Ch' 20: Africa and the Atlantic Slave Trade - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Ch' 20: Africa and the Atlantic Slave Trade

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Portugal led the way in exploring the African coast ... Other nations followed Portugal, brought competition ... Warfare typified much of Sub-Sahara Africa ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Ch' 20: Africa and the Atlantic Slave Trade


1
Ch. 20 Africa and the Atlantic Slave Trade
2
The Atlantic Slave Trade
  • Portugal led the way in exploring the African
    coast
  • Established cities/factories for trade
  • El Mina
  • Luanda
  • Other nations followed Portugal, brought
    competition
  • Development of sugar plantations need for slave
    labor

El Mina, a Portuguese coastal fortress
3
How Many Slaves Were Exported?
  • As many as 12 million over four hundred years
  • High mortality low birth rates high demand
    for slaves
  • Brazil received 42 of slaves
  • Trans-Saharan slave trade was mostly in women in
    Islamic lands
  • Trans-Atlantic trade took men for agricultural
    labor

4
Development of the Slave Trade
  • Portugal controlled most of it
  • From 1630 on, competition increased
  • Dutch seized El Mina
  • British Royal Africa Company
  • Followed by France
  • Purchases of slaves made through local rulers
  • Slave prices were based on the healthy male
    Indies Piece
  • Triangular trade developed

5
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6
African Slave Trade I
7
African Societies, Slavery, and the Slave Trade
  • Traditions of slavery deeply engrained in
    economic systems and social hierarchy
  • In Islam, slavery accepted, but only non-Muslims

8
Slavery and African Politics
  • Europeans tapped into the established slave trade
  • Settled along the coast
  • Intensified the slave trade
  • Warfare typified much of Sub-Sahara Africa
  • Ghana and Songhay took advantage became
    intermediaries in slave trade

9
West Coast Asante/Dahomey East Coast
Swahili/Sudan
  • Serve as examples of the impact of slave trade
  • Asante (Ashanti) rose to prominence during the
    slave trade
  • Ruled along the Gold Coast
  • Ruled for two centuries (1650-1820)
  • Dahomey
  • Traded slaves for European firearms
  • Swahili Coast on the East Coast of Africa brought
    ivory, gold, slaves from the interior

10
South Africa
  • Bantu peoples in southern Africa were organized
    around small chiefdoms
  • Southern expansion brought Dutch contact
  • Settlers moving inland from Cape Colony looking
    for farmland
  • British control from 1815 led to warfare with
    Bantu
  • Boer Great Trek

11
African Slave Trade II
12
Zulu Rise to Power
  • Shaka chief of the Zulu (1818)
  • Created a powerful state that survived his death
  • All of southern Africa was involved in turmoil
    called mfecane (1815 1840)

13
The African Diaspora
  • Slave trade not only forcibly brought slaves into
    a different culture, it brought foreign products
    into Africa
  • The Middle Passage was traumatic for slaves and
    often lethal
  • Africans in the Americans often employed in
    agricultural labor

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16
Slave Societies in the Americas
  • A hierarchy developed distinguishing saltwater
    slaves (newly arrived) from creole descendants
  • Creoles could gain more skilled work in better
    conditions
  • N. American slave population had a higher birth
    rate
  • Less need for new slaves
  • More cut off from Africa than slaves in other
    areas

17
End of the Slave Trade / Abolition of Slavery
  • Abolition resulted from changes outside of Africa
  • Main change was from European intellectuals
  • William Wilberforce
  • British stopped the slave trade in 1807
  • Slavery was finally abolished in the Americas
    when Brazil stopped the practice in 1888

18
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