http://ecoethics.net/2014-ENVRE120/20200913-EV&N-359-Link.html
https://www.cctvcambridge.org/node/733438
A close and careful reading of historical maps can be used to reveal under-studied — but, nonetheless, very important — details about the African slave trade over time.
See related:
- Before 1620… Before 1619…: “The Epic Story” of Dutch Manhattan — the Forgotten Colony that Shaped America.”
- The Epic Story of Dutch Manhattan and the Forgotten Colony That Shaped America (2004)
- Dutch New York with Historian Barry Lewis – Dutch Golden Age
- Class Distinctions: Dutch Painting in the Age of Rembrandt and Vermeer: Ronni Baer, Henk Van Nierop, Herman Roodenburg, Eric Sluijter, Marieke de Winkel, Sanny De Zoete
- Distinguished ‘Class Distinctions’ Offers New Perspectives on Dutch Art and Soci ety | Arts | The Harvard Crimson
and - Going Dutch – The Netherlands’ slave trade
- The Atlantic Trade and Africa: The Portuguese, the Spanish & the Dutch
- What Trump is saying about 1619 Project, teaching U.S. history
- In Black History Month, 2016….a Tribute to Henry Louis Gates, Jr. …a Cambridge~Global Living Legend
- Recalling Some Aspects of America’s Immigration Policies in Black History Month
- Commerce and Cartography on Colonial Frontiers: Reexamining American & African History ~ through Maps
- Mapping the Slave Trade: 1556-1823 – A Digital Humanities Project
As well as:
- Opinion | I Helped Fact-Check the 1619 Project. The Times Ignored Me. – POLITICO
- Legacies of 1619
- 400 Years: African Americans, 1619-2019
- Nikole Hannah-Jones on the conception of ‘The 1619 Project’ |The New York Times Magazine Presents ‘The 1619 Project’ Onstage | Pulitzer Center
- The New York Times Presents The #1619 Project
- The 1619 Project: A Nation Born in Contradiction, a Democracy Defined by Black Struggle
- How America’s History of Racism Informs the Current Moment | Amanpour and Company