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On Slavery and the Slave Trade
De Iustitia et Iure, Book 1, Treatise 2, Disputations 32–40
Series: Early Modern Catholic Sources
Translated by Daniel Schwartz and Jörg Tellkamp
Imprint: Catholic University of America Press
In his monumental On Justice and Rights, the Jesuit Luis de Molina (1535-1600) discussed the legal and ethical aspects of the Portuguese trade in African and Asian enslaved persons. Molina surveys, develops, and problematizes the criteria necessary for the legitimate possession, sale, and purchase of human freedom. He insists that, even under legally valid slavery, persons who have sold or lost their freedom have inalienable rights as human beings, such as the freedom to make contracts, to marry, and even, under certain circumstances, to sue their owners in court. Molina also devotes attention to the ways in which slavery could be ended and whether and under what circumstances slaves had the right to escape from their owners. Well informed about the political structures and customs of many peoples in Africa, as well as Japan, China, and India, Molina paints a vivid and detailed picture of Portuguese trade. He gives specific accounts of the origins and development of the slave trade, region by region, and of the nature of the relationship between local rulers and the Portuguese kingdom. In doing so, he carefully describes the deception, coercion, and general indifference that pervades this trade regarding the rights to freedom of these people. It also attempts to identify the political, ecclesiastical, and market agents involved in this great injustice and their varying degrees of culpability. While Molina does not condemn slavery as a legal institution, the deeply flawed and even immoral behavior of sellers, buyers, regulators, and political rulers both in Portugal and in the slave-supplying regions that Molina denounces casts a heavy shadow on the morality of the trade.
Luis de Molina (1535-1600) was a Spanish Jesuit priest and scholastic. Daniel Schwartz is a professor in the Department of Political Science and the Department of International Relations, Hebrew University of Jerusalem. Jorg A. Tellkamp is professor of philosophy at Metropolitan Autonomous University, Mexico.
"The study of slavery and the trade in enslaved people is fundamental to our understanding of the early modern world. Luis de Molina wrote what was arguably the most elaborate analysis of such a global phenomenon by a Catholic author at that time. Its finely annotated English translation is a most welcome contribution to scholarship."
~Giuseppe Marcocci, University of Oxford
"The Jesuit Luís de Molina was among the last, and one of the greatest, of the members of the ‘School of Salamanca’ who transformed the theological, legal, social and political thinking of early-modern Europe. He was also the first to consider in any depth a problem which would eventually come to define and divide the Western world: slavery. Molina was no abolitionist but he went a great towards establishing the rights that slaves – who under Roman law were indistinguishable from things- might be said to possess, and thereby to restore to them some measure of their humanity. He can, therefore, be said to have set in motion a debate that some two centuries latter would lead to the universal condemnation of all forms of human bondage. Daniel Schwartz and Jörg Tellkamp have produced a magnificent translation of this seminal text which will surely deepen and extend our historical understanding of the role that slavery has played in the evolution of our common awareness of the universality of the human condition."
~Anthony Pagden, University of California Los Angeles