The Trans- Atlantic Slave Trade
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Transcript The Trans- Atlantic Slave Trade
The Trans-Atlantic
Slave Trade
Barbara Anderson
African Studies Center, UNC-Chapel Hill
November 2008
[email protected]
www.global.unc.edu/africa
Origins of the trans-Atlantic Slave
Trade
Begin with the Age of
Exploration—the Portuguese, not
Columbus!
African and Middle Eastern
science and technology were
central
Portuguese explore west coast of
Africa, looking for Asia
Long-distance trading throughout this area, including slaves
European Invasion and Occupation
of the Americas
1441 Portuguese in West
Africa
1492 Columbus
1498 Vasco de Gama
1500 Cabral to Brazil
1517 Spain gives Portugal 1st
Asiento
1542 only African slaves in
Spanish colonies
SUGAR AND GOLD
MINING AND MONOCULTURE CASH CROPS
http://www.mariner.org/exploration/mm_images/F2131E26_vol2_p248_MoulinASucre_large.jpg
Slave exports from Africa
1450-1600
1601-1700
1701-1800
1801-1900
Total
376,000
1,868,000
6,133,000
3,330,000
11,698,000
3.1%
16.0
52.4**
28.5
**This is also the century that most Americans can trace their
African ancestors to.
Destination of Slaves
Europe
U.S. (Mainland North Am.)
Caribbean
Brazil
Spanish Am.
2%
5%
42%
38%
13%
Why did Africans sell
slaves to Europeans?
Were they “selling their
own people?”
Africans did NOT “sell their own”:
Slavery in most of Africa
(and rest of the world!)
Long-distance trading
No racial or national identity
Local and/or lineage loyalty
Prisoners of War or other outsiders
African resistance occurred, but infrequent
How do we depict
the trade?
What do we need the trade to
be?
http://www.nps.gov/history/ethnography/aah/aaheritage/histContextsA.htm
http://hitchcock.itc.virginia.edu/SlaveTrade/collection/lar
http://exploringafrica.matrix.msu.edu/images/slave_routes.jpg
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/low/england/1718422.stm
Places in the slave trade
Liverpool
Senegambia
Dahomey
Kongo
Rio de Janeiro
Jamaica
Cuba
Charleston
Boston
Goree Warehouses, Liverpool
Where the ships were headed
Goree Island, Senegal
Omar Ibn Sayyid, 1770-1864
Charleston, South Carolina 1807
Venture Smith, 1729-1805
Born in West Africa
Enslaved at age 6
Marched to the coast
Sold to Rhode Island ship
Lived in colonial New
England
Purchased self and family
Africans in America DVD
Chicago and the slave trade???
Many Black Chicagoans whose families moved here in
the late 19th or early 20th century came from Mississippi
These Americans may have had ancestors who
experienced the INTERNAL SLAVE TRADE, 18201860, having been marched or shipped from the Upper
South
AND/OR they may have been brought directly in to
the Lower Mississippi by the French during the
colonial period, probably from Senegambia.
Resources for teaching:
Africans in America 4-part video/DVD and web
site http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/aia/
http://docsouth.unc.edu/neh/ for narratives of
Africans
http://hitchcock.itc.virginia.edu/Slavery/index.ph
p for images of slave trade (also AIA above)
http://exploringafrica.matrix.msu.edu/teachers/c
urriculum/m7b/activity1.php lesson plans and
overview of slave trade
Book Resources for Teachers
Lindsay, Lisa (2008)
Diouf, Sylvaine A. (1998)
Captives as Commodities:
The Transatlantic Slave
Trade
Thomas, Hugh (1997) The
slave trade : the story of
the Atlantic slave trade,
1440-1870
Klein, Herbert (1999) The
Atlantic Slave Trade
Servants of Allah: African
Muslims Enslaved in the
Americas
Wright, Donald (2000)
African Americans in the
Colonial Era, 2nd Ed.
Hine et al. (2006) The
African American Odyssey
(Textbook)