Louisiana: Crossroads of the Atlantic World
Subyek
: Louisiana—Ethnic
relations, Louisiana—S
ocial life and customs Slaves—Louisiana, African Americans—Louisiana, Atlantic
Ocean Region—H
istory—18th
century
Penerbit
: University of Pennsylvania Press
Ringkasan :“Perros los Franceses” are the words that Antoine Paul, a domestic slave,
would have cried out to the Sieur Rivière, a merchant in New Orleans, on one
street of the Louisiana capital on a Sunday afternoon in 1766. Witnesses, some
neighbors who watched the fight, told the judge that the Sieur Rivière was hitting
the slave with a stick and that Antoine Paul was trying to defend himself
while “chattering incessantly.” None of them understood what the slave was
saying, because he spoke in Spanish. The Sieur Rivière complained that Antoine
Paul not only tried to defend himself but also attacked him. Coughing
and spitting on the ground, the slave would have made “many silly remarks
about the French.” In front of the magistrate, Antoine Paul claimed that he
did not insult the French; he only said “that the English were dogs, that they
did not know the Virgin Mary or anything else, and that the Sieur Rivière did
not understand correctly if he believed that it was about the French that he
talked, that he had nothing wrong to say about them since he was himself a
Creole from Martinique.” During his first questioning, the defendant had told
the judge his complex peregrinations since his birth in Martinique: Dutch
merchants bought him and took him to Curacao and then Santo Domingo,
where he was baptized. Afterward he circulated in the Caribbean Sea and the
Gulf of Mexico, living in various Spanish settlements, before landing in Havana
where his current master, Mr. de Loyola, purchased him.
The French, the English, the Spaniards in an enslaved man of Africa descent’s
view . . . The incident happened while Louisiana, a colony founded by
the French in 1699, had been divided and given to Spain and Great Britain
by the treaties of Fontainebleau and Paris in 1762–1763. Antoine Paul’s owner,Joseph de Loyola, was probably the war commissioner who, a few months
earlier, had come from Havana to New Orleans with the new Spanish governor
Antonio de Ulloa to take possession of the Louisiana capital and the
western bank of the Mississippi River.1 Located at the junction of North
America and the Caribbean and at the crossroads of the three main empires
that established colonies in the New World, Louisiana experienced a succession
of sovereignties in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. The lives
of Louisiana’s inhabitants, whether they were Native Americans, European
settlers, or slaves of African descent, were all impacted by this geography and
history, and the conflict involving Antoine Paul was emblematic in this regard.
“Tensions of empires”2 — between
metropole and colonies, within colonial
societies, and among various empires— and
trans- imperial
crossings and
mobilities— especially
the slave trade, which was the most internationalized
Atlantic commerce— were
not abstract realities for these various historical
actors. These conflicts deeply shaped life trajectories and informed social
identities. Louisiana’s peculiar geography and history, which makes the “Mississippi
colony” (as Louisiana was known in eighteenth- century
France) a
paradigmatic case study, calls for an Atlantic perspective.
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