The site, which launched in December 2020, features research from scholars affiliated with the Hutchins Center for African & African American Research, the College of Arts and Humanities at the University of Maryland, the MATRIX Center for Digital Humanities & Social Sciences at Michigan State University, and other institutions.
On Enslaved.org, visitors can target searches through more than 5 million data points, including names, genders, birthplaces, places of death, and occupations of individuals, collected from existing research housed at institutions around the world.
“There are many projects at different institutions in the area of slavery studies, but we had a conundrum where much of the work was siloed, and if you were a researcher you couldn’t necessarily see all the information at once, so we tried to find a space that could link these different projects,” said Daryle Williams, one of the principal investigators on the project, an associate professor of history, and associate dean for faculty affairs in the College of Arts and Humanities at the University of Maryland.
There are also in-depth biographies of almost 100 entrants, adapted from the African American National Biography, Dictionary of African Biography, and Dictionary of Caribbean and Afro-Latin American Biography, joint projects between the Hutchins Center and Oxford University Press.
