Tippu tip biography of abraham lincoln
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List of slave owners
See also: Category:Slave owners and Centre for the Study of the Legacies of British Slavery
This is a dynamic list and may never be able to satisfy particular standards for completeness. You can help by adding missing items with reliable sources.
The following is a list of notable people who owned other people as slaves, where there is a consensus of historical evidence of slave ownership, in alphabetical order by last name.
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[edit]- Adelicia Acklen (1817–1887), at one time the wealthiest woman in Tennessee, she inherited 750 enslaved people from her husband, Isaac Franklin.[1]
- Stair Agnew (1757–1821), land owner, judge and political figure in New Brunswick, he enslaved people and participated in court cases testing the legality of slavery in the colony.[2]
- William Aiken (1779–1831), founder and president of the South Carolina Canal and Rail Road Company, enslaved hundreds on his rice plantation.[3]
- William Aiken Jr.
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IntroductionTop ⤴
Livingstone refers to many African locations and geographical features, as well as numbers of African, Arab, and Indian names – sometimes spelled phonetically or with multiple variants. In order to make these references more easily interpretable, we have compiled an extensive glossary of the people, groups, places, and features cited in the manuscripts imaged by the Livingstone Spectral Imaging Project.
Livingstone composed his 1870 and 1871 manuscripts mainly in two locations, the small central African villages of Bambarre (1870-71) and Nyangwe (1871). The references in his manuscripts, however, illustrate the complex, multicultural array of people who influenced Livingstone's ideas and writings during this period and reveal the wide span of geographical information, often collected from African and Arab travelers and traders, to which Livingstone had access.
Pilkington-Jackson, "Last Journey," 1929, details. Copyright Angela Aliff. May not be repro •
Hardcover. Book Condition: Near Fine. Jacket Condition: Very Good. St. Martins Press, New York, NY 1975. First Edition. 1st Printing. 163 pages. Nice Firm Clean copy ! Previous owner name of Adelaide Cromwell. Adelaide McGuinn Cromwell Hill (1919-2019) was an American sociologist and professor emeritus at Boston University, where she co-founded the African Studies Center in 1959, and directed the graduate program in Afro-American studies from 1969 to 1985. She was the first African-American instructor at Hunter College and at Smith College. Size: 9.1 x 6.5 x 1.1. Hamed bin Muhammed, better known as Tippu Tip was one of the last great slavers of the 19th century. His rule extended for thousands of miles, west and north-west of Lake Tanganyika, and his name was known and feared in most of East and Central Africa. Great explorers such as Livingstone, Cameron, Stanley and Wismann knew him well and made extensive use of his power over the African tribes and his intimate knowledge of the