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Triangular Trade: Trade routes between Africa, Europe and the Americas during the Atlantic Slave Trade

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Page 1: Triangular Trade: Trade routes between Africa, Europe and the Americas during the Atlantic Slave Trade
Page 2: Triangular Trade: Trade routes between Africa, Europe and the Americas during the Atlantic Slave Trade
Page 3: Triangular Trade: Trade routes between Africa, Europe and the Americas during the Atlantic Slave Trade

Triangular Trade:Trade routes

between Africa, Europe and the Americas during the Atlantic Slave Trade.

Page 4: Triangular Trade: Trade routes between Africa, Europe and the Americas during the Atlantic Slave Trade

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=i1Qn0xtboYQ

Page 5: Triangular Trade: Trade routes between Africa, Europe and the Americas during the Atlantic Slave Trade
Page 6: Triangular Trade: Trade routes between Africa, Europe and the Americas during the Atlantic Slave Trade

1424-1434: Prince Henry the Navigator paid for voyages along the West Coast of Africa in search of fishing banks.

1441, Antam Gonclaves captured 10 Africans near Cape Bojador. In 1481, Portugal built the 1st European fort called Fort Elmina.

Prince Henry the Navigator

Page 7: Triangular Trade: Trade routes between Africa, Europe and the Americas during the Atlantic Slave Trade
Page 8: Triangular Trade: Trade routes between Africa, Europe and the Americas during the Atlantic Slave Trade

They needed slaves to work on their plantations in South America & in the Caribbean. In the 16th century, Charles I issued the 1st Asiento, a license to import slaves into Spanish Colonies. This gave Spain a monopoly on the slave trade.

King Charles I

Page 9: Triangular Trade: Trade routes between Africa, Europe and the Americas during the Atlantic Slave Trade
Page 10: Triangular Trade: Trade routes between Africa, Europe and the Americas during the Atlantic Slave Trade

In 1662, Sir John Hawkins took 3 ships to Sierra Leone & captured 300 slaves.

Page 11: Triangular Trade: Trade routes between Africa, Europe and the Americas during the Atlantic Slave Trade

Hawkins later convinced Queen Elizabeth I to participate in the slave trade.

Page 12: Triangular Trade: Trade routes between Africa, Europe and the Americas during the Atlantic Slave Trade

They began to bring slaves to the Caribbean.  They formed the Royal African Company in 1672. This allowed English colonies in America to easily buy slaves from English traders.

Page 13: Triangular Trade: Trade routes between Africa, Europe and the Americas during the Atlantic Slave Trade

At the beginning only a few slaves came to English colonies.

But when the big tobacco, cotton and rice plantations grew in the colonies in the south the slave trade increased.

At the conclusion of the War of Spanish Succession, the Treaty of Utrecht gave to Great Britain a thirty-year asiento, or contract, to supply an unlimited number of slaves to the Spanish colonies, and 500 tons of goods per year.

This gave England the monopoly on the slave trade.

Page 14: Triangular Trade: Trade routes between Africa, Europe and the Americas during the Atlantic Slave Trade
Page 15: Triangular Trade: Trade routes between Africa, Europe and the Americas during the Atlantic Slave Trade
Page 16: Triangular Trade: Trade routes between Africa, Europe and the Americas during the Atlantic Slave Trade

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CsdosE10EjU

Page 17: Triangular Trade: Trade routes between Africa, Europe and the Americas during the Atlantic Slave Trade

Ships left Europe loaded with goods, such as guns, tools, textiles & rum.

Crews with guns went ashore to capture slaves. Slaves were obtained by:

1. Kidnapping2. Trading

3. People were given by chiefs as tributes (gifts)

4. Chiefs would send people who were in debt 5. Chiefs would send criminals through

judicial process

6. Prisoners of tribal wars were also sent.

Page 18: Triangular Trade: Trade routes between Africa, Europe and the Americas during the Atlantic Slave Trade

A French naval officer, in the Angola region in the late eighteenth century, describes how slave traders used "a forked branch which opens exactly to the size of a neck so the head can't pass through it. The forked branch is pierced with two holes so that an iron pin comes across the neck of the slave . . ., so that the smallest movement is sufficient to stop him and even to strangle him”

Page 19: Triangular Trade: Trade routes between Africa, Europe and the Americas during the Atlantic Slave Trade
Page 20: Triangular Trade: Trade routes between Africa, Europe and the Americas during the Atlantic Slave Trade
Page 21: Triangular Trade: Trade routes between Africa, Europe and the Americas during the Atlantic Slave Trade

African Chiefs did resist in the beginning; however, they needed weapons for defence.

The Europeans were too powerful; therefore, any effort to resistance was unsuccessful

If chiefs didn’t supply slaves, they were threatened to be taken as slaves.

Page 22: Triangular Trade: Trade routes between Africa, Europe and the Americas during the Atlantic Slave Trade

No racial or national identity. ◦ Based upon local

and/or lineage of loyalty.

Prisoners of War or other outsiders were sold.

Page 23: Triangular Trade: Trade routes between Africa, Europe and the Americas during the Atlantic Slave Trade
Page 24: Triangular Trade: Trade routes between Africa, Europe and the Americas during the Atlantic Slave Trade

Slaves were held in prisons along the west coast of Africa.

They were waiting to

put on slaves ships.

Those that journeyed from the interior and were not fit for the ship were left on the shores to die

Page 25: Triangular Trade: Trade routes between Africa, Europe and the Americas during the Atlantic Slave Trade

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kfr4Q_RT0vk&feature=related

Page 26: Triangular Trade: Trade routes between Africa, Europe and the Americas during the Atlantic Slave Trade

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ow2rItUTQtY&feature=related

Page 27: Triangular Trade: Trade routes between Africa, Europe and the Americas during the Atlantic Slave Trade

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fStDloiEeHE&feature=related

Page 28: Triangular Trade: Trade routes between Africa, Europe and the Americas during the Atlantic Slave Trade

- Ships sailed across the Atlantic Ocean to the Americas with slaves.

- The journey took 8-10 weeks.

- Some Africans tried to jump ship, refused to eat and rebelled.

- Loss of a slave’s life was a loss of $ for the sailors.

Page 29: Triangular Trade: Trade routes between Africa, Europe and the Americas during the Atlantic Slave Trade
Page 30: Triangular Trade: Trade routes between Africa, Europe and the Americas during the Atlantic Slave Trade

“Loose packing” meant that the captains would take on board fewer slaves in hope to reduce sickness and death.

“Tight packing” meant that the captains would carry as many slaves as their ship could hold, as they believed that many blacks would die on the voyage anyway.

Page 31: Triangular Trade: Trade routes between Africa, Europe and the Americas during the Atlantic Slave Trade
Page 32: Triangular Trade: Trade routes between Africa, Europe and the Americas during the Atlantic Slave Trade
Page 33: Triangular Trade: Trade routes between Africa, Europe and the Americas during the Atlantic Slave Trade
Page 34: Triangular Trade: Trade routes between Africa, Europe and the Americas during the Atlantic Slave Trade

Africans would be sold at auctions in the Americas

The ships’ captains would use the $ from their sale to buy a 3rd cargo of raw materials: sugar, spices, cotton or tobacco.

They sold this for a further large profit in Europe.

In Europe, they would convert the raw materials into finished product.

Page 35: Triangular Trade: Trade routes between Africa, Europe and the Americas during the Atlantic Slave Trade
Page 36: Triangular Trade: Trade routes between Africa, Europe and the Americas during the Atlantic Slave Trade

There were 3 ways slaves were auctioned off:

1. Public Auctions: - They put tar on the slaves to hide any sores and cuts- Slaves were inspected- An auction took place and the higher bidder would get to purchase the slave.- Bids were taken as long as an inch of a candle burned.- Slaves were branded- Families were separated- They were given a European name.

Page 37: Triangular Trade: Trade routes between Africa, Europe and the Americas during the Atlantic Slave Trade
Page 38: Triangular Trade: Trade routes between Africa, Europe and the Americas during the Atlantic Slave Trade

2. Private Auctions:- Similar to public auctions- They were indoors and red markers would

be placed on the door to indicate an auction.

Page 39: Triangular Trade: Trade routes between Africa, Europe and the Americas during the Atlantic Slave Trade
Page 40: Triangular Trade: Trade routes between Africa, Europe and the Americas during the Atlantic Slave Trade

3. A Scramble:- They would take place on the docks or on

the deck of the ship- There would be a fixed price per head- Slave owners would go in and grab who

they wanted to purchase.

Page 41: Triangular Trade: Trade routes between Africa, Europe and the Americas during the Atlantic Slave Trade
Page 42: Triangular Trade: Trade routes between Africa, Europe and the Americas during the Atlantic Slave Trade

American born slaves who had skills were the most expensive.

African born slaves were less $, as they had to be “broken in.”

Age, sex and skills determined the cost. Slaves with a lot of scars were considered

too rebellious.

Page 43: Triangular Trade: Trade routes between Africa, Europe and the Americas during the Atlantic Slave Trade

1807 = The slave trade was abolished in the British Empire, which meant that no slaves would be carried from Africa in British ships.

1834 = Emancipation Act stated that slaves under 6 years old were freed; field hands over 6 had to work for their owners for 6 more years; house slaves had to work for 10 more years.

Britain gave 20 million pounds in compensation to former slave owners and slaves received nothing.

1838 all slaves were given complete freedom. Slavery in the USA was not abolished until 1865.