Analysis Of The Era Of Revolution From 1790-1860

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The era of Revolution from 1790-1860 was a crucial period in time. Due to constant conflicts which brought together women equality, former slaves, French oppressors, and the Slave Revolution in the Caribbean. I agree on their passionate voices of what freedom meant in their eyes and how it held them oppressed in place. Although each of these declarations came from different cultural backgrounds all four had stances which gathered large groups of people to agree and create a movement towards their own self-independence.
1. Women were created equally and shouldn’t be held down for their gender of being a woman. The sense of feeling powerless.
2. Freed from Slavery, but still felt a different type of slavery called peon.
3. The Egyptian reaction to the French occupation. The Egyptian’s attempted to call out all supporters and restore their rights. They exploit the fractions of false ideals that the French are trying to furthering conquering beyond Cairo and Delta. The Egyptian used religion to determine how the French are “godless invaders.” …show more content…

When the Haitian Declaration was undergoing efforts to expel the French from their lands. The documents show frustration that had lasted for two centuries.
I ultimately believe in all four cases; they had persuaded the readers towards a successful liberation from the burdens of oppression. For Mary Wollstonecraft and Frederick Douglass they presented class exploitation and the effects it had on their new freedom that still held them from becoming a more modern society. Abd al-Rahman al-Jabarti and the citizens of Haiti both shared the same resistance towards the French and their methods of dividing its inhabitants to enforce French independence. This might not have been the beginning of an era of oppression but it was definitely the most active time within the 70 years’ gap. At this time, societies were at their peak

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