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1722 BCE
Chapter 6 - 3 events.
Racist ideas that were said, "Africans are savages because Africa is hot and extreme weather made them that way". "Africans are savages because they were cursed by ham, in the bible".. "Africans are savages because they were created as an entierly different species.. These are 3 things, because I couldn't do 3 entrys for the chapter. -
1416 BCE
1 event from Chapter 1.
¨Portugal was given the title ¨Worlds First Racist¨ because capturing people wasn't the only thing back then, just a fact of life.¨ - Chapter 1, page 23. -
1415
2nd event from Chapter 1.
The Europeans were conquering everyone because if there's one thing all history books do say, it's the Europeans that conquered the majority of the world. -
Period: 1415 to
History of Racism and Antiracism
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1416
3rd event from Chapter 1.
Prince henrys cut, like a finders fee 185 slaves, equaling money, money, money though it was always framed as a noble. -Chaoter 1, page 25. -
1416
1st event from Chapter 2.
After games Eanes de zuraras ridiculous, money-grabbing lie there were other European ¨race theorists¨ who follows suit, using his text as a jumping-off point for their own concepts and racist ideas. - Chapter 2, page 28. -
1416
2nd event from Chapter 2
Climate theory actually came from Aristotle who questioned whether Africans were born ¨this way¨ or if the heat of the content made them inferior. -Chapter 2, page 29. -
1577
3rd event from Chapter 2.
Curse Theory, In 1577 after noticing that Inuit people in northeastern Canada are darker than people living in the hotter south..English traveler writer George Best determine.. that it couldn't have been climate that made darker people inferior, and instead determined that Africans were in fact cursed. -
1st event from Chapter 4.
By the time a Motton Mather heard about bacons rebbilio. He was already in college.. He was very insecure about his writing.. so he took writing and eventually he could write more than sermons than any other Pertitan preachers. -
1st event from Chapter 3.
There was a piece in 1664 by the British Minister Richard Baxter called a "Christan Directory" -
2nd event from Chapter 3.
Vanni believed Africans were born from a "different adam", and had a different creation story. -
3rd event from chapter 3.
In 1688 there was a petitionin Germantown against slavery, The first piece of writing was being antiracist. -
2nd event from Chapter 4.
There was tension brewing between New England and Old England in 1676. -
3rd event from Chapter 4.
In the early 1700s Cotton Mather never stopped defending the Salem which trials never stopped defending the religions. -
1st event from Chapter 5.
In the mid 1700s Cotton Mather had passed away, and his followers continued on with his legacy. -
2nd event from Chapter 5.
The American Philospical Society in 1743 in Philadelphia. -
3rd event from Chapter 5.
In 1772, John Wheatley Philis adopted father, got eighteen of the smartest men in America together in Boston. -
1st event from Chapter 8.
In 1784, Jeffersons whole live was a big contraidiction,as if he was struggling with what he knew was true was what was supposed to be true. -
2nd event from Chapter 8.
In 1784, Jefferson moved to Paris, his wife died and his old home and he became very lonely. -
3rd event from Chapter 8.
Jefferson had a series of co promises 1. The Great Compromise, 2- Three Fifths Copromise. -
1st event from Chapter 9.
In 1790s, A Straedgy called uplift suasion, was working, well it seemed to be working. -
2nd event from Chapter 9.
Black people slaves started getting free, Runaways and Aboltionists urged the early freed people. -
3rd event from Chapter 9.
It's important you keep this in mind "Make yourself small, make yourself unthreatening, make yourself the same, make yourself safe and make yourself quiet.. To make white people comfortable with ur exsistence. -
1st event from Chapter 10.
The revolt was planned for Saturday, August 30,1800. -
2nd event from Chapter 10.
In 1801 Thomas Jefferson had become president. -
3rd event Chapter 10.
In 1807 with Thomas Jefferson being president, he made a new Slave Trade Act.. The goal was to stop the import of people from Africa and the Caribbean into America. -
1st event from Chapter 11.
There was a abolitionist named William Lloyd Garrison and he was a man with power and privilage not afraid to try. -
2nd event from Chapter 11.
Garrison wasn't the only man that wasnt afraid of speaking out about being against being colonized. David was another walker, walker was a black man and had written about against the idea that Black People were made to server White People. -
3rd event from Chapter 11.
The idea of gradualy equality was rooted in the same principles of uplift suasion. Blacks were seen as scary and it was their responsibility to convince white people they werent. -
1st event from Chapter 12.
The US Census report of 1840 said that free blacks were sane, and that bricial people had shorter lifes spans than whites. -
2nd event from Chapter 12.
John C. Calhoun, a senator from South Caronlina was fighting even for Texas to become a slave state in the 1844 Election. -
3rd event Chapter 12.
In June 1845, The Narrative life of Fredrick Douglass, an American Slave was published, It outlined Douglass's life and gave firsthand account of the horrors of slavery. -
1st event from Chapter 13.
Lincoln shifted with the shift and started to preach that slavery needed to end- but not because if labor was free.. -
2nd event from chapter 13.
Civil Wars had started, slaves wanted to fight against their slave owners and therefore join Nothern Soldiers in battle. -
3rd event from Chapter 13.
By Summer 1862, the slave act had been repealed and a bill passed that declared all Confederate owned africans who escaped Union lines or who resided in terriotories. -
1st event from chapter 14.
On Febuary 3, 1870 the Fifteen Amendment was made official . -
2nd event from chapter 14.
American Anti- Slavery was disabanded in 1870. -
3rd event from Chapter 14.
Black people eager to leave the South, eager to give themselves a chance at safety, Kansas seemed to make more sense than the ever- present conversation of colonization to Africa.