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  1. Anthony Benezet (January 31, 1713 – May 3, 1784) was a French-born American abolitionist and teacher who was active in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. A prominent member of the abolitionist movement in North America, Benezet founded one of the world's first anti-slavery societies, the Society for the Relief of Free Negroes Unlawfully ...

  2. 30 de abr. de 2024 · Anthony Benezet (born January 31, 1713, Saint-Quentin, France—died May 3, 1784, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, U.S.) was an eminent teacher, abolitionist, and social reformer in 18th-century America. Escaping Huguenot persecution in France, the Benezet family fled first to Holland and then to London.

  3. Anthony Benezet is recognized as the founder of the antislavery movement in America in the mid-1700s. Benezet believed the British ban on slavery should have been extended to the colonies, and worked to convince his Quaker brethren that slave-owning was not consistent with Christian doctrine.

  4. against slavery and racial prejudice. Anthony Benezet thus served as a linch-pin between the local and global antislavery movements, as well as between those who opposed slavery on humanitarian grounds versus those with more theoretical or religious motivations. While Benezet did not, as Jackson quotes

  5. Anthony Benezet. 1713 - 1784. Antoine Bénézet was the second of thirteen children born into a wealthy Huguenot family in St. Quentin in France. He was two when his family fled to Rotterdam to escape religious persecution in France. Soon they came to London, where they changed their French names to English ones.

  6. Overview. Anthony Benezet. (1713—1784) educational reformer and abolitionist. Quick Reference. (b. 31 January 1713; d. 13 May 1784), Quaker educator and abolitionist. Anthony Benezet was born to Huguenot parents in Saint-Quentin, Picardy, France. His father, Jean-Etienne Benezet, and his mother ...

  7. This chapter examines the global impact of Anthony Benezet's antislavery ministry, including Benezet's influence on black abolitionists outside the Society of Friends. More than any other individual's work in the eighteenth century, that of Benezet served as a catalyst, throughout the Atlantic world, for the initial organized fight against ...