"RELIGION Christian Theology Ethics." . . "Benezet, Anthony 1713-1784." . . "1700 - 1799" . . "Benezet, Anthony 1713-1784 Political and social views." . . . . "Mouvements antiesclavagistes États-Unis Histoire 18e siècle." . . . "To be silent ... would be criminal the antislavery influence and writings of Anthony Benezet" . . . . . . . . . "Introduces the development of an anti-slavery movement in America largely driven by the influence and writings of Quaker leader Anthony Benezet. The early part of the text is a serious of letters from Benezet to prominent religious and political leaders, The second part of the book is a general discussion of the slave-trade and in particular the slave-trade from Guinea written by Benezet." . "History" . . "Electronic books"@en . . "History"@en . . . . "To be silent ... would be criminal : the antislavery influence and writings of Anthony Benezet" . . . . . . . . "To be silent-- would be criminal : the antislavery influence and writings of Anthony Benezet" . . . "Biography" . "Born in 1713 of French Huguenot stock, Philadelphia Quaker Anthony Benezet was probably the most significant force in advancing the cause against slavery and the African slave trade in the eighteenth century. However, while abolitionists like Granville Sharp, William Wilberforce, Thomas Clarkson, and John Wesley are familiar, the name \"\"Benezet\"\" is hardly recognized. And yet, it was his work that reinforced Sharp's legal battles, his tracts that singularly influenced both Wesley and Clarkson to join the cause, and his friendship with Benjamin Franklin that led to Franklin leading the American."@en . "Biography"@en . "To be silent-- would be criminal the antislavery influence and writings of Anthony Benezet"@en . . "Benezet, Anthony 1713-1784 Influence." . .