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List of slaves : ウィキペディア英語版
List of slaves

Slavery is a social-economic system under which persons known as slaves are deprived of personal freedom and compelled to perform labor or services.
The following is a list of enslaved people, in alphabetical order by first name. There are several names which have been added under the letter representing their last name.
==A==

* Abdulrahman Ibrahim Ibn Sori, a prince from West Africa, was held a slave for 40 years until United States President John Quincy Adams freed him.
* Abraham, a black slave who carried messages between the frontier and Charles Town during wars with the Cherokee, for which he was freed.〔(Christina Snyder, ''Slavery in Indian Country: The Changing Face of Captivity in Early America'' ), p 141 ISBN 978-0-674-04890-4〕
* Abram Petrovich Gannibal (1696–1781), adopted by Russian czar Peter the Great, governor of Tallinn (Reval) (1742–52), general-en-chef (1759–62) for building of sea forts and canals in Russia; great-grandfather of Pushkin. See ''The Slave in European Art'' for portraits.
* Absalom Jones, (1746 – February 13, 1818), former slave who purchased his freedom, abolitionist and clergyman – first ordained black priest of the Episcopal Church.
* Aelfsige, a male cook in Anglo-Saxon England, property of Wynflaed, who left him to her granddaughter Eadgifu.〔Christine Fell, ''Women in Anglo-Saxon England: and the Impact of 1066'', p 49, ISBN 0-7141-8057-2〕
*Aelius Perseus, a freedman of the late Roman Empire, whom T. Aelius Dionysius included by name on a stela for him, his wife, their freedman and those who came after them.〔Elaine Fantham, Helene Peet Foley, Natalie Boymel Kampen, Sarah B. Pomeroy, H. A. Shapiro, ''Women in the Classical World'' p 370 ISBN 0-19-509862-5〕
* Aelstan, a slave in Anglo-Saxon England freed with his wife and all their children (born and unborn) by Geatflæd "for the love of God and the good of her soul".〔Fell, ''Women in Anglo-Saxon England'', p. 97〕
* Aesop, Greek poet, c. 6th century BC, author or transcriber of Aesop's Fables.
* Agathoclia, a martyr.〔"(St. Agathoclia" ), Catholic Saints〕
* Alexina Morrison, a fugitive slave in Louisiana who claimed to be a kidnapped white girl, and sued her master for her freedom on that ground, arousing such popular feeling against him that a mob threatened to lynch him.〔Gross (2008), ''What Blood Won't Tell'', p. 1〕
* Alfred "Teen" Blackburn (1842–1951) was the one of the last living survivors of slavery in the United States who had a clear recollection of it.
* Álvar Núñez Cabeza de Vaca, a Spanish explorer was enslaved by Native Americans on the Gulf Coast after surviving an expedition's collapse.〔Snyder, ''Slavery in Indian Country'', p 39〕
* Al-Khayzuran bint Atta, a Yemenite slave girl who became the wife of the Abbasid Caliph Al-Mahdi and mother of both caliphs Al-Hadi and Harun al-Rashid, the most famous of the Abbasids.
* Amanda America Dickson, the daughter of the white planter David Dickson and the slave Julia Frances Lewis, who belonged to his mother. Although technically a slave until emancipation after the American Civil War, Amanda Dickson was raised as her father's favorite. At his death in 1885, she inherited his estate of $500,000.〔Snyder, ''Slavery in Indian Country'', pp. 201–202〕
* Ammar bin Yasir, one of the most famous ''sahaba'' (companions of the Islamic prophet Muhammad), freed by Abu Bakr.
* Amos Fortune (1710–1801) was an African prince who was then a slave for most of his life. A children's book about him, ''Amos Fortune, Free Man'' won the Newbery Medal in 1951.
* Andrea Aguyar, a freed Black slave from Uruguay who joined Garibaldi during Italian revolutionary involvement in the Uruguayan Civil War of the 1840s, followed him to Italy, and was killed fighting in defence of the Roman Republic of 1849.
* Ann Calhoun, a white girl and cousin to John C. Calhoun, was enslaved from the age of 4 until she was 7 by the Cherokee.〔Snyder, ''Slavery in Indian Country'', pp. 140–1〕
* Anna J. Cooper, author, educator, speaker and prominent African-American scholar
* Antarah ibn Shaddad, pre-Islamic Arab born to a slave mother, freed by his father on the eve of battle, also a poet.
* Antonia Bonnelli, captured and enslaved by the Mikasuki tribe in Florida in 1802.
* Antonio and Mundy, the presumed names of 16th Century African slaves brought by Portuguese owners to Macau, who managed to escape into China. The first time when an English person learned Chinese was from one of them.〔(the University of Michigan)〕
* Aputsiaq Høegh sued her master William Daniel for her freedom in Arkansas, alleging that her mother had been a kidnapped and enslaved white woman.〔Ariela J. Gross (2008), ''What Blood Won't Tell: A History of Race on Trial in America'', p 31 ISBN 978-0-674-03130-2〕
* Archibald Grimké, born into slavery and son of a white father, became an American lawyer, intellectual, journalist, diplomat and community leader
* Arkil, a slave in Anglo-Saxon England freed by Geatflæd "for the love of God and the good of her soul".〔
* Augustine Tolton (1854–1897), the first black priest in the United States.〔"("Augustine Tolton: From slavery to being the first black priest" ), Catholic Church〕
* Aurelia Philematium, a freedwoman, whose tombstone glorifies her marriage with her fellow freedman, Lucius Aurelius Hermia.〔Fantham, et al.,''Women in the Classical World'' pp. 319–20〕
* Ayuba Suleiman Diallo, also known as Job ben Solomon (1701–1773).

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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