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The Divine Providence of Equiano

2023-01-15 03:15:58

In the 18th century, innocent victims from Africa were kidnapped from their homes, the only land they knew, and then brought to a new world by boat. This new world forces them to become slaves and is deprived of all human rights. The survivor of slave trade from the middle aisle is Olaudah Equaino and he says autobiography of his life in a book "Equiano's Travel: an interesting story of the life of Olaudah Equiano or an interesting story of Gustav Vasa in Africa" Published. When he and his sister were kidnapped from their hometown wart, Equiano suffered very much.

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.

Olaudah Equiano was born in 1745 in Eboe, Nigeria. When he was about 11 years old, Equiano was kidnapped and sold to slave merchants in the West Indies. In spite of his short period in Virginia, Equiano served as a majority of slavery for slave ships and the captain of the British navy ship. Henry Pascal, one of his master, was the captain of a British trade ship, and published autobiography in the name of Africa, but he named the name of Greerbosvasa the name of Ario. In order to serve Pascal and subsequent merchants, Equiano went extensively to visit the UK, the Netherlands, Scotland, Gibraltar, Nova Scotia, the Caribbean, Pennsylvania, Georgia and South Carolina. He was acquired by Robert King, a merchant of Philadelphia in 1763, and worked as an official. He also participated in King's trading single single sailing. During his lifetime, it passed through the American version and the eight British versions.

Olaudah Equiano's life, or an interesting story of Gustavus Vasa of Africa. I wrote it myself. Volume I