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Atlantic Slave Trade Europeans bought and sold Africans to work their plantations in the New World. Why did they choose Africans? How did this system exist for so long?
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Causes of African Slavery Need for labor on plantations in New World colonies Natives difficult – Offered resistance – Knew land better – Died from disease, warfare, poor treatment – Exception: Spanish empire’s encomienda system Advantages for enslaving Africans – Already exposed to European diseases – Experience in similar farming techniques – Less likely to escape – Skin color made easier to catch if escaped Atlantic Slave Trade – buying and selling of Africans for work in the Americas – Spanish took early lead – More than 40% of slaves brought to Brazil
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Slavery Wasn’t New Spread of Islam in the 7 th century increased slavery & the slave trade – Muslim rulers justified enslavement with belief that POWs could be sold as slaves – 17M people sold between 650- 1600 to North Africa and Southwest Asia – Could escape bondage in African societies, incl. by marriage to family they served Eastern Slave Trade (Muslim Slave Trade) – Treated slaves as human beings as well as property Could take legal action Own property Own slaves Get married No separation from children under 7 years old – Banned mistreatment of slaves – Freeing slaves was virtuous act – Barred Muslims from enslaving other Muslims – Still involved serious breaches of human rights & restricted freedom – Most worked as house servants – Not wholly motivated by economics Military service Smaller workshops, farms, building projects, mining Sexual slavery – Came from non-Muslim Africa, central and Eastern Europe, and central Asia
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Spread of Slavery Shippers in order of scale: Portuguese, British, French, Spanish, Dutch, & North Americans England dominated slave trade from 1609-1807 when it abolished the slave trade – Transported 1.7M to the West Indies – 400,000 sold to North American colonies Population steadily grew once there 2M by 1830 African cooperation – Rulers & merchants willingly sold captives for profit along coastal port cities From West and Central Africa – Traded for gold, guns, & other goods African resistance – Some voiced opposition – King Affonso I
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Triangular Trade Transatlantic trading network between Europe, Africa, and the Americas Manufactured goods from Europe to Africa Slaves from Africa to the Americas – Middle Passage – voyage that brought captured Africans to the West Indies Bad conditions for both slaves & sailors Disease + physical abuse ~20% died each trip Crops & goods from Americas to Europe
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Slavery in the Americas Sold at auction – Work fields: coffee, cocoa, cotton, tobacco, & sugar plantations – Work in house Developed new cultural heritage – Kept music & stories – Combined native religions with Christianity = santaria Thousands ran away – Laws existed to return slaves to owners – Punished upon return
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Consequences of the Slave Trade Africa – Cultures lost generations of fittest members – Families torn apart – Women took roles formerly belonging to men – Population decline, but was able to recover – Introduced guns to the continent Made some groups more powerful than others Gave rise to great African kingdoms Americas – Labor contribution – African culture brought to Americas – Substantial African-American populations today
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Discussion Points Role of Africans in the slave trade vs. popular perception today Ways economy impacts society Evolution of human rights Term “African American”
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Resources Slave Voyages Database http://www.slavevoyages.org/tast/databas e/search.faces http://www.slavevoyages.org/tast/databas e/search.faces Exploring Africa: The Atlantic Slave Trade http://exploringafrica.matrix.msu.edu/stu dents/curriculum/m7b/activity1.php http://exploringafrica.matrix.msu.edu/stu dents/curriculum/m7b/activity1.php Met Museum Thematic Essay http://www.metmuseum.org/toah/hd/slav /hd_slav.htm http://www.metmuseum.org/toah/hd/slav /hd_slav.htm
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