Wiki User
∙ 2011-02-16 22:42:52slave famillies were split up and sold as part of the domestic slave trade
Wiki User
∙ 2011-02-16 22:42:52Slave families were split up and sold as part of the domestic slave trade.
How did slave rebellions affect slavery? Well, it forced the slave owners to use more punishment for disapproved behavior from slaves. They also got more laws passed to protect their "peculiar institution." They used it as an example of why the colored peoples were inferior and therefore needed to be controlled. It became a political issue nationally. Attention given to the slave rebellions and the retribution given to those involved created much fervor in the Northern abolitionist movements. As people became more aware of what the institution of slavery had become in the South, they began to a social outrage toward slavery. The argument would solidify the differences between the two regions and lead to the Civil War.
Southern slave owners defended slavery, by stating that slavery had existed throughout history and was the natural state of mankind. Defenders of slavery argued that the institution was divine, and a good thing for the enslaved. They also noted that in the Bible, Abraham had slaves.
The constitution should prohibit the states from participating in the international slave trade.
A form of slavery that makes slaves of the children of slave women
Slave families were split up and sold as part of the domestic slave trade.
Slave families were split up and sold as part of the domestic slave trade.
Slave families were split up and sold as part of the domestic slave trade.
sale of American-born slaves increased.
sale of American born slaves increased.
The "Peculiar Institution" was and remains a common euphemism for slavery in the U.S. southern slave states. People to this day will speak of "the South's Peculiar Institution" as a way of referring to slavery without actually using the word "slavery."
The "Peculiar Institution" was and remains a common euphemism for slavery in the U.S. southern slave states. People to this day will speak of "the South's Peculiar Institution" as a way of referring to slavery without actually using the word "slavery."
The institution of slavery became much stricter. The south demanded a federal slave code, the annexation of Cuba, and the reestablishment of the African Slave Trade.
The Confederate Constitution prohibited the international slave trade but permitted the domestic institution without restriction and forbade any Confederate state to abolish it.
many people ended up dead :(
How did slave rebellions affect slavery? Well, it forced the slave owners to use more punishment for disapproved behavior from slaves. They also got more laws passed to protect their "peculiar institution." They used it as an example of why the colored peoples were inferior and therefore needed to be controlled. It became a political issue nationally. Attention given to the slave rebellions and the retribution given to those involved created much fervor in the Northern abolitionist movements. As people became more aware of what the institution of slavery had become in the South, they began to a social outrage toward slavery. The argument would solidify the differences between the two regions and lead to the Civil War.
In order to get the delegates of the slave owning states to support the Constitution, the Constitutional Convention agreed to recognize the institution of slavery.