scholarly journals Prevalence of markers of HIV infection among febrile adults and children in Bo, Sierra Leone, 2012–2013

2017 ◽  
Vol 10 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Rashid Ansumana ◽  
Donald F. Dariano ◽  
Kathryn H. Jacobsen ◽  
Tomasz A. Leski ◽  
Chris R. Taitt ◽  
...  
Biologicals ◽  
2006 ◽  
Vol 34 (2) ◽  
pp. 109-112 ◽  
Author(s):  
Edwin J. Asturias ◽  
Carlos F. Grazioso ◽  
Sandra Luna-Fineman ◽  
Olga Torres ◽  
Neal A. Halsey

Author(s):  
Kangbai Jia Bainga ◽  
Mandoh Isata Victoria ◽  
King Matilda ◽  
Rogers Josephine Alpha ◽  
Mandoh Sulaiman Lansanah

Author(s):  
Y. Al-Tawil ◽  
S. Gould ◽  
C. Lifschitz ◽  
H. DuPont ◽  
C. Ou ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Richard Anderson

“Liberated Africans” refers to a group of African-born men, women, and children intercepted by naval forces from slave ships and slave trading factories in the Atlantic and Indian oceans as part of the 19th-century campaign to abolish the transoceanic slave trade from Africa. Following the passage of Britain’s 1807 Act for the Abolition of the Slave Trade, the British Royal Navy patrolled both the Atlantic and Indian oceans in order to suppress the external trade from Africa. Captured vessels were taken to a series of Vice-Admiralty courts, and later Mixed Commission courts, located in Freetown, Sierra Leone; Havana, Cuba; Rio de Janeiro, Brazil; Tortola; Cape Town, South Africa; James Town, St. Helena; Luanda, Angola; and Port Luis, Mauritius. Naval interdiction by Brazil, Portugal, the United States, and other powers resulted in a smaller number of cases brought before unilateral anti-slave-trade tribunals. Between 1808 and 1896, this complex tribunal network “liberated” approximately 214,000 Africans who survived the Middle Passage. Perhaps 75,000 of these individuals were settled in Sierra Leone; the remainder were settled in the British Caribbean, Brazil, Cuba, Liberia, and British colonies and outposts from the Gambia, Cape Colony, and Mauritius, to Mombasa, Zanzibar, and Bombay. The arrival of an estimated 192,000 Liberated Africans into Atlantic ports continued through the demise of the transatlantic slave trade in the 1860s. In the Indian Ocean, approximately 22,000 Liberated Africans disembarked in East Africa, the Persian Gulf, and India as a result of a highly uneven British naval campaign from 1808 into the 1890s. Many Liberated Africans experienced very liminal freedom. Adults and children were apprenticed to colonial inhabitants for periods of up to fourteen years. Men were conscripted into the British West India Regiments and Royal African Corps. Many women were forcibly married to strangers soon after arrival. Approximately one out of every four Liberated Africans underwent a second oceanic passage, most of them forcibly relocated to the British West Indies. The settlement of Liberated Africans—referred to by British officials as their “disposal”—represented a sizable involuntary African migration into and across the British Empire in the decades after the abolition of the British slave trade. Their arrival brought with it a lasting linguistic and cultural impact in many colonial societies. The descendants of Liberated Africans remain identifiable communities in many postcolonial societies from Africa to the Caribbean.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document