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Transatlantic Slave Trade World History

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Page 1: Transatlantic Slave Tradebarikmo.weebly.com/uploads/5/1/0/5/5105537/slavery.pdf · Slavery was a universal institution in the ancient world but it was a dominant labor force only

Transatlantic Slave Trade

World History

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Ancient World Civilizations

Assyria

Babylonia

China

Egypt

India

Persia

Mesopotamia

Slavery was a universal institution in the ancient world but it was a dominant labor force only in a small number of societies.

First true slave society - Ancient Greece (6th to 4th Century)

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Old World vs. New World

Slavery

Classical world and medieval slavery was not based on racial distinctions.

Ancient world did not necessarily view slavery as a permanent condition.

Slaves did not necessarily hold the loest status in early civilizations.

Slaves in the old world often were symbols of prestige, luxury and power (true even in the ne world prior to European Colonization).

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How was slavery justified?

Early civilizations - accident or bad luck.

Aristotle - notion of the “natural slave”

Christian world - „Curse of Ham”

18th Century European - pseudo-scientific

racism.

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Why was Africa vulnerable to the

Slave Trade?

Political Fragmentation

Sailing Routes

Availability of People (high birth rate)

Civilizations and Skills (metalworking, farming, herding)

No diplomatic repercussions.

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Why not others?

Disease

Knowledge of terrain

Different Agricultural Skills

Supply deficit

Nation American women worked - not men!

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Countries Participating

Britain

Denmark

France

Holland

Portugal

Spain

Norway

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Why did European powers

eventually turn to African labor?

Labor supply was insufficient. Epidemics reduced the native population by 50% - 90%.

Evidence of deeply help racist sentiment. Racism was a consequence of racial slavery as well as a cause.

In English colonies the supply of servants decreased.

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9

The Atlantic Slave Trade

Where to?

5%

60%

35%

65%

30%

5%

Where from?

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Geography of Slavery

Enslaved Africans mostly came from the area stretching from the Senegal River in Africa to Angola.

Europeans divided the area into five regions:

Upper Guinea Coast

Ivory Coast

Lower Guinea Coast

Gabon

Angola

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Regional Divisions in Africa

Upper Guinea Coast (bound by the Senegal and Gambia Rivers)

Ivory Coast (Central Liberia)

Lower Guinea Coast (Divided into the Gold Coast on the west, the Slave Coast and Benin)

Gabon

Angola

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Comparison of Slavery in the

Americas

North America Latin America

No Legal Protection

Cruel Punishments

Slaves were sold apart

“Better” diet, housing, medical care Had to produce their own food, higher

death rates, low proportion of women.

Half of all slaves worked on plantations

with 20 or fewer slaves.

Up to 500 slaves on a plantation.

Slave owners live on plantation Absentee ownership common.

Two-category system of racial

categorization

Wide range of racial gradations

(Spanish/.Portuuese

Slavery depended on the loyalty of non

slaveholding whiles. 3/4 owned no

slaves

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How did slavery differ from

indentured servitude?

Indentured Servitude Slavery

Contracted Time Period For life/freedom was not

contractual.

Could be bought, sold, or

leased.

Could be punished by

whipping.

Were allowed to own

property.

Not property owners.

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Why Africa?

Sailing Routes

Lack of Familiarity with

the Americas

Availability of People

Civilizations and Skills

Metal Working

Farming

Hearding

No diplomatic

repercussions

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15

Number of people enslaved

•30 million

taken from their

homes •10 million die during capture phase

•10 million die during middle passage

•10 million survive to make it over the ocean

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Two main patterns of Triangular

Trade

Rum from New

England to West

Africa

Slaves to sugar islands

Molasses home to the

New England

distilleries

Manufactured goods

from England to

Africa

Goods exchanged for

slaves taken to West

Indies. Profits used to

purchase sugar (and

other goods) for

England.

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Middle Passage Origins of the Infamous Middle Passage

The middle leg of a three part voyage.

Began and ended in Europe.

Carried cargo of iron, cloth, brandy, firearms, gunpowder

Lnded on Africa‟s Slave Coast and exchanged cargo for Africans

Set sail for the Americas, where slaves were exchanged for sugar, tobacco, mlasses.

Final brought the ship back to Europe.

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Middle Passage 1600 - 1850‟s

The Capture

Approx. 60 forts build along the west coast of Africa.

Walked in slave caravans to the forts some 1000 miles away.

Selected by the Europeans and branded.

One half survived the death march.

Place in underground dungeons until they were boarded on ships.

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Middle Passage Statistics

10-16 million Africans forcibly transported across the

Atlantic from 1500-1900.

2 million died during the Middle Passage (10-15%)

Another 15-30% dies during the march to the coast.

For every 100 slaves that reached the New World, another

40 died in Africa or during the Middle Passage.

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Middle Passage

Conditions on Board the Ship

Slaves chained together and crammed into

spaces sometimes less than five feet high.

Slavers packed three of four hundred

Africans into the ship cargo holds.

Little ventilation, human waste, horrific

odors. Unclean.

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British Slave Ship

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Middle Passage

Tight packing - belly to back, chained in twos, wrist to ankle (660+), naked.

Loose packing - shoulder to shoulder chained wrist to wrist or ankle to ankle.

Men and woman separated (men placed towards bow, women toward stern).

Fed once of twice a day and brought on deck for limited times.

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Middle Passage

Journey lasted 6-8 weeks.

Due to high mortality rate, cargo was insured (reimbursed for drowning accidents but not for deaths from disease of sickness)

Common to dump your cargo for sickness or food shortages.

Slave mutinies on board ships were common (1 out of every 10 voyages across the Atlantic experience a revolt).

Covert resistance (attempted suicide, jumped overboard, refusal to eat).

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Destination of Captives

Caribbean 40%

Brazil 40%

Latin America 10%

British North America 10%

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Slave Exports and Profits

Early 18th Century - 36,000 per year

During 1780‟s - 80,000 per year

Between 1740-1810 - 60,000 captives/year on average.

17th Century - slave sold in the Americas for about $150\

Slave trade illegal in Britain in 1807, US 1808, France 1831, Spain 1834.

Once declared illegal prices went much higher. 1850s prime field hand $1200 - $1500 (about $18,00 in 1997 dollars).

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Slave Resistance:

Passive and Active Resistance

Breaking tools

Faking illness

Staging slowdowns

Committing acts of

arson and sabotage

Running Away

Underground Railroad

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Slave Revolts

Late 18th Century slave revolts erupted in Guadeloupe, Grenada, Jamaica, Surinam, Haiti, Venezuela, Winward Islands

Within the United States slave revolts were common as well. Richmond, Virginia, Louisiana, Charleston, South Carolina.

Denmark Vesey

The Amistad

Nat Turner

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Legacy of Slavery

Agriculture

Rice

Sweet Potatoes

Herding

Basketry

Working Style

(cooperative labor)

Planting (heel to toe)

Food

Spices (red pepper,

sesame, cajun)

Okra, black eyed peas

Rice

Dishes

Gumbo, jambalaya

Ash and hot cakes

Sweet potato pie

Music

Banjo

Drum

Blues/Jazz

Call and response

Spirituals

Religion

Call and response patterns

Emotional services

Multiple spirits and souls

Voodoo

Tales and Words

Trickster takes (Anansi

the Spider, Brer Rabbit,

Bugs Bunny)

Words like bogus, bug,

phony, yam, tote, gumbo,

tater, jamboree, jazz.

Creole Language