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Slavery

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First the Portuguese and later the Spanish, British, French and Dutch seized ... sale of gold and slaves in return for guns and gunpowder from European nations ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Slavery


1
Slavery
  • The Atlantic System

2
Sub-Sahara Africa
  • Starting in the 1400s the west coast of Africa
    came under the influence of European explorers
  • First the Portuguese and later the Spanish,
    British, French and Dutch seized cities, built
    fortresses, and established permanent colonies
  • Europeans began to exploit the natural resources
    of Africa such as gold, spices, ivory either
    through trade or force

3
Sub-Sahara Africa
  • Soon Europeans found the need for a new natural
    resource in the New World
  • With the plantation system and the need for labor
    which the Native Americans were unwilling to
    fulfill the Portuguese and later the other
    European nations found a need for slaves

4
West and Central Africa
  • Quickly the number of slaves and slave ship
    increased from Africa to the New World
  • At first European nations only took slaves from
    the coastal areas because they were unable to
    gain entrance into the interiors of Africa
  • By the mid-1800s Europeans were able to explore
    and colonize the interior regions of Africa

5
Songhai
  • Askia Mohammed

6
Songhai
  • As the Kingdom of Mali began to decline a new
    Askia Mohammed a skilled general who expanded the
    boundaries of Songhai while also promoting the
    arts and culture of the Songhai Kingdom
  • Songhai reached its height between 1500 to 1590

7
Kingdom of the Kongo
  • Another large and rich kingdom was that of the
    Kongo in west central Africa
  • The people of the Kongo were skilled in working
    with wood, copper and iron
  • There was a division of labor within this
    cultural kingdom

8
Kingdom of the Kongo
  • In the late 1400s the Portuguese come into
    contact with the Kongo
  • Christian missionaries convert the kingdom when
    they are able to convert Nzinga Mvemba the ruler
    of the Kongo
  • Both Portugal and the Kongo exchanged ambassadors
    and at first dealt with each other on an equal
    basis.

9
Kingdom of the Kongo
  • Soon however Portugals need for slaves caused
    the Portuguese to enslave the people of the Kongo
  • Mvemba and the people of the Kongo attempted to
    stop the slave trade and drive the Portuguese out
    of the Kongo
  • The attempt to push out the Portuguese was not
    successful-Portugal had established a strong
    dominance over
  • Trade in the Kongo
  • Portugal had better technology to overcome the
    Kongo and its people

10
The Gold Coast
  • Cooperation with the Slave Trade
  • During the 1400s many African nations were
    formed through trade with Europeans
  • Many West African nations emerge
  • Oyo
  • Benin
  • Dahomey
  • Kongo
  • Asante (Ashanti)

11
The Gold Coast
  • Cooperation with the Slave Trade
  • Many of these new nations were warring with other
    older or emerging nations
  • Due to this warring nature prisoners of war were
    often sold into European slave markets
    established along the West African coast
  • Africans were selling Africans into slavery

12
The Gold Coast
  • Asante
  • Established in 1680 by Osei Tutu
  • Became a strong African nation because of its
    sale of gold and slaves in return for guns and
    gunpowder from European nations
  • Because of this West Africa became known as the
    Gold Coast
  • Asante was one of the few places that had
    abundant mineral and agricultural resources

13
African Slave Trade
  • Once slaves and the prospect for slaves dried up
    on the coast West Africans began warring against
    Central African nations
  • Europeans desire for slaves lead to constant
    warfare between African nations to obtain more
    slaves

14
Reasons for the Slave Trade
  • 1. The need for labor intensive work on the
    plantations
  • Planting, harvesting sugar
  • At first sugar plantations off the coast of
    Africa, Sao Tome and later Brazil and the
    Caribbean caused the need for labor to become
    more intense

15
Reasons for the Slave Trade
  • 2. Native American were not well suited to be
    slaves
  • The Catholic Church objected to native Americans
    being used as slaves
  • The native Americans were not well suited for the
    hard labor of slavery
  • Native Americans did not have knowledge of
    different activities like mining, agricultural
    work or sugar cultivation like Africans

16
The Atlantic Slave Trade
  • In 1518 the first recorded shipment of slaves
    was brought by the Portuguese from Africa to the
    New World
  • In the 1400s about 1,000 slaves a year were
    brought from Africa to the New World
  • In the 1500s about 2,000 slaves a year were
    brought to the New World

17
The Atlantic Slave Trade
  • During the 16th and 17th Century the need for
    slaves dramatically increased
  • 37 of all slaves brought to the New World went
    to Brazil
  • 15 went to Spanish America
  • By the 17th Century other European nations
    settled in the New World also needed slaves
  • 41 of slaves went to non-Spanish colonies

18
The Atlantic Slave Trade
  • Southern Colonies of British North America were
    slaves were used to grow crops such as tobacco
    and cotton accounted for 5 of the slaves

19
The Atlantic Slave Trade
  • In the 1600s more than 1 million slaves were
    transported from Africa
  • In the 1700s at the peak of the slave trade 6
    million slaves were transported to the New World

20
The Middle Passage
  • Most slaves were captives or prisoners of war
  • Often times slaves were separated from their
    families, mixed with other tribes, spoke
    different languages or practiced different
    customs

21
The Middle Passage
  • At the ports of West African countries slaves
    were loaded onto ships destine for the New World
  • This passage to the New World was known as the
    Middle Passage
  • Slave ships were build and loaded to carry as
    many slaves as possible to ensure greater profits

22
The Middle Passage
  • Slaves were chained together and then chained to
    the boat lying on their backs
  • Hundreds of other slaves were also be chained to
    the boat
  • Shackled in darkness and filth, seasickness and
    disease were rife. The heat in the hold could be
    over 90 degrees and the slaves would have no
    access to toilets or washing facilities.
  • So foul was the smell of slave ships that other
    vessels took care to steer well away from them.

23
The Middle Passage
  • Once at sea, the slaves were brought up out of
    their steamy dungeon each morning.
  • The men's' leg-irons were linked to a chain
    running down the centre of the ship's deck to
    prevent them jumping overboard. On some ships
    they were made to dance for exercise.
  • The slaves would receive their meal, usually a
    kind of porridge made from maize or millet. A
    second meal might be provided in the afternoon,
    usually the same as the first. While on deck a
    good captain had the slaves washed down with warm
    vinegar and scrubbed.  Some did not bother and in
    rough weather the slaves would not be allowed out
    at all.

24
The Middle Passage
  • In such conditions disease spread, and many
    slaves died. It was not rare for hundreds to die
    in an epidemic occasionally every African on
    board was dead by the time the ship entered
    Caribbean waters.
  • Their bodies would be thrown overboard.
  • The average voyage could last 6 week to 3 months

25
The Middle Passage
  • It has been estimated that between 9-11 million
    people were taken from Africa by European traders
    and landed alive on the other side of the
    Atlantic.
  • But as the average loss was 1/8 of all slaves it
    can be estimated that a further 1½ million
    Africans are buried in the Atlantic Ocean between
    Africa and the Americas.

26
The Triangle Trade
  • At the end of the voyage came the sale of  the
    cargo.
  • Africans were inspected for physical faults and
    auctioned like meat in a meat-market.
  • Families were split up forever and life as a
    plantation slave would begin.

27
The Triangle Trade
  • Meanwhile, the captains totted up the profits and
    the crew began cleaning out the ship to take on a
    cargo of colonial produce, which had to be
    carried in better conditions than the slaves had
    endured. As soon as the ship was ready and
    loaded, the final part of the Trade Triangle

28
The Return Passage
  • Having loaded the ships with sugar, tobacco and
    rum paid for from the proceeds of the sale of
    slaves, the captains would try to set sail for
    England on the final part of their triangular
    voyage before the Hurricane season began in
    mid-July.

29
The Return Passage
  • A ship that sank, or was wrecked near the English
    coast, could mean disaster for a single owner.
    This was the reason most merchant ventures shared
    the risk, and therefore the profit, by investing
    jointly in the trade.
  • This was a business venture and profit was to be
    made off the sale of slaves and the return of
    goods

30
The World Economy
  • Slavery was a crucial element in European
    economic life
  • By the 1800s every major nation had made a
    profit off the sale or use of slaves
  • This was evident by the reluctance of nations to
    make slavery illegal
  • The Triangle trade of slaves for goods and later
    the exchange of European finished goods
    (metalware, cotton textiles, processed alcohol
    gin and rum and fire arms) made the slave trade
    possible and profitable

31
The World Economy
Europe
Finished Goods
New World
Finished Goods
Raw Materials
Africa
African Slaves
New World
32
World Economy
  • In America the slaves would be traded for raw
    materials
  • Furs, tobacco, raw cotton, sugar and silver
  • The raw materials would then be transported back
    to Europe and turned into finished goods
  • In Africa finished European goods would be
    exchanged for
  • Gold, ivory, timber and slaves

33
World Economy
  • It was the ruthless expansion of Europeans into
    Africa and the exploitation of African goods
    including people (slaves) that accounted for the
    growth and expansion of European wealth from the
    1400s to the 1800s.
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