1 / 17

Africa & the Age of the Atlantic Slave Trade

Africa & the Age of the Atlantic Slave Trade. Chapter 20 pg. 432-454. the Sudan (savannas of W. Af). Hausa & Yoruba. Asante. Dahomey. Swahili Coast (E. Africa). Kongo. The Atlantic Slave Trade. Portugal established pattern mirrored by other Europeans Factories

sileas
Download Presentation

Africa & the Age of the Atlantic Slave Trade

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Africa & the Age of the Atlantic Slave Trade Chapter 20 pg. 432-454

  2. the Sudan (savannas of W. Af) Hausa & Yoruba Asante Dahomey Swahili Coast (E. Africa) Kongo

  3. The Atlantic Slave Trade • Portugal established pattern mirrored by other Europeans • Factories • First contact based on mutually beneficial trade of goods • Atlantic slave trade result of historical progression

  4. Trend Toward Expansion • 12 million Africans shipped on Middle Passage b/t 1450-1850 • 1700s great age of Atlantic slavery • Sugar = impetus for expansion • Brazil, Caribbean • Demographics perpetuates trade

  5. Demographic Patterns • Male slaves preferred in Atlantic • Female slaves preferred in Africa & Middle East • Trade’s impact on population hotly debated

  6. Organization of the Trade • Control reflected situation in Europe • European mortality & complex routes of trade prevented domination by either side • Triangle Trade

  7. African Societies How did the Atlantic slave trade change earlier slave patterns already inherent in African society?

  8. Slaving & African Politics • Expansion of states & slaving wars both a cause & result of Atlantic trade • Slaving societies vs. Slaved societies • Role of the gun ↔ slave cycle

  9. Asante & Dahomey • Political & cultural development parallel Europe’s in many ways • Yet economies became increasingly dominated by slave trade ex: ↳Asante ↳Dahomey

  10. East Africa & the Sudan E. Af • Area of competing interests: African, Middle Eastern, European • luxury items & slaves still largely for Middle Eastern markets Sudan • Renewed Islamization further changed culture & intensified slavery

  11. South Africa • Little affected by slave trade Whites • Competitive climate for land • Bantu farmers in interior, Dutch Boers/Afrikaners create coastal outpost but pushed to interior by British colonists Africans (Mfecane & Zulu) • Shaka Zulu organized militarized tribal expansion that either unified or destroyed rivals • Clashed w/ Portuguese to East & Boers/British to South • Established patterns b/t Af & Europeans

  12. The African Diaspora • Diaspora = • Slavery became vehicle for globalized Africa Slave Lives • destruction of village → march to coast → loaded on ships → Middle Passage

  13. Africans in the Americas • African slaves performed all jobs, but agriculture dominated • In places, slaves outnumbered whites creating fear & tighter controls

  14. American Slave Societies • Slaveholders racially organized society • Whites • American-born & Mulatto slaves • African-born slaves • slaves organized society by ethnicity • African-born slaves were larger part of population in Latin America, thus had greater influence

  15. People & Gods in Exile • African culture remained important although fused with other beliefs • Religion • Resistance more common in Latin America than N. America

  16. End of Slave Trade & Abolition • Abolition movements come from outside forces (Enlightenment) • Economic self-interest was not major force ending slave trade • 1807: slave trade abolished • 1888: world slavery abolished

  17. Global Connections • Africa enters the world economy, for better or worse • Africa forced to adapt in ways that weakened it & aided colonization • Legacy of the slave trade lingers long after slavery was abolished

More Related