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Africa and the Slave Trade CP World History Modern Era

Africa and the Slave Trade CP World History Modern Era

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Page 1: Africa and the Slave Trade CP World History Modern Era

Africa and the Slave

TradeCP World History Modern Era

Page 2: Africa and the Slave Trade CP World History Modern Era

Overall Look

Page 3: Africa and the Slave Trade CP World History Modern Era

Overall Look - 1

European expansion led to a dramatic increase in the slave trade

European settlement of the Americas in the 1490’s and the emergence of Sugarcane brought on an increased demand for enslaved Africans.

Plantations were established in the 1500’s along the coast of Brazil and on the Caribbean Islands for one main purpose to grow Sugarcane.

Page 4: Africa and the Slave Trade CP World History Modern Era

Overall Look- 2Native Americans

that survived the settlement of Europeans could not supply the labor needed to grow and maintain sugarcane so enslaved Africans were shipped to the Americas to relieve a labor shortage on plantations.

Page 5: Africa and the Slave Trade CP World History Modern Era

• On August 18, 1518: Charles V grants his Flemish courtier Lorenzo de Gorrevod permission to import 4000 African slaves into New Spain- Making it the first true time first enslaved Africans directly from Africa to the Americas

OVERALL LOOK - 3

Page 6: Africa and the Slave Trade CP World History Modern Era

TRIANGULAR TRADE – colonial trade route among Europe and its colonists, the West Indies and Africa in which goods

were exchanged for slaves

Page 7: Africa and the Slave Trade CP World History Modern Era

OVERALL LOOK - 4The triangular trade functioned as follows: • European merchant ships

carried European manufactured goods, such as guns and cloth, to Africa where they were traded for enslaved people. Enslaved Africans were then sent to the Americas and sold. • European merchants then

bought tobacco, molasses, sugar, and raw cotton in the Americas and shipped them back to Europe.

As many as 10 million enslaved Africans were brought to the Americas during this brutal process

Page 8: Africa and the Slave Trade CP World History Modern Era

MIDDLE PASSAGE -- The horrible second leg of the triangular trade in which Europeans brought Africans across the Atlantic Ocean to the West Indies

Page 9: Africa and the Slave Trade CP World History Modern Era

Overall Look - 5

• Many enslaved Africans died during the Middle Passage.

• Those who survived often died from diseases because they had little or no immunity to the germs and diseases that they encountered during the Middle Passage.

• Death rates were higher for newly arrived enslaved Africans than for those born and reared in the Americas.

Page 10: Africa and the Slave Trade CP World History Modern Era
Page 11: Africa and the Slave Trade CP World History Modern Era

Overall Look - 6

• Although this was true, slaveholders rarely encouraged enslaved slaves to have children.

• Many slaveholders, especially on islands in the Caribbean, believed that buying a new enslaved person was less expensive than rearing a child from birth to working age.

Page 12: Africa and the Slave Trade CP World History Modern Era

Source and Progression of African Slavery

Page 13: Africa and the Slave Trade CP World History Modern Era

Before the coming of Europeans arrived in the 15th century, most enslaved persons in Africa were prisoners of war.

Europeans first bought enslaved people from African merchants at slave markets in return for gold, guns, or other European goods.

Source and Progression of African Slavery 1

Page 14: Africa and the Slave Trade CP World History Modern Era

Elmina Castle in Ghana

Page 15: Africa and the Slave Trade CP World History Modern Era

Slave Castle in Cape Coast, Ghana

Page 16: Africa and the Slave Trade CP World History Modern Era

Source and Progression of African Slavery - 2

• Local slave traders first obtained their supplies of enslaved persons from nearby coastal regions --- As demand grew, they had to move farther inland to find people to enslave.

• Some rulers eventually became concerned about the welfare of their own countries - King Afonso of Congo wrote to the king of Portugal, asking him to end the slave trade.

• Europeans and other Africans, however, generally ignored such protests.

Page 17: Africa and the Slave Trade CP World History Modern Era

Source and Progression of African Slavery - 3

Local rulers who traded in enslaved people viewed the slave trade as a source of income.

Page 18: Africa and the Slave Trade CP World History Modern Era

Impact of the Slave Trade

Page 19: Africa and the Slave Trade CP World History Modern Era

IMPACT OF THE SLAVE TRADE - 1

• The slave trade depopulated some areas and deprived many African communities of their youngest and strongest men and women.

• The desire of slave traders to provide a constant supply of enslaved persons increased warfare in Africa ---- Coastal or near-coastal African chiefs and their followers, armed with guns acquired from the trade in enslaved people, increased raids and wars on neighboring peoples.

Page 20: Africa and the Slave Trade CP World History Modern Era

IMPACT OF THE SLAVE TRADE - 2 The use of

enslaved Africans remained largely acceptable to European society.

Europeans continued to view Africans as inferior beings fit chiefly for slave labor.

Not until the Quakers, began to condemn slavery in the 1770s did feelings against slavery begin to build in Europe.

Page 21: Africa and the Slave Trade CP World History Modern Era

Impact of the Slave Trade - 3Even then, it was not

until the French Revolution in the 1790s that the French abolished slavery. The British ended the slave trade in 1807 and abolished slavery throughout the empire in 1833.

Slavery finally ended in the United States in the 1860’s with the oncoming Civil War.