King Charles Supports Study into British Royal Family's Links to Slavery, Marking a Historic First

It's thought to be the first time Buckingham Palace is cooperating with an investigation into the royal family's colonial past

MALTON, ENGLAND - APRIL 05: King Charles III visits the Talbot Yard food court on April 05, 2023 in Malton, England. The King and Queen Consort are visiting Yorkshire to meet local producers and charitable organisations.
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King Charles is opening the archives for an investigation into the British royal family's ties to the transatlantic slave trade.

On Wednesday, The Guardian reported that Buckingham Palace is aiding a Ph.D. research project co-sponsored by Historic Royal Palaces examining the historical ties that bind the monarchy and slavery.

While the palace did not comment on a newly discovered document showing that King William III received over $1,200 in shares in the slave-trading Royal African Company from Edward Colston in 1689, a spokesperson said that related research is supported by King Charles.

"This is an issue that His Majesty takes profoundly seriously. As His Majesty told the Commonwealth heads of government reception in Rwanda last year: 'I cannot describe the depths of my personal sorrow at the suffering of so many, as I continue to deepen my own understanding of slavery's enduring impact,' " a palace spokesperson told The Guardian.

"That process has continued with vigour and determination since His Majesty's accession. Historic Royal Palaces is a partner in an independent research project, which began in October last year, that is exploring, among other issues, the links between the British monarchy and the transatlantic slave trade during the late 17th and 18th centuries," they continued. "As part of that drive, the royal household is supporting this research through access to the royal collection and the royal archives."

Prince Charles, Prince of Wales and Camilla, Duchess of Cornwall during a visit to the Kigali Memorial for Victims of the 1994 Rwandan genocide on June 22, 2022 in Kigali, Rwanda. Prince Charles, The Prince of Wales has attended five of the 24 Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting meetings held since 1971: Edinburgh in 1997, Uganda in 2007, Sri Lanka in 2013 (representing The Queen), Malta in 2015 and the UK in 2018. It was during the UK CHOGM that it was formally announced that The Prince would succeed The Queen as Head of the Commonwealth. Leaders of Commonwealth countries meet every two years for the meeting which is hosted by a different member country on a rotating basis.
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The illuminating statement is thought to be the first time Buckingham Palace has publicly voiced support for, and cooperation with, an investigation into the royal family's history with colonialism.

The paper reports the research is from historian Camilla de Koning at the University of Manchester, examining "the monarchy's involvement in the slave trade and engagement with the empire," with a goal of completion by 2026. Historic Royal Palaces, the co-sponsor, is an independent charity that manages and maintains some unoccupied royal properties for the crown.

Dr. Edmond Smith, who is supervising the project, told the BBC that the British monarchy has "often been left out of discussions" on the transatlantic slave trade, describing the missing history as an "important hole that needed to be filled through the research."

"How the royal household may take that research on board is something we can only hope to see develop in the coming years," Smith said.

Prince Charles
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King Charles, 74, and Prince William both addressed the atrocities of slavery and Britain's role in it during speeches abroad last year. The King spoke about the subject in his opening speech at the Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting in Rwanda (the first British royal visit) in June 2022, expressing his "personal sorrow" and urging the importance of finding "new ways to acknowledge our past."

He also reiterated the royal family's longstanding position that the onus is on Commonwealth countries to make the move towards becoming a republic, if they so wish, and drop the British monarch (then Queen Elizabeth) as head of state.

Catherine Duchess of Cambridge and Prime Minister of Jamaica Andrew Holness (R) listen as Prince William, Duke of Cambridge speaks during a dinner hosted by the Governor General of Jamaica at King's House on March 23, 2022 in Kingston, Jamaica. The Duke and Duchess of Cambridge are visiting Belize, Jamaica and The Bahamas on behalf of Her Majesty The Queen on the occasion of the Platinum Jubilee. The 8 day tour takes place between Saturday 19th March and Saturday 26th March and is their first joint official overseas tour since the onset of COVID-19 in 2020.
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Prince William, 40, denounced slavery during his tour of the Caribbean with his wife, Kate Middleton — which was met with protests about colonialism — last year.

"I want to express my profound sorrow. Slavery was abhorrent. And it should never have happened," he said at a diplomatic dinner hosted by the Governor General of Jamaica in March 2022, acknowledging his country's role in the trafficking of people to the Caribbean and the United States.

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In conversation with The Guardian, the historian who discovered the King William III Royal African Company document said that while King Charles' support of the new research is promising, its scope "does not go anywhere near far enough."

"This is an interesting development, and the expression of support may sound progressive, but a full investigation into the monarchy's extensive, centuries-long involvement in the transatlantic slave trade and slavery, and the wealth successive monarchs accumulated from it, would need a team of researchers and forensic accountants, fully resourced," Dr. Brooke Newman of Virginia Commonwealth University said.

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