Cargo backdrop的問題,透過圖書和論文來找解法和答案更準確安心。 我們找到下列線上看、影評和彩蛋懶人包

Cargo backdrop的問題,我們搜遍了碩博士論文和台灣出版的書籍,推薦Bryant, Jonathan M.寫的 Dark Places of the Earth: The Voyage of the Slave Ship Antelope 可以從中找到所需的評價。

另外網站Greening European cargo operations也說明:Against this backdrop, the 8th Florence Intermodal Forum on the Greening of European Cargo Operations, co-organised by the Transport Area of the Florence ...

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Dark Places of the Earth: The Voyage of the Slave Ship Antelope

為了解決Cargo backdrop的問題,作者Bryant, Jonathan M. 這樣論述:

In 1820, a suspicious vessel was spotted lingering off the coast of northern Florida, the Spanish slave ship Antelope. Since the United States had outlawed its own participation in the international slave trade more than a decade before, the ship's almost 300 African captives were considered ille

gal cargo under American laws. But with slavery still a critical part of the American economy, it would eventually fall to the Supreme Court to determine whether or not they were slaves at all, and if so, what should be done with them.Bryant describes the captives' harrowing voyage through waters ri

fe with pirates and governed by an array of international treaties. By the time the Antelope arrived in Savannah, Georgia, the puzzle of how to determine the captives' fates was inextricably knotted. Set against the backdrop of a city in the grip of both the financial panic of 1819 and the lingering

effects of an outbreak of yellow fever, Dark Places of the Earth vividly recounts the eight-year legal conflict that followed, during which time the Antelope's human cargo were mercilessly put to work on the plantations of Georgia, even as their freedom remained in limbo.When at long last the Supre

me Court heard the case, Francis Scott Key, the legendary Georgetown lawyer and author of "The Star Spangled Banner," represented the Antelope captives in an epic courtroom battle that identified the moral and legal implications of slavery for a generation. Four of the six justices who heard the cas

e, including Chief Justice John Marshall, owned slaves. Despite this, Key insisted that "by the law of nature all men are free," and that the captives should by natural law be given their freedom. This argument was rejected. The court failed Key, the captives, and decades of American history, siding

with the rights of property over liberty and setting the course of American jurisprudence on these issues for the next thirty-five years. The institution of slavery was given new legal cover, and another brick was laid on the road to the Civil War.The stakes of the Antelope case hinged on nothing l

ess than the central American conflict of the nineteenth century. Both disquieting and enlightening, Dark Places of the Earth restores the Antelope to its rightful place as one of the most tragic, influential, and unjustly forgotten episodes in American legal history.