emancipation proclamation

listen to the pronunciation of emancipation proclamation
الإنجليزية - التركية
Abraham Lincoln tarafından uygulanan köleliğin bittiğini açıklayan yasa
الإنجليزية - الإنجليزية
Order made by U.S. President Abraham Lincoln in 1863 that freed all southern slaves (did not take effect until the end of the Civil War in 1865)
an announcement made in the US by President Abraham Lincoln which ordered the end of slavery (=the practice of owning people as property) in the Confederate States (=the southern states of the US) from January 1st 1863. The Proclamation was made during the Civil War. Soon after the war, slavery was completely ended by the "13th Amendment" to the US Constitution. (1863) Edict issued by U.S. Pres. Abraham Lincoln that freed the slaves of the Confederacy. On taking office, Lincoln was concerned with preserving the Union and wanted only to prevent slavery from expanding into the Western territories; but, after the South seceded, there was no political reason to tolerate slavery. In September 1862 he called on the seceded states to return to the Union or have their slaves declared free. When no state returned, he issued the proclamation on Jan. 1, 1863. The edict had no power in the Confederacy, but it provided moral inspiration for the North and discouraged European countries from supporting the South. It also had the practical effect of permitting recruitment of African Americans for the Union army; by 1865 nearly 180,000 African American soldiers had enlisted. The Thirteenth Amendment to the Constitution, ratified in 1865, officially abolished slavery in the entire country
An order issued during the Civil War by President Lincoln ending slavery in the Confederate states
President Abraham Lin­coln issued a preliminary proclamation in Septem­ber 1862 that all slaves would be declared free in those states that were still in rebellion against the Union at the beginning of 1863 Receiving no offi­cial response from the Confederacy, Lincoln an­nounced the Emancipation Proclamation on Janu­ary 1, 1863 All slaves in the rebellious Confederate states were to be forever free However, slavery could continue to exist in border states that were not at war against the Union Lincoln's Emancipa­tion Proclamation represented the beginning of the end of chattel slavery in the United States
President Lincoln's speech that freed the slaves in the land controlled by the North given on September 22, 1863
emancipation proclamation

    الواصلة

    e·man·ci·pa·tion proc·la·ma·tion

    التركية النطق

    îmänsıpeyşın präklımeyşın

    النطق

    /əˌmansəˈpāsʜən ˌpräkləˈmāsʜən/ /ɪˌmænsəˈpeɪʃən ˌprɑːkləˈmeɪʃən/
المفضلات