1650 - 1717 (67 años)
1622 - 1679 (57 años)
Nacimiento |
1622 |
Amsterdam, North Holland, Paises Bajos |
Fallecimiento |
3 Nov 1679 |
Amsterdam, North Holland, Paises Bajos |
Enterrado/a |
Ouderkerk aan de Amstel, Ouder-Amstel, Noord-Holland, Paises Bajos |
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Padre |
Joseph de Jacob Abendana Pereira, n. 1580, Pardemarin, Pontevedra, Galicia, España |
Madre |
Maria Pimentel y Lindes, n. Cir. 1590, Antwerpen, Antwerpen, Belgica |
Casado |
1611 |
Amsterdam, North Holland, Paises Bajos |
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Familia |
Rachel de Simon Gomes de Pas, n. 1631, Antwerpen, Antwerpen, Belgica |
Casado |
25 Jun 1655 |
Amsterdam, North Holland, Paises Bajos |
Hijos |
+ | 1. Ester Mordechay Abendana y Gomes de Pas, n. 1647, Amsterdam, North Holland, Paises Bajos |
+ | 2. Sara de Mordechai Abendana y Gomes de Pas, n. 1650, Amsterdam, North Holland, Paises Bajos |
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Familia 1 |
Sara de Mordechai Abendana y Gomes de Pas, n. 1650, Amsterdam, North Holland, Paises Bajos f. 9 Jun 1689, Curacao, Antillas Holandesas (Edad 39 años)
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Marriage |
9 Jun 1673 |
Amsterdam, North Holland, Paises Bajos |
Tipo: Sinagoga |
Age at Marriage |
He : ~ 23 años y 6 months - She : ~ 23 años y 6 months. |
Hijos |
+ | 1. Gracia de Manuel Alvares Correa y Abendana, n. 1683, Curacao, Antillas Holandesas f. 18 Feb 1726, Curacao, Antillas Holandesas (Edad 43 años)
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+ | 2. Raphael de Manuel Alvares Correa y Abendana, n. 1686, Curacao, Antillas Holandesas f. 11 May 1733, Curacao, Antillas Holandesas (Edad 47 años)
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Documentos |
| Certificado de matrimonio Manuel Alvares Correa y Sara Abendana
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ID Familia |
F942 |
Hoja del Grupo | Family Chart |
Última Modificación |
19 Feb 2014 |
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Lápidas |
| Foto de lapida Manuel Alvares Correa Manuel died on Jan. 12th 1717 at Curaçao
Resting place of the honorable and elderly man, the intellectual and wise scalar Emmanuel Alvares Correa. His soul may rest in Heaven. He was taken to the Highest Tribunal on 5 Shevat 5485. May his soul rest in Peace. On the date of his death a prayer in his remembrance (Escava) is still said in the… |
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Notas |
- De Encyclopedia Judaica:
In the Americas ? Until 1730 the Dutch West India Company maintained a monopoly on the importation of slaves into all the Dutch colonies in the Americas, but Jews appear to have been among the major retailers of slaves in Dutch Brazil (1630?54), because Jews possessed ready money and were willing to trade slaves for sugar. The bylaws of the Recife and Mauricia congregations (1648) included an imposta (Jewish tax) of 5 soldos for each slave which a Brazilian Jew purchased from the West Indies Company. In Curaçao, the Dutch occasionally gave permission to a merchant to conduct independent transactions in slaves; two such Jewish entrepreneurs were the brothers David and Jacob Senior, who came to the island from Amsterdam about 1685. Another Curaçao Jew, Manuel Alvares Correa (1650?1717), who was active in the local slave trade for many years, served in 1699 as an intermediary between the Dutch and Portuguese West Indies companies for the transfer of a shipment of slaves from Africa to Mexico via Curaçao. In all of the American colonies, whether Dutch, French, or British, almost every merchant or trader had dealings in slaves: when he acted as auctioneer or agent for the sale of an estate, when he served his planter clients in the sale or purchase of slaves or in the pursuit of runaways. In the Barbados, until 1706, Jews were limited by law in the number of slaves they themselves could own, but in Jamaica there was no such restriction. Among the Jamaican Jewish merchants who seem to have specialized in the slave trade were David Henriques, Hyman *Levy , and especially Alexander Lindo (1753?1812), who was a major importer of slaves during the period 1782?92. During an investigation of slave mortality conducted in Jamaica in 1789, Lindo testifies that 150 slaves on a ship ?consigned to? him had died in the Middle Passage and that another 20 perished after their arrival in Jamaica, but it is unclear whether he owned this slave shipment of the others in which he was involved. Members of the well-known *Gradis family of Bordeaux were active in the shipment of slaves from West Africa to such French colonies as Santo-Domingo (Dominican Republic).On the North American mainland, a number of Jews were active participants in the infamous triangular trade, which brought slaves from Africa to the West Indies, where they were exchanged for molasses, which was in turn taken to New England and converted into rum for sale in Africa. David *Franks of Philadelphia was in this business during the early 1760s; Aaron *Lopez and Jacob Rodriguez *Rivera of Newport, Rhode Island, had at least one slaver on the high seas each year after 1764, and in 1772 and 1773 had a total of eight such ships under sail. Isaac Da *Costa of Charleston was another large-scale importer of slaves. In Louisiana, under both French and Spanish rule, the Monsanto brothers made frequent transactions in slaves; during 1787 they purchased 44 blacks.
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