Transatlantic Slave Trade: Nineteenth To The 19th Century

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The Transatlantic Slave Trade
The business of procuring, transporting, and selling slaves, especially African Slaves to the New World, prior to the mid nineteenth century is called slave trading. The Trans-Atlantic slave trade lasted for more than 400 years, throughout the fifteenth to the nineteenth centuries. Major economic products encouraging slave labor were, coffee, cotton, indigo, mining, rice, sugar, and tobacco. The European and African rulers, merchants and middlemen all played significant roles in the slave trade. Even though, forms of slavery in Africa existed before the Europeans arrived, the Europeans predominated the African slave trade due to the demand for slaves which expanded to the New World.
In the beginning, some countries …show more content…

The ruling families in West African based societies became powerful by institutionalizing their people into slavery. Through tribal wars, African leaders placed their enemies from distant tribes into slavery. Slave owners used the women as wives or concubines and the men worked in the farms, and herded the animals. The slaves who belonged to wealthy African families and especially of ruling lineages of states also worked as porters and rowers. They learned crafts such as weaving, construction, and metal work. The new slaves were sometimes given the simple tasks, while the slaves who were more experienced, did the difficult and dangerous work such as mining and quarrying. Some male, and fewer female slaves held positions of high status and trust within their societies. In precolonial states, in the interior of West and Central Africa, the slaves often served as soldiers and confidants of high officials. With their necessarily limited ambitions and dependence on their masters, slaves were considered the ideal persons to be close to men in power. In a few cases, female slaves assumed power and influence as well. For example, in the 19th century in the West African Kingdom of Dahomey, which is now southern Benin, women served in the royal palace, and formed in the kingdom’s royal elite. According to the article “Women and Slavery in the kingdom of Dahomey,” the women who enjoyed the social equality were given the freedom to enslave other human beings as long as they had the political, economic, and social standing in the society to do so. (B. Obichere. P. 5-20). On the other hand, European rulers intended to use the institution of slavery in Africa, as a gateway to invent powerful nation-states to maintain social order. The incentive to improve their society was pushed by the state of their political and social standings within the region of Europe. One of those social perspectives that were

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