Natnart is a foresighted person who will change America forever. His vision may not sound like ordinary people, but Nat Turner achieved his vision on the planet. Natner is the most famous and controversial slave rebel among American history and he is still the center of the controversial storm ("Stephen Fire" author Stephen B. Oates). Nat Turner 's slave riot may not be the best way to solve the problem of slavery, but it opens the eyes of many people.
The rebellion of Nat Turner was also known as the Southampton County Uprising or Southampton Uprising. This is a revolt led by Natner and the slave slave of 1831. People remember that it was one of the few pre-war slave riots that deeply changed the attitude of Caucasians into slavery. Indeed, it may have the most significant and lasting influence on the way slavery politics and slavery are memorized as systems in American cultural memory. The revolts themselves lasted only two days, but the influence led to the efforts of the law to limit education and religious problems of black slaves and efforts to tighten militias to prevent new rises.
Although suppressive slavery provided the necessary background for resistance, Nat Turner explained his motive for the religious ups and downs of Southampton slaves. Little is known about Turner, except Thomas Gray's announcement in Natner's confession. According to the "confession" report, Turner was born on October 2, 1800 as a slave to Southampton Plantation. He can read and write, but it is rare for those who were enslaved at that time and place. He has a "very intimate" grandmother, a father who escapes slavery, and a family, including his wife and son, living in a nearby farm. He was very religious, experienced "spending time on fasting and praying" and personal revelation. There, "the spirit to talk with the prophet" told him. When he was in his twenties, Turner ran away from his boss. He was a month away, just returned to the spiritual encouragement.
On August 27, 1831, the editor of Richmond asked as follows. Nat Turner's uprising that happened five days ago killed more than 50 white people; at the end of the trial a similar number of suspicious rebels were killed extraordinarily or sentenced to death and executed. Even though Nat Turner was arrested on October 30, 1831, the problem with the compiler has not been answered.