1 / 17

Pgs 72-80 Reading Quiz

Pgs 72-80 Reading Quiz. Explain how this picture relates to the assigned readings using evidence from the reading Before you ask: NO you can’t use your books!!!. Early Slavery. Origins of Slavery. Slavery goes as far back as 1800 bce Code of Hammurabi

Télécharger la présentation

Pgs 72-80 Reading Quiz

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Pgs 72-80 Reading Quiz • Explain how this picture relates to the assigned readings using evidence from the reading • Before you ask: NO you can’t use your books!!!

  2. Early Slavery

  3. Origins of Slavery • Slavery goes as far back as 1800 bce • Code of Hammurabi • Civilizations have used various forms of slavery • Warfare most common • New World Slavery • Comes from lack of labor • Mines and cultivation of cash crops • Curse of Ham

  4. Origins in the Colonies • Chesapeake Bay • Slavery began very small • 4,500 in 1640 • Growth of Tobacco industry demands labor • Indentured servitude did not provide the labor force • Native-Americans • Unwilling and cold escape easily • Blacks • Terms of service never expired • Could not escape • “accustomed” to agricultural work • Resistance to disease

  5. The English • Viewed alien people with disdain • Modern views of race did not exist • Division between civilized and uncivilized or Christianity and heathenism • West Indies • Majority worked sugar plantation in Carribean • Population growth • The America’s • Slow start because of price

  6. European Views

  7. Triangle Trade

  8. The Middle Passage

  9. Cargo Advertisement

  10. Africa and the Trade • Few African societies opted out of the trade • European goods • Textiles and guns • Kingdoms • Ashanti and Dahomey • With European goods, kingdoms expanded • Captured prisoners sent to factories on the coast • Sold into slavery

  11. American Slavery • Chesapeake • Tobacco farming • Increased demand meant increased supply • Small farms turn into large plantations • Spreads west as does slavery • By 1770 there are 270,000 slaves • Work • Males- worked fields but also served as teamsters, boatmen, worked in skilled crafts (blacksmiths) • Women- seamstresses, dairy maids, personal servants, wet nurses, etc.

  12. Law • Enhanced control over slaves • Enhanced restrictions on freedom • Increasingly becomes about color • Southern Slavery • Rice production dominates the South • This will eventually change to cotton • Enitially used Native-Americans • Early slaves had more freedoms, but as rice increased so did restrictions • Georgia

  13. Northern Slavery • Slavery not essential to northern economies • One or two slaves was the norm • Farm hands, artisans, dock workers, personal servants • No threat meant less restrictions • Marriages, punishment, court

  14. Slave Culture • Not one people • Only later would Africans recognize their unity • Came from different regions of Africa • Different languages, beliefs, cultures, religions • Chesapeake • Climate allowed reproduction • Exposure to white culture • Religion and language • South Carolina • Harsh climate, less contact with whites • Larger cities, sexual relations

  15. Resistance • Runaway slaves • Passive Resistance • Breaking work tools, taking time • Rebellion • 1st in New York in 1712 • 1730-1741 • Imperial conflicts led to revolts across the West Indies and America

  16. Runaway Slave Ads

More Related