Abstract

The current historical consensus is that English common law was somewhat confused, but that coerced servitude was legal in England before 1772, and certainly in its empire, where English law on slavery did not reach, because it was “beyond the line” of English justice. The common law is characterized by an effort to see continuity and consistency, and historians (despite our natural desire to track change) often look for those patterns too. Such efforts to provide a consistent overview of an England that was free and colonies that created slavery on their own—have obscured the vibrant struggle over slavery within the English judicial system—the common law—over more than a century. Not only did the common law on slavery change profoundly during the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries: the common law became an instrument of crown policy. It did so within a federal empire, wherein colonial legal norms had to adhere, in crucial ways, to that common law. English high court judges thus provided the legal foundation for an imperial common law of slavery that allowed people to be deemed absolute property. That definition of people as property was closely connected to absolutism, both in theory and practice. In theory the absolute power of kings over subjects was connected to that of masters over slaves. In practice, the crown's use of the courts to create laws without parliamentary consent (to bypass parliament) also increased crown revenue and thus their independence from parliamentary control. These powerful legal mechanisms made it possible to “recover” enslaved people as assets for debts, a legal definition that was essential for a market in people to function sucessfully. This history reveals the absolutist character of early capitalism, and the extent to which the character of capitalist development depends on the legal rules that define markets and justice.

Highlights

  • Law and History Review, November 2021 governor and main shareholders all belonged to the royal family

  • When Parliament failed to pass an imperial slave code with such provisions, he turned to the courts

  • Charles II’s judges — “his” judges in the sense that they held their seats “during his pleasure”—presided over a series of rulings that made slavery legal in England itself, and in its empire

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Summary

HOLLY BREWER

Between 1667 and 1671, the Royal African Company (RAC) went bankrupt.[1]. It did so despite extensive royal patronage and connections—its. Who knew the details, would fail to announce such sales and purchase the entire estate themselves, including all servants and slaves, for a fraction of their worth and for a fraction of the debt owed.[32] Part of the problem was, as one RAC official summarized: “the Planters (our Debtors) are Judges” in the courts of law meant that the judges had little incentive to cooperate.[33] Despite such harsh legislation between 1664 and 1677 either pushed through the legislature or proclaimed the king’s governors, the efforts largely failed. The data from the RAC account books are among the most reliable, but they are incomplete; it is hard to run the numbers to exclude the estimations

Creating a Common Law of Slavery for England
Findings
Shankshoone and his brother Mahomet had signed indentures with
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