Slavery in Southeastern Europe

Author:

Achim ViorelORCID

Abstract

AbstractIn Southeastern Europe, slavery was present in various forms from antiquity until the nineteenth century. During the 1800s, slavery as a social reality still existed in the Ottoman Empire (including its European provinces) as well as in the Romanian principalities. Wallachia and Moldavia had slaves and slavery since their founding in the fourteenth century. Around the middle of the nineteenth century, the roughly 250000 slaves living in the two countries represented seven percent of the total population. There were three categories of slaves: state slaves, slaves owned by monasteries, and privately owned slaves. The slave population was diverse in numerous ways. In terms of their ethnicity, most slaves were Roma, while some were of Romanian or other origin. As in previous centuries, they played an important role in the country’s economy—primarily by way of the enslaved craftsmen who practiced their crafts itinerantly in villages. This chapter reconstructs the history of slavery, abolitionism, and emancipation in the Romanian principalities between the 1830s and the 1850s, with reference to previous periods and similar processes taking place around the same time in other geographical areas.

Publisher

Springer International Publishing

Reference10 articles.

1. Achim, Viorel. The Roma in Romanian History. Budapest: Central European University Press, 2004.

2. Achim, Viorel. “The Gypsies in the Romanian Principalities: The Emancipation Laws, 1831–1856,” Historical Yearbook 1 (2004): 109–120.

3. Achim, Viorel. “Romanian Abolitionists on the Future of the Emancipated Gypsies,” in Identity Projects and Processes in the Romanian Space, 19th–20th Centuries, edited by Viorel Achim, 23–36. Cluj-Napoca: Romanian Academy, Center for Transylvanian Studies, 2010.

4. Achim, Viorel. “Considerations about the Territorial Distribution of Slaves in the Romanian Principalities,” in Slaving Zones: Cultural Identities, Ideologies, and Institutions in the Evolution of Global Slavery, edited by Jeff Fynn-Paul and Damian Alan Pargas, 70–93. Leiden – Boston: Brill, 2017.

5. Erdem, Y. Hakan. Slavery in the Ottoman Empire and its Demise, 1800–1909. Houndmills—Basingstoke—Hampshire: Macmillan Press; New York: St. Martin’s, 1996.

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