Title: Warm Up
1Warm Up
- What do you see in this painting?
- What message do you think the artist was trying
to convey here? - What do you already know about this topic?
Middle Passage - Viola Burley Leak, 1997
2Voices from The Transatlantic Slave Trade
- Essential Questions
- Why is it important to study the history of
slavery? - Why have humans throughout history enslaved one
another?
3Trans-Saharan Slave Trade
Other captives were shipped north across the
deserts of northwest Africa to the Mediterranean
coast (to Morocco). Africans were purchased
there to work as servants in Spain, Portugal, and
other countries. By the mid-1400s, Portuguese
ship captains were trading slaves along the west
coast of Africa for working on sugar plantations.
What do you think Trans-Saharan refers
to? Between the 10th 14th century, African
captives were sold in Islamic markets around the
area of present day Sudan. Many of these slaves
were female, sold for servants or concubines.
4Transatlantic Slave Trade
Now that we understand what the Trans-Saharan
slave trade was, what do you think
Transatlantic refers to?
- In 1492, Columbus landed in the New World,
linking Europe The Americas
- Spanish adventurers arrived in the following
years, enslaving Native Americans to search for
gold and silver.
- The Natives were weakened by disease,
malnutrition, Spanish cruelty so the
Spanish decided to use Africans.
- Around 1520, the first African slaves arrived in
the Americas off of Portuguese ships.
5- Based on this map, what do you think the Triangle
Trade Route was? - How do you think each continent was affected by
this trade? - What impact did slavery have on colonial
economics?
Triangle Trade Route
6The Middle Passage
- Middle Passage ship crossing for African slaves
to the New World - What do you think life would have been like on a
slave ship?
7- Several hundred slaves were packed below deck on
stacked wooden platforms. - These platforms were covered with excrement,
blood, and filth and caused many infections and
diseases. - Slaves were confined by leg irons while on the
ship and were often tortured with whip beatings. - Many slaves committed suicide by jumping
overboard or refusing to eat.
- As the journey typically took several
months15-20 of the slaves died on the ship - Estimates claim 2-4 million slaves died on the
Middle Passage
8Slavery in the Southern Colonies
- Those surviving The Middle Passage were auctioned
off - In the 18th century, the ideal slave (male,
strong, young, healthy) was worth how much in
todays money? - 11,630-23,200
- 40 of slaves before the American Revolution
passed through South Carolina and were often put
to work in its rice fields
9Slavery in the Southern Colonies
- There was no harder or more unhealthy work than
the rice fields - Ankle deep or mid-leg in water which floats an
oozy mud, and exposed to a burning sun which
makes the air hotter than human blood those poor
wretches are in a furnace of stinking putrid
vapor - 2 out of 3 African-American children on rice
plantations failed to reach their 16th birthday
(malaria, harsh working conditions)
10Copper Sun
- About a 15 year old African girl, Amari, and her
experiences with the slave trade - Historical Fiction Work of fiction, but events
of the story are based on fact - Author spent 10 years researching its content
- Written by Sharon Draper, 2006
- Grand-daughter of a slave
- Setting 1738 (slave trade in full swing)
African village, then South Carolina - What kinds of things do you think Amari will
experience that you learned about today?