Talk:Timeline of abolition of slavery and serfdom

Latest comment: 1 month ago by R Prazeres in topic Please leave the Medina entry

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This is just a start - should include appropriate legislation etc for all countries and UN - please help especially with links etc.



539 BCE

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Cyrus abolished slavery after conquering Babylon in 539bce. That should definitely be on here. 204.148.73.182 (talk) 02:42, 6 August 2023 (UTC)Reply

We have no genuine evidence that Cyrus abolished slavery and considerably evidence to the contrary, that it was not abolished under Cyrus or his successors (there are numerous slave sale contracts preserved from Achaemenid times, some of which reference direct involvement of the Achaemenid bureaucracy in facilitating (and taxing) such sales: see for example Stolper, Registration and Taxation of Slave Sales in Achaemenid Babylonia).
What you are likely thinking of, as discussed on the Cyrus Cylinder page of this encyclopedia, is a modern forgery purporting to be a translation of the Cyrus Cylinder, which claims to abolish slavery along with other human rights initiatives and which has circulated widely on the Internet (and is not infrequently encountered, and subsequently cited in good faith, by people unaware that it is fake). Aithiopika (talk) 19:05, 16 March 2024 (UTC)Reply
This is not true. Many human rights organisations recognise the Cyrus cylinder as a human rights charter. It might not be as full fledged as modern versions of human rights legislation, but it is an example of the earliest form of human rights law. The fact that the burden placed on the Cyrus cylinder is so high is just a matter of racism and there being a higher burden of proof placed on non-white people and their historical artifacts/events.
We have no evidence of chattel slavery in Persia, even with the link you provided. So based on that, we can conclude that chattel slavery has been abolished, and Persia should also be on the list.
I mean, even with your link, it is debatable as to what slavery is. Slavery is a spectrum, and even the modern worker today could be considered to be a wage slave in capitalist society. From my perspective, when I think of a slave, I think of the old school chattel slave that made up the bulk of labour of societies like Greece and Rome. This was simply not present in Persia. Most of the agriculture or labour was made from the labour of free people.
It is based on this concept, that Persia should be included in that list.
I will continue to undo your changes based on this. TwoArms225 (talk) 03:45, 2 July 2024 (UTC)Reply
Well, first off, I'm not a huge fan of the assumption that the motivation for deleting ancient Persia from this list must be racist. I refer you to a prior comment linked below if you would like reassurance that I have in fact deleted some bogus claims about abolition in the pasty-whitest parts of the ancient world, such as Ireland, as well. I'm not pursuing an anti-Persian agenda here, although I do dislike the shoddiness of a number of entries on this list and an overall lack of focus, especially in the medieval portion of the list, on, you know, "abolition of slavery and serfdom."
So, I do agree with your followup post's point that the list, especially the medieval portion, includes a large number of weak entries that are only tangentially, if at all, related to abolition. I fail to see why things like a single individual slaveowner manumitting some slaves or an effort to ransom war prisoners should be listed on this timeline. I suggested in a now archived talk comment that a lot of those types of entries should be deleted, but so far nobody other than me has replied to that suggestion, and I haven't made time to look comprehensively at more than a handful of entries. If you would like to take on the task of reviewing a few of those claims and confirming that they should be deleted, I for one would applaud the effort. I would propose that if the list includes dubious entries, the correct approach is to delete them and improve the standard of the list, not to add more dubious entries on the basis that they are no more dubious than some existing ones.
I'm going to pass on the topic of whether modern wage labor is tantamount to slavery. Re "old school chattel slavery" - I take chattel to mean the exercise of property rights over human beings - the ancient Persians did practice it, and we do have evidence. You haven't said why you are unconvinced by the Stolper article (are you proposing that Persians practiced and supported slavery in Babylonia while simultaneously opposing and abolishing it in Persia proper?). But there are plenty of sources, and that was just one. If you clarify what you're looking for I could likely point you to a different source that specifically addresses it. Aithiopika (talk) 21:38, 23 July 2024 (UTC)Reply
You also undid a change that was undeniable. 50,000 Jews were freed upon the conquest of Babylon. That is a fact. Your table includes examples of other rulers that freed slaves (even if it wasn't state policy to abolish slavery or wasn't enforced by the state). Why can't we include the people that were free'd by Cyrus the great? TwoArms225 (talk) 03:48, 2 July 2024 (UTC)Reply
It isn't my table.
But as far as the story in the Book of Ezra, I did some poking around the story today since you mentioned it. It says of the returnees, "The whole company numbered 42,360, besides their 7,337 male and female slaves; and they also had 200 male and female singers." At least according to the first-listed translation, the NIV (2.64-65), though I'm aware that translating words for slavery and servitude in the Bible is a fraught topic and there are other translations that seem more euphemistic (maidservants instead of female slaves and the like).
But at least in translation, if anyone at all is being freed from slavery as part of the story described in Ezra, I'm not sure who. Not the 42k, who are being allowed to return from exile but who aren't slaves to begin with. Not the 7k, since the reason they are being brought along is that they are slaves, which there's no mention that Cyrus does anything to change. So who?
Am I missing something? I try to avoid getting too deep into Hebrew Bible slavery stuff since a lot of it seems like just an extended culture wars fight I don't want to get into, so I might be....? Aithiopika (talk) 02:39, 24 July 2024 (UTC)Reply

Venice

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Are these final abolitions or does this list include abolitions that were later reinstated? Slavery was alive and well in Venice in the 15th century:

source: The Human Swarm (M.W. Moffett), Domestic Slavery in Renaissance Italy (Sally McKee) Twistybrastrap (talk) 15:38, 14 January 2024 (UTC)Reply

About slavery and forced penal labor

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I feel like slavery of convicted prisoners is ultimately ignored in this article. When slavery is banned with explicit exemption of prisoners is the case in many countries, we should place more emphasis on that fact when saying “all countries have abolished slavery”. 2603:8000:FA00:5020:1578:B1E8:40CD:73FA (talk) 03:52, 5 February 2024 (UTC)Reply

Please leave the Medina entry

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As title says. Mohammed Al-Keesh (talk) 20:00, 19 October 2024 (UTC)Reply

This material ([1]) was added by a sockpuppet account that was evading a block and it cites only a religious source. It is not admissible as is. It is your responsibility to provide reliable sources that support the material you want to include in an article. Please stop edit-warring and put in the required work. If you are ready to do that, then please present your proposal here first so we can verify that you have appropriate sources, since you seem to have difficulty judging what's appropriate on Wikipedia. R Prazeres (talk) 20:22, 19 October 2024 (UTC)Reply
The religious source is also valid history. You know this is why there's even a Banu Qurayza story right? So be consistent. Sahih al-Bukhari 2270 is along similar lines. I can't find an article or book that addresses this hadith if that's what you're asking, maybe in time. It's a description of history and is considered Sahih by Sunnis. Far above Sirahs like Ibn Ishaq, which is what whole books are based on. This is stronger history than Ashoka's stone engravings let me tell you that. So whenever you cite Al Tabari, or Ibn Ishaq etc they're all far weaker than Sahih Bukhari for Sunni Muslims. It's not even a primary source, since it's written 200+ years later. Mohammed Al-Keesh (talk) 02:14, 20 October 2024 (UTC)Reply
In the slavery article whole hadiths are quoted so I don't understand how it's not admissible. Mohammed Al-Keesh (talk) 02:15, 20 October 2024 (UTC)Reply
Hadiths should certainly not be cited on Wikipedia unless it is strictly for reporting what the hadiths themselves say (without further personal interpretation). If that is done elsewhere, then it's a problem to fix there. R Prazeres (talk) 02:20, 20 October 2024 (UTC)Reply
So if it had been written by Ibn Ishaq it's permissible? Again you do know Sirah is below Sahih Hadiths, by a lot right? I get that Wikipedia doesn't like citing scripture, but that's because scripture often lies about history. It's different when scripture is the history. Like hadiths are history and far above Sirahs. This is how the Banu Qurayza story reached us. And on top of that they are secondary sources. Scratch everything, how do you study Islamic history? Anyways I'll try to find a secondary source in Arabic (zero chance in english I'll find someting). Mohammed Al-Keesh (talk) 04:23, 20 October 2024 (UTC)Reply
Hadiths are not secondary sources in the sense we are speaking of here. This is an article about the history of slavery, please cite professional historians. There are certainly enough in English. R Prazeres (talk) 04:40, 20 October 2024 (UTC)Reply