Haitians During The French Revolution

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This Means War During the time of the French revolution, it was a era of inequality. There were men who were ranked higher than others just because of the job they had. Some were even ranked by the color of their skin but not the content of their character. Some were ranked based on if they were a male or female. This tells one that this era was not good for some. All of these things promoted people to fight for change. The Haitians may have been flogged or beaten but when it came down to fighting for what was right they were never broken. Not only did the French influence the Haitians but it influenced the way Haiti was ran. Saint Dominigue also known as Haiti was once France's wealthiest overseas colony. Known for their…show more content…
To be able to produce all these things it is evident that there was brutality. When the French revolution was birthed there where five groups; the white planters who owned land and slaves, and petit blancs who where teachers, shopkeepers, and artisans. These two distinct groups where known as the upper class and together they numbered 40,000 of the population. Shockingly the white planters and petit blancs were for independence, because they were disenchanted from France. Even though the two groups where for independence they still remained committed to the concept of slavery. The three remaining groups were African and consisted of those who were free, those who were slaves, and those who ran away. There were 30,000 free Africans living during that time. Amazingly the free Africans were often more wealthier than the petit blancs. One sees how the concept of inequality stirred up the white petit blancs to start a ration against the Africans who were wealthier than them. The slaves consisted of about 500,000 people. The run away
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