Colonial heritage in Switzerland
Colonial heritage in Switzerland
Introduction
Switzerland had no colonies of its own - yet there were a number of Swiss involved in slavery, the slave trade, and colonialism activities between the 16th and the 19th centuries. Swiss trading companies, banks, city-states, family enterprises, mercenary contractors, soldiers, and private individuals participated in and profited from the commercial, military, administrative, financial, scientific, ideological, and publishing activities necessary for the creation and the maintenance of the Transatlantic slavery economy. In this project, focusing on the Caribbean Community member states, we are interested in discovering the trace of the colonial past of Switzerland.
Our primary source is the CARICOM Compilation Archive written by Hans Fässler, MA Zurich University, a historian from St.Gallen (Switzerland).
Motivation
The goal is to obtain
- person name
- origin, i.e. location in Switzerland
- colonial location
- date
- activities
fo each actor identified in the CCA. This properties have been validated ad relevant and valuable information by Hans Fassler.
Project Plan and Milestones
Step I : Information extraction with NLP tools(Stanford NER, NLTK)
Step II : Visualize the connection between Switzerland and Caribbean colonies
Step III : Highlight the material traces
Date | Task | Completion |
---|---|---|
By Week 4
(07.10) |
|
✓ |
By Week 6
(21.10) |
|
✓ |
By Week 10
(25.11) |
Step I
Step II
|
✓ |
By Week 11
(02.12) |
Step I
Step II
Step III
|
|
By Week 12
(09.12) |
Step II
Step III
|
|
By Week 13
(16.12) |
Step II
Overall
|
|
By Week 14
(22.12) |
Overall
|
Methodology
Text Understanding
First step is to create items;
Then to process to add all the properties mentioned above. tools: Natural Language processing with tools as NLTK for tokenization and Stanford NER for Named Entities recognition and BIO taggings.
Add geographical information based on the properties.
Results
Limitation
The complete archive has 464 items, i.e. entries about different actors. However, retrieving information such as the name and origin of the actor, as well as his activities and the location of the activities is difficult. The texts can be pretty complex and intricated, 'as were the implications of Switzerland in Black Slavery'[^1].
- David Louis Agassiz (1737–1807), uncle of the racist and glaciologist Louis Agassiz (1807–1873), was a financier who left Switzerland for France in 1747 with his friend Jacques Necker in order to work in the Parisian branch of the Thellusson et Vernet bank (investments in colonial companies, links with the slave trade). Until 1770, David Louis Agassiz cooperated with Pourtalès of Neuchâtel via the company «Joseph Lieutaud et Louis Agassiz». Necker was to become Louis XVI’s Minister of Finance, whereas David Louis Agassiz left for Britain where he acquired a considerable fortune and anglicised his name to Arthur David Lewis Agassiz. He was naturalised by a private Act of Parliament in 1766. Agassiz dealt in cotton, silk, sugar, cocoa, coffee, tobacco, and cochineal and had business relations with France, Spain, Portugal, Italy, Germany, Belgium, Denmark, the Netherlands, Sweden, Switzerland, Russia, North and South America and the East and West Indies. In 1776, Francis Anthony Rougemont (1713–1788) from a Neuchâtel family joined the partnership under the name of «Agassiz, Rougemont et Cie.», a company which had close ties with «MM Pourtalès et Cie.» from Neuchâtel (ownership of plantations on Grenada, indiennes industry, banking). Arthur David Lewis Agassiz’s son Arthur Agassiz (1771–1866), cousin of the racist Louis Agassiz, took over the family business, and later formed a company «Agassiz, Son & Company». In 1823, Arthur Agassiz was working in Port-au-Prince (Haiti) with «Jean Robert Bernard et Cie.».
Through processing the the number of workable entries is reduced to TO ADD.
This number could be increase in the following ways: -
The second part that transform [^1] Hans Fassler
Links
Github repository: Colonial-heritage-in-Switzerland
Primary source: caricom archives
Secondary sources: Dictionnaire historique de la Suisse DHS, swissNAME3d