Title: Transatlantic Slave Trade (15th
1Transatlantic Slave Trade(15th 19th century)
It takes more than a horrifying transatlantic
voyage chained in the filthy hold of a slave ship
to erase someones culture - Maya Angelou
Kevin Lu Period 5
- hover and click on the red triangles throughout
the presentation to learn more about the topic - Click on image to enlarge in browser
2Origins of Slave Trade
Destination of most slaves
- Portugal first to heavily import African slaves,
their advantage ship building - Cause for slave trade economic-driven era
- mercantilism economy theory set the stage for
slavery - based on the definition "country's wealth depends
on capital (gold) (Chambers 543) - slave labor for raw goods gt sell for capital
in Europe
http//www.history.org/History/teaching/eft/slavet
radesample/images/SlaveTrade_SampleLesson.pdf
3Origins continued.
Sugar plantation
- Exploration gt discovery of abundant riches of
West Indies, need labor for profitable, but
labor-intensive sugar plantations in the
Caribbean and Brazil - Symbiotic relationship with
- Industrial Revolution
- 12 million slaves arrive
- in New World
Process of Indigo Dye
4Triangular Trade
Triangular Trade European manufactured goods
like guns, gunpowder, glass, textiles traded for
slaves gt slaves sent to West Indies gt in return
raw goods like sugar, cotton, rice, coffee,
tobacco sent to Europe
5Middle Passage
- Dangerous Middle Passage
- - journey in which slaves were captured and
loaded onto ships to travel across the Atlantic
Ocean - Brutal conditions
- unhygienic
- overcrowded
- disease
- force-fed
- lack of water
- forced to dance to stay agile
- death was common
- Arrival in Americas covered in grease so that
they looked healthy and more valuable at
auctions, branded as possessions - Seasoning - breaking or conditioning slaves
for new life of labor - Language and Culture
- New name, loss of identityand real communication
with others - Daily Life
- resistance, preservation of African language on
the plantation to organize together - subculture
Crampled conditions
Slave Action Ad
Slave traders ledger
6Excerpts
- From Slave Olaudah Equianos narrative (The
Interesting Narrative of the Life of Olaudah
Equiano or Gustavus Vassa the African) 1789
(Click here to read whole narrative) - The noise and clamor with which this is
attended, and the eagerness visible in the
countenances of the buyers, serve not a little to
increase the apprehension of terrified
Africans... In this manner, without scruple, are
relations and friends separated, most of them
never to see each other again. - From An Account of the Slave Trade on the Coast
of Africa by Alexander Falconbridge, a surgeon on
slave ships (1788) - Upon the Negroes refusing to take sustenance, I
have seen coals of fire, glowing hot, put on a
shovel and placed so near their lips as to scorch
and burn them. And this has been accompanied with
threats of forcing them to swallow the coals if
they any longer persisted in refusing to eat.
These means have generally had the desired
effect. I have also been credibly informed that a
certain captain in the slave- trade, poured
melted lead on such of his Negroes as obstinately
refused their food. . .
7- Zong slave ship court case, 1781
- - London ship navigates to wrong shore
- Not enough resources for the overcrowded ship.
- Crew throws 132 alive slaves into ocean
believing that since the slaves were property,
they could claim insurance. - Former slave Equiano found out and alerted Quaker
abolitionists. Case goes to court. Court first
says it is allowed to kill animals for the
safety of the ship, equating Africans to being
animals. - Eventually, landmark decision concluded that the
Africans were people. (Zong)
A Landmark Case recognizing slaves as humans
Read some more landmark cases
8Europes Role
part of 1713 Treaty of Urecht with Great Britain
gives Britain full control over slave trade to
Spanish colonies, later, in 1748, part of Treaty
of Aix-la-Chapelle (1748)- renew Asiento contract
with Spain
- How and why did slave trade start?
- Portugal and Spain (15-16th century)
- Prince Henry the Navigator explored coast of West
Africa by 1460, since North Africa was already
occupied by Muslims - Initially sought , but found profit in slaves
- Spanish Asiento give permission for Great Britain
to sell slaves to Spanish colonies - Dutch (17th century)
- Dutch West India Company controls richest sugar
crops in Brazil - Copper trade
- French and English (late 17th-18th century)
- Captain John Hawkins, under the rule of Queen
Elizabeth I, heads first English slave ship
voyage in 1562 - first British settlement in Jamestown, Virginia
1607 - France founds Quebec in 1608
- initially, only British government can transport
slaves through Royal African Company, this
changes in 1698 so rich can take advantage of
this profitable trade eventually known as
capitalism (Alcott)
Gold
9Impact in Europe
- Background The Slave Ship by JWM Turner (1840)
- Humans are powerless to the storm and sea
monsters (government) - Speaks out against the exploitation of slavery,
the redness of the sunset symbolizes blood
- Economic
- Eventually jumpstarts Industrial Revolution with
the profits made by sugar and other investments
advancement of technology - Cotton as raw material in textile production gt
employment gt shift in roles, women go to work gt
stimulate need for transportation gt railroads - 2nd half of 18th century, British wonder about
the morality of this slave trade and religious
groups of Quakers and Methodists began to
organize and spread abolitionist messages - Wealthy port cities, like Liverpool, UK develop
The Slave Ship, http//personalpedia.wordpress.com
/
10Africas Role
Portugal makes contact with Kingdom of Kongo,
converts King to Christianity, gains footing in
Africa
Locations of most slave trading
- Slavery has existed since ancient times
- Global scale with growth of European colonial
expansion and demand for supply of slaves - European traders rarely go inland for fear of
disease and unknown territorygtthey trade along
the coast - Civil war and hostile rivalries within Africa led
Africans to capture and sell other Africans to
European slave traders in return for to trade for
goods like guns, gunpowder, textile, glass, iron
(M'Bokolo) - Become involved in slave raid (immediate profit
return) instead of build powerful states which
require time and greater cost (roads, border
security, government system) (MBokolo) - King Gezo (1840)
- The slave trade is the ruling principle of my
people. It is the source and the glory of their
wealth... the mother lulls the child to sleep
with notes of triumph over an enemy reduced to
slavery... (BBC)
Slaves being transported in Africa
11Impact in Africa
- Difficult to assess due to lack of statistic
evidence - Demographic shifts, uneven ratio of men to women
and population declines (Rubenstein 253) - Conflict among coastal regions who want to
control trade leads to internal war - Lack of agricultural and artisan development,
instead there is focus solely on slave trade - People afraid of getting captured, mistrust and
fear gt ethnic stratification (Whatley) - Rich kings and African slave traders gt unstable,
unbalanced wealth - Small, divided states
- Loss of contact with outside world insulation,
economic stagnation, weak political structure
Slave forts along the coast
12The New Worlds Role
- First slaves arrive on Hispaniola in 1502 on
Cuba, then Jamaica, South Carolina, Virginia,
Colombia - Arrival of Europeans in New World brought
diseases that reduced the native population
drastically - Only 5 of slaves go to North America, rest go to
Brazil and Caribbean (West Indies) - Black slaves fulfill labor force on the
plantation - Plantation economy produces huge number of cash
crops like cotton, sugar, tobaccogt more slaves
than European settlers ("Africa and the
Transatlantic Slave Trade") - practice chattel slavery which means that slave
status was passed down to descendants, society
revolve around mass export of commodities - - vs. lineage slavery in Africa, descendants may
not share the same status, slaves were given
tasks that free people did not want to do, not
laborious manual labor for the singular goal of
maximizing profit
13Impact on the New World
- United States
- Gabriels Rebellion (1800), Vesey Conspiracy
(1822), and Nat Turners Rebellion (1831) - Click here to learn more about the rebellions
- 2. Frederick Douglass aids abolition movement,
Civil War, culminates in Emancipation
Proclamation (1863) - South America
- 3. Simon Bolivar 1826 liberate South America
- 4. Brazil Emancipation (1888) (Chambers 776)
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Click on Thumbnails to Learn More
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iography.com/imported/images/Biography/Images/Prof
iles/B/Simon-Bolivar-241196-1-402.jpg http//publi
c.gettysburg.edu/tshannon/hist106web/site20/brazi
l.htm http//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/common
s/thumb/d/d0/Nat_Turner_captured.jpg/250px-Nat_Tur
ner_captured.jpg
Box shows New World
14Influence of Religion
- Africa
- Before slavery variety of religious, spiritual
beliefs - By 15th century, Portuguese missionaries spread
Christian beliefs in Africa - Americas
- Spanish government promise fugitive slaves
freedom if they came to Florida and converted
(Muhammad) - British slaveholders were afraid that
Christianity would result in slaves demanding
freedom (Muhammad) - Colonies then passed laws that said conversion
did not change their slave status - Great Awakening spread messages like "individual
freedom" and "direct channel with God" (same "one
god" belief as those of African religions),
concept of heaven, with Baptist and Methodist
churches
Founder of Methodist Church, John Wesley opposed
slavery, published Thoughts on Slavery in
1774 Learn More
15Influence of Religion continued
- Americas
- Appealing to slave through similar actions of
dancing, call-and-response (ring shout) singing
missionaries say slaves would bond through a
common religion, "social control (Muhammad) - Several slave rebellions happen gt plantation
owners fear religion is cause behind these
insurrections, restrict blacks from meeting, tear
down churches (Muhammad) - Americas and Europe
- use Bible to justify slavery bring
civilization Learn More - Abolition Movement
- driven by many reasons, including beliefs spread
by Methodist and Quakers, former slave
autobiographies, awareness of inhumanity,
French/American revolution - Click here to learn more about slavery and
religion
16Notable Figures
- William Wilberforce
- member of British Parliament
- dedicated to the abolition of slavery
- 1807 263 to 16 vote in favor of abolishing
transatlantic slave
Toussaint LOurverture - leader of successful
13-year slave rebellion in Saint-Domingue on the
island of Hispanola, gaining independence from
France in 1804 - influence from the French
Revolution taking place overseas Click here to
learn - grand-scale influence Haiti become a
refuge for slaves escaping from Jamaica, inspires
Simon Bolivar to fight for Venezuela's
independence, inspires enslaved blacks in United
States to revolt
17Decline of Slave Trade
http//faculty.goucher.edu/mbell/ Master_of_the_Cr
ossroads/Tlouv1.jpg
- Olaudah Equiano (1745 1797) slave who
- bough his freedom after 21 years,
- involved in the British abolition movement
- Haitian Rebellion at Saint Domingue of 1791
- abolish slavery, gain independence, led by
- Toussaint LOurverture (Chambers 598-600)
- British Slave Trade Act 1807 abolishes slave
trade, - but not slavery.
- Began with growing Christian duty, spread by new
forms of Protestantism, such as Quakerism to free
the oppressed savage (Rubenstein 267) - Led by politicians William Wilberforce, Thomas
Clarkson - Treaty of Paris 1814 includes agreement to end
slave trade in 5 years, in 1814 Dutch outlaw
slave trade too - La Amistad (1839) slave-led mutiny on ship from
Sierra Leone to Cuba gt end up in U.S. court
case, United States v. La Amistad, survivors
return to Africa in 1842
God Almighty has set before me two great
objects, the suppression of the slave trade and
the reformation of manners. -William
Wilberforce, 1759
18Legacy
- Africa
- Lack of common language and religion
- Tension between state borders caused by ethnic
differences and unequal levels of wealth - poverty due to lack of industrial/economic growth
because younger generation is sold into slavery - Americas
- Forever alters history gt racism
- key issue in American politics leading to many
arguments between North and South states - Modern day African Diaspora African Americans
visit West Africa, research their collective
history (inspire TV series Roots)
Point of No Return Door, Goree Island, Senegal
slaves exit homeland through this door Click to
Learn More
Infamous Elmira Castle, Ghana slave trading
outpost Click to Learn More
19Quiz
5. Which was the destination for the most
slaves? a) Barbados b) New England colonies c)
Mexico d) Brazil e) Netherlands 6. Most of the
slaves in the New World came from a) West
Africa b) Natives c) Prisoner of war d) North
Africa e) East Africa 7. The Middle Passage
refers to a) Slave rebellion in Sierra Leone b)
Transportation of slaves from selling block to
plantations c) Introduction of Christianity to
slaves d) Slave capture in Africa e) Voyage
across the Atlantic Ocean from Africa to
America
8. The ever-growing demand for sugar was
dependent on a) Stable British government b)
Indentured servants from Western Europe c) New
agricultural technologies d) Rise of
mercantilism e) Slave labor 9. Which was not
part of the triangular trade? a) Transportation
of West Indies natives to Europe b) European
export of manufactured goods to Africa c)
Shipment of sugar, rice, tobacco to Europe d)
Ship slaves to New World e) All of the above are
correct
- Most important West Indian cash crop?
- a) sugar
- b) gold
- c) tobacco
- d) rice
- e) Coffee
- 2. African slaves were converted to
- a) Witchcraft
- b) Laissez-faire
- c) Quakerism
- d) Christianity
- e) Islam
- 3. First country to begin contact with Africa?
- a) Italy
- b) Britain
- c) Portugal
- d) Spain
1)A, 2)D, 3)C, 4)D, 5)A, 7)E, 8)E, 9)A
(Answers will show up here on next click)
20Extra Links (Click on image)
- Transatlantic slave trade and abolition
- Very good PBS resource broken in 4 time periods
from 1450 to 1865 - Lots of good resources at the end of this page
pictures of slave forts, pamphlets related to the
slave trade, autobiographies of slaves
http//americanhistory.si.edu/brown/history/2-batt
leground/detail/almanac.html http//consortiumnews
.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/03/PBS_logo.jpg http
//www.darwinproject.ac.uk/wp-content/uploads/2010/
12/Am_I_not_a_man-276x300.jpg
21WORKS CITED/BIBLIOGRAPHY
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f-europe.htmlgt. - African Slave Owners. BBC. 9 Jan. 2013.
lthttp//www.bbc.co.uk/worldservice/africa/features
/storyofafrica/9chapter2.shtmlgt. - Hathaway, Jane. Rebellion, Repression,
Reinvention Mutiny in Comparative Perspective.
Westport, CT Praeger, 2001. - Whatley, Warren and Rob Gillezeau. The Impact of
the Transatlantic Slave Trade on Ethnic
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on Africa." - Le Monde Diplomatique. N.p., Apr.
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News. BBC, n.d. Web. 18 Dec. 2012. - Appiah, Anthony, and Henry Louis.
Gates. Africana The Encyclopedia of the African
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Histories-The Stories of Enslavement.
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France." History Today. History Today, n.d. Web.
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History of Slavery in Africa. Cambridge, UK
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ushistory.org. Independence Hall Association of
Philadelphia, 2008. Web. 18 Dec. 2012. - Obadina, Tunde. "Slave Trade as Root to African
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Africa Economic Analysis, 2000. Web. 18 Dec.
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England Pearson Longman, 2004. Print. - Scott, Jennifer. "The Slave Trade." The Slave
Trade. Oxford University Press, n.d. Web. 18 Dec.
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18 Dec. 2012. lthttp//www.understandingslavery.com
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