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Freedom Seekers: Escaping from Slavery in Restoration London: Back Cover

Freedom Seekers: Escaping from Slavery in Restoration London
Back Cover
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Notes

table of contents
  1. Cover
  2. Title
  3. Copyright
  4. Contents
  5. List of illustrations
  6. Praise for Freedom Seekers
  7. About the author
  8. A note on language
  9. Acknowledgements
  10. Escape Route by Abena Essah
  11. Prologue: Ben
  12. PART I Restoration London and the enslaved
    1. 1.  London
    2. 2.  The Black community
    3. 3.  Freedom seekers in Restoration London
  13. PART II The freedom seekers
    1. 4.  Jack: boys
    2. 5.  Francisco/Bugge: South Asians
    3. 6.  ‘A black Girl’ and ‘an Indian black girl’: female freedom seekers
    4. 7.  Caesar: country marks
    5. 8.  Benjamin: branded
    6. 9.  Pompey: shackled
    7. 10. Quoshey: escaping from ships and their captains
    8. 11. Goude: Thames-side maritime communities
    9. 12. Quamy: merchants, bankers, printers and coffee houses
    10. 13. David Sugarr and Henry Mundy: escaping from colonial planters in London
    11. 14. Calib and ‘a Madagascar Negro’: freedom seekers in the London suburbs and beyond
    12. 15. Peter: London’s connected community of slave-ownership
  14. PART III Freedom seekers in the colonies
    1. 16. Freedom seekers and the law in England’s American and Caribbean colonies
    2. 17. London precedents in New World contexts: the runaway advertisement in the colonies
  15. Epilogue: King
  16. Index

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