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  1. 20. Jan. 2024 · Vincent Ogé ( [oʒe]; c.1755–1791) was a wealthy free man of mixed race descent and the instigator of a revolt against white colonial authority in French Saint-Domingue that lasted from October to December 1790 in the area outside Cap-Français, the colony's main city. The Ogé revolt of 1790 foretold the massive slave uprising of August ...

  2. Vincent Ogé, né vers 1755 à Dondon (Saint-Domingue) et mort roué vif le 25 février 1791 [2] au Cap-Français, est le meneur de la première révolte des mulâtres [3], prélude de la Révolution haïtienne [4]. Biographie. Mulâtre ...

  3. 1. Juni 2019 · Abstract. This essay argues that George Boyer Vashon’s epic poem, “Vincent Ogé” (1854), reframes the Haitian Revolution by aligning two moments of imminent revolution—Saint-Domingue in the late eighteenth century and the United States in the mid-nineteenth century—to suggest the free black people of the United States might activate the volcanic latency of racial discontent in their ...

  4. Chicago/Turabian Format. Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture, Photographs and Prints Division, The New York Public Library. "Vincent Ogé, jeune colon de St. Domingue."

  5. Vincent Ogé jeune (the younger) was one of the wealthiest free men of color in Saint-Domingue, but his behavior in the year before the Haitian revolution (1791-1804) was a puzzling anomaly. Returning to the colony from Paris in October 1790, Ogé quicldy emerged at the head of a group of free colored militiamen demanding voting rights. Colonists labeled this a "revolt" and four months later ...

  6. Vincent Ogé (c. 1757 – 6 February 1791) was a Dominican Creole revolutionary, merchant, military officer and goldsmith best known for his role in leading a failed uprising against French colonial rule in the colony of Saint-Domingue in 1790.

  7. Ogé Landing in Saint-Domingue. In this nineteenth-century lithograph, members of the free-colored population hail Vincent Ogé and the French tricolor flag at the start of the short-lived insurrection in October 1790. The seal of the République d̓Haïti, visible below the picture, shows that this illustration does not date from the 1790s. In ...