Obrázky stránek
PDF
ePub

offences punishable with bondage. Even insolvency was punished in Greece and Rome with slavery. The same custom now obtains in Africa.

The traffic of slaves consisted, not only in the sale of the children of freemen by their parents, and the sale of freemen from a want of the means of sustenance, but of the sale of captives and of those born in bondage.

The first instance of slavery by bargain and sale is given in the Scripture History of Joseph. The account of the sale of Joseph to the Ishmaelites for twenty pieces of silver and his conveyance to Egypt, prove that the practice was common at that time, and that Egypt was a mart for the traffic in slaves. There is, in the Bible, frequent mention of the purchase and sale of slaves. The purest patriarchs participated in the commerce; and the inspired code of the Jews justified and regulated the traffic. The Hebrews were allowed to sell their own countrymen for six years; to sell their sons and daughters; and unlimited power to purchase slaves from the neighbouring nations was expressly given.

"If thou buy a Hebrew servant, six years he shall serve, and in the seventh he shall go free for nothing."

"If a man sell his daughter to be a maid-servant, she shall not go out as the men servants."

"Both thy bondmen and bondmaids which thou shalt have, shall be of the heathen that are round about you: of them shall ye buy bondmen and bondmaids. Moreover of the children of strangers who sojourn among you, of them shall ye buy; and of the families that are with you, which they begat in your land; and they shall be your possession. And ye shall take them as an inheritance for your children after you, to inherit them for a possession; they shall be your bondmen for ever."

Egypt appears to have been one of the principal markets for the sale of the human species. Homer refers to Cyprus and Egypt as the common marts for slaves in the Trojan war. The traffic was also practised, at that time, in many of the islands of the Egean sea. Tyre and Sidon are described by the Scriptures, as prosecuting this commerce. In truth, it prevailed in the whole of the known world. In Greece and Rome, and their colonies, the trade was universal; and among the nations which overran the South of Europe, it prevailed until the establishment of the Feudal System. That system was little else than a modification of the slavery of the ancients, to suit the circumstances and necessities of the rude and warlike nations in which it was adopted. It was admirably adapted to the purposes of defence; but did little, if any thing, to lighten the bonds of the slave, or ameliorate the condition of the race.

Slavery continued to exist, even in Europe, up to a late period. In the middle ages the Venetians carried on a very extended commerce in slaves; which was prohibited by the pope, only so far as it included trade in Christians. In England the AngloSaxon nobility sold their servants as slaves to foreigners; and even after the conquest, and until the reign of Henry II. slaves were exported, in numbers, from England to Ireland.

CHAPTER II.

Slavery among the Ancients continued-Voluntary Slavery-Roman Mercenarii-Grecian Prodigals-German Enthusiasts-Condition of Slaves-Power and inhumanity of Masters.

PERHAPS slavery, when resulting from insolvency, might with propriety be regarded as voluntary. The freeman who pursued a course which resulted in bondage, and thus incurred a fate which might have been avoided, may be considered as having assumed it. If this be admitted, the number of voluntary bondmen in Greece and Rome, where the refinement of society rendered the vicissitudes of fortune frequent, must be accounted very great.

In Rome there existed a large body of slaves, or servants, known as mercenarii. This title was given them because they received hire. They were free-born citizens, set down in the books as liberi, and distinguished from the foreigners, or alieni, who served the rich.

In the time of the Emperor Claudian, the Roman Senate passed a decree permitting those who were born free to sell their freedom and become slaves. This law remained in force until abrogated by Leo.

The Grecian Thetes were servants of a character somewhat similar to the mercenarii. They received are compense for their labours; and, though treated as slaves and obliged to perform the most servile offices, were not completely subject to the

will of their master, but could, at the expiration of a certain term, obtain their discharge if used with illegal severity.

There was, amongst the Greeks, a species of slaves denominated Prodigals. They were those who, having incurred debts which they were unable to liquidate, were sold for the satisfaction of their creditors. The Delinquents were debtors of a similar description, who having imprudently subjected themselves to the loss of their liberty, were sentenced to the gallies and laboured at the oar.

The most singular class of which we have an account, were the German Enthusiasts. They were gamblers, who, pursuing their intoxicating and fatal passion to the last stake, maddened by the excitement of the game, placed their persons on the hazard of the die, and, in case of failure, were sold as slaves. The whole account exhibits, in vivid colours, the strength of the passion for gaming-a passion which prevails with equal power, in the hut of the savage and the hell of the more finished gamester of refined society. Tacitus gives the following description of the Enthusiasts. The loser," says the historian, "goes into voluntary servitude; and though younger and stronger than the person with whom he played, patiently suffers himself to be bound and sold. Their perseverance in so bad a custom is styled honour. The slaves thus obtained are immediately exchanged away in commerce, that the winner may get clear of the scandal of his victory."

The condition of slaves among the ancients was totally different from that of modern slaves. Instead of being protected, as now, not only from unjust severity on the part of the master, but from suffering or want, they were wholly in the power of their owners. There was no limit to the power the master over the slave. The latter was, in a civil

of

sense, dead. His limbs, life, faculties and affections were all at the mercy of his lord. In a legal point of view, he had neither name nor tribe; he was recognized as possessing no rights; and was, in fact, as completely within the power of the master as his horse or his dog.

There were, however, some partial exceptions to this general description. The Egyptian slave, though perhaps a greater drudge than any other, was protected from murder, and could, if he succeeded in reaching the temple of Hercules, secure a retreat from the oppressive severity of his master. Hebrews also appear to have treated their slaves with lenity.

The

Athens, however, was distinguished above all the nations of antiquity for her peculiar humanity to slaves. In no place were they allowed so many privileges or treated with so much kindness. Demosthenes, in his Second Philippic, states that "the condition of a slave in Athens was preferable to that of a free citizen in many other countries." They were allowed great liberty of speech, and were permitted to enjoy a certain portion of time in their own peculiar pursuits, their private labours, amusements, amours or hours of relaxation and rest. They also had a temple of refuge; and were allowed the privilege of appealing to the legal tribunal against their masters in case of harshness or inhumanity. Besides these advantages, they possessed the invaluable privilege of redeeming themselves from bondage. They had an opportunity of working for themselves; and when their skill or industry had enabled them to accumulate a sufficient sum, they might purchase manumission, and become free for ever.

In Sparta and Carthage, the slaves were treated with more severity. In Rome, the power of the

« PředchozíPokračovat »