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The Diary Of My Life In 1756, By Olaudah Equiano

2023-01-26 03:24:22

My diary's diary in 1756, Orauda Equinos Today is another interesting day. My friends and I went to a traditional tree and saw a kidnapper in another day. To my surprise, I found some. I should remind my neighbors that they can catch a man before our parents leave home. These aliens always come and try to steal us, and in most cases we can gather to fight them. Dear diary, it happened at last, this is one of the worst days in my life.

Please remember that when you read the interesting story of Olaudah Equiano about Olaudah Equiano's life and excerpts from Gustavus Vassa of Africa, the collection page is part of a larger piece. If you are interested in the abstract version, you can find online full-text version at http://history.hanover.edu/texts/equiano/equiano_contents.html. The story of Equiano introduced us first to us before looking at slaves and it is difficult to ignore the similarity between the opening of Equiano and the opening of Benjamin Franklin in his autobiography there were. Publications and future generations for Franklin's son may benefit from his experience, and Equiano publishes for his friends and wants it. Further possible 'human interest' (753)

Equiano, Olaudah (Gustavus Vassa) (1745-1797) Autobiography, abolitionist Olaudah Equiano published the lifetime of Olaudah Equiano in 1789, or an interesting story of Gustavus Vassa in Africa. Tradition of slave stories. - American literature Equiano witnessed the atrocities of slave trade across the Atlantic Ocean, helped terminate the slave trade in the UK and became the most influential African American writer of the 18th century. The son of Orauda Ecuano, leader of Ibo in Benin province of Africa, now known as Nigeria, was born in 1745. In 1756, at the age of 11, he was kidnapped by an African merchant and sold to a British slave. He was sent to Barbados in the West Indies and then to Virginia. So the British navy's lieutenant Michael Henry Pascal sent him to Virginia.