LEADER 02263nls a2200337 n 450 001 EJ21024294 005 20200602145505.0 011 $a1826-7505 011 $a1826-7513 017 80$aoai:ojs2.oaj.fupress.net:article/2476 017 80$a10.13128/SDD-8443 049 $aARMAGDIG 100 $a20190501a2009 --k--ita-50----ba 101 1 $aeng 200 1 $aL?esclavage des femmes en Europe à l?époque moderne$bArticolo 210 1$cFirenze University Press$d2009-12-05 300 $aIn relazione con: https://oaj.fupress.net/index.php/sdd/article/view/2476/2476 300 $aSorgente: Storia delle Donne; Vol. 5 (2009): Schiave; 131-146 300 $aSorgente: Storia delle Donne; V. 5 (2009): Schiave; 131-146 300 $aSorgente: 1826-7505 300 $aSorgente: 1826-7513 330 $aIn this short essay I am trying to present two different aspects of the women’s slavery in Europe during the sixteenth, seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. Firstly in the case of Andalucia and south of Portugal, especially thanks to the recent thesis of Aurelia Martin Casares and Julio Izquierdo Labrado, and also thanks to the work of Vicenta Cortes Alonso and the excellent work, unfortunately not published, of Albert N’Damba, an catholic priest of Congo. The main outcome of this works is the obvious preference of the owners of slaves for the women and the prices of women are higher than the prices of the men. The motive is the productive ability of women. Secondly, I improve my investigations in the record offices of the Inquisitions of Malta and Sicily to point out the part of the corsairs in the trade of the human, especially the women proceeding from Russia, Greece, Central Europe.Keywords: esclavage, femmes, Andalousie, Mediterranée, exploitation sexuelle; slavery, women, Andalucia, Mediterranean, sexual working out.  332 $aStoria delle Donne; Vol. 5 (2009): Schiave; 131-146 336 $aapplication/pdf 700 0$aBennassar, Bartolomé 801 3$aIT$bIT-FI0098 856 4 $uhttp://memoria.depositolegale.it/*/https://oaj.fupress.net/index.php/sdd/article/view/2476$2https://oaj.fupress.net/index.php/sdd/article/view/2476 977 $a CR 997 $aCF FMT $aAR FOR $aAR