Dutty Boukman was a Vodou priest and leader of escaped enslaved people in Saint-Domingue whose August 1791 sermon at Bois Caïman called for rebellion against slavery, using religious justification to launch the uprising that became the Haitian Revolution.
Dutty Boukman was a Vodou priest and a leader among escaped enslaved people in the French Caribbean colony of Saint-Domingue (modern Haiti). In August 1791, he delivered a sermon, traditionally placed at a ceremony at Bois Caïman, calling enslaved people to rise up against their enslavers. He framed resistance in religious terms, telling listeners that their god demanded vengeance against the brutality of slavery. The uprising he helped ignite grew into the Haitian Revolution, the only successful slave revolt that produced an independent nation.
For AP Euro, Boukman is the human face of what the CED calls the consequences of the slave trade. Europeans expanded the trade of enslaved Africans to feed a plantation economy in the Americas (KC-1.3.IV.C), and Saint-Domingue was the richest plantation colony of all. Boukman's sermon shows that the system Europeans built in Topic 1.9 created the resistance that exploded in the Age of Revolutions. He also matters historiographically. His religious call to rebellion is direct evidence that enslaved people drove their own liberation, not just European Enlightenment thinkers.
Boukman sits in Unit 1, Topic 1.9 (The Slave Trade) and supports learning objective AP Euro 1.9.A, explaining the causes and development of the slave trade. The essential knowledge here (KC-1.3.IV.C) says Europeans expanded the trade of enslaved Africans because the plantation economy demanded labor after demographic catastrophes wiped out indigenous populations. Boukman is what happens on the other end of that system. The Middle Passage and planter society created the conditions of enslavement that he urged people to overthrow.
He's also your bridge to the revolutionary era. The 2023 DBQ asked whether the Haitian Revolution was caused primarily by the spread of Enlightenment ideas or by the conditions of enslavement. Boukman is the single best piece of evidence for the 'conditions of enslavement' side, because his sermon invoked Vodou and lived suffering, not Rousseau. Knowing him lets you complicate the lazy answer that everything traces back to European philosophes.
Keep studying AP® Euro Unit 1
Plantation Economy and Planter Society (Unit 1)
Saint-Domingue was the most profitable plantation colony in the world, built on sugar and the labor of enslaved Africans. Boukman's revolt is the plantation system producing its own destruction. The same brutal conditions that made planters rich made rebellion almost inevitable.
Enslavement and the Middle Passage (Unit 1)
Boukman himself was enslaved and transported within the Atlantic system, likely from Jamaica to Saint-Domingue. He turns the abstract statistics of Topic 1.9 into a specific person who fought back, which is exactly the kind of concrete evidence essays reward.
Enlightenment Ideas (Unit 4)
The Haitian Revolution erupted two years after the French Revolution declared the rights of man. The exam loves the tension here. Did enslaved people rebel because Enlightenment ideas trickled down, or because slavery itself was intolerable? Boukman's religious, Vodou-rooted sermon is your evidence that resistance didn't need European philosophy to exist.
Abolition of Slavery (Units 5-6)
The revolution Boukman sparked terrified planters across the Atlantic world and energized abolitionists in Britain and France. Haiti's independence in 1804 became proof that the slave system could be ended, feeding the abolition movements of the late 18th and early 19th centuries.
Boukman is most useful to you as evidence, not as a likely MCQ answer on his own. The clearest exam precedent is the 2023 DBQ, which asked whether the Haitian Revolution was caused primarily by the spread of Enlightenment ideas or by the conditions of enslavement. That's an argument-driven prompt, and Boukman is high-value outside evidence for it. Citing his 1791 sermon, which justified rebellion through Vodou and the lived horror of slavery rather than European political theory, can earn you the evidence-beyond-the-documents point and strengthen a complexity argument. In multiple choice, expect him to show up in stimulus passages about the consequences of the slave trade or the spread of revolution to the colonies, where you'd need to connect the plantation economy (Topic 1.9) to revolutionary upheaval.
Both are leaders of the Haitian Revolution, but they played different roles at different stages. Boukman lit the fuse. His 1791 sermon launched the initial uprising, and he was killed within months. Toussaint Louverture came later as the military and political leader who organized the revolution into a disciplined force and governed the colony. On an essay, use Boukman as evidence about the revolution's origins and causes, and Louverture as evidence about its course and outcome.
Dutty Boukman was a Vodou priest in Saint-Domingue whose August 1791 sermon called enslaved people to rebellion and ignited the Haitian Revolution.
He connects directly to Topic 1.9 and KC-1.3.IV.C, because the plantation economy that Europeans built with enslaved African labor created the conditions he urged people to overthrow.
Boukman's sermon used religious justification rooted in Vodou, which makes him strong evidence that the conditions of enslavement, not just Enlightenment ideas, caused the Haitian Revolution.
The 2023 DBQ asked exactly this question about the Haitian Revolution's causes, so Boukman works as outside evidence for the conditions-of-enslavement argument.
Boukman started the uprising and died early in it, while Toussaint Louverture led the revolution that followed, so keep their roles separate in your essays.
Boukman was a Vodou priest and leader of escaped enslaved people in Saint-Domingue. In August 1791 he delivered a sermon calling for rebellion against slavery, framing resistance as religiously justified, and the uprising he sparked became the Haitian Revolution.
No. Boukman launched the initial 1791 uprising but was captured and killed by French colonial forces within a few months. Toussaint Louverture later emerged as the revolution's main military and political leader.
Boukman started the revolution with his 1791 sermon and early uprising, while Louverture organized and led it afterward. Think of Boukman as the spark and Louverture as the general.
The 2023 AP Euro DBQ asked exactly this, and the strongest answers argue both with nuance. Boukman's Vodou-based sermon shows enslaved people had their own motives and traditions of resistance, while the French Revolution's rights language (1789) shaped the political context. Use him to push back on a purely Enlightenment-driven explanation.
AP Euro covers the slave trade and plantation economy because Europeans built and profited from them (Topic 1.9, KC-1.3.IV.C). Boukman's revolt in France's richest colony shows the consequences of that European system, and the Haitian Revolution directly shaped European debates over abolition.
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