The Haitian Revolution (1791-1804) was an uprising of enslaved people in the French colony of Saint-Domingue that overthrew its colonial, enslaving government and created Haiti, an independent Black republic free of slavery and the second independent nation in the Americas after the United States.
The Haitian Revolution was a revolution led by enslaved people in Saint-Domingue, France's most lucrative Caribbean colony, between 1791 and 1804. It's the only uprising of enslaved people in world history that succeeded in overturning a colonial, enslaving government. When it ended, a European sugar colony had become Haiti, an independent Black republic that abolished slavery and became the second independent nation in the Americas.
Two details the CED really cares about. First, who fought it. Many of the freedom fighters were former soldiers who had been captured during civil wars in the Kingdom of Kongo and enslaved in Saint-Domingue, so the revolution drew on real military experience from West Central Africa. Maroons (Afro-descendants who had escaped slavery and built free communities) spread information between scattered groups and organized attacks. Second, what it cost France. Fighting Haitians drained Napoleon's resources so badly that he sold the Louisiana Territory to the United States in 1803, nearly doubling the country's size and opening that land to the expansion of slavery. One revolution reshaped two continents.
This term anchors Topic 2.12 (Legacies of the Haitian Revolution) in Unit 2: Freedom, Enslavement, and Resistance, and it feeds directly into Topic 2.13 (Resistance and Revolts in the United States). Three learning objectives lean on it. AP African American Studies 2.12.A asks you to explain its global impacts, including the Louisiana Purchase. AP African American Studies 2.12.B asks you to describe the role of maroons. AP African American Studies 2.12.C asks you to explain its impact on African diasporic communities and Black political thought. That last one is the big idea. Haiti became a lasting symbol of Black freedom and sovereignty, and for some African Americans its independence exposed the unfulfilled promises of the American Revolution. If a question asks what inspired Charles Deslondes in 1811 or the Malê rebels in Brazil in 1835, Haiti is usually the answer.
Keep studying AP® African American Studies Unit 2
Louisiana Slave Revolt / German Coast Uprising (Unit 2)
In 1811, Charles Deslondes led up to 500 enslaved people in the largest slave revolt on United States soil, directly inspired by Haiti's success. This is the clearest cause-and-effect link the exam tests, so know it cold.
Malê Uprising (Unit 2)
Haiti's influence wasn't just a U.S. story. The 1835 Malê Uprising of enslaved Muslims in Brazil, one of the largest revolts in that country, shows the revolution echoing across the whole African diaspora.
Denmark Vesey (Unit 2)
Vesey's planned 1822 revolt in Charleston drew on the example of Black self-liberation Haiti made real. Haiti proved freedom by force was possible, which changed what organizers in the U.S. believed they could attempt.
Maroons and former African soldiers (Unit 2)
The revolution's success wasn't luck. Maroons carried information and coordinated attacks, and many fighters were former Kongo soldiers with battlefield experience. This pattern (concentrations of African military skill enabling revolt) shows up across the Americas in Topic 2.13.
Multiple-choice questions usually test the Haitian Revolution as a cause. Expect stems asking how it influenced resistance movements among enslaved people in the United States, or how it shows the impact of former African soldiers on revolts. You should be able to do three things with it: explain its global impacts (only successful slave revolution, second independent nation in the Americas, France's losses prompting the Louisiana Purchase), describe the maroons' role, and trace its inspiration to specific later events like the 1811 German Coast Uprising and the 1835 Malê Uprising. For short-answer and project work, it's a go-to example of how one act of Black self-liberation shaped Black political thought as a symbol of freedom and sovereignty.
Both produced independent nations in the Americas, and that's where the similarity ends. The American Revolution created a republic that kept slavery legal, while the Haitian Revolution was fought BY enslaved people and abolished slavery entirely. The CED frames this contrast directly. For some African Americans, Haiti's independence highlighted the unfulfilled promises of the American Revolution, since the U.S. preached liberty while Haiti actually delivered it to the enslaved.
The Haitian Revolution (1791-1804) was the only uprising of enslaved people in history that overturned a colonial, enslaving government, turning Saint-Domingue into the independent Black republic of Haiti.
Haiti became the second independent nation in the Americas after the United States, and unlike the U.S., it abolished slavery at independence.
France's costly war against Haitians pushed Napoleon to sell the Louisiana Territory in 1803, which nearly doubled the size of the United States and opened new land to the expansion of slavery.
Maroons spread information and organized attacks during the revolution, and many freedom fighters were former soldiers enslaved during civil wars in the Kingdom of Kongo.
The revolution inspired later uprisings across the diaspora, including the 1811 Louisiana Slave Revolt led by Charles Deslondes and the 1835 Malê Uprising in Brazil.
Haiti's victory became an enduring symbol of Black freedom and sovereignty in Black political thought, a legacy the exam expects you to explain.
It was an uprising of enslaved people in the French colony of Saint-Domingue from 1791 to 1804 that overthrew the colonial government and created Haiti, an independent Black republic free of slavery. It anchors Topic 2.12 and is the exam's central example of successful Black self-liberation.
Yes, at the scale of overthrowing a government. The CED states it was the only uprising of enslaved people that resulted in overturning a colonial, enslaving government. Other revolts, like the 1811 German Coast Uprising, were significant but were suppressed.
The American Revolution created an independent nation that kept slavery; the Haitian Revolution was led by enslaved people and abolished slavery itself. That contrast is why Haiti's independence highlighted the unfulfilled promises of the American Revolution for some African Americans.
Largely, yes. The cost France incurred fighting Haitians prompted Napoleon to sell the Louisiana Territory to the United States in 1803, nearly doubling the size of the U.S., land the federal government then opened to the expansion of slavery.
Maroons were Afro-descendants who escaped slavery and built free communities. During the revolution they spread information across disparate groups and organized attacks, and many fighters were former soldiers from civil wars in the Kingdom of Kongo. This is exactly what learning objective 2.12.B asks you to describe.
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