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Zorg: A Tale of Greed and Murder That Inspired the Abolition of Slavery

زورج: قصة الجشع والقتل التي ألهمت إلغاء العبودية

Not Translated

When a series of unpredictable weather events and navigational errors led to the Zorg sailing off course and running low on supplies, the ship's captain threw more than a hundred slaves overboard in order to save the crew and the most valuable slaves. The ship's owners then claimed their loss on insurance, a first for slaves who had not been killed due to insurrection or died of natural causes.

The insurers refused to pay due to the higher than usual mortality rate of the slaves on board, leading to a trial which initially found in their favor, in which the Chief Justice compared the slaves to horses. Thanks to the outrage of one man present in court that day, a retrial was held. For the first time, concepts such as human rights and morality entered the discourse on slavery in a courtroom case that boiled down to a simple yet profound question: Were the Africans on board people or cargo?

What followed was a fascinating legal drama in England’s highest court that turned the brutal calculus of slavery into front-page news. The case of the Zorg catapulted the nascent anti-slavery movement from a minor evangelical cause to one of the most consequential moral campaigns in history―sparking the abolitionist movement in both England and the young United States.

Zorg: A Tale of Greed and Murder That Inspired the Abolition of Slavery

Bibliographic Data

Author
PublisherMariner BooksWebsite
Publisher Addressorders@harpercollins.com
CountryUSA
Also In
Published2025
LanguageEnglish (EN)
Pages304 pages
Editionfirst
Dimensions14×21
ISBN978-1250348227
Translation
Not Translated

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