Tyler Edward Stovall (April 9, 1954 – December 11, 2021) was an American academic and historian. He served as president of the American Historical Association in 2017.
72-528: Black Code or Black Codes may refer to: Law [ edit ] Code Noir , or Black Code, slavery decree in 1685 France Black Codes (United States) , discriminatory state and local laws passed after the Civil War in 1860s "Black code", another name for Jim Crow laws in 1960s Other [ edit ] Black Codes (From the Underground) ,
144-589: A legal void , because, while slavery had existed in the French Caribbean since at least 1625, it was nonexistent in metropolitan France. The first official French establishment in the Antilles was the Company of Saint Christopher and neighboring islands (Compagnie de Saint-Christophe et îles adjacentes) which was founded by Cardinal Richelieu in 1626. In 1635, 500-600 slaves were acquired, through what
216-518: A 1985 album by Wynton Marsalis Black (code) , a diplomatic cypher system used by the U.S. prior to its entry into the Second World War Black Code (film) , a Canadian documentary film Sometimes Black code is synonymous for Black bag operation See also [ edit ] Code Black (disambiguation) Topics referred to by the same term [REDACTED] This disambiguation page lists articles associated with
288-527: A better world. Stovall earned a degree in history from Harvard University in 1976. He earned a master's degree in 1978 at the University of Wisconsin–Madison , where he also earned a doctorate in 1984 with a thesis that eventually was published as a book called The rise of the Paris Red Belt . He served as a high school teacher in 1978 before teaching at the University of Wisconsin–Milwaukee ,
360-594: A few Flemish families and a great many slaves, settled in Martinique. Many of these immigrants were Sephardic Jewish planters from Bahia, Dutch Pernambuco, and Suriname , who brought sugarcane infrastructure to French Martinique and English Barbados . Although colonial authorities were hesitant to allow entry to the Jewish families, the French decided that their capital and proficiency in cane cultivation would benefit
432-561: A general abolitionist trend, but one that was mainly preoccupied with a gradual emancipation that paralleled improved conditions for slaves. The revolution of February 1848 and the creation of the Second Republic brought prominent abolitionists such as Cremieux , Lamartine , and Ledru-Rollin to power. One of the first acts of the Provisional Government of 1848 was to establish a commission to "prepare for
504-688: A guarantee of morality to the Catholic nobility that arrived in Martinique between 1673 and 1685. Of these, were Knight Charles François d'Angennes , the marquis of Maintenon and his nephew Jean-Jacques Mithon de Senneville, the colonial intendant Jean-Baptiste Patoulet, Charles de Courbon , the count of Blénac, and the militia captain Nicolas de Gabaret . In the English colonies, the Barbados Lifetime Slavery Decree of 1636
576-521: A high chance of owning businesses, properties and even their own slaves. The code has been described by historian of modern France Tyler Stovall as "one of the most extensive official documents on race, slavery, and freedom ever drawn up in Europe". Codes governing slavery had already been established in many European colonies in the Americas , such as the 1661 Barbados Slave Code . At this time in
648-436: A month were to have their ears cut off and be branded with the fleur-de-lis . In the case of recidivism, the slave's hamstring would be cut . Should there be a third attempt, the slave would be put to death. It is important to note that these kinds of punishments (branding by iron, mutilation, etc.) also existed in metropolitan France's penological practice at the time. Punishments were a matter of public or royal law, where
720-502: A part of a pledge . In general, a slave could be said to have a much more restricted legal capacity than does a serf, simply due to the fact that serfs were considered right-holding individuals whereas slaves, although recognized as human beings, were not. Swiss Roman law scholar Pahud Samuel explains this paradoxical status as "the slave being a person in the natural sense and a thing in the civil law sense". The Code noir provided that slaves might lodge complaints with local judges in
792-485: A seizure of person (physical seizure), this is an exception to article 44. Should the human nature of the slave confer certain rights, the slave was nevertheless denied a true civil personality before the reforms adopted under the July Monarchy . According to French colonial legal historian Frédéric Charlin, an individual's legal capacity was fully dissociable from her humanity under old French law. Additionally,
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#1732775552196864-587: A serial number. Following the 1848 abolition of slavery under the French Second Republic , a name was assigned to each former slave. Slaves could testify, have a proper burial (for those baptized ), lodge complaint, and, with the master's permission, have savings, marry, etc. Nevertheless, their legal capacity was still more restrictive than that of minors or domestic servants (articles 30 and 31). Slaves had no right to personal possessions and could not bequeath anything to their families. Upon
936-576: A slave could be justified in certain cases. The law also incorporated the Elizabeth Key case (a mulatto slave, daughter of a white plantation owner, who converted to Christianity and successfully sued for her freedom) which was contested by the white aristocracy who held that paternity and conversion were unable to confer freedom. Tyler Stovall For me, history is the record not only of how things change, but how people make things change, how they act individually and collectively to create
1008-474: A slave population that had grown to 9634, and with the Indigenous population at a mere 61, slaves made up 68% of the total population. In all of the colonies, there was a great disparity between the number of men and women which led to men having children with Indigenous women, who were free persons , or with slaves. With white women being rare and black women seeking to improve their circumstances, by 1680
1080-472: Is currently in the Archives nationales d'outre-mer (French National Overseas Archives). The Marquis de Seignelay wrote the draft using legal briefs written by the first intendant of the French islands of the Americas, Jean-Baptiste Patoulet [ fr ] , as well as those of his successor Michel Bégon . Legal historians have debated whether other sources, such as Roman slavery laws, were consulted in
1152-605: Is free, various parliaments refused to pass the original Ordonnance ou édit de mars 1685 sur les esclaves des îles de l'Amérique which was ultimately instituted only in the colonies for which the edict was written: the Sovereign Council of Martinique on 6 August 1685, Guadeloupe on 10 December of the same year, and in Petit-Goâve before the Council of the French colony of Saint-Domingue on 6 May 1687. Finally,
1224-563: Is the mode of reproduction that distinguishes slavery from serfdom : while a serf cannot be purchased, they reproduce through demographic growth. In Roman law (the Digest ), a slave could be sold, given away, and legally passed to another owner as part of an estate or a legacy, but this could not be done with a serf. Contrary to serfdom, slaves were considered in Roman law to be objects of personal property that could be owned, usufruct , or used as
1296-504: The Antilles between 1673 and 1685. The title Code noir first appeared during the regency of Philippe II , Duke of Orleans, (1715–1723) under minister John Law , and referred to a compilation of two separate ordinances of Louis XIV from March and August 1685. One of the two regulated black slaves in the French islands of the Americas, while the other established the Sovereign Council of Saint-Domingue . Subsequently, starting in 1723, two supplementary texts were added that instituted
1368-614: The Congress of Vienna . Article 8 of the decree of 27 April 1848 extended the Second Republic 's ban on slavery to all French citizens residing in foreign countries where the possession of slaves was legal, while according them a grace period of three years to conform to the new law. In 1848, there numbered around 20,000 French nationals in Brazil , Cuba , Puerto Rico , and in the U.S. state of Louisiana . Louisiana was, by far,
1440-576: The French National Convention did the same on 4 February 1794, for all French colonies. This would only be effective, however, in Saint-Domingue, Guadeloupe , and Guiana , because Martinique was, at this time, a British colony and Mascarene colonists forcibly opposed the institution of the 1794 decree when it finally arrived to the isle in 1796. Napoleon Bonaparte reinstated slavery on 20 May 1802 in Martinique and
1512-521: The July Monarchy were characterized by a political trend to endow the slave with a certain level of humanity… [and to] encourage a slow assimilation of the slave into other workforces of French society through moral and family values". The jurisprudence of the Court of Cassation under the July Monarchy was marked by a gradual recognition of a legal personhood for slaves. Accordingly, the 1820s saw
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#17327755521961584-564: The Protestant faith (article 5) and particularly "pagan religions" practiced by indigenous Indians who were routinely forced into slavery in Mexico and the Americas. The code extends the punishment of pagan slave conventicles to masters who allowed pagan beliefs and practices performed by their slaves, thus encouraging quick indoctrination into Catholicism on threat of the outright punishment of lenient slave holders. Code Noir acknowledged
1656-625: The University of California, Berkeley , and Ohio State University . He then served as a professor and Dean of Humanities for the University of California, Santa Cruz before returning to Berkeley. His last position was Dean of the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences at Fordham University . Stovall's studies specialized in the history of French suburbs, urban immigration, and post-colonial and transnational history. Tyler E. Stovall died in New York City on December 11, 2021, at
1728-462: The cane sugar plantation economy. The Code Noir aimed to provide a legal framework for slavery, to establish protocols governing the conditions of the slaves in the French colonies, and appears to make an attempt at ending the illegal slave trade. Strict religious morals were also imposed in the crafting of the Code noir ; in part a result of the influence of the influx of Catholic leaders arriving in
1800-428: The 1830s, under the civil code of the July Monarchy, slaves were explicitly given a civil personality while also considered as being fixtures, that is, personal property legally attached to and/or part of real estate or businesses. The status of the slave in Code noir is legally different from that of a serf primarily in that serfs could not be bought. According to anthropological historian Claude Massilloux , it
1872-425: The 18th century, manumission required authorization as well as the payment of an administrative tax. The tax was first instituted by local officials, but later affirmed by the edict of 24 October 1713 and the royal ordinance of 22 May 1775. Manumission was considered de jure if a slave was designated the sole legatee of the master (article 56). Based on the fundamental law that any man who sets foot on French soil
1944-463: The Apostolic and Roman Catholic religion (article 2). Slaves had the right to marry (articles 10 and 11), provided the master allowed them to do so, and had to be buried in consecrated ground if they were baptized (article 14). The code prohibited slaves from publicly practicing any religion other than the Catholic, Apostolic, and Roman Catholic religion (article 3), including the practice of
2016-546: The Caribbean trade was given to the Senegal Company ( Première compagnie d'Afrique ou du Sénégal ) in 1679. To amend what was seen as an insufficient supply, Louis XIV created the Company of Guinea ( Compagnie de Guinée —not to be confused with the 17th century English colonial enterprise Guinea Company ) to provide a yearly supplement of 1000 black slaves to the French isles. To solve the "negro shortage", in 1686,
2088-500: The Caribbean, Jews were mostly active in the Dutch colonies , so their presence was seen as an unwelcome Dutch influence in French colonial life. French Plantation owners largely governed their land and holdings in absentia , with subordinate workers dictating the day-to-day running of the plantations. Because of their enormous population, in addition to the harsh conditions facing slaves, small-scale slave revolts were common. Although
2160-464: The Code Noir contained a few, minor humanistic provisions, the Code noir was generally flaunted, in particular regarding protection for slaves and limitations on corporal punishment. In his 1987 analysis of the Code noir 's significance, French philosopher Louis Sala-Molins claimed that its two primary objectives were to assert French sovereignty in its colonies and to secure the future of
2232-460: The Code was passed before the councils of Cayenne and Guiana on 5 May 1704. While the Code Noir was also applied in the colony of Saint Christopher , the date of its institution is unknown. The edicts of December 1723 and March 1724 were instituted in the islands of Réunion (Île Bourbon) and Mauritius (Île de France) as well as in the colony and province of Louisiana , in 1724. The Code Noir
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2304-498: The Company of Saint Christopher (by this date renamed Company of the American Isles and owner of multiple islands) importing 60 enslaved people. Then, in 1650, the company imported 100 more. Starting in 1653-1654 the population greatly increased with the arrival of 50 Dutch nationals to the French isles, who had been run out of Brazil , taking with them 1200 black and métis slaves. Subsequently, 300 people composed mainly of
2376-510: The French Antilles for New-France, where all men were considered free. The Code Noir was a multifaceted legal document designed to govern every aspect of the lives of enslaved and free African people under French colonial rule. While Enlightenment thinking about liberty and tolerance prevailed dominantly in French society, it became necessary to clarify that people of African descent did not belong under this umbrella of understanding. It
2448-422: The French migration was voluntary. Creolization was unavoidable due to basic endogamous tendencies, with colored women being preferred as many colonists considered the new arrivals to be foreigners. The authorities were not concerned with miscegenation per se, but rather the resulting manumission of mulatto children. For this reason, the Code inverted basic patrimonial French custom in maintaining that even if
2520-544: The King personally chartered a slave ship for operation in Cape Verde . At the time of the first official census of Martinique, taken in 1660, there were 5259 inhabitants, 2753 of which were white and already 2644 were black slaves. There were only 17 Indigenous Caribbeans and 25 mulattoes . Twenty years later, in 1682, the number of inhabitants had tripled to 14,190 with a white population that had barely doubled, but with
2592-748: The Mascarenes, as the islands had been returned by the British after the Treaty of Amiens . Soon after, he reestablished slavery in Guadeloupe (on 16 July 1802) and Guiana (in December 1802). Slavery was not reestablished in Saint-Domingue due to the resistance of the Haitians against the expeditionary corps sent by Bonaparte, a resistance which eventually resulted in the independence of the colony and
2664-868: The Rights of Man and of the Citizen of 1789 articulated the principle of equal rights from birth for all, but under the lobbying influence of the Massiac Club of plantation and slave owners, the National Constituent Assembly and the Legislative Assembly decided that this equality applied only to the inhabitants of metropolitan France , where there were no slaves and where serfdom had been abolished for centuries. The American territories were excluded. After Saint-Domingue (present day Haiti ) abolished slavery locally in 1793,
2736-485: The act of emancipation of slaves of the colonies of the Republic". The commission was completed and presented to the government in less than two months and subsequently instituted on 27 April 1848. The enslavement of black people in French colonies was definitively abolished on 4 March and 27 April 1848. Due in large part to the actions of Victor Schoelcher , the slave trade had already been abolished in 1815, following
2808-426: The atrocity of the circumstances; in the case of absolution, our officers will…” The most serious punishments, such as the cutting of the ears or of the hamstring, branding, and death are prescribed by a criminal court in the case of conviction and imposed by a magistrate rather than by the slave's master. However, in reality, the conviction of masters for the murder or torture of slaves was very rare. With respect to
2880-506: The case of mistreatment or being under-provided with necessities (article 26), but also that their statements should be considered only as reliable as that of minors or domestic servants . The first article of the Code noir enjoins a Catholic expulsion of all Jews residing in the colonial territories due to their being "sworn enemies of the Christian faith" ( ennemis déclarés du nom chrétien ), within three months under penalty of
2952-725: The census showed 314 métis people in Martinique (twelve times the count in 1660), 170 in Guadeloupe, and 350 in Barbados where the slave population was eight times that of Guadeloupe but where miscegenation (métissage) was illegalized after the rise of sugarcane cultivation. To mitigate the deficit of women in the Antilles, Versailles enacted a similar measure to the King's Daughters of New France and sent 250 girls to Martinique and 165 to Saint-Domingue. Compared to its English counterpart, which sent condemned criminals and exiled populations,
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3024-582: The code in the Mascarene Islands and Louisiana . The earliest of these constituent ordinances was drafted by the Naval Minister ( secrétaire d'État à la Marine ) Marquis de Seignelay and promulgated in March 1685 by King Louis XIV with the title " Ordonnance ou édit de mars 1685 sur les esclaves des îles de l'Amérique ". The only known manuscript of this law to have been preserved
3096-430: The colonies in 1683, which would be incorporated into the Code Noir. The Jewish population of Martinique was likely the specific target of the antisemitic clause (article 1) of the original 1685 Code. These settlers' arrival in the 1650s marked the second stage of colonization. Until then, tobacco and indigo cultivation had been the mainstay of colonial efforts and had required more laborers than slaves, but this trend
3168-561: The colony. Some historians suggest that these Jewish planters, such as Benjamin da Costa d'Andrade , were responsible for introducing commercial sugar production to the French Antilles. After the Da Costa family founded the first synagogue of Martinique in 1676, the visible Jewish presence in Martinique and Saint-Domingue led Jesuit missionaries to petition for the expulsion of Jews and other non-Catholics to both local and metropolitan authorities. This precipitated an edict expelling Jews from
3240-477: The confiscation of person and property. The Antillean Jews targeted by the Code noir were mainly descendants of families of Portuguese and Spanish origin who had come from the Dutch colony of Pernambuco in Brazil . The writers of the code believed that slaves of all races were human persons, endowed with a soul and receptive to salvation. The Code noir encouraged that slaves be baptized and educated in
3312-399: The death of the slave, all remained property of the master (article 28). Married slaves and their prepubescent children could not be separated through seizure or sale (article 47). Slaves could be manumitted by their owner (article 55), in which case no naturalization records were required for French citizenship, even if the individual was born abroad (article 57). However, starting in
3384-500: The disciplinary power over slaves could be considered more severe than that for domestic servants yet less severe than that for soldiers. Masters could only chain and whip slaves "when they believe that their slaves deserved it" and cannot, at will, torture their slaves, or put them to death. The death penalty was reserved for those slaves who had struck their master, his wife, or his children (article 33) as well as for thieves of horses or cows (article 35) ( larceny by domestic servants
3456-489: The drafting of this original text. Studies of correspondence from Patoulet suggest that the 1685 ordinance drew mostly on local regulations provided in the colonial intendant's memoranda. The later two supplemental texts concerning the Mascarene Islands and Louisiana were drafted during Phillippe II 's regency and ratified by King Louis XV (a minor of thirteen) in December 1723 and March 1724 respectively. It
3528-431: The empire, defined the punishments meted out to them, and ordered the expulsion of all Jewish people from France's colonies. The code's effects on the enslaved population of the French colonial empire were complex and multifaceted. It outlawed the worst punishments owners could inflict upon their slaves, and led to an increase in the free population. Despite this, enslaved persons were still subject to harsh treatment at
3600-409: The evolving needs of each colony. The New Orleans planters relaxed and adapted the slave regime towards the end of French administration. In 60 articles, the document specified the following: In the Code noir , the slave ( of any race, color or gender) is considered property immune from seizure (article 44), yet also criminally liable (article 32). Article 48 stipulates that, in the case of
3672-407: The existence of slave families and marriages. The Code recognized slaves marriages provided they were contracted according to the Catholic rite and attempted to regulate family life among slaves. Mothers played a central role in maintaining family structures, and the Code addressed issues related to the separation of families through sales or other means. The status of a child's freedom was dependent on
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#17327755521963744-417: The father is free, the children of an enslaved woman shall be slaves unless they are rendered legitimate through the marriage of the parents, which was a rare occurrence. In subsequent regulation, marriage between free and slave populations would be further limited. The Code Noir also more sharply defined the status of métis people. In 1689, four years after its promulgation, around one hundred mulattoes left
3816-578: The formation of the Republic of Haiti on 1 January 1804. The Code Noir coexisted for forty-three years with the Napoleonic code despite the contradictory nature of the two texts, but this arrangement became increasingly difficult due to the French Court of Cassation rulings on local jurisdictions' decisions following the 1827 and 1828 ordinances on civil procedures. According to historian Frédéric Charlin, in metropolitan France, "the two decades of
3888-462: The hands of their owners, and the expulsion of Jews was an extension of antisemitic trends in the Kingdom of France . Free people of color were still placed under restrictions via the Code noir , but were otherwise free to pursue their own careers. Compared to other European colonies in the Americas , a free person of color in the French colonial empire was highly likely to be literate, and had
3960-560: The inheritance of property, estate, and seizures, slaves were considered to be personal property (article 44), that is, considered separate from the estate on which they live (which was not the case with serfs). Despite this, slaves could not be seized by a creditor as property independent of the estate, with the exception of compensating the seller of the slaves (article 47). According to the Code, slaves can be bought, sold, and given like any chattels . Slaves were provided no name or civil registration, rather, starting in 1839, they were given
4032-436: The legal status of slaves was further distinguished by the separation of field slaves ( esclave de jardin ), the main workforce, from domestic slaves "of culture" ( esclave de culture ). Before the institution of the Code noir , slaves other than those "of culture" were considered fixtures ( immeubles par destination ). The new status was adopted with such great reluctance on the part of local jurisdictions that it
4104-475: The mother's master if they are owned by two different masters". This reliance upon the mother's status for the identification of the consequent child's status placed the majority of the slave-producing burden upon the enslaved women of the French colonies. The Code Noir permitted corporal punishment for slaves and provides for disfigurement by branding with an iron , as well as for the death penalty (articles 33-36 and 38). Runaway slaves who had disappeared for
4176-422: The mother's status at the time of birth. Article XIII cites that "...if a male slave has married a free woman, their children, either male or female, shall be free as is their mother, regardless of their father's condition of slavery. And if the father is free and the mother a slave, the children shall also be slaves". Article XII precises that "the children born in marriage to a male and a female slave will belong to
4248-461: The region home to the most slave owning French, who, despite the 1803 sale of the territory to the U.S. government, retained citizenship. Article 8 forbade all French citizens "to buy, sell slaves, or to participate, whether directly or indirectly, in any traffic or exploitation of this nature". The application of this law was not accomplished without difficulty in these regions, with Louisiana being particularly problematic. The edict of 1685 bridged
4320-486: The same practices and sacraments for slaves as it did for free persons. While it did grant enslaved people the right to rest on Sundays and holidays, to formally marry through the church, and to be buried in proper cemeteries, forced religious conversion was just one of the many methods that France used to attempt to 'civilize' and exert their imperial control over the Black population in the French colonies. The Code thus gave
4392-469: The territory. The ordinance elaborated little on the legal status of slaves, but generally characterized slavery as "a kind of convention" that is "very useful for this colony", proclaiming that "all Panis (native slaves and indigenous members of First Nation/Pawnee) and Negroes who have been purchased or who will be purchased at some time, will belong to those who have purchased them as their full property and be known as their slaves". The Declaration of
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#17327755521964464-532: The title Black Code . If an internal link led you here, you may wish to change the link to point directly to the intended article. Retrieved from " https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Black_Code&oldid=891153881 " Category : Disambiguation pages Hidden categories: Short description is different from Wikidata All article disambiguation pages All disambiguation pages Code Noir The Code noir ( French pronunciation: [kɔd nwaʁ] , Black code )
4536-520: Was a decree passed by King Louis XIV of France in 1685 defining the conditions of slavery in the French colonial empire and served as the code for slavery conduct in the French colonies up until 1789 the year marking the beginning of the French Revolution . The decree restricted the activities of free people of color , mandated conversion to Catholicism for all enslaved people throughout
4608-515: Was also during the Régence , that the first royal authorizations to practice the slave trade were given to shipowners in French ports. From the 18th century onward, the term Code noir was used not only to describe edits and additions to the original code, but also came to refer broadly to compilations of laws and other legal documents applicable to the colonies. Over time, the foundational ordinances and their associated texts were amended to meet
4680-686: Was also punishable by death in France). The third attempt to escape (article 38) and the congregation of recidivist slaves belonging to different masters (article 16) were also offenses punishable by death. Although it was forbidden for the master to mistreat, injure, or kill his slaves, he nevertheless possessed disciplinary power (article 42) according to the Code. "Masters shall only, when they believe that their slaves so deserve, be able to chain them and have them beaten with rods or straps", similar to pupils, soldiers, or sailors. Article 43 addresses itself to judges: "to punish murder while taking into account
4752-450: Was essential to the preservation of France's economy and colonial interests that Black people residing in French colonies maintain their status as property rather than become French subjects. The Code Noir was also conceived to “maintain the discipline of the Catholic, Apostolic, and Roman church” in the French colonies. It required that all enslaved people of African descent in the French colonies receive baptism, religious instruction, and
4824-494: Was essentially a seizure of a slave shipment from the Spanish . Later, the number was increased by slaves brought from Guinea aboard Dutch or French ships. With the island becoming overpopulated, there were efforts to colonize Guadeloupe with the aid of French recruits in 1635, as well as Martinique with the aid of 100 "old residents" of Saint Christopher in the same year. In Guadeloupe, the influx of slaves started in 1641 with
4896-496: Was instituted by governor Henry Hawley on his return to England after having entrusted Barbados to his deputy governor Richard Peers. In 1661, the Barbados Slave Code reiterated this 1636 decree and the 1662 Virginia slave law passed by governor William Berkeley under the reign of Charles II used similar jurisprudence. The 1661 law held that a slave could only produce enslaved children and that mistreatment of
4968-468: Was necessary for a ruling of the King's Council of 22 August 1687 to take a position on the capacity of slaves because of the rules of succession applicable to the new status. Despite the 1804 creation of the Napoleonic Code and its partial promulgation in the Antilles, the re-institution of slavery in 1802 had led to the reinstatement of parts of Code noir which precluded Napoleonic rights. In
5040-400: Was not explicitly stated in the 1664 edict that chartered the company. The word "trade" was generally defined as any form of trade or commerce and did not exclude commerce in slaves as it might today. Despite the creation of various incentive plans in 1670, 1671, and 1672, the company went bankrupt in 1674 and the islands in its possession became crown lands ( domaine royal ). The monopoly on
5112-638: Was not originally intended for northern New France (present day Canada) which followed the general principle of French law that Indigenous peoples of lands conquered or surrendered to the Crown should be considered free royal subjects ( régnicoles ) upon their baptism. Various local indigenous customs were collected to create the Custom of Paris . However, on 13 April 1709, an ordinance created by Acadian colonial intendant Jacques Raudot imposed regulations on slavery thereby recognizing, de facto , its existence in
5184-565: Was reversed around 1660 with the development of cane cultivation and large plantation estates . Thereafter, the French State made the facilitation of the slave trade a matter of primary concern and worked to undercut foreign competition, particularly Dutch slavers. It is undeniable that the French East India Company , as the owner of slaveholding isles, took part in the slave trade, even though commercial slavery
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