Toby GreenFBA is a British historian of inequality. He is also a Professor of Precolonial and Lusophone African History and Culture at King's College London. He obtained his Doctor of Philosophy in African studies, at the University of Birmingham. He is Chair of the FontesHistoriae Africanae (Sources of African History) Committee of the British Academy,[1] and has written extensively about African early modern history and colonial African slavery, mainly focused on slavery in the Portuguese colonies.
He has also written on the Spanish Inquisition.[2] Green disagrees with the notion of a Black Legend of the Spanish Inquisition and often quotes sixteenth-century sources, regarding the institution's abuse of power in Latin America, and is often cited regarding this subject. He has other publications regarding the issues of religious prosecution and oppression in Africa and other European colonies.
His interests are slavery in the Atlantic and cultural and economic links between America and Africa.[3]
Green addresses the Spanish Inquisition mainly through Hispano-American sources. He notes that the great unchecked power given to inquisitors meant that they were "widely seen as above the law",[9] and sometimes had motives for imprisoning, while sometimes executing alleged offenders other than for the purpose of punishing religious nonconformity, mainly in Ibero-America.[9][10][11]
Publications
Articles
Baculamento or Encomienda?: Legal Pluralisms and the Contestation of Power in Pan-Atlantic World of the Sixteenth and Seventeenth Centuries
Green, T. 28 Sep 2017 In : Journal of Global Slavery. 2, p. 310-336
“Africa and the Price Revolution: Currency Imports and Socioeconomic Change in West And West-Central Africa During the 17th Century”, Journal of African History, 57/1 (2016), 1-24.
“Beyond an Imperial Atlantic: Trajectories of Africans From Upper Guinea and West-Central Africa in the Early Atlantic World", Past and Present 230 (Feb 2016), 91-122
Brokers of Change: Atlantic Commerce and Cultures in Pre-Colonial Western Africa (Oxford University Press, for the British Academy: 2012)
“Building Slavery in the Atlantic World: Atlantic Connections and the Changing Institution of Slavery in Cabo Verde, 15th-16th Centuries”, Slavery and Abolition 32/2, 2011, 227-45:
Major books (selected only)
Saddled with Darwin: A Journey through South America on Horseback (1999) ISBN0571248284
Meeting the Invisible Man: Secrets and Magic in West Africa (2001) ISBN978-0297646150
Thomas More's Magician: A Novel Account of Utopia in Mexico (2004) ISBN0753819783