Nat Turner, the son of the mother of an African-born slave in Southampton County, Virginia, led the uprising of 60 or 70 slaves among the most important and recorded slave riots in the southern history . As his extraordinary confession shows, he is a precocious young man, driven to a mysterious voice to become a missionary to realize his dream of releasing his people. He acknowledged that his own master, Joseph Travis, was a gentleman; but he and his family were the first people massacred. At least 51 years old - Gray was said to be 55 - was killed on the night of the uprising on August 21, 1831. See confession below for details.
This case is particularly important for Southerners as Southern media reported at least six in the Caribbean or West Indies, and one in North Carolina. (But there is no evidence of conspiracy between the principals of Turner and Carolina Interlude.) After the Holocaust, the community investigated suspects and killed unknown numbers, the court ordered 16 executions. More people have been sentenced to jail or imprisonment. Natnart went to the gallows, he said there was nothing to join his confession.
Natnar uprising shocked the south and led to the adoption of strict police law by most slave provincial legislatures. The prosperous liberation movement in the South began to shake. The people in the south began to believe that the rebellion was related to the abolition, in particular the announcement of the same year's 1877 liberator of the Garrison, but this was never confirmed. More practically, Southerners never recovered from the fear of the early slave riots, despite the blessing that there was nothing to worry about Thomas R. Dew and the former propaganda.
This issue of "Natner's Confessions" has been completed. Only the appendix and the materials in the preface were deleted. Punctuation and spelling are sometimes silent and fixed
Nat Turner's confession is a novel that won the 1967 Pulitzer Prize of American writer William Stallen. The novel was presented by historical figure Natnart as the first person stories involving slavery riot in Virginia state in 1831. This is based on Natner's confession. A recent uprising leader in Southampton, Virginia, having a direct account in 1831, local lawyer Thomas Ruffin Gray announced Turner 's confession. Stellen's ambitious novel is trying to imagine Natner's character; it does not mean an accurate or authoritative description of what happened. Some historians believe that Gray is biased toward Turner's "repentance" debate, and recent authors claim that Gray 's remarks are fake itself
In 1831, Nat Turner organized the only ongoing slavery revolt in American history. In the confession of Natner, Turner recorded a record of the doctor Thomas Thomas Gray after Turner was caught by Turner during execution. At least a hundred blacks were killed in the search of God's predictive Turner for several months. Competition and related articles in the timetable in the United States © American Anthropological Society 2012. All rights reserved. Please use with permission. The American Anthropological Association (AAA) encourages research to promote public understanding of anthropology and to promote the use of anthropological information in solving human problems. For details, please visit our website aaanet.org.
Natner (from October 2, 1831 to November 11, 1831) was a slave, became a missionary on August 21, 1831 and became one of the most blood slave rebels in the United States. After the uprising, Turner hid six weeks, but he was finally caught and hanged. This incident ended the liberation campaign of this area and even resulted in more stringent laws against slavery. When Turner became an idol of the black power movement in the 1960s, others criticized him for using violence as a means of seeking change.