<span>He led the Haitian Revolution that turned a slave society
into a successful uprising that eventually established the Republic of
Haiti. He fought with the Spaniards in
Sto. Domingo but then allied himself with the French when slavery was
abolished. He inevitably launched his rule over Haiti and dominated his rivals
through military tactics. During his
rule, worked to uplift the economy and strengthen the security in Saint
Domingue. Other developments under his
governance were the declaration of a autonomous constitution and declaring
himself Governor –General for Life. 1802, he was deported to France after
Napoleon Bonaparte sent troops to restore French rule and died in 1803.</span>
Geothermal plateau. I'm only guessing, but since a lot of places use heat as energy it only makes sense.
civil rights leader who was born into slavery and later worked to achieve racial equality
One of the different working conditions of slaves in the antebellum south was that these quarters consisted of a large grouping of rudely made cabins. Within these slave barracks, black families began to seize, hold, and extended families slowly gained approval for living together within the same homestead. This provided for the cultivation and flourishment of the black community. Southern slaves also tasted a small dose of freedom when allowed to plant and manage their own, small cash crops. This added to the home realm in which black life and expression overrode white intervention. The home began to represent more than just a form of shelter... it became the haven for the development of the African-American experience
Another one of the different working conditions of slaves in the Antebellum south was that many owners had experienced such runaway rates and unsettled behavior from their male slaves that they were forced to begin to buy more females, even though they were not considered as a valuable commodity. The main reason for the purchasing of slave woman had definitely been for reasons that involved the slaveholder's sexual desires rather than the female's economic potential. But slave masters soon began to buy an equal amount of black women and men for their plantations in order to ensure families and hence stable slave behavior. A married male slave had more responsibility to his mate and children and therefore would be more deterred from trying to escape.
Hope this helps