The Atlantic Slave Trade: Empire Built on Human Suffering — Fexingo History

The 1811 German Coast Uprising: Louisiana's Largest Slave Revolt

6 min · 18. kesä 2026
jakson The 1811 German Coast Uprising: Louisiana's Largest Slave Revolt kansikuva

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In January 1811, the largest slave revolt in US history erupted along the Mississippi River in the Territory of Orleans. Led by Charles Deslondes, a mixed-race enslaved driver from Saint-Domingue, a column of several hundred men marched from plantation to plantation, gathering weapons and recruits, their destination the city of New Orleans. The uprising was crushed within two days by planters and a detachment of US troops under General Wade Hampton. The aftermath saw brutal reprisals, public decapitations, and severed heads displayed on pikes to terrorize the enslaved population. This episode explores the revolt's roots in the Haitian Revolution, the unique social structure of Louisiana's sugar coast, and the legacy of an uprising that history nearly forgot. Lucas and Luna discuss Deslondes' background, the role of Saint-Domingue refugees, and why this rebellion remains less known than others like Stono or Nat Turner's. #1811GermanCoastUprising #CharlesDeslondes #Louisiana #SlaveRevolt #HaitianRevolution #NewOrleans #TerritoryOfOrleans #WadeHampton #SugarPlantations #SaintDomingue #MississippiRiver #AndryPlantation #DestrehanPlantation #USHistory #AfricanAmericanHistory #Slavery #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

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jakson The Indian Ocean Slave Trade: East Africa's Forgotten Diaspora kansikuva

The Indian Ocean Slave Trade: East Africa's Forgotten Diaspora

We often think of the Atlantic when we hear 'slave trade,' but for centuries before and after, a vast network moved enslaved people from East Africa across the Indian Ocean to Arabia, Persia, and India. In this episode, Lucas and Luna explore the scale, the routes, and the human cost of the East African slave trade — from the Swahili Coast to the markets of Zanzibar. They discuss the Omani Empire's role, the Portuguese disruption, the notorious slave market at Stone Town, and the British abolition efforts that officially outlawed the trade in the early 1800s but did little to stop it. The conversation also touches on a remarkable resistance figure: the Mijikenda warrior chief who led attacks against slave caravans in the 19th century. A lesser-known story of the global slave economy, told with the specifics it deserves. #IndianOceanSlaveTrade #EastAfrica #Zanzibar #SwahiliCoast #OmaniEmpire #StoneTown #Mijikenda #SlaveTrade #Abolition #EastAfricanDiaspora #19thCentury #Africa #ArabianPeninsula #PersianGulf #SlaveMarkets #History #FexingoHistory #ForgottenHistories Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

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jakson The Saltwater Railroad: Resistance Networks from Slavery to Freedom kansikuva

The Saltwater Railroad: Resistance Networks from Slavery to Freedom

The story of the Saltwater Railroad—a term used to describe the covert maritime routes enslaved people took to escape bondage in the American South to freedom in the Bahamas and beyond. This episode focuses on the remarkable figure of Richard Barnard, a free Black fisherman from Charleston who risked his life piloting runaways through the treacherous waters of the Intracoastal Waterway. We explore the geography of escape: the Sea Islands, the Gulf Stream, and the British colonial outposts in the Bahamas that offered a chance at liberty after the 1818 Treaty of Ghent. Barnard's first-person account, preserved in a rare 1840s deposition, reveals the intricate logistics: hiding refugees under fishing nets, navigating by night, and the coded language of the maritime underground. We also examine the legal limbo of 'freedom by water' after the Fugitive Slave Act of 1850, and the quiet complicity of Black and white sailors who formed an unlikely brotherhood of resistance. This is a forgotten chapter of the Underground Railroad—one that unfolded on the open sea. #SaltwaterRailroad #RichardBarnard #UndergroundRailroad #MaritimeEscape #Bahamas #FugitiveSlaveAct #IntracoastalWaterway #SeaIslands #GulfStream #TreatyOfGhent #Charleston #BlackSailors #Abolitionism #19thCentury #AmericanSouth #Slavery #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

Eilen7 min
jakson The 1835 Malê Revolt: Enslaved Muslims in Brazil kansikuva

The 1835 Malê Revolt: Enslaved Muslims in Brazil

In January 1835, a sweeping slave revolt shook Salvador, Bahia, led by West African Muslims known as Malê. The rebels, literate in Arabic, coordinated using copies of the Quran, and their Uprising drew on deep networks among Hausa and Yoruba speakers from the Bight of Benin. This episode unpacks the revolt's Islamic roots, its brutal suppression, and its aftermath, including how the 1838 Feijó Law and 1850 Eusébio de Queirós Law aimed to dismantle the slave trade. We discuss key figures like Manoel Congo and the role of African-born Muslims in Brazilian resistance. Fexingo History brings you a nuanced look at a rebellion that fused faith, literacy, and a desperate fight for freedom. #MalêRevolt #SalvadorBahia #IslamicSlaveRevolt #1835Brazil #Hausa #Yoruba #Quran #AfricanDiaspora #BrazilianHistory #SlaveResistance #FeijóLaw #EusébioDeQueirós #ManoelCongo #Alufá #BightOfBenin #History #FexingoHistory #AtlanticSlaveTrade Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

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jakson The 1820s Coffee Boom and the Slave Trade's Last Gasp in Brazil kansikuva

The 1820s Coffee Boom and the Slave Trade's Last Gasp in Brazil

By the 1820s, the British Navy had been patrolling the Atlantic for over a decade, hunting illegal slave ships. But in Brazil, a coffee boom was fueling a new wave of human trafficking. This episode of The Atlantic Slave Trade traces the story of the 'coffee barons' of the Paraíba Valley, the rise of the illegal slave trade after 1831, and the brutal conditions on the coffee plantations that replaced sugar as the engine of slavery. We explore how the British Anti-Slavery Squadron intercepted ships like the 'Providencia' and 'Camões', the diplomatic tensions between Britain and the Brazilian Empire, and the role of African-born slaves like Manoel Congo—who later led a revolt. We also look at the economic forces that kept the trade alive, including the expansion of coffee cultivation into the São Paulo region. A story of shifting commodities, broken treaties, and the relentless pursuit of profit over humanity. #CoffeeBoom #ParaíbaValley #BrazilianSlaveTrade #BritishAntiSlaverySquadron #IllegalSlaveTrade #1831Law #CoffeePlantations #SlaveRevolt #ManoelCongo #Providencia #Camões #SãoPaulo #AfricanBornSlaves #Abolition #19thCentury #History #FexingoHistory #AtlanticSlaveTrade Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

17. heinä 20266 min
jakson The 1835 Malê Revolt: Enslaved Muslims in Brazil kansikuva

The 1835 Malê Revolt: Enslaved Muslims in Brazil

In January 1835, a group of enslaved and freed African Muslims in Salvador, Bahia, staged a carefully planned uprising known as the Malê Revolt. Drawing on shared Islamic faith, literacy in Arabic, and networks of resistance, the rebels—many of them Hausa and Yoruba from the Bight of Benin—moved through the streets before being crushed by government forces. This episode explores how the Malê used religion as a rallying force, how authorities responded with brutal repression, and how the revolt reshaped Brazilian slave policy. We discuss the role of Quranic amulets, the Hausa jihadi context, and the aftermath that ended large-scale uprisings in Brazil. A story of faith, freedom, and the global connections of the slave trade. #MaleRevolt #Brazil #Salvador #Islam #Hausa #Yoruba #AfricanDiaspora #SlaveRevolt #19thCentury #Bahia #Quran #Abolition #History #FexingoHistory #AtlanticWorld #Resistance #BrazilianHistory #MuslimSlaves Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

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