Some ways slaves rebelled against their bondage included sabotage of equipment or crops, running away (escaping), forming underground resistance groups, and engaging in acts of defiance or disobedience while working.
Slaves in African societies performed various roles, such as agricultural labor, domestic work, and military service. Additionally, slaves were often used as a form of social status or wealth, and could sometimes rise to positions of authority or influence. Despite their bondage, some slaves were able to earn or buy their freedom and integrate into society as free individuals.
Rich people do not "need" slaves. Historically, some wealthy individuals may have used slaves for economic and social gain, but this practice is unethical and illegal in most modern societies. Owning slaves goes against basic human rights and principles of equality.
Some individuals opened their homes to escaping slaves out of a sense of moral obligation, empathy, or a belief in the immorality of slavery. Others may have done so as an act of resistance against unjust laws or to support the abolitionist movement.
Captured in war or raids: Many individuals became slaves after being captured during wars or raids by invading groups. Debt bondage: Some people became slaves as a way to pay off debts owed to others. Inheritance: In some societies, people were born into slavery due to being the descendants of enslaved individuals or belonging to a specific social group deemed inferior.
Escaped slaves often joined existing communities of free African Americans, formed their own independent settlements, or sought refuge in abolitionist networks that helped them find safe passage to freedom in the North or Canada. Some escaped slaves also joined the Underground Railroad or engaged in other forms of resistance against slavery.
For freedom
Fugitive slaves rebelled against the 1850 Fugitive Slave Law by escaping to Canada, forming and joining abolitionist groups, participating in the Underground Railroad, and sometimes physically resisting capture by slave catchers. Some fugitive slaves also sought legal assistance and used the court system to fight for their freedom.
Some of the conquered provinces of the Aztec Empire rebelled because of repressive rule. The Aztec overlords actually sacrificed many of the outlying tribes people in ceremonies in the capital city.
some Greeks rebelled against he and helped there fellow Greeks in the fight for Asia
In the US on January 1,1863, President Lincoln issued the famous Emancipation Proclamation. This document officially freed the slaves in the states that had rebelled against the US government. It probably took some time before the slave-owners actually left them go. Slaves in the states that were loyal to the Union were not set free by this proclamation but were freed at various times by action of the various state legislatures.
challenged by the Filipino resistance movement, leading to a conflict known as the Philippine–American War from 1899 to 1902. This war resulted in significant casualties and damage to both sides, eventually leading to the establishment of the Philippines as a U.S. colony until gaining independence in 1946.
using some of the same tactics that the spanish had used in Cuba.
Some reasons of why the colonists rebelled against the British were: 1. The Boston Massacre 2. Taxation without Representation 3. Intolerable Acts 4. Proclamation of 1763 5. The Stamp Act 6. The Quartering Acts 7. The Sugar act
In some versions of the legend, King Arthur executed his nephew Mordred for treason after Mordred rebelled against him.
The North American slaves were largely unsuccessful at insurrection against their owners because their activities were so closely monitored. However, some groups of slaves still managed to revolt.
Equiano believes that the brutal and inhumane treatment endured by slaves, including himself, are integral to the slave trade. These hardships, which are so severe that he cannot bring himself to fully describe them, highlight the harsh reality of the system that dehumanizes and exploits individuals for profit. For Equiano, these experiences underscore the cruelty and degradations inherent in the slave trade.
Some northern states made slavery against the law.