An indispensable resource for academics and general readers, this fully translated and revised edition of De grootste slavenhandelaren van Amsterdam. Over Jochem Matthijs en Coenraad Smitt (Walburg Pers, 2022) examines the emergence of private Dutch slave trading in the eighteenth century. Focusing on the enterprise of Jochem Matthijs and Coenraad Smitt - whose slave ships transported an estimated 11,000-13,000 enslaved West Africans to Suriname - Ramona Negrón and Jessica den Oudsten reconstruct the experiences of shipboard crew and captives and uncover the inner workings of the private slave trade.

Drawing upon newly uncovered archival materials, the authors demonstrate how the West India Company's abandonment of its monopoly in the 1730s precipitated a flourishing private trade. Pioneering case studies - most notably the return voyage of the 't Gezegende Suikerriet - reveal voices long silenced in conventional narratives.

This edition features a new revised introduction and a new epilogue, making it the definitive scholarly account of Amsterdam's principal private slave traders and their enduring legacies.



Autorentext

Ramona Negrón is a postdoctoral researcher at the KITLV/Royal Dutch Institute for Caribbean and Southeast Asia Studies, researching slavery and proto-citizenship in the Dutch Caribbean. She specializes in colonial, maritime, and slavery history.

Jessica den Oudsten is a PhD candidate at Radboud University and a guest researcher at the Huygens Institute. Her research focuses on the social mobility of immigrants and their descendants in Amsterdam (1660-1811). She specializes in early modern maritime history and migration history.

Titel
The Private Slave Trade in Eighteenth-Century Amsterdam
Untertitel
On Jochem Matthijs and Coenraad Smitt
EAN
9781040834657
Format
E-Book (pdf)
Veröffentlichung
22.04.2026
Digitaler Kopierschutz
frei
Dateigrösse
28.51 MB
Anzahl Seiten
198