The Heretic of Cacheu
Struggles over Life in a Seventeenth-Century West African Port
- Published: 3 July 2025
- ISBN: 9781802061598
- Imprint: Penguin eBooks
- Format: EBook
- Pages: 368
A stunning global history of West Africa, The Heretic of Cacheu weaves together the tragic histories of the Inquisition and the Atlantic slave trade. Drawing on archival research in three continents and presenting transformative new arguments in a profoundly moving narrative, with this new tour de force, Green confirms himself as the most innovative historian, writer, and thinker of his generation
Ana Lucia Araujo, author of <i>Humans in Shackles: An Atlantic History of Slavery</i>
This book is more than a biography of a great West African settlement. It is also about how Cacheu held the keys to prosperity and progress for generations of Atlantic traders. As in his previous works, Toby Green has, again, given agency to the people of the West African Coast, in this particular case especially to Crispina Peres
Hassoum Ceesay, Director General, National Centre of Arts and Culture, The Gambia
Toby Green has produced a book of rare distinction. Working across a range of inquisition sources, languages and spatial locations, he has shown the emotional effects of imperial slave trafficking on African inhabitants and colonial sojourners in Cacheu, modern-day Guinea-Bissau. To produce this remarkable book, he looks through the crystalline lens of the life story of the richest trader in the town, a woman called Crispina Peres. Green reveals human emotions by exhuming sources that catalogue daily lives governed by politics, fears, betrayal, treachery, promiscuity, affairs, revenge, cruelties, imprisonment and religious confessions. This is a substantial contribution to knowledge and our understanding of the social history of Africans and Europeans in seventeenth-century West Africa
Dr. José Lingna Nafafé, author of <i>Lourenço da Silva Mendonça and the Black Atlantic Abolitionist Movement in the Seventeenth Century</i>