220 likes | 228 Vues
Explore the causes, demand, and consequences of the Atlantic Slave Trade, including the role of African merchants, resistance and rebellion, and the impact on Africa and the Americas.
E N D
Chapter 20, Section 3 “The Atlantic Slave Trade”
The Causes of African Slavery Slavery in Africa • increased with spread of Islam during 7th century • had some legal rights • leave bondage, like marrying into family they served
Slavery in Africa • Not a new concept • 7th century spread of Islam increases slave trade • Across the Sahara, the Red Sea and the Indian Ocean • Justification • Muslim belief non-Muslim prisoners can be bought and sold • b/t 650 -1600 17 million Africans transported throughout Muslim land in North Africa
The Demand for Africans • Europeans saw advantages in using Africans • immunity to diseases • experience in farming • less likely to escape, didn’t know their way • skin color made them easier to catch • Atlantic slave trade – buying, transporting, and selling of Africans for work in the Americas
Spain and Portugal Lead the Way • Spanish first to import African slaves • Plantations • Gold and silver mines • Portuguese surpassed Spanish • Brazil – more than 40% of all slaves sent to work on plantations
Slavery Spreads Throughout the Americas England Dominates the Slave Trade • leading carrier of enslaved Africans from 1690-1807 • transported nearly 1.7 million to the West Indies • 400,000 to North American colonies
African Cooperation and Resistance • African merchants and some rulers participated • traded slaves for gold, guns, and other goods • some rulers voiced opposition
A Forced Journey The Triangular Trade – • transatlantic trading network along which slaves and other goods were carried between Africa, England, Europe, the West Indies, and the colonies in the Americas
The Middle Passage • middle leg of transatlantic trade triangle • slaves packed into ships • whippings and disease • many committed suicide
Most ships provided slaves with enough room to sit upright, but not enough to stand • Others forced slaves to lie in chains with barely 20 inches space between them
Slavery in the Americas A Harsh Life • auctioned off to highest bidder • worked in mines, fields, or as domestic servants • many lived on little food in small huts • worked long days and suffered beatings • mostly a lifelong condition and hereditary
Resistance and Rebellion • developed a way of life based on cultural heritage • musical traditions • stories of their ancestors • made themselves less productive • broke tools, uprooted plants, worked slowly • thousands ran away • uprising in Hispaniola, Brazil, W. Indies, N. America
Consequences of the Slave Trade Africa • lost fittest members – the young and able • families were torn apart • introduced guns into the continent
The Americas • without labor, some colonies wouldn’t have survived • expertise in agriculture • culture – art, music, religion, and food • substantial African-American population
Daily Essential Questions What factors led European colonists to use Africans to resupply their labor force? How did African slaves contribute to the development of the Americas?