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  2. Slavery in medieval Europe - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Slavery_in_medieval_Europe

    Additionally, the possession of slaves was legal in 13th century Italy; many Christians held Muslim slaves throughout the country. These Saracen slaves were often captured by pirates and brought to Italy from Muslim Spain or North Africa. During the 13th century, most of the slaves in the Italian trade city of Genoa were of Muslim origin. These ...

  3. History of slavery - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_slavery

    13th-century Africa – Map of the main trade routes and states, kingdoms and empires. Writing in 1984, French historian Fernand Braudel noted that slavery had been endemic in Africa and part of the structure of everyday life throughout the 15th to the 18th century.

  4. Swedish slave trade - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Swedish_slave_trade

    In parallel with the increasing manumission-wills of slaves during the 13th-century, different parts of Sweden started to ban slavery within their counties, while it remained legal in others. The last document mentioning a slave in Sweden is a will from 1310, which manumitted the male slave Karelus. [29]

  5. Venetian slave trade - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Venetian_slave_trade

    By the 9th-century, the Republic of Venice was prospering of the slave trade with the Muslim world. [ 3 ] Slavery died out in Western Europe after the 12th century, but the demand for laborers after the Black Death resulted in a revival of slavery in Southern Europe in Italy and in Spain , as well as an increase in the demand for captives to ...

  6. Children's Crusade - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Children's_Crusade

    The Children's Crusade was a failed popular crusade by European Christians to establish a second Latin Kingdom of Jerusalem in the Holy Land in the early 13th century. Some sources have narrowed the date to 1212.

  7. Slave trade in the Mongol Empire - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Slave_trade_in_the_Mongol...

    In pre-imperial Mongolia, slavery had not played any big part, but the Mongol invasions and conquests of the 13th century created a great influx of war captives, which were by custom considered legitimate to enslave, and caused a significant expansion of slavery and slave trade. The Mongol Empire established a massive international slave trade ...

  8. Danish slave trade - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Danish_slave_trade

    During the 11th century, the Viking nations of Denmark, Norway and Sweden became Christian, which made it impossible for them to continue to conduct slave raids toward Christian Europe and sell Christian Europeans to Islamic slave traders. Slavery as such was gradually replaced by serfdom (Danish: hoveriet) in the 13th century.

  9. Slavery in Britain - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Slavery_in_Britain

    Slavery in Britain existed before the Roman occupation, which occurred from approximately AD 43 to AD 410, and the practice endured in various forms until the 11th century, during which the Norman conquest of England resulted in the gradual merger of the pre-conquest institution of slavery into serfdom in the midst of other economic upheavals ...