logo

icon

icon

icon

icon

icon

  • Books
    • Back Close
    • Academic
      • Back Close
      • Subjects
      • Series
    • Non Fiction
      • Back Close
      • Non-Fiction
      • Anthem Essential Knowledge
    • Education
      • Back Close
      • Anthem Advanced Learning
      • Anthem SCAT Series
      • Other Education
    • Professional
  • Products
    • Back Close
    • Anthem Advanced Introductions
    • Anthem Impact
    • Anthem Enviroexperts Review
    • Anthem Handbooks
    • Partnership Publishing
    • Anthem Editions
    • First Hill Books
  • Author Hub
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Blog
Search
WORK WITH USOPEN ACCESSRIGHTS & PERMISSIONSPRIVACY & COOKIES POLICYTERMS & CONDITIONSACCESSIBILITY
CATALOGUESBOOKSELLERSLIBRARIANSREVIEWERSINSTRUCTORSPARTNERSHIP PUBLISHING
SALES REPRESENTATIONORDERING EBOOKSSHIPPING: NORTH AMERICAShipping: UK, EU & ROWShipping: Australia & NZ

Copyright © 2024 Anthem Press. Registered in England & Wales under No. 02889958.

HomeEuropean StudiesBritish Entanglement with Brazilian Slavery
British Entanglement with Brazilian Slavery
Flyer Cover
Google Review

British Entanglement with Brazilian Slavery

Masters in Another Empire, c. 1822-1888

Joseph Mulhern

Anthem Brazilian Studies



Title Details

ISBN: 9781839984662

Pages: 250

Pub Date: October 2025

Imprint: Anthem Press

Request for Desk or Exam copyAdd to Cart

Related Books

Hardback

£80.00 / $110.00

E-Book (WEB PDF)

£25.00 / $35.00

E-Book (EPUB)

£25.00 / $35.00

This book addresses a neglected aspect of the history of Britain’s centuries-long involvement with transatlantic slavery. For a half century after the Slavery Abolition Act of 1833, individual Britons and British enterprises continued to own enslaved people and invest in slavery in Brazil. This study explores the material basis of this entanglement, in the context of British anti-slavery policy, to explain how the last vestiges of British slaveholding in the Americas were only extinguished by abolition in Brazil in 1888.

Based on extensive archival research on both sides of the Atlantic, this book provides the most complete survey of British slaveholding interests in Brazil. From extensive plantations and vast mining operations to the warehouses and workshops of individual merchants and artisans, slaveholding was a feature at all levels of the British community in Brazil. This book also looks beyond slaveholding in its direct form, to expose the entanglement of British merchant credit and banks with the illegal slave trade and slavery. As well as tracing the extent and diverse forms of entanglement, this book also provides analysis of the treatment of those enslaved by British masters and the strategies employed by British slaveholders to obfuscate, sanitise, and justify these practices to compatriots in anti-slavery Britain.
The book also examines how the proliferation of British slaveholding and other forms of entanglement squared with the explicitly anti-slavery foreign policy rhetoric of successive British governments during this period. This discussion pivots around a largely overlooked and little understood anti-slave trade law of 1843. An analysis of the parliamentary debates around this bill and crucially, attempts to implement its provisions in Brazil, shed light not only on practical difficulties of enforcing British law overseas, but an ambivalence both codified in legislation and embodied by British officials that ultimately facilitated the types of entanglement discussed throughout this study. Lastly, the book reflects on the varied legacies of this entanglement on both sides of the Atlantic.

European Trade and Colonial Conquest
Turkey Today
Why Europe Was First
The Atlas of Climate Change Impact on European Cultural Heritage
Europe - giving shape to an idea
Bulgaria and Europe