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Emulating a Portuguese Model: The Slave Policy of the West India Company and the Dutch Reformed Church in Dutch Brazil (1630–1654) and New Netherland (1614–1664) in Comparative Perspective

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TLDR
In this paper, the authors present a new perspective on the master-slave relationship in New Netherland in order to complement the existing theories on the treatment of slaves in that Dutch colony, and show how prior to the loss of Dutch Brazil, the West India Company modeled its slave policy after Portuguese practices such as the formation of black militias and the use of Christianity as a means to foster slave loyalty.
Abstract
This article presents a new perspective on the master-slave relationship in New Netherland in order to complement the existing theories on the treatment of slaves in that Dutch colony. It shows how prior to the loss of Dutch Brazil, the West India Company modeled its slave policy after Portuguese practices, such as the formation of black militias and the use of Christianity as a means to foster slave loyalty. It also points out that in the initial slave policy of the Dutch Reformed Church was characterized by the ambition to replace the Iberian Catholic Church in the Americas. While the Reformed Church in the early decades of the Dutch colonial expansion was characterized by a community-building spirit and a flexible attitude toward newcomers, the loss of Brazil shattered the dream of a Protestant American continent and gave way to a more exclusivist approach with a much stronger emphasis on orthodoxy. This led to a dramatic change in attitude vis-a-vis slaves, which is reflected in the segregationist policies―both at a social and a religious level―in later Dutch slave colonies such as Suriname.

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Creating an Orderly Society: The Regulation of Marriage and Sex in the Dutch Atlantic World, 1621-1674

Deborah Hamer
TL;DR: Omohundro Institute of Early American History and Culture, College of William and Mary, Williamsburg, Virginia 2015-2017 Postdoctoral Fellow and Visiting Assistant Professor Boston College, Chestnut Hill, Massachusetts 2014-2015 Visiting assistant Professor University of Miami, Miami, Florida Spring 2014 Instructor Columbia University, New York, NewYork Summer 2011 Instructor Museum of the City of New York and New York Museum of Art, Museum of Science and Technology, New Orleans, Louisiana, USA 2011 Collections Intern Columbia University and Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, Massachusetts 2006-2009 Teaching Assistant
Journal ArticleDOI

Slavery at the Court of the ‘Humanist Prince’: Reexamining Johan Maurits van Nassau-Siegen and his Role in Slavery, Slave Trade and Slave-smuggling in Dutch Brazil

TL;DR: The role of Johan Maurits in the transatlantic slave trade and enslavement in Brazil is poorly covered by research, with some historians recently arguing that there is no proof of any personal involvement as discussed by the authors.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

A Social History of Black Slaves and Freedmen in Portugal, 1441-1555

TL;DR: The slave trade and its legal and philosophical justifications are discussed in this paper, where the demography of slaves in Portugal is also discussed, as well as the life of the slave.
Book

New Netherland: A Dutch Colony in Seventeenth-Century America

Jaap Jacobs
TL;DR: In this article, the authors describe a country where milk and honey flow in a country separated from all the friends in such a far distant country, separating them from the rest of the world.
Book

The History of Brazil under the Governorship of Count Johan Maurits of Nassau, 1636?1644

TL;DR: The Dutch West India Company controlled a scattered but sizeable portion of the western hemisphere, from present-day Albany, New York, to northeast Brazil In 1647, the Dutch historian, theologian, and philosopher Caspar van Baerle created a landmark historical narrative, which he published in Latin this paper.
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