General Average, Human Jettison, and the Status of Slaves in Early Modern Europe

IF 0.1 Q3 HISTORY
Jake Dyble
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Abstract This article proposes a transition in Western European thinking on slavery by examining the legality of slave jettison and its indemnification in the seventeenth-century Christian Mediterranean and comparing this with the late eighteenth-century Atlantic. Under the law of general average (GA), a shipmaster may legally sacrifice cargo or parts of a vessel to save a maritime venture from peril. GA then mandates that the costs of this sacrifice be shared proportionally between all interested parties. However, the status of human cargo with respect to pre-modern GA remains unclear, beyond the well-known example of the eighteenth-century British slave ship, the Zong. A jettison, a moment of crisis, forces the slave's dual conception as person and property to be definitively resolved. This article uses historical GA records and early modern jurisprudence on human jettison to shed light on the legal conceptualization of the slave in the two contexts. It finds that seventeenth-century jurisprudence generally ruled against slave jettison and that such a jettison could not be indemnified. In some Mediterranean operational contexts, slaves were excluded from GA altogether. To a certain extent, this finding justifies the conceptual divide historians have placed between Atlantic bondage and earlier forms of slavery.
共同海损、人类遗弃与近代早期欧洲奴隶的地位
本文通过考察17世纪基督教地中海地区抛弃奴隶及其赔偿的合法性,并将其与18世纪晚期的大西洋地区进行比较,提出西欧奴隶制思想的转变。根据共同海损法,船长可以合法地牺牲船舶的货物或部分以拯救海上企业脱离危险。然后,GA要求所有相关方按比例分担这种牺牲的成本。然而,除了18世纪著名的英国奴隶船宗号之外,人类货物在前现代GA中的地位仍然不清楚。一次抛弃,一次危机,迫使奴隶作为人与财产的双重概念最终得到解决。本文运用GA的历史记载和近代早期关于弃人的法理学,对这两种语境下奴隶的法律概念进行了阐释。它发现,17世纪的法理学通常反对抛弃奴隶,而且这种抛弃不能得到赔偿。在一些地中海作战环境中,奴隶被完全排除在GA之外。在某种程度上,这一发现证明了历史学家在大西洋奴役和早期形式的奴隶制之间的概念分歧是正确的。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
0.10
自引率
0.00%
发文量
6
期刊介绍: “Ajalooline Ajakiri. The Estonian Historical Journal” is peer-reviewed academic journal of the Institute of History and Archaeology, University of Tartu. It accepts articles in Estonian, English or German. It is open to submissions from all parts of the world and on all fields of history, but articles, reviews and communications on the history of the Baltic region are preferred.
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