Book contents
- The Cambridge World History of Slavery
- The Cambridge World History of Slavery
- The Cambridge World History of Slavery
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Figures
- Contributors
- Chapter 1 Slavery in the Medieval Millennium
- Part I Captivity and the Slave Trade
- Part II Race, Sex, and Everyday Life
- Part III East and South Asia
- Part IV The Islamic World
- Part V Africa, the Americas, and Europe
- Chapter 18 Slavery in the Carolingian Empire
- Chapter 19 Slavery in the Byzantine Empire
- Chapter 20 Slavery in Northern Europe (Scandinavia and Iceland) and the British Isles, 500–1420
- Chapter 21 Slavery in Medieval Iberia
- Chapter 22 Slavery in Africa c. 500–1500 CE: Archaeological and Historical Perspectives
- Chapter 23 Slavery in Precontact America
- Index
- References
Chapter 23 - Slavery in Precontact America
from Part V - Africa, the Americas, and Europe
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 09 September 2021
- The Cambridge World History of Slavery
- The Cambridge World History of Slavery
- The Cambridge World History of Slavery
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Figures
- Contributors
- Chapter 1 Slavery in the Medieval Millennium
- Part I Captivity and the Slave Trade
- Part II Race, Sex, and Everyday Life
- Part III East and South Asia
- Part IV The Islamic World
- Part V Africa, the Americas, and Europe
- Chapter 18 Slavery in the Carolingian Empire
- Chapter 19 Slavery in the Byzantine Empire
- Chapter 20 Slavery in Northern Europe (Scandinavia and Iceland) and the British Isles, 500–1420
- Chapter 21 Slavery in Medieval Iberia
- Chapter 22 Slavery in Africa c. 500–1500 CE: Archaeological and Historical Perspectives
- Chapter 23 Slavery in Precontact America
- Index
- References
Summary
This chapter describes the forms of enslavement that existed in the Americas prior to contact with the Old World. Scholars have long avoided the subject due to their concern that indigenous Americans are already too much associated with savagery. However, the time has come to gather together all that we know of the varied forms of coerced labor. The information only helps us to humanize and comprehend ancient Americans. In Mesoamerica and South America, agricultural states did demand contributions from communities of laboring people; but though these people were diempowered dependents, they were not slaves. The vast majority of those who really were enslaved were prisoners of war who were maintained as domestics, most of them women. We even have some sixteenth-century texts that reveal something of these women's lives. Meanwhile, among the semi-sedentary peoples of North America, slavery likewise existed, as an effect of perennial warfare, but not nearly to the same extent as in the agricultural states to the south.
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- The Cambridge World History of Slavery , pp. 553 - 570Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2021