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Transatlantic slave trade

Transatlantic slave trade. The Door of No Return. Transatlantic Slave Trade. Why? European colonization of Americas Spain Portugal England Europeans thirst for New World (Americas) items fuels growth of plantations Sugar Tobacco Cotton Molasses Rum

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Transatlantic slave trade

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  1. Transatlantic slave trade The Door of No Return

  2. Transatlantic Slave Trade • Why? • European colonization of Americas • Spain • Portugal • England • Europeans thirst for New World (Americas) items fuels growth of plantations • Sugar • Tobacco • Cotton • Molasses • Rum • Disease, overwork kills millions of Native Americans; new labor force needed

  3. Why Africans? • No written language • Some disease resistance; already exposed to Europeans through trade activities, attempts “civilize” • No muskets, gunpowder • Slave trade already existed on the continent • Prisoners of war • Some sold themselves into slavery during famines • Treated as servants rather than property • “A slaves who knows how to serve inherits his master’s property” • Between 1450 and 1800 historians estimate 10-20 MILLION Africans were kidnapped and sold into slavery • 5% brought to North America

  4. How? • Africans became enslaved mainly through four ways: • criminals sold by the chiefs as punishment; • free Africans conducted raids for African and European gangs • domestic slaves resold • prisoners of war. Source: AduBoahen (University of Ghana)

  5. “The Door of No Return” – Goree Island, Senegal

  6. Cape Coast Castle, West Africa

  7. What was Triangular Trade? • Three leg route • Europe • Africa • America • Europe to Africa • Cloth, firearms, beads, • spirits, tobacco • Africa to Americas • “Middle Passage” • Slaves • Americas to Europe • Raw materials: cotton, • Sugar, rum, tobacco

  8. Triangular Trade

  9. Middle Passage • Slaves loaded on ships • Horrific conditions • Diseases including small pox, dysentery • Those too sick to continue journey thrown overboard • Literally stripped of humanity • No clothes • No dignity • Treated as cargo • Hands/feet chained together • Fed only once daily, sometimes not at all • Clip from the movie “Amistad” • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Vo-JejTp7O4

  10. Middle Passage: Tight Pack Tight pack meant as many as 400 slaves: high deaths but high profits

  11. Middle Passage: Loose Pack A loose pack meant fewer slaves: lower deaths and lower profits

  12. Coping with Captivity • Occasionally, revolts took place on ships • Often quickly put down as slaveholder had advanced weapons • La Amistad revolt (1839) • Ship’s captain and much of crew killed • Remaining crew trick Africans – end up in America • President John Quincy Adams championed their cause • US Supreme Court rules in favor of Africans; allowed to return home • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2W9N44PixDk

  13. Coping with Captivity • Life in the Colonies • Caribbean • Spain • Sugar plantations • Brazil • Portugal • Mining • North America (West Indies & colonies) • England: dominated slave trade by 1600’s • Cotton, craft workers, domestic servants • Long hours, brutal conditions, no freedoms • To cope kept cultural traditions alive, turned to religion, slowed work pace, occasionally rebelled

  14. African Diaspora • Diaspora: from the Greek, means “spreading out” • Movement of Africans and their descendants to places throughout the world • the America • Europe • Middle East • Caused the spread of African culture to Americas, Western Europe

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