Title: Section 2: Africa in an Age of Transition
1Section 2 Africa in an Age of Transition
6. The Slave Trade A. 15th century In
Southwest Asia and Europe, African slaves had
worked as domestic servants. B. 16th century
African slaves were shipped to the Americas to
work on plantations Indians had died of
diseases.
2SLAVE SHIPS
3C. Growth of Slave Trade - 1518 First
boatloads of Africans were
sent directly to Americas. - triangular
trade Connected Europe, Africa, and the
Americasbetween 16th 19th century 10 million
African slaves were brought to the AmericasSo
many African slaves were brought to the Americas
because of their high death rate on ships known
as Middle Passage - and disease after arrival
4 HENRIETTA MARIE
5- D. Sources of Slaves
- - European first bought African slaves from
local African merchants local African rulers
who traded slaves - viewed the trade as a source of income
raided villages
6TRIBAL WARFARE
7AFRICAN SLAVE TRADE
8- E. Effects of Slave Trade
- - tragic effects for individuals and their
family - - led to depopulation
- - deprived many communities of their young,
strong men and women - - deterioration of art and culture
- - led to increased warfare in Africa
9ASHANTI THE GOLDEN STOOL
10- 7. Political and Social Structures
- A. Traditional Political Systems
- - By 16th century, a monarchy had become
the common form of government throughout much of
Africa. - - Other African kingdoms consisted of
small independent states linked together by
kinship ties and subordinated to a king - - Some lived in small political units
authority rested in a village leader
11B. Foreign Influences
- - European introduced new food products
sweet potatoes, corn, and peanuts. - - Influenced African religious beliefs
Muslim beliefs become dominant
12- Section 3
- Southeast Asia
- in the Era of the Spice Trade
13- 8. Emerging Mainland States
- - 1500, Southeast Asia was relatively stable.
Kingdoms developed their own ethic, linguistic,
and cultural characteristics. - - There were conflicts among some states and
Muslim merchants had a big impact especially in
Thailand where Melaka became the leading power in
the region.
14(No Transcript)
15MUSLIM GOLD MERCHANTS
16- 9. The Arrival of Europeans
- A. In 1511, Portuguese seized Melaka and soon
occupied the spice islands. - ?Because of Portugal lack of military power,
they set up small settlements or trading post en
route to the Spice Islands (Moluccas). - ?A Shift in Power
- 1600s, the Dutch pushed the Portuguese and
English out of the spice trade. - ?The Dutch consolidated their political and
military control over the entire area brought
the island of Java under their control - established fort there
- dominated clove trade.
- ?Impact on the Mainland
- The mainland states were better able to resist
the - Europeans than the Malay Peninsula and the
Indonesian as a distinct political entity had
strong monarchs that resisted foreign intrusion.
17SPICE ISLANDS (Moluccas).
18- 10. Religious and Political Systems
- A. Between 1500 1800 religious beliefs
changed in Southeast Asia. - non-mainland states were being converted to Islam
and Christianity. - Mainland states ?Buddhism was the dominant
religion traditional beliefs that survived and
influenced the new religions
19RELIGIONS
BUDDHISM
ISLAMIC
20- B. Four political systems evolved in Southeast
Asia Buddhist, Javanese, Islamic, and Vietnamese
- 1. Buddhist chief form of government in Burma,
- Thailand, Laos, and Cambodia king was
considered superior king served as the link
between human society and the universe. - 2. Javanese rooted in Indian political
traditions like Buddhist kings, Javanese rulers
were believed to have a sacred quality. - 3. Islamic sultans were viewed as mortal but
possessed special qualities. They were defenders
of the faith and staffed the bureaucracy with
aristocrats. - 4. Vietnamese emperor ruled by Confusion
principles. He was seen as a mortal appointed by
Heaven to rule because of his - talent and virtue also seen as an
- intermediary between Heaven and Earth.