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  1. Enslaved young woman: We were mothers, fathers, husbands, wives, sons, daughters, farmers, priests, merchants, musicians. And for hundreds of years, we were sold into slavery as part of a war, or ...

    • Triangular Trade
    • Fellow Africans' Role in The Slave Trade
    • African Communities Beyond The Americas
    • Role of Resistance

    The trans-Atlantic slave trade was one leg of a three-part system known as the triangular trade. The forming of the triangle began when European ships, carrying firearms and manufactured goods, sailed to Africa, where the commodities were traded for enslaved men, women and children. Next, the same ships transported the human cargo across the Atlant...

    Another downplayed factor is the central role played by ruling African states in the capture and sale of fellow Africans to European traders—an estimated 90 percent of all captives. The main motivation behind these transactions was the acquisition of guns for use in inter-ethnic warfare. The enslaved were abducted from as far north as present-day S...

    Predating the trans-Atlantic slave trade were eastward and northbound slave-tradingenterprises known broadly as the Arab Slave Trade. They contributed significantly to the creation of an African diasporic presence in the Old World. “People from Ethiopia, Eritrea, Somalia and the Swahili Coast were deported as slaves to the Indian Peninsula,” says S...

    For the nearly four centuries before its abolition by all nations involved, “the trans-Atlantic slave trade not only influenced the composition of slave communities in the Americas, it also powerfully shaped slave resistance,” according to Marjoleine Kars, author of Blood on the River: A Chronicle of Mutiny and Freedom on the Wild Coast. “Take, for...

    • Nicholas Boston
  2. Aug 26, 2024 · The transatlantic slave trade involved the purchase by Europeans of enslaved men, women, and children from Africa and their transportation to the Americas, where they were sold for profit. Between 1517 and 1867, about 12.5 million Africans began the Middle Passage across the Atlantic, enduring cruel treatment, disease, and paralyzing fear ...

  3. Once the enslaved men and women had been sold in the Caribbean and the Americas, the ship’s captain used the money to buy goods produced by the enslaved workers on the plantations. Sailing back across the Atlantic to Bristol, the ships’ holds were filled, not with human beings, but with barrels of sugar, rum or tobacco.

  4. Feb 17, 2011 · Colonial purchases of British goods were a major stimulus to the economy. Around 1770, 96.3% of British exports of nails and 70.5% of the export of wrought iron went to colonial and African markets.

  5. The Church of England owned and operated Codrington, a profitable sugar plantation in Barbados where over 275 enslaved men, women, and children labored in hot, grueling conditions to plant, harvest, and produce sugar, which required a worker to stand over a boiling cauldron for more than 12 hours at a time. 117 Adam Hochschild, Bury the Chains: Prophets and Rebels in the Fight to Free an ...

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  7. After 1807: the Royal Navy and suppression of the slave trade. In 1808, the British West Africa Squadron was established to suppress illegal slave trading. Between 1820 and 1870, Royal Navy patrols seized over 1500 ships and freed 150,000 Africans destined for slavery in the Americas. Many people believed that the only way to eradicate slavery ...

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