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Articles

Bringing war into everyday life

strange “dialogues” about values from the 1940s
The ongoing war in Ukraine makes many people ask how such devastation is possible in 21st-century Europe. The arguments of the Russian side create misunderstanding and leave us perplexed. The incitement to hatred and destruction by Putin's regime can even be compared to the Stalinist era. In the 1940s when the Baltic states were occupied by the…
Feb 23, 2024
Aigi Rahi-Tamm

Analysing the everyday practices of labour coercion through arbitration court records

The case of a runaway maidservant in Iceland in 1820
The following text is a complete transcription of a case that was resolved in the arbitration court in the district of Engihlíð in northern Iceland in 1820:1
Feb 23, 2024
Vilhelm Vilhelmsson

The failed petition of Christopher McPherson, Richmond, Virginia, 1810

In 1810, Christopher McPherson submitted a petition to the Virginia General Assembly, the State’s legislative body. In this petition, he asked to be exempted from a newly enacted ordinance which prohibited people of African descent from riding in a carriage in the city of Richmond, Virginia’s capital.1 This was a time when the free Black population of Virginia, and in the US South as a whole, was experiencing growing pressure for being Black in a society that justified slavery by skin colour. Slavery came to be abolished in the northern states, yet in the South, it intensified and spread. When the legislative framework around free people of…
Feb 23, 2024
Viola Müller

Negotiating Coercion at the Court

Barrelmakers and the Ottoman State in the Early Nineteenth Century
Judicial authorities and the courts lay at the heart of the tributary labour mechanisms in the Ottoman Empire. The Ottoman judge, kadı, played a central role in drafting workers and organising the production and transportation of materials for the military worksites. Nevertheless, the state's use of such judicial mechanisms for coerced labour did not hinder their appropriation by Ottoman subjects to negotiate the terms of the labour draft or to…
Feb 23, 2024
Akin Sefer

Chains, Escapes and Debt Transfers aboard the Venetian Galleys

the case of Marco from Corfu
Trial number 12/23, conserved in the Cariche da Mar Processi fond (CMP, Frari archives, Venice), is a 19-page document written at the end of September 1600 about the escape of two galley convicts in the Venetian maritime colonies, the Stato da Mar. Trials of this kind were held aboard ships by the representatives of the Republic, generally called retto…
Jun 12, 2023
Cosimo Pantaleoni

Convict Bodies

An exploratory data analysis of a nineteenth-century language of coercion
Across multiple historical contexts, we encounter a recurring fantasy: using language to conjure an image of a person out of place to enable the apprehension of said person in real life. An especially fantastical version is encountered in the otherwise middling James Bond movie For Your Eyes Only (1981), in which the protagonist, played by Roger Moore, encounters a villain unknown to him. Later, at MI6 headquarters, a clerk suggests to a somewhat baffled Bond that he go into “the identigraph room”. Q, played by Desmond Llewelyn then in his late 70s, leads Bond into a computer lab and places him in front of a monitor, by early eighties’…
Jan 1, 2023
Frederik Aastradsen Bagger, Louise Bundgaard, Mie Dodensig, Annesofie Ebbesen, Jonas Foldager, Iben Landbo Gregersen, Thomas Haaber, Jamison Isabeau Helstrup, Malthe Gammelmark Jürgensen, Steffan Klockmann, Sofie Othilia Knudsen, Kamilla Matthiassen, Niklas Lolholm Monhof, Eva Rosalie Buch Nielsen, Tobias Aske Heltborg Nielsen, Albert Mellergaard Olsen, Fiona Gesine Otten, Anne Katrine Holm Pedersen, Patrick Alexander Skov, Tania Sini Vorbeck, Louise Willingsøe and Johan Heinsen

Owing and Serving

Berthold von Regensburg Preaching the Social Order (13th Century, German territories)
This data story is the product of a group of eleven history master students at the University of Vienna. The students have been working on historical semantics as an approach to social and labor history throughout the summer term of 2021. In several workshops on digital tools and online hands-on sessions, they experimented with the…
Mar 17, 2022
Michael Gamperl, Anna Günter, Lisa Horak, Gregor Hutter, Natalia Kowalczyk, Marie Letouzé, Benjamin Lindenthal, Karina Müller, Teresa Petrik, Nour Saber, Lisa Schwarzinger, Corinna Peres and Juliane Schiel

Atlantic Slavery and Its Repercussions in German-Speaking Territories, c. 1650–1850

Notions of German exceptionalism long perpetuated the assumption that early modern Germany had no significant connection to Atlantic slavery. According to this view neither did slavery as an institution exist in the various territories of early modern Germany, nor were German states or actors significantly involved in transatlantic and race-based…
Sep 30, 2021
Annika Bärwald

Claiming a Runaway Slave in the Holy Roman Empire

The Case of Samuel Johannes (1754)
In the early morning hours of March 26, 1754, a lone man secretly left the Moravian communal settlement Herrnhut in the margraviate of Upper Lusatia. His name was Samuel Johannes (sometimes Samuel Johannes Felix), he was a Moravian, and he originally hailed from Southern India. Samuel Johannes had been living in Herrnhut for a mere two weeks, employed as a servant in the house of Baron…
Aug 3, 2021
Josef Köstlbauer

Servants in the early-modern Nordic countries

Early studies of Nordic servants written in the first half of the twentieth century focused on legal…
Jan 4, 2021
Hanne Østhus, Carolina Uppenberg

Voluntary Work or Coerced Labour?

Albania between 1945 and the 1990s
Under communism, the mobilisation of voluntary workers played an important role for the Albanian economy as…
Sep 9, 2020
Dorjana Klosi

Slavery and Resistance in the US South

Slavery in the United States was already the focus of…
Sep 9, 2020
Viola Müller

Grammars of Coercion

Towards a cross-corpora annotation model
This document describes the first digital steps of Working Group 1 “Grammars of Coercion” (hereafter WG1) towards a common and multilingual cross-corpora annotation model for the semantic analysis of historical sources on coercion in labor. It is the result of four rounds of experiments with Catma (a semantic annotation and analysis tool) held…
Sep 7, 2020
Juliane Schiel, Johan Heinsen, Claude Chevaleyre

Prosecution of a murderous female slave, Mukden (Qing China), 1796

The Chinese judiciary was organized along a vertical chain of transmission. Judicial cases were investigated at the local level and, depending on their gravity, transmitted upward to the prefecture, the province, then to the Board of Punishments (or Ministry of Justice) and, ultimately, to the emperor. The higher the punishment corresponding to the proposed incrimination, the higher the trying instance. For instance, a district magistrate could only close minor cases (liable to beating). In cases liable to banishment, the Board of Punishments was the last decision-making body. Crimes punishable by death were always submitted to the emperor for final decision, either…
Sep 4, 2020
Claude Chevaleyre
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