with children and spouses forcibly sold to different plantations, perpetuating a cycle of anguish and despair. The enslaved population lived under constant surveillance, with overseers and slave drivers strictly enforcing rules and regulations.

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Any form of resistance or rebellion was met with severe punishment, including torture and execution. This pervasive culture of fear aimed to suppress any aspirations of freedom or equality among the enslaved population.

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Enslaved individuals faced relentless brutality from white oppressors who responded with extreme ferocity to any act of defiance. To maintain control and discipline, a range of violent & intimidating methods were employed, such as the use of whips, stocks, and iron collars. These punishments were often carried out publicly, serving as a chilling spectacle intended to instill fear in others & deter any notions of resistance or rebellion.

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While it is easy to emphasize the individual sadistic nature of master-slave relationships, the violence within the plantation system had both psychological and strategic dimensions. The violence was not solely an outcome of individual sadists or the consequence of unchecked tyranny, but rather a structural feature that aimed to maintain control over the enslaved population.

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Historians often assert that the treatment of the enslaved in the Caribbean was unparalleled in its severity. Nowhere else were slaves subjected to such complete vulnerability and the arbitrary whims of their masters.

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The violence inherent in the plantation system, coupled with the constant tension akin to warfare that permeated their lives, occasionally erupted into violent and brutally suppressed slave revolts, serving as stark manifestations of the deep-rooted tensions.

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One notable example of the horrors endured by the enslaved was the mid-18th century Jamaica, a land of prodigious wealth that became an inferno for those in bondage. In 1760, the island was engulfed in a massive slave revolt known as Tacky's revolt, masterminded by an African-born slave named Wager or Apongo, with Tacky serving as his lieutenant.

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The rebellion aimed to eradicate white presence from the island and establish an African principality. Taking place during the Seven Years' War, the rebels may have seen it as a vulnerable time for the imperial system. However, the British regulars joined forces with the Maroons to quell the revolt, employing extreme force and difficulty.

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This island-wide conspiracy dealt a devastating blow to the Jamaican slave system, resulting in £100,000 in damages and the loss of numerous lives. Approximately 60 whites, 60 free people of color, and 500 slaves were killed in battle or executed in gruesome ways.

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The rebellion shook Jamaican white society to its core, while the excessive punishments that followed shocked Britons, prompting disbelief that their own people could be so barbaric. This revolt may have also spurred on the burgeoning abolitionist movement.

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To prevent similar rebellion, implementation of strict slave codes by the colonies further solidified the oppressive control over the enslaved population. These laws imposed severe restrictions on their movement, prohibited literacy, and stripped them of basic legal rights and protections. The slave codes also included provisions that justified harsh punishments for slaves who exhibited defiance or disobedience.

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Another method employed to crush the spirit of restless slaves was through violent slave auctions. These auctions were characterized by brutality and dehumanization, where families were forcibly torn apart and individuals were objectified and evaluated like commodities. The experience of being subjected to an auction, coupled with the constant fear of being separated from loved ones, inflicted lasting trauma and profound degradation.

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Enslaved people were often sold through a variety of methods. Occasionally, chaotic scenes known as "scrambles" ensued, where buyers fiercely competed to seize desired captives. More commonly, however, enslaved individuals were sold to merchants and then auctioned off in smaller groups or as individuals.

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This practice of sorting often resulted in enslaved people being sold in mixed ethnicities or as individuals, eroding their ethnic identities on the plantations. Planters often favored enslaved people from the Gold Coast, known as the Koromantee.

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Enslavers were able to inflict such severe mistreatment upon the enslaved because they regarded them as something less than human. Africans were consistently subjected to dehumanizing comparisons, portraying them as bestial and lacking full humanity. While Europeans recognized their common origin with Africans in God's creation, they considered Africans to be inferior forms of humans, perpetuating their subjugation.

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Escaping slavery in the eighteenth-century British Caribbean was an arduous endeavor with limited avenues for freedom. Enslaved individuals had three main options: attempting to run away, seeking manumission through legal means, or participating in slave rebellions.

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Running away and evading detection on the islands posed significant challenges. Nevertheless, some enslaved individuals managed to escape plantations and establish independent communities known as Maroon communities. These communities often thrived in remote and inaccessible areas, prompting plantation owners to engage in concerted efforts to suppress them.

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The clashes between Maroons and colonial authorities frequently escalated into violent conflicts, leading to brutal reprisals. In certain cases, Maroon leaders negotiated agreements with colonial governments to secure autonomy and prevent future runaway attempts.

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Manumission, the legal process of granting freedom, presented another avenue for escape. However, unlike their Spanish and Portuguese counterparts, the British were hesitant to embrace manumission. They were reluctant to establish an intermediate social group between free white individuals and enslaved black people, limiting opportunities for legally obtaining freedom.

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As mentioned before in Jamaica, slave rebellions served as the final, yet perilous, means of seeking liberation. The harsh conditions experienced on plantations occasionally ignited uprisings and revolts. One notable instance was the 1816 Barbados Slave Revolt, where thousands of enslaved people protested against their brutal treatment and demanded freedom.

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However, these uprisings were met with severe force, resulting in widespread casualties and brutal retaliation from plantation owners and colonial authorities.

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Although successful slave rebellions were rare in the eighteenth-century British Caribbean, the desire for freedom persisted. While many recorded conspiracies were foiled or never came to fruition, some rebellions did occur. A notable example is the Grenada rebellion led by Julien Fedon in 1795.

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The Grenada revolt, influenced by the winds of change brought about by the Haitian Revolution, resulted in prolonged warfare, devastation to the Grenadian economy, and the loss of numerous lives, predominantly among the enslaved population. These rebellions demonstrated that enslaved individuals were not always resigned to their plight and would seize opportunities to fight for freedom.

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While immediate emancipation was not achieved in the eighteenth century, the signs of weakness within the seemingly invincible plantation system began to emerge. The possibility of escaping the plantation's grip and attaining freedom became a contemplation for some enslaved individuals.

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Ultimately, it took another generation for emancipation to occur in the British Caribbean, but the fact that it transpired at all reveals the growing cracks in the plantation system and the determination of the enslaved population to seek a life beyond bondage.

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The nineteenth century brought about the realization of the seemingly impossible dream of freedom through the process of emancipation. This pivotal moment coincided with the decline of the plantation system, and the British Caribbean gradually lost its position as the center of global attention.

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The wealth derived from sugar had once granted white planters immense power, while the exploited and resentful enslaved population endured relentless coercion. However, the tides began to shift as the abolitionist movement gained traction, shining a light on the brutality and violence inherent in plantation life.

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@Deglassco Declare your own Constitution according to the Protocol to be real independent:
http://chevalier-des-mots.blogspot.com/2018/01/protocol-for-constitutions.html
Protocol for Constitutions

Protocol for Constitutions 2 Ekim 2011, 08:29 We declare to the world that according to the principle put by this Protocol we ...

@Deglassco precisely the same causal chain (exceedingly brutal repressions after easter rising in 1916) that moved general irish public from generally favouring home rule within the union to supporting full independence from the crown.

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Thank you for sharing this powerful & important thread about Caribbean slave plantations.