Atlantic Slave Trade Essay

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    Philip Curtin described the historiography of the Atlantic slave trade as a “Numbers Game.” Curtin found that historians conceptualized the commodification of human beings through quantification. A year earlier in 1968, Frederick George Kay claimed in The Shameful Trade that fifty million Africans were exported into slavery in foreign lands. Twenty years later, Paul Lovejoy offered a summary of the field. He argued “that known scale of the slave trade was on the order of 11,863,000” Africans were exported

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    Sydney Abbott 11/20/14 History 2010 Professor Robinson Atlantic Slave Trade PART I Many historians will argue that the institution of enslaving Africans in European cultures was merely a commercial solution to an economic problem, not a result of racism. Slavery throughout history existing in the America and the New World has been mainly identified with “the Negro slave.” Although, the truth is that slaves of the New World were of all different religious denominations and ethnicities, not strictly

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    development of the Atlantic Slave Trade had impacted the participating civilizations in 1450-1750. Many slaves were treated brutally. Some countries prospered as others died, and a new source of cheap labor has been found. The demand for cheap labor in 1450 to 1750 has caused economic, social, and political effects on civilizations from Europe, America, and Africa participating in the Atlantic Slave Trade by causing the downfall of African tribes and race, hardships of surviving slave life and leading

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    The history of the Trans-Atlantic slave trade is more readily accessible and popular, as opposed to the history of the Viking slavers. Painter points out that the Vikings were hardly viewed in popular culture as the preeminent slavers they really were, while Dublin was the slave market capitol of the world from the 11th through the 15th centuries. Whites living in the current day British Isles through France and Scandinavia were all subject to slave raids by Vikings for hundreds of years with some

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    North Atlantic Slave Trade

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    Edward Long justified slavery in 1774 by arguing that black Africans’ “narrow intellect” and “bestial smell” implied that they might almost be of a different species. What part did racism play in establishing and maintaining the north Atlantic slave trade? Response: With the discovery and colonisation of the New World, white Europeans had to establish a workforce to perform the transformation of vast areas of land. Massive vegetation clearance, road construction, building development, establishing

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    ruthless history of the slave trade during the 18th and 19th centuries. I had never before explored, in this depth, the cruelty of the slave trade operations. To begin with, I was baffled by John Green’s video “The Atlantic Slave Trade” Revelation after revelation was revealed to me. For instance, I was not aware that pre-civil war Americans facetiously dubbed this horrific practice as “the peculiar institution.” Also, later in the video he mentions the exact space the average slave was given during the

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    European colonist employed various forms of coerced labor on slaves to develop North America because of their desire for profit, the drive for land, and the need of labor. Slavery and servitude started playing a role in the development of the North American colonies In the 1490s when Columbus started exploring new lands. When Columbus found the new lands, he brought back things such as plants, minerals, golds, and the people who inhabited the land. He would kidnap the people and inslave them. He

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    that cultivating sugar was labor extensive. Their search for labor led them to African slaves. The West African kingdoms competed with one another to supply slaves to the Europeans in return for European goods which created a beneficial trading system. Slave labor became key in the South especially, allowing few successful farmers to develop large plantations over hundreds of acres. Because of the expansion of slave labor, America’s economy started off with a boom. Farmers, plantation owners, blacksmiths

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    Being fully aware of the benefits of the slaves, the British elevated their importation and by the turn of the eighteenth century African slaves numbered in the tens of thousands in the British colonies (1). As the demands in tobacco increased, labor increased. Like the simple law of supply and demand. Ending of Royal African Company’s monopoly in 1698 encouraged more traders to enter the slave business -- thus making African slaves more accessible (4). As a result of their increased expense, their

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    Trans-Atlantic Slave trade began. When the Portuguese moved away from their interests of selling gold, they turned to an asset that would gain them more money, slaves. By the seventeenth century, the Trans-Atlantic Slave Trade was fully established, and hit its milestone by the end of the eighteenth century. There were three stages to the Trans-Atlantic TradeStage, every stage played a role in a journey that was cost-effective for merchants. “As a commercial and economic enterprise, the slave trade

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