(Redirected from Slaves)
★
Abram Petrovich Gannibal (
1696–
1781), adopted by Russian czar
Peter the Great, governor of
Reval (1742–52), general-en-chef (1759–62) for building of sea forts and
canals in
Russia.
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Absalom Jones, (1746 - February 13, 1818), abolitionist and clergyman.
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Aesop, Greek poet, c.
6th century BC, author or transcriber of
Aesop's Fables.
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Amanda America Dickson, daughter of her owner; the fight over her inheritance on his death went all the way to the
Supreme Court of Georgia.
★
Ammar bin Yasir, one of the most famous ''
sahaba'' (companions of the Islamic prophet
Muhammad), freed by
Abu Bakr.
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Antarah ibn Shaddad,
pre-Islamic Arab born to a slave mother, freed by his father on the eve of battle, also a poet.
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Ayuba Suleiman Diallo, also known as Job ben Solomon (1701–1773).
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Baibars, a Kipchack Turk who became a
Mamluk Sultan of
Egypt and
Syria.
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Benedict the Moor (1526 – April 4, 1589), Italian saint.
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Bilal ibn Ribah, 6th century, freed and converted to
Islam; chosen by
Muhammad as his ''
muezzin''.
★
Booker T. Washington (
1856–
1915) was an
American educator, author and leader of the
African American community.
★
Pope Callixtus I (died
222) was
Pope from about 217 to about 222, during the reigns of the
Roman Emperors
Heliogabalus and
Alexander Severus. He was
martyred for his
Christian faith and is a canonized saint of the
Roman Catholic Church.
★
Cesar Picton ca.1765 - 1831, enslaved in
Senegal, servant in
England, later a wealthy coal-merchant.
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Dave Drake, also known as Dave the Potter, (c.
1800–
1864)
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Denmark Vesey (c.
1767–
1822) was an African American slave, and later a freeman, who planned what would have been one of the largest
slave rebellions in the United States had word of the plans not been leaked.
★
Dred Scott (c.
1799–
1858), attempted to sue for his freedom in
Scott v. Sandford.
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Enrique of Malacca, also known as
Henry the Black, slave and interpreter of
Ferdinand Magellan, the first man to circumnavigate the globe.
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Epictetus (
55–c.
135),
ancient Greek stoic philosopher
★
Estevanico, also known as Esteban the Moor, one of only four survivors of the ill-fated
Narváez expedition, later a guide in search of the fabled
Seven Cities of Gold (ca.
1503-
1539)
★
Felicitas, Christian martyr and saint (died March
7,
203).
★
Francis Bok, born 1979,
Dinka slave from
Sudan now in
United States
★
François Mackandal,
Haitian maroon leader.
★
Frederick Douglass (c.
1818–
1895), abolitionist writer and speaker.
★
George Africanus (
1763-
1834) was a negro slave from
Sierra Leone who became a successful entrepreneur in
Nottingham.
★
Guðríður Símonardóttir (
1598-
1682), Icelandic woman taken captive by
North African slavers (
Barbary Pirates).
★
Hagar, Biblical figure, belonging to
Sarah.
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Harriet Tubman, nicknamed "Moses" because of her efforts in helping other slaves escape through the
Underground Railway.
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James Somersett, his escape, supported by abolitionists, led to the milestone
Somersett's Case, which effectively ended slavery in Britain, though not in its colonies.
★
Jean-Jacques Dessalines (1758–1806), leader of the
Haitian Revolution and first leader of independent
Haiti.
★
Jean Saint Malo, leader of runaway slaves in colonial
Louisiana and founder of the secret community
that bears his name.
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Jeffrey Hudson, English courtier, spent 25 years as a slave in
North Africa.
★
John Brown (fugitive slave) (c.
1810–
1876), escaped and wrote of conditions in
Deep South of United States
★
John Casor, the first slave in what would later be the United States (
Virginia, 1654).
★
Jordan Lockett, a runaway slave whose plight led to
Wisconsin becoming the only state to declare the
Fugitive Slave Law of 1850 unconstitutional.
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Joseph, Biblical figure (about 1600 BC).
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Joseph Antonio Emidy, violinist and composer born in
Africa, died in
Cornwall.
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Cinque, leader of the slaves in the
Amistad v. United States case in 1839
★
Josephine Bakhita, (1869 — February 8 1947),
Sudanese, a Roman Catholic nun and saint.
★
Juan Francisco Manzano (c.
1797–
1854)
Cuban poet.
★
Joseph Knight, unsuccessfully sought to get his freedom through the courts in
18th century Scotland.
★ Lydia, a slave shot and wounded by her owner when she struggled to escape a whipping, an action ruled legal by the
Supreme Court of North Carolina in
1830 (see
North Carolina v. Mann) .
★
Malinche, translator during the
Spanish conquest of Mexico.
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Mammy Lou, actress who appeared in the
silent film, The Glorious Adventure .
★
Marcus Tullius Tiro, Roman author (c.
103–
4 BC).
★
Margaret Garner (
1835 –
1858) was a slave in pre-Civil War America notorious or celebrated for killing her own daughter rather than see the child returned to slavery.
★
Mary Prince (1788-?1833); the account of her life galvanized the
anti-slavery movement in England.
★
Mende Nazer, a
Nuba woman captured in
Darfur and transported from
Sudan to
London, where she eventually won refugee status and wrote the memoir ''Slave'' (2004).
★
Moses, ancient
Israelite who led his people out of slavery in Egypt
★
Nanny of the Maroons, also known as Granny Nanny and Queen Nanny,
Jamaican Maroons leader.
★
Nat Turner (
1800–
1831), escaped and led revolt in
Southampton County,
Virginia.
★
Nero Hawley (
1742-
1817), free slave, served in the
Continental Army during the
Revolutionary War, buried
Trumbull, Connecticut.
★
Olaudah Equiano (c.
1745–
1797), also known as Gustavus Vassa, prominent African/British author and figure in the abolitionist cause.
★
Onesimus, a slave of
Philemon of Colossae who ran away and, having met
St. Paul, was converted by him. Paul set him back to the Christian Philemon with a letter, which is the ''
Epistle to Philemon''.
Ignatius of Antioch mentions an Onesimus as
Bishop of Ephesus in the early
second century, but it is not certain that these are the same men.
★
Owen Fitzpen, English merchant taken captive by
Turkish pirates in 1620, subsequently escaped.
★
Patrick, abducted from
Britain, enslaved in
Ireland, escaped to Britain, returned to Ireland as a missionary.
★
Phillis Wheatley,
Colonial American poet
★ Prosper, a slave cruelly murdered by his owner
Arthur William Hodge, for which Hodge was tried and executed, the first such case ever recorded.
★
Qutb-ud-din Aybak or
Qutbuddin Aibak,
Turkish ex-slave, became a soldier, the first of the
Sultans of Delhi, founder of
India's "
slave dynasty".
★
Romaica, slave girl who became the favorite wife of
Muhammad al-Mu'tamid, Muslim king of
Seville,
Spain.
★
Roustam Raza,
Napoleon Bonaparte's
Armenian bodyguard.
★
Roxelana, (circa 1500 - April 18, 1558), a concubine and later wife to the sultan
Suleiman the Magnificent, and mother of
Selim II.
★
Salman Al Farisi, of
Persian descent, he was owned by a Jew of the
Beni Quraiza in
Arabia, became one of
Muhammad's companions and was the first to translate the
Quran.
★
Salvius, also known as Tryphon, leader of the 104 B.C. slave rebellion in
Sicily known as the
Second Servile War.
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Scipio Africanus (c.
1702-
1720)
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Scipio Moorhead, enslaved artist.
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Sojourner Truth (c.
1797–
1883)
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Solomon Bayley, wrote a book in 1825 about his life as a slave.
★
Spartacus, gladiator and rebel leader, led the
Servile Revolt, died
71 BC
★
Sumayyah binte Khabbab, an
Abbyssinian slave, the mother of
Ammar bin Yasir, was killed by her master when she refused to renounce
Islam, thus becoming its first martyr.
★
Terence (full name Publius Terentius Afer), Roman playwright, comic poet who wrote before and possibly after his freedom, died
159 BC.
★
Tiro, slave and secretary of the Roman politian
Cicero, later freed; invented a long-lasting system of shorthand and wrote books that are now lost.
★
Toussaint L'Ouverture, freed slave who led the slave revolt that led to the independence of
Haiti.
★
Ukawsaw Gronniosaw, freed slave turned writer.
★
Vincent de Paul. (
1576–
1660) Taken captive by
Turkish pirates, sold into slavery, freed in 1607.
★
William Ellison (1790-1861),
mixed race, gained his freedom, became a slaveholder himself, producing cotton.
★ William and
Ellen Craft, slaves who wrote a tale of their flight from slavery (1800s).
★
Yarrow Mamout, freed after serving many years in America
★
Zayd ibn Haritha, given to
Muhammad's wife
Khadijah, freed, adopted, became known as Zayd ibn Muhammad.
★
Zheng pang wang, Chinese explorer.
★
Ziryab, also known as Abul-Hasan Alí Ibn Nafí, musician, introduced
asparagus to Europe (c.
789 -
857).
★
Zumbi, escaped and joined the
Quilombo dos Palmares, the largest ever settlement of escaped slaves in
colonial Brazil, becoming its last and most famous leader.
''See also'':
Janissary,
Mameluk