| Thomas W. Simon - 1995 - 366 psl.
...African slave trade and an instrument of English colonial policy who proposed legislation to ensure that 'every freeman of Carolina shall have absolute power and authority over his Negro slaves.'"65 For a comparison to Locke and Winstanley on slavery, and to expand the canon in that regard,... | |
| Thomas D. Morris - 1996 - 596 psl.
...for 't." Yet it was Locke who drafted the Fundamental Constitutions of Carolina, which provided that "every freeman of Carolina, shall have absolute power and authority over his negro slaves." Ibid., 118. 102. See, however, Heirn, Ex'r., &c., v. Bridault and Wife, 37 Miss. 209 (1859). 103. Genovese,... | |
| Stanley L. Engerman, Robert E. Gallman - 1996 - 508 psl.
...by Sir Anthony Ashley Cooper and John Locke in 1669, declared that every freeman of the colony would have "absolute power and authority over his Negro Slaves, of what opinion or Religion soever. " In contrast, property rights in blacks remained much more uncertain for an extended... | |
| Robin Blackburn - 1997 - 624 psl.
...‘The Fundamental Constitutions of Carolina' (Political Writings, pp. 210—32) in which it was stated: ‘Every freeman of Carolina shall have absolute power...and authority over his negro slaves, of what opinion or religion whatsoever' (p. 230). 93. IK Steele, Politics of Colonial Policy: The Board of Trade in... | |
| E. Nathaniel Gates - 1997 - 378 psl.
...what happened.54 In his draft of the Fundamental Constitutions of Carolina John Locke provided that "Every freeman of Carolina shall have absolute power...and authority over his negro slaves, of what opinion or religion soever.''55 This provision was ambiguous. Did the "what opinion or religion soever" refer... | |
| David A. J. Richards - 1998 - 545 psl.
...may be just as well.39 Locke had drafted the Fundamental Constitutions of Carolina, which provided: "Every freeman of Carolina shall have absolute power...and authority over his negro slaves, of what opinion or religion soever."40 He apparently believed that the African slave trade rested on captives taken... | |
| Walter B. Edgar - 1998 - 784 psl.
...assent, and approbation of the freemen of the said province. The Second Charter of Carolina, 30 June 1665 Every freeman of Carolina shall have absolute power and authority over his negro slaves. Fundamental Constitutions of Carolina, 21 July 1669 ,HE FAILURES AT Roanoke in the 1580s did not lead... | |
| Tommy Lee Lott - 1998 - 388 psl.
...the Fundamental Constitution of the Carolinas in 1669.la This document declares that "every freedman of Carolina shall have absolute power and authority over his negro slaves." Locke, along with his patron Shaftesbury and many others, bought shares in the original subscription... | |
| Warren Montag - 1999 - 172 psl.
...opinion that he himself merely set down nearly verbatim in 1669. Article 110 of the Constitution states: 'Every freeman of Carolina shall have absolute power...and authority over his Negro slaves, of what opinion or religion soever' (Locke, 1993, 230). Chapter 15 of the Second Treatise: 'Despotical power is an... | |
| Bridget Anderson - 2000 - 228 psl.
...constitution on which the proprietors could agree and for which they would obtain royal consent. Article 110: 'Every freeman of Carolina shall have absolute power...and authority over his negro slaves, of what opinion or religion soever.' (Locke 1993: 230). None of these aspects of the original 166 contract are discrete... | |
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