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Alexander von Humboldt: „Humboldt and American Slavery“, in: ders., Sämtliche Schriften digital, herausgegeben von Oliver Lubrich und Thomas Nehrlich, Universität Bern 2021. URL: <https://humboldt.unibe.ch/text/1858-Baron_Humboldt_on-32-neu> [abgerufen am 26.04.2024].

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Titel Humboldt and American Slavery
Jahr 1858
Ort Reading
Nachweis
in: Berkshire Chronicle, Windsor Herald, and General Advertiser for the Counties of Bucks, Oxon, Hants, Surrey, Middlesex, and Wilts 35:1647 (10. Juli 1858), S. 7.
Sprache Englisch
Typografischer Befund Antiqua; Spaltensatz.
Identifikation
Textnummer Druckausgabe: VII.156
Dateiname: 1858-Baron_Humboldt_on-32-neu
Statistiken
Seitenanzahl: 1
Zeichenanzahl: 1485

Weitere Fassungen
Baron Humboldt on American Slavery. A Private Letter to Mr. Julius Froebel. Communicated to The Tribune with Humboldt’s consent (New York City, New York, 1858, Englisch)
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Baron Humboldt on American Slavery (Dubuque, Iowa, 1858, Englisch)
Ein Brief Humboldts (Wien, 1858, Deutsch)
Briefwechsel Alexander v. Humbold’s mit Julius Fröbel (Berlin, 1858, Deutsch)
[Baron Humboldt on American Slavery. A Private Letter to Mr. Julius Froebel. Communicated to The Tribune with Humboldt’s consent] (Köln, 1858, Deutsch)
[Baron Humboldt on American Slavery. A Private Letter to Mr. Julius Froebel. Communicated to The Tribune with Humboldt’s consent] (Augsburg, 1858, Deutsch)
[Baron Humboldt on American Slavery. A Private Letter to Mr. Julius Froebel. Communicated to The Tribune with Humboldt’s consent] (Glasgow, Missouri, 1858, Englisch)
[Baron Humboldt on American Slavery. A Private Letter to Mr. Julius Froebel. Communicated to The Tribune with Humboldt’s consent] (Würzburg, 1858, Deutsch)
[Baron Humboldt on American Slavery. A Private Letter to Mr. Julius Froebel. Communicated to The Tribune with Humboldt’s consent] (Ljubljana, 1858, Deutsch)
[Baron Humboldt on American Slavery. A Private Letter to Mr. Julius Froebel. Communicated to The Tribune with Humboldt’s consent] (Zürich, 1858, Deutsch)
Ein Brief Humboldt’s (Olmütz, 1858, Deutsch)
Baron Humboldt on American Slavery. A Private Letter to J. Froebel (Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, 1858, Englisch)
[Baron Humboldt on American Slavery. A Private Letter to Mr. Julius Froebel. Communicated to The Tribune with Humboldt’s consent] (Bremen, 1858, Deutsch)
[Baron Humboldt on American Slavery. A Private Letter to Mr. Julius Froebel. Communicated to The Tribune with Humboldt’s consent] (Timisoara, 1858, Deutsch)
Humboldt and American Slavery (London, 1858, Englisch)
Humboldt and American Slavery (London, 1858, Englisch)
Humboldt and American Slavery (London, 1858, Englisch)
Humboldt and American Slavery (Belfast, 1858, Englisch)
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Humboldt and American Slavery (London, 1858, Englisch)
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Humboldt and American Slavery (Edinburgh, 1858, Englisch)
Humboldt and American Slavery (Aberdeen, 1858, Englisch)
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Humboldt and American Slavery.

—The followingfrom a letter, addressed lately by Alexander von Hum-boldt to Froebel, a German author of some distinction,and formerly a member of the parliament at Frankfort,may not be without interest to some of our readers,partly from the question of slavery it alludes to, andpartly from the noble image it exhibits on the undyingearnestness of purpose in that “old man eloquent:”—“I should like to live long enough yet to see yourbook ‘On the Political State of America,’ with whichyou are engaged. May you continue to brand thatshameful leaning to slavery, and that imposture aboutintroducing negroes who are said to become free, andwhich is a means to encourage those negro hunts in theinterior of Africa. What horrors one is obliged to wit-ness, if one has the misfortune of living from 1767 to1858. My book against slavery has not been prohibitedin Madrid, yet in the United States, which you call ‘therepublic of gentlemen,’ it could only become saleable bythe omission of all that concerns the sufferings of co-loured people who, according to my political views, arefellow men entitled to enjoy any amount of freedom. Ilead an industrious life, chiefly at night, being muchworried by an ever increasing and most uninterestingcorrespondence. I exist joylessly, in my 89th year, sinceof so many things towards which I have striven eversince my early youth and with ever equal warmth, so verylittle has been fulfilled.”