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Exploration in Africa

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Exploration in Africa * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * I. The Age of European Exploration & Colonization Western European countries expand during 15th century ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Exploration in Africa


1
Exploration in Africa

2
I. The Age of EuropeanExploration Colonization
  • Western European countries expand during 15th
    century
  • Explore, conquer, and colonize
  • Trade
  • Eastern markets of India, China, and Japan
  • New World
  • Demand for laborers led to Atlantic slave trade

3
II. The Slave Trade in Africa
  • African kingdoms and Islamic nations conduct
    brisk commerce
  • Not race based
  • Arab merchants and West African kings imported
    white slaves from Europe

4
The Slave Trade in Africa CONT
  • West African slave trade dealt mainly in women
    and children who would serve as concubines and
    servants
  • European demand for agricultural laborers changed
    slave trading patterns

5
III. Growth of the Atlantic Slave Trade
  • Demand for labor in 16th century
  • Spanish gold and silver mines
  • Portuguese sugar plantations
  • Tobacco, rice and indigo

6
The Atlantic Slave Trade Where?
5
65
60
30
35
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7
Estimated Slave Imports by Destination, 14511870
8
TRIANGLE TRADE
North America
Rum, and Weapons
Molasses
Africa
The Caribbean
Slaves
9
  • In this late-eighteenth-century drawing, African
    slave traders conduct a group of bound captives
    from the interior of Africa toward European
    trading posts.

SOURCE Culver Pictures, Inc.
10
The African-American Ordeal from Capture to
Destination (cont.)
  • High mortality
  • Exhaustion, suicide, murder
  • Long, forced marches from interior to coast
  • Factories served as
  • Headquarters for traders
  • Warehouses for trade goods
  • Pens or dungeons for captives

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12
The Crossing
  • Canary Islands to the Windward Islands
  • 40 to 180 days to reach the Caribbean
  • Pirates attacked Spanish ships
  • Frightening experience

13
New York docks.
Economic reasons even up until the 1800s.
14
Shipping rates fell from 25 per ton in the early
1850s, to 11 in 1857. Increased domestic
manufacturing lessened the need for overseas
imports. The ships also began aging, and
required more money to be properly maintained.
There was a glut of sail in the late 1850s,
and ship-owners were eager to make money any way
they could.
15
The Slavers
  • Small and narrow ships
  • Most captains were tight packers
  • Ignored formula in the name of profits

16
The Slavers (cont.)
  • Crowded, unsanitary conditions
  • Slaves rode on planks 66 x 15
  • only 20 25 of headroom
  • Chained in pairs
  • High mortality rates
  • One-third perish between capture and embarkation

17
33
Provisions trouble
18
British Slave Ship
  • Plan of the British Slave Ship Brookes, 1788.
    This plan, which may undercount the human cargo
    the Brookes carried, shows how tightly Africans
    were packed aboard slave ships.

19
Provisions for the Middle Passage
  • Slaves fed twice per day
  • Poor and insufficient diet
  • Vegetable pulps, stews, and fruits
  • Denied meat or fish
  • Ten people eating in one bucket
  • Unwashed hands spread disease
  • Malnutrition, weakness, depression, death

The diseased were thrown overboard.
20
Sanitation, Disease, and Death
  • Astronomically high before 1750
  • Poor sanitation
  • No germ theory
  • Malaria, yellow fever, smallpox, dysentery

21
African Women on Slavers
  • Less protection against unwanted sexual attention
    from European men
  • African women worth half the price of African men
    in the Caribbean markets
  • Separation from male slaves made them easier
    targets

22
VI. Landing and Sale in the West Indies
  • Pre-sale
  • Bathed and exercised
  • Oiled bodies to conceal blemishes and bruises
  • Hemp plugs

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24
VII. Seasoning
  • Creoles
  • slaves born in the Americas
  • worth three times price of unseasoned Africans
  • Old Africans
  • Lived in the Americas for some time
  • New Africans
  • Had just survived the middle passage
  • Creoles and Old Africans instruct New Africans

25
Seasoning Cont
  • Slaves seasoned in Barbados
  • Worked out to see if they could handle the new
    climate, and environment
  • Work day and Night in slave camps
  • Than were sold and shipped to parts of the
    Caribbean and the Americas

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VIII. The End of Journey
  • Survival
  • One-third died
  • Men died at a greater rate than women
  • Adapted to new foods
  • Learned a new language
  • Psychological no longer suicidal
  • Africans retained culture despite the hardships
    and cruel treatment
  • Created bonds with shipmates that replaced blood
    kinship

28
IX. The Ending of the Atlantic Slave Trade
  • Cruelties help end Atlantic slave trade
  • Great Britain bans Atlantic slave trade in 1807
  • Patrols African coast to enforce
  • United states congress outlaws slave trade in
    1808
  • Guinea and western central African kingdoms
    oppose banning slave trade

29
Conclusion
  • Nine to eleven million Africans brought to the
    Americas during three centuries of trade
  • Millions more died
  • Most arrived between 1701 and 1810
  • Only 600,000 reached the British colonies of
    north America

30
Consequences of the Atlantic Slave Trade
  • In Africa, numerous cultures lost generations of
    their strongest members, both men and women.
  • The slave trade introduced guns to the African
    continent
  • African slaves contributed greatly to the
    cultural and economic development of the
    Americas.
  • Africans brought their culture to the Americas

31
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