Slave Economy and Society in Minas Gerais and São Paulo, Brazil, in 1830
Author(s)
Luna, Francisco Vidal; Klein, Herbert S.
Abstract
The current analysis of slave society in Brazil has involved a rethinking of the traditional plantation-dominated model, with a new stress on the wide dispersion of slaves among whites and non-whites and their involvement in a lively internal economy as well as in extractive industries. This general picture is confirmed in a detailed analysis of the economy and slavery practiced in the two major provinces of Minas Gerais and São Paulo in the late 1820s and early 1830s. Slaves were held in small units and they could be found in every region and occupied in every major economic activity. Some regions even had positive growth rates of the resident slave population despite the massive arrival of Africans. Finally we find women and free colored as significant slave-owners, with the latter especially concentrated in the trades.