Africa in the Age of the Atlantic Slave Trade Inspired by Mr. Millhouse; Hebron High School.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
NEW PATTERNS OF TRADE. 1. The Columbian Exchange a. pgs b. Columbian Exchange is the name historians give this period of time. It is the exchanging.
Advertisements

Agenda Bell ringer Review Maritime Revolution Transformations in Europe Closure.
Comparing Colonial Societies in the Americas
Turbulent Centuries in Africa By Michaela Hoyt. European Outposts in Africa  In the 1400’s, Portuguese ships explored the coast of west Africa.  Looking.
Exploration and Expansion The Atlantic Slave Trade Ms. James.
4/18 Focus: 4/18 Focus: – To meet their growing labor needs, Europeans enslaved millions of Africans in forced labor in the Americas. Do Now: Do Now: –
Forced removal of Africans
Chapter 20 Africa and Africans in the Age of the Atlantic Slave Trade.
I. The Atlantic Slave Trade II
The Arabs started the trading of slaves.. It was the forced migration of millions of Africans to a new land and treated as merchandise.
Africa and the Slave Trade
World History: The Earth and its Peoples
The Atlantic Slave Trade. A Brief History of Slavery Hunter-Gatherers had no need for slavery. With the Agricultural Revolution farmers found they could.
The Atlantic System and Africa 1550–1800. Plantations in the West Indies Colonization Before 1650 Spanish settlers introduced sugar-cane cultivation into.
The Colonies Develop Chapter 4.
JEOPARDY Africa and Atlantic Slave Trade Categories
Turbulent Centuries in Africa
The Age of Exploration The First Global Economic Systems
Triangular Trade Unit 5: Age of Exploration.
Africa and Africans in the Age of the Atlantic Slave Trade.
Mr. Ermer World History AP Miami Beach Senior High.
Africa & the Age of the Atlantic Slave Trade Chapter 20 pg
Forced removal of Africans
Africa & the Transatlantic Slave Trade American Indians succumbed to disease as laborers in colonies “1 st the Portuguese, then Spanish, Dutch, French,
Ch. 6-2 Africa in the Age of Transition
A Not Bad B Could be better C 12 Barely good enough to not suck D Sucks F 0-9 YOU FAIL!!!!!
Africa and the Slave Trade Chapter 20. Impact of Slave Trade in Africa Diaspora - any group that has been dispersed outside its traditional homeland,
Atlantic Slave Trade, Commercial Revolution, and Exploration: Big Picture Age of Exploration.
Africans & The Atlantic Slave Trade. Portuguese - interior trade - especially gold -Generally with local consent -El Mina Missionaries followed –gain.
Ch. 20: Africa and the Atlantic Slave Trade. The Atlantic Slave Trade Portugal led the way in exploring the African coast Portugal led the way in exploring.
The Trans Atlantic Slave Trade Mr. Mulligan Geography.
Africa and the Africans: Age of Atlantic Slave Trade Ch 20.
The Trans-atlantic Trianglular Trade
First Global Economic Systems
The Atlantic Slave Trade
The Atlantic Slave Trade Portuguese established trading forts (factories) along the African coast. Permanent settlement. Other Europeans followed the Portuguese.
1. 2 Section I  Europeans first began growing tobacco on large plantations  Chartered companies were private investors with trade monopolies in colonies.
 Notebook Check! Please take out your notebook and prepare for a notebook check. You must have all assignments given, all notes written and both exams.
Chapter 21 Africa and the Africans in the Age of the Atlantic Slave Trade.
Africans and Africa during the age of slavery. ► Portuguese traded for: ivory, pepper, animal skins and gold ► Trade= basis for contact between Africans.
Mr. Millhouse AP World History Hebron High School.
The Atlantic Slave Trade. Need for Labor  Sugar plantations and tobacco farms required a large supply of workers to make them profitable  Millions of.
Africa & the Age of the Atlantic Slave Trade Chapter 20.
The Columbian Exchange
Africa in the Age of the Atlantic Slave Trade
Africa in the Age of the Atlantic Slave Trade
Africa and the Africans in the Age of the Atlantic Slave Trade
Africa and the Africans in the Age of the Atlantic Slave Trade
Africa in the Atlantic Slave Trade
Mrs. McDonough, Mrs. Hendricks, and Mrs. Thomas
Using your textbook write an identification for the following (make sure to include what it is, how it work, where it is was, and what effects it had on.
The Atlantic World and Slavery
The African Slave Trade
Africa and the Africans in the Age of the Atlantic Slave Trade
The Commercial Revolution
Age of Exploration and Trade 1400 to 1700
Lesson #12-Exploration Part 2
Africa in the Age of the Atlantic Slave Trade
Chapter 3 Expansion and Establishment
Africa and Africans in the Age of the Atlantic Slave Trade
Africa and the Slave Trade
Section 4 Africa and the Atlantic Slave trade
Africa in the Age of the Atlantic Slave Trade
Africa in the Age of the Atlantic Slave Trade
Portuguese traded for: ivory, pepper, animal skins and gold
Ch. 15 The Atlantic Slave Trade
Africa and Africans in the Age of the Atlantic Slave Trade
Slaving and African Politics
Investigate the impact of the new world economy on Africa
Turbulent Centuries in Africa
Presentation transcript:

Africa in the Age of the Atlantic Slave Trade Inspired by Mr. Millhouse; Hebron High School

I. Sugar and Slaves  1620s & 30s – GB, F, NL settled West Indies islands.  Chartered Corp developed WI colonies  Cheap passage for poor Europeans => indentured servants  Ex. Barbados  1640s: Grew tobacco, then switched to Sugar; better profit by 1680s  By 1700 Barbados surpassed Brazil Grew: Tobacco- Sugar

II. Volume of the Slave Trade  15 th century -minimal: to islands off Africa’s coast plantations  16 th c.. – small  17 th C.  1 st half of 17 th c. increase to 10,000 per year  2 nd half of 17 th c. increase to 20,000.  >1/2 landed in GB, F, NL colonies  18 th c. most of trade  7 million slaves, 80% of all trade  19 th c. slows down, under attack,  still exports to Cuba & Brazil (1.7 million)\  Muslim areas - Trans-Saharan, Red Sea, East Africa  3 million slaves traded

III. Switch to Slaves  Tobacco –farmers preferred Europeans  Cheaper = willing to accept low pay in return for land  1750 sugar production – speculator drove land-price up  Europeans choose N. America, Owners had to get Africans  Demographic Patterns  Trans-Saharan trade = Mostly women  Atlantic trade = Primarily young men African kingdom preferred to keep the women for domestic slaves and sell the men to the Europeans

American Sugar Plantation

Treatment of slaves

IV. Plantation Economy  Relied on slave labor  Chattel slavery – owners held legal rights over life of workers  Grew crops for export to European markets Not food for consumption  plantations forerunner of factory labor

African Diaspora  WI plantation colonies = world’s more polarized societies.  On most island 90 % were slaves.  Pwr resided in the hands of a Plantocracy  Slave health: death outnumbered birth  Life expectancy = 23 yrs for males and 25.5 for females

African Slave Trade

Middle Passage

Triangular Trade part of the Atlantic Circuit

V. Slavery and African Politics  Common in African society  slaves = main form of wealth due to non- egalitarian land-ownership (king owned all land)  Europeans= new opportunities for expansion of slavery  Competition between rival kingdoms led to endless wars => need for guns  Kingdoms trade slaves for guns (W. Africa)  Slave trade shifts balance of power –  From Sudanic E. Africa to the West Africa

True size of Africa

VI. West African Kingdoms  Asante on the Gold Coast (Ghana) (1650s to 1820s)  Centralized leadership under Osei Tutu after 1650 (d 1715)  Slave made up 2/3 of trade by 1700  Dahomey (becomes Benin)– (17 th c to 19 th c )  Dependent on slavery; controlledby royal court  1.8 million slaves ( shipped from Bight of Benin betw )

VII. East Africa & the Arrival of Europe  Swahili city-states continued traditional commerce in the Indian Ocean  Some African states copied European plantation system  Zanzibar (plantation economy) 100,000 slaves by 1860  Sultan continues to trade slaves until 1910s  Islamic States  Slavery legitimate for non-muslims

VIII. Effect on Africa  Social Effect  _____________________________________________________  ____________________________________________________  Economic Effect  _____________________________________________________  ____________________________________________________  _____________________________________________________

IX. Cape Colony  Dutch East India Co. establish a colony at the Cape of Good Hope in 1652  Provision ships headed to Asia  Large fertile lands were great for farming  Used slave labor  Slaves brought from Indonesia and other parts of Asia  Eventually enslave the natives  Dutch settlers, called Boers, move to Cape Colony in search of land  17, 000 settlers, 26,ooo slaves, and 14,ooo natives by 1800

VII. Sudanic Africa  Period of violent Islamization in 18 th C  Islamic elites vs. animistic natives  Violence helped supply slaves to coastal regions  In the 1770s Muslim spread “purified” Sufi Islam  The Sokoto Caliphate (N. Nigeria) founded by Usman’s son  Inspired by Usamn Dan Fodio who Believed he was an instrument of Allah  Preached jihad against Hausa kingdoms  Son attacked neighboring Muslim kingdoms  Effects of reformist Islam  Spread literacy, new centers of trade emerged, attempts to eliminate pagan practices

Areas to concentrate on for test  Columbian Exchange  Spanish conquest  Sociedad de Castas – social stratification  Plantation Economy  Brazil – development – slave colony to Gold  African Slavery –Chattel  Triangular trade impact on Africa & Europe  Slavery impact on Africa  S. Africa