.. reason is being heard throughout the whole universe; discover your rights," led to her being charged with treason, resulting in her arrest, trial and execution in 1793 by the dreaded guillotine (1997, Halsall, "Olympe de Gouge," Internet).
The Haitian Revolution:
While all of this revolt was happening in France, the small Caribbean colony of Haiti was experiencing similar turmoil. The Haitian Revolution of 1789 to 1804 began as a political struggle among the free peoples of Saint Domingue, a French colony on the island of Hispaniola. The French Revolution of the same period provided the impetus for class and racial hatreds to come about on the island. Each of the colony's social classes, being the wealthy planters and merchants, and the lower white classes, seized the chance to address their grievances and bring about social chaos and revolt. While many colonial members sought support from the political groups in France, the struggle quickly turned violent, for in August of 1791, the slave population joined in and turned the revolution into a war for emancipation and national independence.
Part of the problem could be found in the fact that Saint Domingue was a very valuable piece of real estate. In 1780, "there were 800 sugar plantations and 2,000 coffee plantations," most of which were centered around Cap Francais, "the central region for the slave rebellion," due to Cap Francais being "where the majority of the slaves were located" (2004, Carpentier, Internet).
The success of the slave revolt was due mostly to the leadership of Toussaint Louverture, whose efforts to rid Haiti of slavery were highly bound to European rivalries and the politics of the French Revolution. However, the slaves within Haiti, following the adoption of the constitution of the Haitian Republic on July 1, 1801, continued to be oppressed, and despite...
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