The video owner has disabled playback on external websites.

This video is no longer available on YouTube.

This video cannot be played right now.

Watch on YouTube

KI-gestützte Lerntools freischalten

Registriere dich, um leistungsstarke Tools zu nutzen, die dir helfen, schneller aus jedem Video zu lernen.

Szenen-Erklärer Phrasen-Jäger Karteikarten-Review Nachsprechübung Sprachausgabe
Kostenlos registrieren
B1 Mittelstufe Englisch 12:35 Educational

Haitian Revolutions: Crash Course World History #30

CrashCourse · 4,412,210 Aufrufe · Hinzugefügt vor 3 Wochen

Lernstatistiken

B1

GER-Niveau

5/10

Schwierigkeit

Untertitel (177 Segmente)

00:00

Hi, I’m John Green. This is Crash Course World History. And apparently it’s Revolutions

00:04

Month here at Crash Course, because today we are going to discuss the often-neglected

00:09

Haitian Revolutions. The Haitian Revolutions are totally fascinating and they involve two

00:12

of my very favorite things: 1. Ending slavery, and

00:17

2. Napoleon getting his feelings hurt. I can’t help myself, Napoleon. I like to see you suffer.

00:21

[theme music]

00:30

So, the French colony in Saint-Domingue began in the 17th century as a pirate outpost. And

00:35

its original French inhabitants made their living selling leather and a kind of smoked

00:38

beef called boucan. All that beef actually came from cattle left behind by the Spanish,

00:42

who were the first Europeans to settle the island.

00:44

But anyway, after 1640, the boucan-sellers started to run low on beef. And they were

00:49

like, “You know what would pay better than selling beef jerky? Robbing Spanish galleons,”

00:52

which as you’ll recall were loaded with silver mined from South America. So, by the

00:56

middle of the 17th century, the French had convinced many of those buccaneering captains

01:00

to give up their pirating and settle on the island.

01:03

Many of them invested some of their pirate treasure in sugar plantations, which, by 1700

01:07

were thriving at both producing sugar and working people to death. And soon, this island

01:12

was the most valuable colony in the West Indies, and possibly in the world. It produced 40%

01:17

of Europe’s sugar, 60% of its coffee, and it was home to more slaves than any place except Brazil.

01:22

And as you’ll recall from our discussion of Atlantic slavery, being a slave in a sugar-production

01:27

colony was exceptionally brutal. In fact, by the late 18th century, more slaves were

01:31

imported to Saint-Domingue EVERY YEAR— more than 40,000— than the entire white population

01:37

of the island. By the 19th century, slaves made up about 90% of the population.

01:42

And most of those slaves were African born, because the brutal living and working conditions

01:46

prevented natural population growth. Like, remember Alfred Crosby’s fantastic line,

01:50

“it is crudely true that if man’s caloric intake is sufficient, he will somehow stagger

01:54

to maturity, and he will reproduce?” Yeah, well, not in 18th century Haiti, thanks to

01:59

Yellow Fever and smallpox and just miserable working conditions. So, most of these plantations

02:04

were pretty large, they often had more than 200 slaves, and many of the field workers—

02:07

in some cases, a majority— were women.

02:10

Colonial society in Saint-Domingue was divided into four groups, which had important consequences

02:13

for the revolution. At the top, were the Big White planters who owned the plantations and

02:18

all the slaves. Often these Grand Blancs were absentee landlords who would just rather stay

02:21

in France and let their agents do, you know, the actual brutality.

02:25

Below them were the wealthy free people of color. Most of the Frenchmen who came to the

02:29

island were, you know, men, and they frequently fathered children with slave women. These

Vollständige Untertitel im Videoplayer verfügbar

Mit Übungen trainieren

Erstelle Vokabel-, Grammatik- und Verständnisübungen aus diesem Video

Vokabeln & Grammatik Verständnisquiz IELTS-Prüfung Schreib-Übung
Registrieren zum Üben
Noch keine Kommentare. Sei der Erste, der seine Gedanken teilt!

Registriere dich, um alle Features freizuschalten

Verfolge deinen Fortschritt, speichere Vokabeln und übe mit Übungen

Kostenlos Sprachen lernen