"Corruption of the Air": Yellow Fever and Malaria in the Rise of English Caribbean Slavery

Justin Roberts
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Abstract

abstract:The yellow fever epidemic that struck Barbados in 1647 was a hinge point in the development of English slavery. European newcomers to the tropics were more likely than West Africans to succumb to the effects of both yellow fever and malaria, diseases that originated in Africa and became more prevalent in the Americas with the expansion of the slave trade. The "Africanization" of the Caribbean disease environment after 1647 hastened the transition to slave economies. The impact of the first Barbadian yellow fever epidemic and the spread of yellow fever and falciparum malaria through the sugar islands has been underemphasized in the specialist literature on the rise of slavery in English Caribbean. The change in the disease environment shaped many aspects of slave societies. It played a role in the trajectory of the sugar frontier, in the development of gang labor, in the rise of large integrated planation units, and in colonial debates about the classification and inheritance of slave property.
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“空气的腐败”:黄热病和疟疾在英国加勒比奴隶制的兴起
1647年袭击巴巴多斯的黄热病疫情是英国奴隶制发展的一个转折点。新到热带地区的欧洲人比西非人更容易受到黄热病和疟疾的影响,这两种疾病起源于非洲,随着奴隶贸易的扩大在美洲变得更加普遍。1647年后加勒比海疾病环境的“非洲化”加速了向奴隶经济的过渡。第一次巴巴多斯黄热病流行的影响以及黄热病和恶性疟疾在糖岛的传播在关于英属加勒比地区奴隶制兴起的专业文献中没有得到充分强调。疾病环境的变化塑造了奴隶社会的许多方面。它在糖业前沿的发展轨迹中发挥了作用,在帮派劳动的发展中,在大型综合种植园单位的兴起中,以及在殖民地关于奴隶财产分类和继承的辩论中。
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