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Conceptually similar
AR6172906 
AR6177097 
AR6172897 
AR6172901 
AR6172914 
AR6172905 
AR6172923 
AR6172898 
AR6173002 
AR6177096 
AR6172908 
AR6177100 
AR6177099 
AR6177101 
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AR6172913 
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AR6173006 
Alkemy, king of Adrat in Guinea, engraving, late 17th century, by Francois Gerard Jollain, in the Musee d'histoire de Nantes, in the Chateau des ducs de Bretagne, in Nantes, Pays de la Loire, France. In 1670 Alkemy sent an ambassador, Mateo Lopes, to France to agree a trade agreement with king Louis XIV. French ships were protected in Adrat (along the current coast of Benin and Togo) and Nantes slave ships profited hugely until 1724, when the kingdom of Adrat became part of Dahomey. The museum opened in 2007 and covers the history of Nantes, focusing on slavery, world wars, industrialisation and the chateau. Picture by Manuel Cohen 
Unique Identifier AR6177098 
Type Image 
Purpose Public 
Size 4409px × 6496px 
Photo Credit Manuel Cohen / Art Resource, NY 
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Tags
17th century
AFRICA
African
ART
B&W
Black and white
BRETAGNE
BRITTANY
Chateau des ducs de Bretagne
CHIEF
Collection
Dahomey
Engraving
EUROPE
EUROPEAN
FINE ARTS
French
HERITAGE
History
HISTORY MUSEUM
INDOORS
INSIDE
interior
king
KINGDOM
MUSEUM
NANTES
Pays de la Loire
Portrait
PORTRAITURE
Royalty
RULER
Slave
SLAVE TRADE
Slavery
TRADE
VERTICAL
WEST AFRICA
Western Europe
Western European