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People Of Faith Slavery And African Catholics In Eighteenthcentury Rio De Janeiro Mariza De Carvalho Soares

  • SKU: BELL-35898800
People Of Faith Slavery And African Catholics In Eighteenthcentury Rio De Janeiro Mariza De Carvalho Soares
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People Of Faith Slavery And African Catholics In Eighteenthcentury Rio De Janeiro Mariza De Carvalho Soares instant download after payment.

Publisher: Duke University Press
File Extension: PDF
File size: 1.1 MB
Pages: 336
Author: Mariza de Carvalho Soares
ISBN: 9780822350231, 0822350238
Language: English
Year: 2011

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People Of Faith Slavery And African Catholics In Eighteenthcentury Rio De Janeiro Mariza De Carvalho Soares by Mariza De Carvalho Soares 9780822350231, 0822350238 instant download after payment.

In People of Faith, Mariza de Carvalho Soares reconstructs the everyday lives of Mina slaves transported in the eighteenth century to Rio de Janeiro from the western coast of Africa, particularly from modern-day Benin. She describes a Catholic lay brotherhood formed by the enslaved Mina congregants of a Rio church, and she situates the brotherhood in a panoramic setting encompassing the historical development of the Atlantic slave trade in West Africa and the ethnic composition of Mina slaves in eighteenth-century Rio. Although Africans from the Mina Coast constituted no more than ten percent of the slave population of Rio, they were a strong presence in urban life at the time. Soares analyzes the role that Catholicism, and particularly lay brotherhoods, played in Africans’ construction of identities under slavery in colonial Brazil. As in the rest of the Portuguese empire, black lay brotherhoods in Rio engaged in expressions of imperial pomp through elaborate festivals, processions, and funerals; the election of kings and queens; and the organization of royal courts. Drawing mainly on ecclesiastical documents, Soares reveals the value of church records for historical research.

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