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  1. 4. Jan. 2009 · Ogé, “Motion faite par M. Vincent Ogé jeune, à l’Assemblée des colons, habitans de S.-Domingue, à l’Hôtel de Massiac.” he himself would function as a liaison between it and the ...

  2. Vincent Ogé. Vincent Ogé ( pocaping cara Prancis: [vɛ̃sɑ̃ ɔʒe]; kira-kira taun 1755 – 6 Februari 1791) yaiku aristokrat Prancis katurunan belasteran sing micu pamberontakan ngelawan otoritas kolonial kulit putih ing Saint-Domingue Prancis sing dumadi saka Oktober nganti Desember 1790 ing kawasan jaba Cap-Français, kutha utami koloni ...

  3. Portrait of Vincent Oge. Born a free man with African ancestry in Saint-Domingue (Haiti), Vincent Ogé (1757−1791) challenged notions of societal control and forced a reconsideration of categories such as “white” and “citizen.”. When his prolific wealth as a ship-owning merchant in the slave and Atlantic trade failed to bring him ...

  4. 36 Vincent Ogé jeune (1757-91) regarded recent histories of the Revolution rely on the mistaken assumptions of nineteenth-century authors, describing, for example, Ogé sailing across the Atlantic with weapons to arm his followers, something he did not do.11 We cannot say that he started the Haitian revolution, as some nineteenth-century

  5. In 1789 two mix-race Creole merchants, Vincent Ogé and Julien Raimond, happened to be in France during the early stages of the French Revolution. Here they began lobbying the French National Assembly to expand voting rights and legal protections from the grands blancs to the wealthy slave-owning gens de couleur, such as themselves.

  6. 6. Feb. 2019 · Vincent Ogé was a wealthy man of colour from Saint Domingue, a quarteron, in the terminology of the times. He found himself in Paris in 1789, and decided to stay after meeting first with Julien Raimond, and like him becoming a member of the Societé des Amis des Noirs. The Society, lead by Brissot, had previously been campaigning for abolitionism.

  7. Slave resistance gains momentum: 1790-1791. 21-28 October 1790. The Ogé Rebellion: Jacques Vincent Ogé, an affranchis representing the colony in France, leads a revolt against the white colonial authorities in Saint-Domingue. Despite colonists’ attempts to prevent him from leaving France, Ogé manages to escape to England, where he is ...