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IsabelDavies_'s profile
Isabel Davies
Isabel Davies
Isabel Davies
@IsabelDavies_

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Isabel Davies

@IsabelDavies_

• Video game, esports and digital broadcast lawyer at @WigginLLP • Ex @King_Games & @DisneyInteract • Cabaret Club Grand Prix addict •

London, England
wiggin.co.uk/people/isabel-…
Joined October 2009

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    1. National Trust‏Verified account @nationaltrust 23 Aug 2020

      Many of the places we care for have direct or indirect links to slavery, including objects made from materials obtained by forced labour. Today, as we mark the @UNESCO Day for the Remembrance of the Slave Trade and its Abolition, we take a closer look at these materials.pic.twitter.com/StFcyVifF7

      2,247 replies 4,144 retweets 15,563 likes
      Show this thread
    2. National Trust‏Verified account @nationaltrust 23 Aug 2020

      Caribbean mahogany furniture was the height of 18th-century fashion, but this luxury material came at a human cost. Mahogany trees were felled by enslaved Africans in dangerous virgin rainforest and shipped back to Britain to be made into fine furniture.pic.twitter.com/Jsqu3tXlyT

      198 replies 362 retweets 2,477 likes
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    3. National Trust‏Verified account @nationaltrust 23 Aug 2020

      Chocolate was consumed in 18th-century Europe as a sweetened drink. Raw cocoa beans and sugar cane were grown by enslaved Africans on American plantations. Chocolate pots, like this from Ickworth, are a reminder of the bitter history of this popular confection.pic.twitter.com/H5yR6ELj4d

      47 replies 256 retweets 1,998 likes
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    4. National Trust‏Verified account @nationaltrust 23 Aug 2020

      Growing and processing sugar was labour intensive, and Europe’s sweet tooth fuelled the slave trade from the early 16th century. The wealthy served their sugar from ornate casters like these at Dunham Massey.pic.twitter.com/4Jww9bfybP

      24 replies 219 retweets 1,797 likes
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    5. National Trust‏Verified account @nationaltrust 23 Aug 2020

      By the mid-1800s, ivory exports from West Africa boomed, satisfying new fashions for ivory piano keys, billiard balls and trinkets. Traders from Egypt and North Africa travelled in search of elephants, kidnapping local people to serve as ivory bearers, servants, and concubines.pic.twitter.com/kZuOMu36kJ

      37 replies 237 retweets 1,887 likes
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    6. National Trust‏Verified account @nationaltrust 23 Aug 2020

      This September, we’re sharing a report exploring the connections of slavery and colonialism to the places we care for. Discover more about how we’re working on this with local and global communities, partners and experts:http://ow.ly/DJgn30r5MIq 

      351 replies 681 retweets 3,911 likes
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      Isabel Davies‏ @IsabelDavies_ 24 Aug 2020
      Replying to @nationaltrust

      Thanks for the great thread here! All these pieces are beautiful but it's important to appreciate the history here too. Lyme Park is next on my list to visit!

      7:57 AM - 24 Aug 2020 from Walthamstow, London
      • 1 Like
      • Mavis River
      0 replies 0 retweets 1 like

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