By 1801, Toussaint L'Ouverture controlled almost all of Saint-Domingue, the French colony that would become Haiti. He had led the fight to end slavery, and now he needed rules for what came next.
So he wrote a Constitution. It permanently abolished slavery — a huge, world-changing statement. But it stopped short of full independence: it named L'Ouverture governor for life, while Saint-Domingue stayed formally part of the French empire.
Why the 1801 Constitution mattered: It proved a colony run by formerly enslaved people could govern itself and end slavery for good. Napoleon saw it as a direct threat to French control and sent an army to crush it in 1802.
That French invasion backfired. Fierce resistance, yellow fever, and the return of Napoleon's plan to restore slavery pushed Haitian forces — now led by Jean-Jacques Dessalines — to fight for full independence, not just self-rule.
On 1 January 1804, Dessalines proclaimed the Declaration of Independence, drafted with his secretary Boisrond-Tonnerre. It announced Haiti as a free, sovereign nation, and renamed the territory using its Indigenous Taíno name, Haiti, rejecting the French colonial name Saint-Domingue.
- 1801 Constitution — ends slavery, makes L'Ouverture governor for life, stays under French sovereignty.
- 1802 French invasion — Napoleon tries to restore slavery and colonial control; sparks renewed war.
- 1804 Declaration of Independence — Dessalines breaks fully from France; Haiti becomes the first state founded by a successful uprising of enslaved people.
Reading a source: the 1804 Declaration: Content — it says Haiti is independent and free forever from France. Context — written by the new Haitian leadership, in the moment of victory, to announce and legitimise the new state to the world. Together, content and context tell you this source is a triumphant founding statement, not a neutral report.
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Independence ended slavery, but it did not erase the divisions French colonial rule had built. Haiti's new society still carried old fault lines.
Under French rule, society had been split sharply by colour and class. At the top were white planters; below them, the affranchis — some of whom owned land and even enslaved people themselves; at the bottom, the enslaved majority, who did the plantation labour.
Old hierarchies did not vanish in 1804: After independence, many affranchis kept the land and wealth they already held. Formerly enslaved Haitians, who made up the vast majority of the population, often stayed landless labourers on the same plantations, now working for new Haitian owners instead of French ones.
Land was the sharpest divide of all. Dessalines and later leaders debated whether to break up plantations into small farms for ordinary Haitians, or keep large estates running to produce export crops like sugar and coffee for revenue.
Colonial-era divisions
- White planters held political and economic power
- Affranchis (free people of colour) owned some land and property
- Enslaved majority had no rights, land, or freedom
Post-1804 divisions
- Black and mixed-race elite (often former affranchis) held land and government posts
- Rural formerly enslaved majority remained poor and largely landless
- Access to land and power still shaped by colour and class, not just legal freedom
A historian using sources on this theme has to ask: who wrote it, and where did they sit in this hierarchy? A wealthy Haitian landowner's account of 'a free and equal nation' looks very different from a rural labourer's account of daily life.
Content vs perspective on the same topic: Two sources can both accurately describe land policy after 1804, yet reach different conclusions — because their authors' position in Haitian society shaped what they noticed and valued. That is a perspectives point, not a factual error.
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For two decades after 1804, no major power recognised Haiti as a nation. France still hoped to reclaim it, and other slave-owning nations, including the USA, feared recognising Haiti would encourage revolts elsewhere.
In 1825, French King Charles X offered a deal: France would recognise Haitian independence — but only if Haiti paid an indemnity of 150 million francs.
Compensation for whom?: The 150 million francs was not aid to Haiti. It was payment to former French slave-owners, compensating them for the 'loss' of their plantations and of the people they had enslaved.
Haiti's government, under President Jean-Pierre Boyer, agreed under threat of French warships anchored off the coast. The sum was roughly ten times Haiti's annual government revenue — impossible to pay outright.
So Haiti borrowed from French banks to make the payments, creating a cycle of debt on top of debt. Haiti did not finish repaying this debt and its related loans until 1947.
1825
Charles X demands 150 million francs for recognition; Haiti agrees under naval threat.
1825–1830s
Haiti borrows from French banks to fund the payments, adding interest on top of the original sum.
1838
The original debt is renegotiated down to 90 million francs — still crushing.
1947
Haiti finally finishes repaying the debt and related loans, over a century later.
Freedom in 1804, but the bill kept coming for 143 more years.
Why this matters for 'identity': A nation born from the world's only successful uprising of enslaved people had to spend generations paying its former enslaver — a huge obstacle to building schools, infrastructure, and stability for its new identity.