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Africa and the Africans in the Age of the Atlantic Slave Trade

25. Africa and the Africans in the Age of the Atlantic Slave Trade. 25. Africa and the Atlantic Slave Trade Flash Cards: m iddle passage Olaudah Equiano. The Atlantic Slave Trade. Portuguese Move south Angola Luanda, 1570s Mbundu people Mozambique Gold trade from Monomotapa

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Africa and the Africans in the Age of the Atlantic Slave Trade

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  1. 25 Africa and the Africans in the Age of the Atlantic Slave Trade

  2. 25 Africa and the Atlantic Slave Trade Flash Cards: middle passage OlaudahEquiano

  3. The Atlantic Slave Trade • Portuguese • Move south • Angola • Luanda, 1570s • Mbundu people • Mozambique • Gold trade from Monomotapa • Few settlers

  4. The Atlantic Slave Trade • Common European pattern • Trading stations • Slave trade becomes central

  5. Portuguese Contact and Penetration of Africa

  6. Trend Toward Expansion • 1450-1850 • 12-20 million Africans sent across Atlantic • ¼ - ½ die in middle passage • 18th century • Height of slave trade • 80% of total trade

  7. Trend Toward Expansion • Muslim areas • Trans-Saharan, Red Sea, East Africa • 3 million slaves traded • to Middle East and Indian Ocean basin

  8. Demographic Patterns • Saharan trade • Mostly women • Atlantic trade • Primarily young men for hard labor

  9. Demographic Patterns

  10. Demographic Patterns

  11. Organization of the Trade • Portuguese dominate first • to 1630 • Dutch • Seize El Mina, 1630 • Rival Portuguese • English • Slave trade from 1660s

  12. Organization of the Trade • French • 18th century • Dahomey • Royal monopoly on flow of slaves

  13. Organization of the Trade • Economic importance? • Same profits as other trade • Value tied up with plantation and mining economy • Definitely ties Africa to global economy

  14. African Societies, Slavery, and the Slave Trade • African slave traditions changed • Intensified use of slaves

  15. Slaving and African Politics • West and Central Africa • Small, volatile states • Warfare endemic • Military becomes important • Feeds into slave trade • European influence • States close to coast dominate

  16. Asante and Dahomey • Asante Empire • Akan people • Center at Kumasi • Between the coast and Hause and Mande regions • 1650, Oyoko clan • Firearms • Centralization, expansion

  17. Asante and Dahomey • Asante Empire • Osei Tutu • Asantehene • Dutch • Trade directly with Asante

  18. Asante and Dahomey • Benin • Controls trade with Europeans, but not slave trade

  19. Dahomey • Fon peoples • Center at Abomey • Firearms by 1720s • Agaja (1708-1740) • Expansion • Takes port of Whydah

  20. Dahomey • Other developments • Divine right kingship • Akin to European absolutism • Some states limit royal power • Oyo, Yoruba peoples • King and council • Artistic achievements • Especially Benin, the Yoruba

  21. East Africa and the Sudan • East coast • Swahili trading towns • Ivory, gold slaves to Middle East • Zanzibar • Cloves • Interior • Luo dynasties in great lakes area

  22. East Africa and the Sudan • Bunyoro, Buganda • Monarchies • Northern Savanna • New Islamization • Songhay breaks up in 1500s • Successor states • Pagan Bambara of Segu • Muslim Hausa states in northern Nigeria

  23. East Africa and the Sudan • Muslim reform movements, from 1770s • Usuman Dan Fodio, 1804 • Hausa states • New kingdom of Sokoto

  24. White Settlers and Africans in Southern Africa • Bantu into southern Africa by 1500 • Left arid areas to Khoikhoi, San • Agriculture, pastoralism • Iron, copper • Chiefdoms common

  25. White Settlers and Africans in Southern Africa • Capetown • Dutch colony, 1652 • Estates worked by slaves • Wars with San, Khoikhoi • By 1760s, encounter Bantu • 1795, Britain occupies colony • 1815, possession • After 1834, Afrikaners push beyond boundaries

  26. The Mfecane and theZulu Rise to Power • Nguni people • 1818, Shaka creates Zulu chiefdom • 1828, assassinated • Beginning of mfecane • Mfecane • Period of disruption, wandering • Defeated into new areas • Swazi, Lesotho

  27. The African Diaspora • Slave trade joined Africa to world economy • Millions killed • Families destroyed • Plantation system • Miscegenation

  28. The People and Gods in Exile • Dynamic, creative • Religion adaptive • Haitian vodun • Muslim Africans • 1835, Brazil • Muslim Yoruba and Hausa slaves

  29. The People and Gods in Exile • Palmares, Brazil • 1600s, runaway slave state • Jamaica • “Maroons” • runaway slaves form community in mountains • Suriname • Fusion culture formed by runaway slaves

  30. The End of the Slave Trade and the Abolition of Slavery • Slave trade ended outside of Africa • Denmark was quietly first, 1802 • great effort by Britain, 1807 • followed by USA, 1808 • Causes? • Not because of economic self-interest • Influence of Enlightenment

  31. Global Connections: Africa and the African Diaspora in World Context • Africa linked with world economy • Especially after 1750 • Millions of Africans enslaved

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