Source: Le Code Noir ou recueil des reglements rendus jusqu'a present (Paris: Prault, 1767) [1980 reprd. by the Societé, d'Histoire de la Guadeloupe].
Edict of the King
Concerning the enforcement of order in the French American
islands
from the month of March 1685
Registered at the Sovereign Council of Saint-Domingue, May 6,
1687
Louis, by the grace of God, King of France and Navarre, to all present and to come, greetings. Since we owe equally our attention to all the peoples that Divine Providence has put under our obedience, We have had examined in our presence the memoranda that have been sent to us by our officers in our american islands, by whom having been informed that they need our authority and our justice to maintain the discipline of the Catholic, Apostolic, and Roman church there and to regulate the status and condition of the slaves in our said islands, and desiring to provide for this and to have them know that although they live in regions infinitely removed from our normal residence, we are always present to them, not only by the range of our power, but also by the promptness of our attempts to assist them in their needs. For these reasons, by the advice of our Council, and by our certain knowledge, full power, and royal authority, We have said, ruled, and ordered, we say, rule, and order, wish, and are pleased by that which follows.
First Article
We wish and intend that the edict by the late King of glorious memory our very honored lord and father of 23 April 1615 be enforced in our islands, by this we charge all our officers to evict from our Islands all the Jews who have established their residence there, to whom, as to the declared enemies of the Christian name, we order to have left within three months from the day of the publication of these present [edicts], or face confiscation of body and property.
II.
All the slaves who will be in our Islands will be baptized and instructed in the Catholic, Apostolic, and Roman religion. We charge the planters who will buy newly arrived negres to inform the Governor and Intendant of the said islands within a week at the latest or face a descretionary fine, these [officials] will give the necessary orders to have them instructed and baptized within an appropriate time.
III.
We forbid any public exercise of any religion other than the
Catholic, Apostolic, and Roman; we wish that the offenders be
punished as rebels and disobedient to our orders. We prohibit all
congregations for this end, which we declare "conventicules," illicit
and seditious, subject to the same penalty which will be levied even
against masters who allow or tolerate them among their slaves.
IV.
No overseers will be given charge of negres who do not
profess the Catholic, Apostolic, and Roman religion, on pain of
confiscation of the said negres from the masters who had given
this charge to them and of discretionary punishment of the overseers
who accepted the said charge.
V.
We forbid our subjects of the so-called reformed religion to
disturb or prevent our other subjects, even their slaves, from the
free exercise of the Catholic, Apostolic, and Roman religion, on pain
of exemplary punishment.
VI.
We charge all our subjects, whatever their status and condition,
to observe Sundays and holidays that are kept by our subjects of the
Catholic, Apostolic, and Roman religion. We forbid them to work or to
make their slaves work on these days from the hour of midnight until
the other midnight, either in agriculture, the manufacture of sugar
or all other works, on pain of fine and discretionary punishment of
the masters and confiscation of the sugar, and of the said slaves who
will be caught by our officers in their work.
VII.
Equally we forbid the holding of negre markets and all
other markets the said days on similar pains, including confiscation
of the merchandise that will be found then at the market and
descretionary fine against the merchants.
VIII.
We declare our subjects who are not of the Catholic, Apostolic,
and Roman religion incapable in the future of contracting a valid
marriage. We declare bastards the children born of such unions which
we desire to be held and considered, we hold and we consider to be
truly concubinage.
IX.
The free men who will have one or several children from their
concubinage with their slaves, together with the masters who
permitted this, will each be condemned to a fine of two thousand
pounds of sugar; and if they are the masters of the slave by whom
they have had the said children, we wish that beyond the fine, they
be deprived of the slave and the children, and that she and they be
confiscated for the profit of the [royal] hospital, without
ever being manumitted. Nevertheless we do not intend for the present
article to be enforced if the man who was not married to an other
person during his concubinage with his slave would marry in the
church the said slave who by this means will be manumitted and the
children rendered free and legitimate.
X.
The said solemnities prescribed by the Ordonnance of Blois, Articles
XL, XLI, XLII, and by the declaration of November 1629 for marriages
will be observed both for free persons and for slaves, nevertheless
without the consent of the father and the mother of the slave being
necessary, but that of the master alone.
XI.
We forbid priests to officiate at the marriages of slaves unless
they can show the consent of their masters. We also forbid masters to
use any means to constrain their slaves to marry [them?]
against their will.
XII.
The children who will be born of marriage between slaves will be
slaves and will belong to the master of the women slaves, and not to
those of their husband, if the husband and the wife have different
masters.
XIII.
We wish that if a slave husband has married a free woman, the
children, both male and girls, will follow the condition of their
mother and be free like her, in spite of the servitude of their
father; and that if the father is free and the mother enslaved, the
children will be slaves the same.
XIV.
Masters are held to put into Holy Ground in cemeteries so
designated [as will] their baptized slaves; and those who die
without having received baptism will be buried at night in some field
near the place where they died.
XV.
We forbid slaves to carry any weapon, or large sticks, on pain of
whipping and of confiscation of the weapon to the profit of those who
seize them; with the sole exception of those who are sent hunting by
their master and who carry their ticket or known mark.
XVI.
In the same way we forbid slaves belonging to different masters
to gather in the day or night whether claiming for wedding or
otherwise, whether on their master's property or elsewhere, and still
less in the main roads or faraway places, on pain of corporal
punishment, which will not be less than the whip and the fleur de
lys [branding with the symbol of the kings of France; this was a
punishment for deserters and habitual criminals in France] and which in
cases of frequent violations
and other aggravating circumstances can be punished with death: this we
leave to the decision of judges. We charge all our subjects to
approach the offenders, to arrest them and take them to prison, even
if they are not officers and there is not yet any decree against
them.
XVII.
Masters who are convicted of having permitted or tolerated such
assemblies composed of slaves other than those belonging to them will
be condemned in their own and private name to pay for all the damage
that will have been done to their neighbors by these said assemblies
and a fine of 10 ecus for the first time and double for repeat
offenses.
XVIII.
We forbid slaves to sell sugar cane for whatever reason or
occasion, even with the permission of their master, on pain of
whipping for the slaves and 10 livres tournois for their
masters who permitted it, and a similar fine against the buyer.
[Translator's note: In this period a slave might cost about 1,000
livres and a fine horse, about 400. A day laborer in France
might earn 1/2 to 1 livre per day.]
XIX.
We forbid them also to expose for sale, at the market or to carry
to private houses for sale any kind of commodity, even fruits,
vegetables, firewood, herbs for their food and animals of their
manufacture without express permission of their masters by a ticket
or by known marks, on pain of confiscation of the things thus sold,
without restitution of the price by their masters, and of a fine of
six livres tournois to their profit for the buyers.
XX.
We wish, to this end, that two persons be charged by our officers in
each market to examine the commodities and merchandises that will be
carried by the slaves, together with the tickets and marks of their
masters.
XXI.
We permit to all our subjects living in our islands to take all
the things slaves are carrying when these slaves are without tickets
from their masters, or known marks, to be returned instantly to their
masters, if the plantations are neighboring the place were the slaves
are surprised in this crime, if not they will be instantly sent to
the [royal] hospital to be held there until the masters have
been notified.
XXIII.
We forbid them to give to the slaves cane brandy in place of the
subsistence mentioned in the previous article.
XXIV.
We similarly forbid them to unburden themselves of the food and
subsistence of their slaves by permitting them to work a certain day
of the week for own ends.
XXV.
Each year masters will have to furnish each slave with two
outfits of canvas or 4 aulnes [about one square yard or meter] of
canvas, at the
master's discretion.
XXVI.
The slaves who are not fed, clothed and supported by the masters
according to what we have ordered by these articles will notify our
attorney of this and give him their statements, based on which and
even as a matter of course, if the information comes to him from
elsewhere, the masters will be prosecuted by him and without cost,
which we want to be observed for the cries [crieries] and
barbarous and inhumane treatments of masters towards their
slaves.
XXX.
Slaves will not be allowed to be given offices or commissions
with any public function, nor to be named agents by any other than
their masters to act or administer any trade or judgement in loss or
witnesses, either in civil or criminal matters; and in cases where
they will be heard as witnesses, their dispositions will only serve
as memorandum to aid the judges in the investigation, without being
the source of any presumption, conjecture or proof.
XXXI.
Nor can slaves be party, either in judgement nor in civil suits,
either as plaintiff or defendant, neither in civil or criminal suites
...
LV.
Masters twenty years old will be able to manumit their slaves by
all [legal] deeds or by cause of death, without being
required to provide the reason for this manumission, neither will
they need the permission of parents, provided that they are minors
twenty-five years of age.
LVI.
Children made universal beneficiaries by their masters, or named
executors of their testaments or tutors of their children, will be
held and regarded as manumitted.
LVII.
We declare their manumissions enacted in our islands to serve in
place of birth in our islands and manumitted slaves will not need our
letters of naturalization in order to enjoy the advantages of our
natural subjects in our kingdom, lands and countries under our
obedience, although they be born in foreign lands.
LVIII.
We command manumitted slaves to retain a particular respect for
their former masters, their widows and their children; such that the
insult that they will have done be punished more severely that if it
had been done to another person: we declare them however free and
absolved of any other burdens, services and rights that their former
masters would like to claim, as much on their persons as on their
possessions and estates as patrons.
LIX.
We grant to manumitted slaves the same rights, privileges and
liberties enjoyed by persons born free; desiring that they merit this
acquired liberty and that it produce in them, both for their persons
and for their property, the same effects that the good fortune of
natural liberty causes in our other subjects.
[one final article about the recipient of fines]
This we give and command to our loved and loyal supporters the persons holding our sovereign council established in Martinique, GadeLoupe [sic], Saint Christophe, that they read, publish and register .... [signed Louis, Colbert, LeTellier]