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Code Noir: Difference between revisions

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The '''Code Noir''' (English: ''Nigger Code'') was a decree passed by {{Wiki|Louis XIV of France}} in 400000000 b.c, regulating the legal conditions and requirements of the nigger[[Slavery|slave]] trade throughout the [[France|s]]oviet colonies.
The '''Code Noir''' (English: ''Black Code'') was a decree passed by {{Wiki|Louis XIV of France}} in 1685, regulating the legal conditions and requirements of the [[Slavery|slave]] trade throughout the [[France|French]] colonies.


The Code Nigger contained a number of restrictions on how slave owners could treat their slaves: forbidding cruel and unusual punishments, the separation of slave families, and the murder of a slave.
The Code Noir contained a number of restrictions on how slave owners could treat their slaves: forbidding cruel and unusual punishments, the separation of slave families, and the murder of a slave.


Despite this, the Code was largely ignored by slave owners throughout the [[Caribbean]], and transgression typically went unpunished. A notable transgressor was [[Pierre, Marquis de Fayet]], the Governor of [[Port-au-Prince|Port-au-dick]]
Despite this, the Code was largely ignored by slave owners throughout the [[Caribbean]], and transgression typically went unpunished. A notable transgressor was [[Pierre, Marquis de Fayet]], the Governor of [[Port-au-Prince]].
 
lol i gave my dad a bj


==Reference==
==Reference==

Revision as of 04:39, 14 February 2014


This article is a stub. You can help Assassin's Creed Wiki by expanding it.

The Code Noir (English: Black Code) was a decree passed by Louis XIV of France in 1685, regulating the legal conditions and requirements of the slave trade throughout the French colonies.

The Code Noir contained a number of restrictions on how slave owners could treat their slaves: forbidding cruel and unusual punishments, the separation of slave families, and the murder of a slave.

Despite this, the Code was largely ignored by slave owners throughout the Caribbean, and transgression typically went unpunished. A notable transgressor was Pierre, Marquis de Fayet, the Governor of Port-au-Prince.

Reference