Emancipation

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Emancipation refers to becoming free or equal, and can be used in a variety of contexts:

In politics:

In slavery:

  • Abolitionism (abolition of slavery), a political movement that sought to end the practice of slavery and the worldwide slave trade
  • Emancipation Proclamation, a declaration by United States President Abraham Lincoln announcing that all slaves in Confederate territory still in rebellion were freed
  • The freedom of a slave in accordance with laws under certain conditions
  • Manumission, the freedom of a slave by the owner voluntarily
  • Emancipation reform of 1861 in Russia, the liquidation of serf dependence of Russian peasants by Alexander II of Russia

In law:

  • Emancipation of minors, where a minor becomes an adult in practice, usually by receiving a declaration of liberation from a court expressly for this purpose
  • Emancipist was a term used for former transported convicts in the Australian penal colonies given conditional or absolute pardon.

In music:

In television:

In horseracing:

[edit] See also