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Accounts for the Ruby
Description:
Accounts for the Bristol ship, the Ruby.
Copyright: Copyright BCC Record Office
Object ID:BRO 39654(1)
Accounts for the Ruby
Description:
Accounts for the Bristol ship, the Ruby.
Date: unknown
Copyright: Copyright BCC Record Office
Object ID:BRO 39654(1)
Accounts for the Ruby
Description:
Accounts for the Bristol ship, the Ruby.
Date: unknown
Copyright: Copyright BCC Record Office
Object ID:BRO 39654(1)
Accounts for the Ruby
Description:
Accounts for the Bristol ship, the Ruby.
Date: unknown
Copyright: Copyright BCC Record Office
Object ID:BRO 39654(1)
Accounts for the Ruby
Description:
Accounts for the Bristol ship, the Ruby.
Date: unknown
Copyright: Copyright BCC Record Office
Object ID:BRO 39654(1)
Accounts for the Ruby
Description:
Accounts for the Bristol ship, the Ruby.
Date: unknown
Copyright: Copyright BCC Record Office
Object ID:BRO 39654(1)
Inventory, Edmund Saunders
Description:
Inventory of merchant and sea captain, Edmund Saunders, 1740.
Creator: Edmund Saunders
Date: 1740
Copyright: Copyright BCC Record Office
Object ID:AC/JS62/20
Detail from will of Becher Fleming
Description:
Detail from will of Becher Fleming, a Bristol merchant who invested in slave ships, 1718.
Creator: Becher Fleming
Date: 1718
Copyright: Copyright BCC Record Office
Object ID:WILL: BECHER FLEMING, 1718
Signature on will of Becher Fleming
Description:
Signature on will of Becher Fleming, a Bristol merchant who invested in slave ships, 1718.
Creator: Becher Fleming
Date: 1718
Copyright: Copyright BCC Record Office
Object ID:WILL: BECHER FLEMING, 1718
Playbill
Description:
Playbill, showing a play called Ganem: Slave of Love; or the Shoe-Black Gent. 1865.
Ganem, the Slave of Love is one of the Arabian Nights tales.
Ganem, a merchant’s son, rescued a woman (possibly a slave), named Fetna/b from being buried alive.
He looked after her and found she was the favourite of the ruler of Muslims, or caliph, whom a jealous sultan (ruler of a Muslim country) ordered to be buried alive.
The caliph was at first jealous of Ganem and ordered him to be put to death, but Ganem escaped.
On hearing what had really happened, the caliph saw he had been wrong. He pardoned Ganem and gave him Fetna/b as a wife.
The language used to describe people of African descent in the 18th, 19th and 20th centuries is unacceptable in today’s terms. We cannot avoid using this language in its original context. To change the words would impose 20th century attitudes on history.
Date: 1865
Copyright: Copyright BCC Record Office
Object ID:8982/169
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