Haitian Revolutions: Crash Course World History #30
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Summary
In this Crash Course World History video, John Green delves into the complex and often overlooked history of the Haitian Revolutions. The video highlights the brutal conditions of slavery in the French colony of Saint-Domingue, the social hierarchy that fueled discontent, and the powerful revolt led by Toussaint L'Ouverture. It emphasizes the international ramifications of the revolutions, especially against the backdrop of the French Revolution and Napoleonic Wars. The successful rebellion, which was significantly aided by disease amongst the French troops, resulted in Haiti becoming the first independent nation in the Caribbean and a symbol of freedom and resistance against racial oppression.
Highlights
The Haitian Revolutions marked the end of slavery on the island and challenged European colonial powers. đ˛
Napoleon Bonaparte's ambitions were thwarted by the uprising, altering the course of American and Caribbean history. đ
Toussaint L'Ouverture emerged as a pivotal leader, guiding the revolution to success and independence. â
The revolt's success was significantly boosted by Yellow Fever, which decimated the French troops. đĄď¸
On January 1, 1804, Haiti declared itself an independent nation, a landmark event in world history. đ
Key Takeaways
Slavery in Saint-Domingue was exceptionally brutal, but it also set the stage for one of the most successful slave revolts in history. đ´
The Haitian Revolutions were deeply intertwined with the events of the French Revolution and the Napoleonic Wars. đĽ
Disease, notably Yellow Fever, played a critical role in the success of the Haitian revolts against French forces. đŚ
Haiti became the second independent nation in the Americas, firmly establishing itself as a nation led by people of African descent. đ
Despite its eventual freedom, Haiti's post-revolution history has been marred by tragedy and struggles. đ
Overview
The video kicks off with John Green's enthusiastic dive into the Haitian Revolutions, beginning as a French colony's grim history of slavery and economic exploitation. Green humorously jibes at Napoleon while setting the stage for the revolts that would forever change the island's destiny.
Amidst the backdrop of the French Revolution, the enslaved and free people of color in Saint-Domingue seized upon revolutionary ideals, igniting a fierce struggle for freedom. Led by the resilient Toussaint L'Ouverture, they overcame immense adversities, including facing formidable European military forces.
Haiti's victory, earned through immense sacrifice and aided by disease against foreign troops, was a bold declaration of independence and resilience. As the first nation of African descent to claim such sovereignty in modern times, Haiti's courageous stance became a beacon of hope for oppressed peoples worldwide.
Chapters
00:00 - 00:30: Introduction and Background The chapter introduces the topic of the Haitian Revolutions as part of a series on Revolutions in Crash Course World History, presented by John Green. It highlights key themes including the abolition of slavery and the impact on Napoleon, with a light-hearted approach to the latter.
00:30 - 03:00: The French Colony in Saint-Domingue The French colony in Saint-Domingue started in the 17th century initially as a pirate outpost. The early French settlers sustained themselves by selling leather and smoked beef known as boucan, made from cattle left by the Spanish, who were the first Europeans on the island. By 1640, as beef supplies dwindled, the settlers shifted from selling beef to pirating, specifically targeting Spanish galleons filled with South American silver. By the mid-17th century, many French captains had embraced buccaneering.
03:00 - 05:00: Saint-Domingue's Social Structure Pirates who settled on the island invested their wealth in sugar plantations, leading to a booming sugar industry by 1700. This transformed the colony into one of the most valuable in the West Indies and globally. The island produced a significant portion of Europe's sugar and coffee and held a massive population of slaves, second only to Brazil in size. Life for slaves in the sugar sector was particularly harsh and cruel, with extremely high mortality rates. By the late 18th century, the conditions had worsened, reflecting the brutal realities of Atlantic slavery.
05:00 - 07:00: Effects of the French Revolution The chapter 'Effects of the French Revolution' examines the demographic impact of the French colonial economy in Saint-Domingue, highlighting that the number of slaves imported annually exceeded the total white population. By the 19th century, slaves constituted 90% of the populace, primarily due to importation as natural population growth was stunted by harsh conditions, diseases like Yellow Fever and smallpox, and brutal working environments, echoing Alfred Crosby's notion that poor living conditions inhibited health and reproduction.
07:00 - 10:00: The Start of the Slave Revolt The chapter discusses the beginning of the slave revolt in Saint-Domingue, highlighting the structure of the colonial society which had a significant impact on the revolution. It notes that plantations were large and heavily populated with slaves, many of whom were women working in the fields. Saint-Domingue's society was divided into four groups. At the top were the Big White planters (Grand Blancs) who owned the plantations. These were often absentee landlords residing in France. Beneath them were the wealthy free people of color, many of whom were born from French fathers and slave mothers. This societal structure and racial dynamics played a crucial role in the unfolding of events leading to the slave revolt.
10:00 - 13:00: Toussaint L'Ouverture and the War The chapter discusses the complex social hierarchy of the colony by 1789, highlighting the 24,800 free people of color alongside 30,000 white inhabitants. Free people of color played a significant role in the colony's stability, participating in the militia, local constabulary, and even owning plantations and slaves. Alongside them were the petit blancs, or poor whites, working as artisans and laborers, with slaves forming the large base of this social structure. Rather than ensuring stability, the chapter hints that this was actually a recipe for instability.
13:00 - 18:00: Napoleon's Involvement and Haitian Independence The chapter discusses the impact of the French Revolution on various social groups, with a focus on their grievances. It highlights how slaves were obviously against their conditions, free people of color faced legal discrimination despite wealth, poor whites resented privileges of wealthier people of color, and the Grand Blancs opposed French trade laws and regulations aimed at improving conditions for slaves. This sets the stage for understanding the complex societal dynamics preceding Haiti's fight for independence.
18:00 - 21:00: The Importance of the Haitian Revolutions In this chapter, the speaker addresses a common misunderstanding about slavery, emphasizing the severe nature of slavery compared to poor working conditions. The misconception that slaves did not revolt if slavery was so bad is challenged, suggesting that revolt was not a simple option for slaves. The statement highlights the fundamental differences between slavery and working for low wages, emphasizing the total control that slave owners had over enslaved individuals.
Haitian Revolutions: Crash Course World History #30 Transcription
00:00 - 00:30 Hi, Iâm John Green. This is Crash Course
World History. And apparently itâs Revolutions Month here at Crash Course, because today
we are going to discuss the often-neglected Haitian Revolutions. The Haitian Revolutions
are totally fascinating and they involve two of my very favorite things:
1. Ending slavery, and 2. Napoleon getting his feelings hurt. I canât
help myself, Napoleon. I like to see you suffer. [theme music]
00:30 - 01:00 So, the French colony in Saint-Domingue began
in the 17th century as a pirate outpost. And its original French inhabitants made their
living selling leather and a kind of smoked beef called boucan. All that beef actually
came from cattle left behind by the Spanish, who were the first Europeans to settle the
island. But anyway, after 1640, the boucan-sellers
started to run low on beef. And they were like, âYou know what would pay better than
selling beef jerky? Robbing Spanish galleons,â which as youâll recall were loaded with
silver mined from South America. So, by the middle of the 17th century, the French had
convinced many of those buccaneering captains
01:00 - 01:30 to give up their pirating and settle on the
island. Many of them invested some of their pirate
treasure in sugar plantations, which, by 1700 were thriving at both producing sugar and
working people to death. And soon, this island was the most valuable colony in the West Indies,
and possibly in the world. It produced 40% of Europeâs sugar, 60% of its coffee, and it was
home to more slaves than any place except Brazil. And as youâll recall from our discussion
of Atlantic slavery, being a slave in a sugar-production colony was exceptionally brutal. In fact,
by the late 18th century, more slaves were
01:30 - 02:00 imported to Saint-Domingue EVERY YEARâ more
than 40,000â than the entire white population of the island. By the 19th century, slaves
made up about 90% of the population. And most of those slaves were African born,
because the brutal living and working conditions prevented natural population growth. Like,
remember Alfred Crosbyâs fantastic line, âit is crudely true that if manâs caloric
intake is sufficient, he will somehow stagger to maturity, and he will reproduce?â Yeah,
well, not in 18th century Haiti, thanks to Yellow Fever and smallpox and just miserable
working conditions. So, most of these plantations
02:00 - 02:30 were pretty large, they often had more than
200 slaves, and many of the field workersâ in some cases, a majorityâ were women. Colonial society in Saint-Domingue was divided
into four groups, which had important consequences for the revolution. At the top, were the Big
White planters who owned the plantations and all the slaves. Often these Grand Blancs were
absentee landlords who would just rather stay in France and let their agents do, you know,
the actual brutality. Below them were the wealthy free people of
color. Most of the Frenchmen who came to the island were, you know, men, and they frequently
fathered children with slave women. These
02:30 - 03:00 fathers would often free their children. Wasnât
that generous of them. So, by 1789, there were 24,800 free people of color along with
about 30,000 white people in the colony. The free people of color contributed a lot to
the islandâs stability. They served in the militia, and in the local constabulary, and
many of the wealthier ones eventually owned plantations and slaves of their own. And then, below them on the social ladder were
the poor whites, or the petit blancs, who worked as artisans and laborers. And at the bottom were
the slaves who made up the overwhelming majority. I know what youâre thinking: this is a recipe
for permanent social stability. No, it wasnât.
03:00 - 03:30 Okay, so when the French Revolution broke
out in 1789, all these groups had something to complain about. The slaves, obviously,
disliked being slaves. The free people of color were still subject to legal discrimination,
no matter how wealthy they became. And the poor whites, in addition to being
poor, were resentful of all the privileges held by the wealthy people of color. And the
Grand Blancs were complaining about French trade laws and the governmentâs attempts
to slightly improve the living and working conditions of slaves. Basically they were
saying that government shouldnât be in the business of regulating business. So everyone
was unhappy, but the slaves were by far the worst off.
03:30 - 04:00 Mr. Green, Mr. Green! Youâre always saying
how much slavery sucks, but is it really any worse than having to work for, like, subsis... Yeah, Iâm gonna stop you right there, Me
from the Past, before you further embarrass yourself. You often hear from people attempting
to comprehend the horrors of slavery that slavery couldnât have been all that bad,
and that it wasnât that different from working for minimum wage. And that we know this because
if it HAD been so bad, slaves would have just revolted, which they never did. Yeah. Well,
1. equating slavery to poor working conditions ignores the fact that if you work at, like,
Foxconn, Foxconn doesnât get to sell your
04:00 - 04:30 children to other corporations. And
2. As you are about to see, SLAVES DID REVOLT. So, the unrest in what became Haiti started
in 1789 when some slaves heard a rumor that the King of France had freed them. Even though
it was across the ocean, word of the changes in France reached the people of Haiti, where
The Declaration of Rights of Man and Citizen, while terrifying to planters, gave hope both
to free people of color and to slaves. At the same time, some petit blancs argued
that there was inadequate discrimination against blacks. They identified with the third estate
in France, and they called for interest rates
04:30 - 05:00 to be lowered so they could more easily pay their debts.
And they began lobbying for colonial independence. The psychology here shows you the extent to
which slaves were not considered people. I mean, these radical petit blancs thought that
they were the oppressed people in Saint-Domingue because they couldnât afford to own slaves.
And they thought if they could become independent from France, they could take power from the
people of privilege and institute a democracy where everyone had a voice-- except for the
95% of people who werenât white. Then in 1791, these radical petit blancs seized
the city of Port-au-Prince. Youâll remember
05:00 - 05:30 that by 1791, France was at war with most
of Europe, and just like with the 7 Yearsâ War, the wars of Revolutionary France played
out in the colonies as well as at home. So the French government sent troops to Saint-Domingue. Meanwhile, urges toward liberty, fraternity,
and equality were only growing in France, and it didnât seem very equitable to grant
citizenship based solely on race. So in May of 1791, the National Assembly gave full French
citizenship to all free men of color. I mean, if they owned property, and had enough money,
and werenât the children of slaves. The
05:30 - 06:00 petit blancs werenât thrilled about this,
and that led to fighting breaking out between them and the newly French free people of color. And then in August of 1791, the slaves were
like, âUm, hi, yes. Screw all of you.â And a massive slave revolt broke out. Among
the leaders of this revolt was Toussaint Breda, a former slave of full African descent, who later
took the name Toussaint Lâouverture. LâOuverture helped mold the slaves into a disciplined army
that could withstand attacks from the French troops. But again, the context of the wider revolution
proves really important here. So, the Spanish had consistently supported slave revolts in
Saint-Domingue hoping to weaken the French.
06:00 - 06:30 But, by 1793 they were offering even more
support. In fact, LâOuverture became an officer in the Spanish military because the
emancipation of the slaves was more important to him than maintaining his rights as a French
Citizen. So then, in October of 1793 the British, whom
as Iâm sure youâll recall were also at war with France, decided to invade Saint-Domingue.
And at that point, the French military commanders were like, We are definitely going to lose
this war if we fight the British, the Spanish, and the slaves, so letâs free the slaves.
So they issued decrees freeing the slaves
06:30 - 07:00 and on February 4, 1794 the National Convention
in Paris ratified those decrees. By May, having learned of the Conventionâs
actions, LâOuverture switched allegiances to the French and turned the tide of the war.
Thus, the most successful slave revolt in human history won freedom and citizenship
for every slave in the French Caribbean. But emancipation didnât end the story because
the French were still at war with the Spanish and the English in Saint-Domingue. Luckily
for France, LâOuverture was an excellent general, and luckily for the people of the
island, LâOuverture was also an able politician.
07:00 - 07:30 And between 1794 and 1802, he successfully
steered the colony toward independence. So, although slavery was abolished, this didnât
end the plantation system because both LâOuverture and his compatriot AndrĂŠ Rigaud believed
that sugar was vital to the economic health of the island. But now at least people were
paid for their labor and their kids couldnât be sold. Now you can compare it to Foxconn. But soon, LâOuverture and Rigaud came into
conflict over Rigaudâs refusal to give up control over one of the Southern states on
the island, and there was a civil war, which LâOuverture, with the help of his able lieutenant
Jacques Dessalines, was able to win after
07:30 - 08:00 13 months of hard fighting. LâOuverture
then passed a new constitution, and things were going pretty well on Saint-Domingue with
the small problem that it was still technically part of France, which meant that it was about to be ruled by
Napoleon Bonaparte. Letâs go to the Thought Bubble. So, in 1799, Napoleon seized power in France
in a coup. And, his new regime, called the Consulate (because he was the First Consul
Ă la the Roman Republic) established a new constitution that specifically pointed out its
laws did not apply to Franceâs overseas colonies.
08:00 - 08:30 Napoleon had plans to reconstruct Franceâs
empire in North America that it had lost most of in the 7 Yearsâ War, and to do this he
needed tons of money from Franceâs most valuable colony, Saint-Domingue. And the best
way to maximize profits? Why, to reintroduce slavery, of course. Thatâs certainly what
the former slaves thought was the plan when in 1802, a French expedition commanded by
Napoleonâs brother in-law Charles-Victor-Emmanuel âI-Have-Too-Many-Namesâ Leclerc showed
up in Saint-Domingue. This started the second phase of the Haitian
revolution, the fight for independence. So,
08:30 - 09:00 Leclerc eventually had LâOuverture arrested
and shipped to France where he died in prison in 1803. But this itself did not spark an
uprising against the French because LâOuverture wasnât actually that popular, largely because he wanted
most blacks on the island to continue to grow sugar. Instead, the former slaves only started fighting
when Leclerc tried to take away their guns, thus beginning a guerrilla war that the French,
despite their superior training and weapons, had absolutely no chance of winning. Although
the French were exceedingly cruel, executing
09:00 - 09:30 women as well as men and importing man-eating
dogs from Cuba, the Haitians had the best ally of all: Disease, specifically in the
form of Yellow Fever, which killed thousands of French soldiers, including Leclerc himself.
Oh, itâs time for the Open Letter? Stan! Where is my chair? Stan, youâre telling
me the yellow chair has been lost? The yellow chair is the star of the show. The stars,
in order, are 1. me, 2. yellow chair, 3. the chalkboard, 4. Danica, 5. Meredith the Intern,
6. you, Stan. Youâre sixth. Oh, Iâm mad.
09:30 - 10:00 Letâs see whatâs in the secret compartment
today. Itâs a giant squid of anger!!! IâM A GIANT SQUID OF ANGER!!!! Oh, no. It broke. An open letter to disease. Dear disease, why do you
always put yourself at the center of human history? Most of you are just tiny, little single-celled
organisms, but youâre so self-important and self-involved that youâre always interfering
with us. Admittedly, sometimes you work for the good guys, but usually you donât. It
seems like even though youâre constantly interfering with human history, you donât
even care about it.
10:00 - 10:30 I just hate when people, and also microbes,
are super self-involved. Like, donât tell me you gotta take a day off to go to your
momâs birthday party, Stan. Thatâs not imagining me complexly. Iâve got needs over
here. Best wishes, John Green. So continued defeat and the death of his troops
eventually convinced Napoleon to give up his dreams of an American empire and cut his losses.
He recalled his surviving troops, of the 40,000 who left, only 8,000 made it back. And then,
he sold Thomas Jefferson Louisiana. And that is how former slaves in Haiti gave America
all of this.
10:30 - 11:00 On January 1, 1804, Dessalines who had defeated
the French, declared the island of Saint-Domingue independent and re-named it Haiti, which is
what the island had been called by the native inhabitants before the arrival of Columbus.
The Haitian Declaration of Independence was a rejection of France and, to a certain degree
of European racism and colonialism. It also affirmed, to quote from the book Slave
Revolution in the Caribbean, âa broad definition of the new country as a refuge for enslaved
peoples of all kinds.â So, why is this little island so important that we would devote an
entire episode to it? First, Haiti was the
11:00 - 11:30 second free and independent nation state in
the Americas. It also had one of the most successful slave revolts ever. Haiti became
the first modern nation to be governed by people of African descent, and they also foiled
Napoleonâs attempts to build a big new world empire Of course, Haitiâs history since its revolution
has been marred by tragedy, a legacy of the loss of life that accompanied the revolution.
I mean, 150,000 people died in 1802 and 1803 alone. But the Haitian revolutions matter.
They matter because the Haitians, more than
11:30 - 12:00 any other people in the age of revolutions,
stood up for the idea that none should be slaves, that the people who most need the
protection of a government should be afforded that protection. Haiti stood up for the weak
when the rest of the world failed to. The next time you read about Haitiâs
poverty, remember that. Thanks for watching. Iâll see you next week. Crash Course is produced and directed by Stan
Muller. Our script supervisor is Danica Johnson. The show is ably interned by Meredith Danko.
And our graphics team is Thought Bubble. Oh, right, I write it with my high school history
teacher Raoul Meyer. Actually, he does most
12:00 - 12:30 of the work, who are we kidding. Last weekâs phrase of the week was âfancy
footwear.â If you want to guess this weekâs phrase of the week or suggest future ones,
you can do so in comments, where you can also ask questions that will be answered by our
team of historians. Thanks for watching Crash Course, and as we
say in my home town, Don't Forget To Be Awesome.