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==Slavery and the colonies== [[File:Fire in Saint-Domingo 1791, German copper engraving.jpg|thumb|right|upright=1.0|The [[Haitian Revolution|Saint-Domingue]] slave revolt in 1791]] In 1789, the most populous French colonies were Saint-Domingue (today Haiti), Martinique, Guadeloupe, the Île Bourbon (Réunion) and the Île de la France. These colonies produced commodities such as sugar, coffee and cotton for exclusive export to France. There were about 700,000 slaves in the colonies, of which about 500,000 were in Saint-Domingue. Colonial products accounted for about a third of France's exports.{{Sfn|Régent|2013|p=397}} In February 1788, the ''[[Society of the Friends of the Blacks|Société des Amis des Noirs]]'' (Society of the Friends of Blacks) was formed in France with the aim of abolishing slavery in the empire. In August 1789, colonial slave owners and merchants formed the rival ''Club de Massiac'' to represent their interests. When the Constituent Assembly adopted the Declaration of the Rights of Man and of the Citizen in August 1789, delegates representing the colonial landowners successfully argued that the principles should not apply in the colonies as they would bring economic ruin and disrupt trade. Colonial landowners also gained control of the Colonial Committee of the Assembly from where they exerted a powerful influence against abolition.{{Sfn|Régent|2013|p=398–402}}{{Sfn|Doyle|1990|p=413}} People of colour also faced social and legal discrimination in mainland France and its colonies, including a bar on their access to professions such as law, medicine and pharmacy.{{Sfn|Régent|2013|p=398–399}} In 1789–90, a delegation of free coloureds, led by [[Vincent Ogé]] and [[Julien Raimond]], unsuccessfully lobbied the Assembly to end discrimination against free coloureds. Ogé left for Saint-Domingue where an uprising against white landowners broke out in October 1790. The revolt failed, and Ogé was killed.{{Sfn|Régent|2013|pp=401–402}}{{Sfn|Doyle|1990|p=413}} In May 1791, the National Assembly granted full political rights to coloureds born of two free parents but left the rights of freed slaves to be determined by the colonial assemblies. The assemblies refused to implement the decree and fighting broke out between the coloured population of Saint-Domingue and white colonists, each side recruiting slaves to their forces. [[Haitian Revolution|A major slave revolt]] followed in August.{{Sfn|Régent|2013|p=402–403}} In March 1792, the Legislative Assembly responded to the revolt by granting citizenship to all free coloureds and sending two commissioners, [[Léger-Félicité Sonthonax]] and [[Étienne Polverel]], and 6,000 troops to Saint-Domingue to enforce the decree. On arrival in September, the commissioners announced that slavery would remain in force. Over 72,000 slaves were still in revolt, mostly in the north.{{Sfn|Régent|2013|p=404–405}} Brissot and his supporters envisaged an eventual abolition of slavery but their immediate concern was securing trade and the support of merchants for the revolutionary wars. After Brissot's fall, the new constitution of June 1793 included a new Declaration of the Rights of Man and the Citizen but excluded the colonies from its provisions. In any event, the new constitution was suspended until France was at peace.{{Sfn|Régent|2013|pp=406–407}} In early 1793, royalist planters from Guadeloupe and Saint-Domingue formed an alliance with Britain. The Spanish supported insurgent slaves, led by [[Jean-François Papillon]] and [[Georges Biassou]], in the north of Saint-Domingue. White planters loyal to the republic sent representatives to Paris to convince the Jacobin controlled Convention that those calling for the abolition of slavery were British agents and supporters of Brissot, hoping to disrupt trade.{{Sfn|Régent|2013|pp=407–408}} In June, the commissioners in Saint-Domingue freed 10,000 slaves fighting for the republic. As the royalists and their British and Spanish supporters were also offering freedom for slaves willing to fight for their cause, the commissioners outbid them by abolishing slavery in the north in August, and throughout the colony in October. Representatives were sent to Paris to gain the approval of the convention for the decision.{{Sfn|Régent|2013|pp=407–408}}{{Sfn|Doyle|1990|p=414}} The Convention voted for the abolition of slavery in the colonies on 4 February 1794 and decreed that all residents of the colonies had the full rights of French citizens irrespective of colour.{{Sfn|Régent|2013|p=409}} An army of 1,000 sans-culottes led by [[Victor Hugues]] was sent to Guadeloupe to expel the British and enforce the decree. The army recruited former slaves and eventually numbered 11,000, capturing Guadeloupe and other smaller islands. Abolition was also proclaimed on Guyane. [[Martinique]] remained under British occupation, while colonial landowners in [[Réunion]] and the [[Mascarene Islands|Îles Mascareignes]] repulsed the republicans.{{Sfn|Régent|2013|pp=409–410}} Black armies drove the Spanish out of Saint-Domingue in 1795, and the British troops withdrew in 1798.{{Sfn|Doyle|1990|pp=414–415}} In republican controlled areas from 1793 to 1799, freed slaves were required to work on their former plantations or for their former masters if they were in domestic service. They were paid a wage and gained property rights. Black and coloured generals were effectively in control of large areas of Guadeloupe and Saint-Domingue, including [[Toussaint Louverture]] in the north of Saint-Domingue, and [[André Rigaud]] in the south. Historian Fréderic Régent states that the restrictions on the freedom of employment and movement of former slaves meant that, "only whites, persons of color already freed before the decree, and former slaves in the army or on warships really benefited from general emancipation."{{Sfn|Régent|2013|pp=409–410}}
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