Atlantic slave trade
Adapted from Wikipedia · Adventurer experience
The Atlantic slave trade was a big part of history where people were taken from Africa to work in places like the Americas. It started in the 15th century and went on until the 19th century. Ships called slave ships used a route known as the triangular trade, which included a part called the Middle Passage. Most of the people taken were from Central Africa and West Africa. They were captured or sold by local traders to Europeans who then took them across the ocean.
European countries needed workers for their colonies, especially to grow things like sugarcane. The Portuguese were the first to bring enslaved people to Brazil in 1526. Over time, many countries like Britain, Spain, France, and the United States joined in. Many Africans were forced onto these ships. Later, many countries worked to stop this unfair trade, though it continued secretly for some time.
Background
Atlantic travel
The Atlantic slave trade began after Europeans started traveling between the Old World (Afro-Eurasia) and the New World (the Americas). Ocean travel was hard because of strong currents. In the 1400s, Europeans built better ships, like the caravel, which could cross the Atlantic Ocean. Portuguese sailors might have started a school to improve navigation.
Between 1600 and 1800, about 300,000 sailors from Europe went to West Africa as part of the slave trade. They met people along the African coast and in the Americas for the first time.
European explorers wanted new trade chances and valuable goods like gold and spices. Many European countries, including Spain, Portugal, France, England, the Italian states, and the Netherlands, explored the Atlantic. This connected the Old and New Worlds, leading to the Columbian exchange. Europeans brought animals like cattle and horses to the Americas and got new crops like tobacco and potatoes.
European slavery in Portugal and Spain
Slavery was common in Portugal and Spain for a long time. Ancient Rome had slavery, and it continued after the Roman Empire fell. In the 1400s, Portuguese traders captured Africans and took them to Europe as slaves. They also built a fort for the slave trade on the coast of Africa.
During the Middle Ages, religion often decided who could be enslaved. Christians did not enslave other Christians, and Muslims did not enslave other Muslims, but both could enslave people of different religions. In the 1400s, Spain made a law called "limpieza de sangre," which stopped people with Jewish or Muslim ancestry from living in new lands. This law led to some Jews and Muslims being enslaved.
In the 1400s, Europeans began using race and religion to justify enslaving Africans. As more Africans were enslaved, Europeans linked slavery with skin color. The word "race" started being used in the 1500s to describe family and lineage, and later it was used to justify the slave trade and unfair treatment.
African slavery
Slavery was common in many parts of Africa for centuries before the Atlantic slave trade began. Enslaved people were often captured in wars between African states and sold. Europeans would buy these enslaved people and take them to the Americas. Some Africans sold captives from neighboring groups, creating a big market for the slave trade. While enslaved people in Africa sometimes could escape, those taken away had little hope of returning home.
European colonization and slavery in West-Central Africa
The Atlantic slave trade began in 1441 when Portuguese explorers took twelve Africans to Portugal. By 1500, Portugal had taken 50,000 Africans to work as servants, artisans, and farmers, and on sugar plantations. After Portugal and Spain, other European countries like England also joined the slave trade.
European traders made agreements with some African rulers to trade peacefully, but there were also fights. In some places, Europeans tried to take control by force. Even with these problems, trade went on, with African states often setting their own rules, like charging taxes on foreign ships. Some African leaders, like Queen Nzinga of Ndongo and Matamba, resisted Portuguese attempts to expand the slave trade and fought to protect their people.
16th, 17th, and 18th centuries
The Atlantic slave trade began in the 16th century when Europeans started taking enslaved Africans to the Americas. This trade went on for centuries. European ships followed a route called the triangular trade. Enslaved Africans were taken from Africa to work on farms in the Americas. They made goods like sugar and cotton that were sent back to Europe.
In the early years, the Portuguese and Spanish led the slave trade. Later, the English, French, and Dutch also took part. The trade grew biggest in the 18th century, with many Africans being taken to the Americas. European settlers needed workers to grow crops in the New World.
Human toll
The movement of enslaved people from Africa to the Americas caused many deaths. Many people died during the journey to the New World and after arriving.
Many factors affected the lives of those who were enslaved.
During the years between the 1500s and 1800s, many people were taken from Africa. Many died during the ocean journey. Many more died in Africa before reaching a ship.
The effects of this trade were deep and lasting. The journey and conditions led to many deaths. The impact of these events continues to be felt today.
Main article: Middle Passage
Conditions of slavery on plantations before and after abolition of the transatlantic slave trade
Caribbean
Many enslaved people in Haiti had very hard lives, and many did not live long. Life was difficult, and many children did not grow up.
In places like the Caribbean, Dutch Guiana, and Brazil, the number of enslaved people often went down because many died and few new babies were born. Plantations needed more workers, so more enslaved people were brought from Africa. Work was very hard, especially on sugar plantations, and many children died from sickness.
The Atlantic slave trade to Cuba was made illegal in 1820, but Cuba kept bringing in enslaved Africans until slavery ended in 1886. After the slave trade stopped in the United States and British colonies in 1807, Florida still got enslaved people from Cuba. This happened secretly, and it continued until the United States took control of Florida in 1821.
The cost of bringing enslaved people from Africa went up in the mid-1800s. Prices for younger enslaved people went up because they were seen as stronger workers. In Cuba, the price of enslaved people changed based on age and the need for labor on sugar plantations.
South America
In Brazil, enslaved people did not live very long. The Atlantic slave trade to Brazil was made illegal in 1831, so slaveholders made plans to keep slavery going by forcing enslaved women to have many children. Some were promised freedom if they had many children, but this was not always kept. Brazil used laws to make sure the number of enslaved people grew, even after the trade was outlawed.
After the Atlantic slave trade ended, Brazil needed more enslaved workers, so they depended on enslaved women to have many children. Some people wanted to end slavery by changing these laws, which would let children of enslaved women be born free, though they would have to work for their mothers’ owners until they were older.
United States
Main articles: Slave trade in the United States, Post-1808 importation of slaves to the United States, and History of slavery in the United States by state
In the United States, the number of enslaved people grew because many babies were born to enslaved mothers. After the Atlantic slave trade was stopped in 1807, slaveholders in the Deep South needed more workers for cotton and sugar fields. They started forcing enslaved women to have many children. This happened in places like Richmond, Virginia, which became known for selling enslaved people to the Deep South.
Enslaved women and girls were forced to have many children, which was very hard on their health. Enslaved people were sold from places like Louisville, Kentucky, down the Mississippi River to markets in the Deep South. New Orleans became a big market for enslaved people after 1807.
Texas was also involved in illegal slave trade, bringing enslaved people from Cuba to Galveston Island. After Texas became part of the United States, many enslaved people were smuggled in from Cuba to work on plantations. Some people made a lot of money by doing this, including someone named Jean Lafitte, who helped bring in many enslaved people to the United States.
British involvement
As Britain's navy grew stronger and they settled in North America and the West Indies, they became the main sellers of enslaved people. The Royal African Company in London controlled this trade at first. But after 1689, merchants from Bristol and Liverpool joined in. By the late 1700s, many ships from Liverpool carried enslaved people. Cities like Manchester grew wealthy from cotton picked by enslaved people. Other British cities also gained from this trade. For example, Birmingham made guns used in the trade. Most of the sugar from plantations went to London, where it was sold in popular coffee houses.
New World destinations
Creole languages and cultures
During the Atlantic slave trade, a new way of speaking grew along the African coast. It mixed West African languages with European ones and was called West African Pidgin English. This helped people from different places talk to each other. In places like São Tomé, people made their own special languages, blending African and European words.
In the Americas, these mixed languages turned into new ones. Some of these new languages include Gullah, Haitian Creole, Kouri-Vini, and Jamaican Patois. These languages helped enslaved people talk to each other and to their enslavers. They also kept parts of their African heritage alive.
Caribbean
The first enslaved people arrived in the New World in 1502 on the island of Hispaniola, which is now Haiti and the Dominican Republic. Other places like Cuba, Jamaica, and Brazil also received many enslaved Africans. They worked very hard on farms growing sugar and brought their African traditions with them.
Central America
Slave exports to Honduras and Guatemala started in 1526. Many of the enslaved people came from places in West Africa like present-day Senegambia. They were forced to work on farms growing sugar and other crops.
United States
Further information: Rhode Island slave trade
The first enslaved Africans arrived in what would become the United States in 1526. Over time, many more people were brought to places like Virginia and Massachusetts. In some areas, enslaved people made up a large part of the population. They were forced to work on farms and in other jobs.
South America
In South America, both Spanish and Portuguese colonizers enslaved Indigenous people and later brought Africans from West and Central Africa. Brazil received the most enslaved people. These people created their own communities and kept some of their African traditions alive, creating new religions and cultures.
Russia
By 1802, some traders from the United States were involved in trading enslaved people with Indigenous groups in Southeast Alaska.
| Destination | Percent |
|---|---|
| Portuguese America | 38.5% |
| British West Indies | 18.4% |
| Spanish Empire | 17.5% |
| French West Indies | 13.6% |
| English/British North America / United States | 9.7% |
| Dutch West Indies | 2.0% |
| Danish West Indies | 0.3% |
Economics of slavery
In the 1700s, people in places like France could make money by investing in sugar plantations. These investments could be risky, but investors could spread their money across many ships to lower the risks.
By 1800, the United Kingdom had the most profitable sugar islands, such as Jamaica, Trinidad, the Leeward Islands, and Barbados. This success grew when France lost its main sugar island, St. Domingue (now Haiti), after a revolt by enslaved people in 1791.
After this, British sugar became very common, especially as something added to tea. Some historians believe that the money made from the slave trade and sugar plantations helped shape the British economy during the Industrial Revolution in the late 1700s.
When the Slavery Abolition Act 1833 ended slavery in the British Empire, the government paid money to former slave owners, but not to the people who had been enslaved.
Effects
When the slave trade began in the 1500s, Europe and Africa used similar tools. Europe had better ships. During this time, Europe and the Americas grew, while Africa's population stayed the same. Some believe the money from slavery helped Europe grow and invent new things.
Historians have different views on how the slave trade affected Africa. Some say Africa was not greatly changed, while others argue it caused big problems. Some African leaders traded slaves for goods like guns. But others believe this hurt Africa in the long run.
Some say the money from slavery helped Britain's economy grow. Others disagree, saying it was a small part of the economy. Views differ on how much it mattered.
The slave trade caused big changes in Africa's population. Some areas lost many people, changing the number of men and women. Others argue that Africa handled the loss better than some think.
The slave trade changed African cultures. Traditional beliefs and ways of life were replaced by new ideas brought from Europe. Trade routes shifted, and new leaders rose to power.
As the slave trade grew, African coastal towns changed. They became busy trading places instead of fishing villages. Later, Europeans took control of more of Africa.
The slave trade left a lasting mark on how people see others. It created ideas about racial differences that still affect the world today. Many now see these old ideas as wrong and unfair.
End of the Atlantic slave trade
Many people from different places worked to stop the Atlantic slave trade. Some were leaders from Africa, and others were from Europe and the Americas. They spoke out about the bad conditions of slavery and pushed for laws to end the trade.
Countries started making laws against the slave trade in the late 1700s and early 1800s. Britain banned the trade in 1807 and used its navy to stop other countries. The United States passed a law in 1808 to stop bringing in new slaves from other countries. Brazil was the last country to end the Atlantic slave trade in 1850, but it took time for the practice to stop completely.
Legacy
Sierra Leone
Main articles: Committee for the Relief of the Black Poor and Sierra Leone Creole people
In 1787, the British helped 400 freed slaves move to Sierra Leone. Most of the first group died from sickness and fighting, but about 64 survived and started a new place called the "Province of Freedom."
In 1792, 1200 more freed slaves from Nova Scotia settled and created the Colony of Sierra Leone and the town of Freetown. Many had fought for the British during a big war and were offered freedom.
Liberia
Main articles: American Colonization Society and Americo-Liberian people
In 1816, a group of wealthy people started the American Colonization Society to send freed African Americans to West Africa. In 1820, they sent their first ship to Liberia, and over time, around two thousand African Americans settled there. This continued through the 1800s.
Rastafari movement
The Rastafari movement, which started in Jamaica, helps keep the memory of slavery alive, especially through reggae music.
Apologies
Worldwide
In 1998, a special day was created to remember the slave trade and its end. In 2001, African nations asked former slave-trading countries for a clear apology, but some countries were not ready to say sorry.
On March 25, 2026, a big group of countries voted to call the enslavement of Africans the "gravest crime against humanity."
Benin
In 1999, the leader of Benin said sorry for the role Africans played in the slave trade.
Denmark
Denmark had traded many enslaved Africans for over 200 years. In 1992, a Danish leader said the day the islands became part of the U.S. was a sad day for Denmark. He talked about how they sold enslaved people instead of giving them freedom.
France
In 2006, the leader of France said May 10 would be a day to remember victims of slavery.
Ghana
The leader of Ghana also said sorry for his country’s role in the slave trade.
Netherlands
In 2001, a Dutch leader said the Netherlands knew about the wrong things done in the past. In 2013, the Dutch government said they were very sorry for their part in the slave trade. In 2022, the leader of the Netherlands said sorry again, and some people still wanted the king to say sorry too.
Nigeria
In 2009, a group in Nigeria asked African leaders to say sorry for their part in the slave trade.
United Kingdom
In 1999, the city of Liverpool said sorry for its part in the slave trade. In 2006 and 2007, the leader of Britain said sorry, but some people thought it wasn’t enough. In 2020, the Bank of England said sorry for having leaders who owned or traded enslaved people.
United States
In 2007, Virginia was the first U.S. state to say sorry for its role in slavery. Other states followed. In 2008 and 2009, the U.S. House of Representatives and Senate also said sorry for slavery and unfair laws that followed. Slavery was legal in the U.S. from 1776 until 1865, mostly in the South. Even after slavery ended, unfair treatments continued.
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