Nicholas Draper
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Ireland and British colonial slave-ownership, 1763–1833
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The relationship of Ireland to colonial slavery in the Atlantic world embraced not only the movement of people and ideas, the flow of tropical commodities, and the financing and supply of provisions, but also direct participation in slave-ownership. The first phase of the Legacies of British Slave-Ownership Project (LBS) based on the slave-compensation records contrasted levels of slave-ownership in Ireland at the end of slavery with those in Scotland and England, and suggested some structural constraints that help explain the comparatively low level of Irish absentee slave-ownership. In the second phase, LBS has been building a history of slave-ownership in the British colonies between c. 1763 and its termination in the compensation process. This recent material both provides rich detail on ‘paths to ownership’ for those in possession of property in people in the 1830s, and identifies a new cadre of slave-owners in Britain and Ireland. At the same time, the generosity of other scholars and of family and local historians has enabled us to flesh out many of the previously skeletal entries on Irish slave-owners based on the slave-compensation papers. This chapter draws on the second-phase LBS material and related expansions of the first-phase material to highlight new findings for Irish slave-owners, to develop the analysis of the ‘backwash’ of slave-ownership in Ireland, and to suggest future lines of enquiry once the current phase of empirical research is complete.

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Ireland, slavery and the Caribbean

Interdisciplinary perspectives

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