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History of Suriname - Abolition of slavery |  | History of Suriname - Abolition of slavery: Encyclopedia II - History of Suriname - Abolition of slavery |  | In the first half of the 18th century, agriculture flourished in Suriname. Most of the work on the plantations was done by African slaves. The treatment of these slaves was bad, and many slaves escaped to the jungle. These Maroons (also known as "Djukas" or "Bush Negroes") sometimes returned to attack the plantations. They formed a sort of buffer zone between the Europeans who settled along the coast and main rivers, and t ...
See also:History of Suriname, History of Suriname - Native American period, History of Suriname - Early European involvement, History of Suriname - Abolition of slavery, History of Suriname - Post-independence Era, History of Suriname - Into the 1990s |  | | History of Suriname, History of Suriname - Abolition of slavery, History of Suriname - Early European involvement, History of Suriname - Into the 1990s, History of Suriname - Native American period, History of Suriname - Post-independence Era |  | |
|  |  | History of Suriname: Encyclopedia II - History of Suriname - Abolition of slavery
History of Suriname - Abolition of slavery
In the first half of the 18th century, agriculture flourished in Suriname. Most of the work on the plantations was done by African slaves. The treatment of these slaves was bad, and many slaves escaped to the jungle. These Maroons (also known as "Djukas" or "Bush Negroes") sometimes returned to attack the plantations. They formed a sort of buffer zone between the Europeans who settled along the coast and main rivers, and the unconquered Native American tribes of the inland regions.
Suriname was occupied by the British in 1799 after the Netherlands were incorporated by France, and was returned to the Dutch in 1816, after the defeat of Napoleon. The Dutch abolished slavery only in 1863—the last European nation to do so—although the British had already abolished it during their short rule. The slaves were, however, not released until 1873; up to that date they conducted obligatory but paid work at the plantations. In the meantime, many more workers had been imported from the Netherlands East Indies, mostly Chinese inhabitants of that colony. After 1873, many Hindu laborers where imported from India. This emigration was ended by Mohandas Gandhi in 1916. After that date, many laborers were again imported from the Netherlands East Indies, especially Java.
In the 20th century, the natural resources of Suriname, rubber, gold and bauxite were exploited. The US company Alcoa had a claim on a large area in Suriname where bauxite, from which aluminium can be made, was found.
Other related archives1630, 1651, 1667, 1799, 1816, 1863, 1873, 18th century, 1916, 1954, 1973, 1975, 1980, 1982, 1985, 1987, 1990, 1991, 1992, 1994, 1996, 1997, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2004, 20th century, 3000 BCE, African, Alcoa, Arawaks, Barbados, Caribs, Cuba, December 8, Desi Bouterse, Dutch, English, Fort Zeelandia, France, French Guiana, Grenada, Henck Arron, India, Java, Jules Wijdenbosch, Libya, Marowijne, Mohandas Gandhi, NPK, Napoleon, Native Americans, Netherlands East Indies, Netherlands Guiana, New Amsterdam, New York, Nicaragua, November 25, Ronald Venetiaan, Ronnie Brunswijk, South America, Suriname, Treaty of Breda, Zeeland, aluminium, bauxite, coup, deficits, fishing, gold, hunting, indigenous peoples, nomadic, oil, rainforest, rubber, savanna, sugar, tobacco, vote of confidence
 Adapted from the Wikipedia article "Abolition of slavery", under the G.N U Free Docmentation License. Please also see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki |
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