TEKS 8C: Calculate percent composition and empirical and molecular formulas. Bell Work: Read Witness History at the top of page 125. How does the portrait.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
The Atlantic Slave Trade
Advertisements

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: –
Aim: If you were a reporter how would you report on the Atlantic Slave Trade? Do Now: Answer the following questions in your notebook Where is this place?
Atlantic Slave Trade. Causes of the Slave Trade Europeans needed cheap laborers in South and Central America because many of the Native Americans had.
Aim: How did the Atlantic slave trade effect Africa? Do Now: What is the legacy of Columbus? Aim: What were the horrors of the Atlantic slave trade? Do.
Objectives Explain how triangular trade worked.
The Trans-Atlantic Slave Trade. What is a colony? What was the Spanish system of labor called in the Americas? Describe the system above? Where did the.
The Atlantic Slave Trade
Get an FIQ Chart from the front and use it to answer the following : 1.What FACTS can you gain from the image above 2.What INFERENCES can you make about.
ISS World History 10. Trans-Atlantic Slave Destinations.
Columbian Exchange.
Triangular Trade and Middle Passage 17 th & 18 th Centuries.
Lesson 4: The Middle Passage
What were its effects on slavery and global economies?
Unit 6 part Spanish and Portuguese Colonies in the Americas 15-4 The Atlantic Slave Trade.
ATLANTIC SLAVE TRADE. European slave traders in Africa did not seize land from natives and colonize the coast, as they were doing in their New World.
The Atlantic Slave Trade
North American Colonies. North America  Because of Spain’s success, other countries joined in taking over the Americas  France and England controlled.
The Atlantic Slave Trade
TEKS 8C: Calculate percent composition and empirical and molecular formulas. Colonial Immigration and Slavery.
Triangular trade, mutiny, Middle Passage
A person could become a slave for many reasons: Captured in war Could not pay debts Criminals Parents sold children into slavery Slaves held a variety.
The Atlantic Slave Trade
Section 1-10 The triangular trade route developed. Ships brought sugar and molasses from the West Indies to New England where the molasses was made into.
Chapter 16 Section 4 – Turbulent Centuries in Africa.
Triangular Trade The Start of Slavery. A voyage across the Atlantic Ocean Enslaved Africans forced to endure Also Called the Middle Passage.
Exploration and Expansion Section 4 Jump Start: Observe the above picture and complete and FIQ: 1. What are some FACTS you know from looking at this image?
The Atlantic Slave Trade
TEKS 8C: Calculate percent composition and empirical and molecular formulas. Slavery in the Colonial Period.
TEKS 8C: Calculate percent composition and empirical and molecular formulas. Slavery in the Colonial Period.
Triangular Trade and the Middle Passage
November 18, 2015 Learning Target: Understand the evolution of African slavery Essential Question: How did slavery impact the history of Africa and newly.
Atlantic Slave Trade Objectives: Discuss triangular trade and analyze its consequences. Terms and People: plantations, triangular trade, Middle Passage,
The Commercial Revolution New wealth from the Americas combined with a dramatic growth in overseas trade created the Commercial Revolution. The transfer.
The Atlantic Slave Trade
The African slave trade
Map Questions, Study Guide Parts 1-3 and Vocabulary.
Bellringer Happy Friday! Review! (New Sheet of paper) I am collecting this! 1.What was the first country to explore? 2.Who led the age of exploration.
Effects of Global Contact: The Columbian Exchange.
Section 3 The Atlantic Slave Trade To meet their growing labor needs, Europeans enslave millions of Africans in the Americas. NEXT.
Trans-Atlantic Slave Trade. Evolution of Slavery Slavery began about 10,000 years ago Many civilizations practiced slavery Slavery not always based on.
TEKS 8C: Calculate percent composition and empirical and molecular formulas. The Atlantic Slave Trade.
Chapter 3.  Mercantilism  An economic policy that said a nation’s power was directly related to its wealth ▪ Britain wanted more power, so they needed.
Triangular Trade. What was the Triangular Trade? Trading networks in which goods and slaves moved among England, the American colonies, and Africa.
The Atlantic Slave Trade
The Atlantic Slave Trade
The Atlantic Slave Trade
The Atlantic Economy.
New Global Connections ( )
Triangular Trade and the Middle Passage
Trade in the 13 Colonies.
New Global Connections ( )
Turn in your DBQ Staple it to your plan sheet and research sheet. DBQ goes on top. Or get out your planner for me to sign GRRRRRRRR. Then sit and wait.
The Atlantic Slave Trade
Chapter 5 Lesson 3 ACOS #5: Identify major leaders in colonial society. ACOS #5d: Identify geographic features, landforms, and differences in climates.
Aim: Trace the Spread of Slavery and Explain the Triangular Trade
Map Questions, Study Guide Parts 1-3 and Vocabulary
Trans Atlantic Slave Trade Chap 15 Sec 4
The Atlantic Slave Trade
The Atlantic Slave Trade
What were the horrors of the Atlantic slave trade?
Objectives Explain how triangular trade worked.
Transatlantic SLAVE TRADE
Objectives Describe the conditions under which enslaved Africans came to the Americas. Explain why slavery became part of the colonial economy. Identify.
Unit 3: Early Modern Times (1300 – 1800) Ch
The Beginnings of Our Global Age: Europe and the Americas
The Atlantic Slave Trade
The Atlantic Slave Trade
The Atlantic Slave Trade
The Atlantic Slave Trade
Presentation transcript:

TEKS 8C: Calculate percent composition and empirical and molecular formulas. Bell Work: Read Witness History at the top of page 125. How does the portrait of Equiano contrast with the sterotypical view of an African slave?

TEKS 8C: Calculate percent composition and empirical and molecular formulas. The Atlantic Slave Trade

TEKS 8C: Calculate percent composition and empirical and molecular formulas. I can explain how the triangular trade worked. I can describe the Middle Passage and describe its effects. I can analyze the impact of the Atlantic slave trade. Objectives

TEKS 8C: Calculate percent composition and empirical and molecular formulas. Terms and People triangular trade – colonial trade routes among Europe and its colonies, the West Indies, and Africa in which goods were exchanged for slaves Middle Passage – the second leg of triangular trade in which slaves were transported to the Americas Olaudah Equiano – enslaved African who published an autobiography in the late 1700s detailing his experiences mutiny – a revolt aboard a ship

TEKS 8C: Calculate percent composition and empirical and molecular formulas. nkind-the-story-of-all-of- us/videos/african-slave-trade

TEKS 8C: Calculate percent composition and empirical and molecular formulas. An international trade network began in the 1500s. A key part of it was the slave trade, in which Africans were taken from their homes, sold, and sent to the Americas. The Spanish were the first European partners in the slave trade. As other European nations established colonies, the slave trade intensified. How did the Atlantic slave trade shape the lives and economies of Africans and Europeans?

TEKS 8C: Calculate percent composition and empirical and molecular formulas. A series of trade routes linking Europe, Africa, and the Americas arose during the 1500s. This was known as triangular trade. The Atlantic slave trade, in which slaves were transported to America, was one part of the triangle.

TEKS 8C: Calculate percent composition and empirical and molecular formulas. 2.Slaves were transported to the Americas on the second leg, known as the Middle Passage. 3.Finally, merchants carried goods from America to Europe— sugar, cotton, furs. 1.First, ships brought European goods to Africa—guns, cloth, cash.

TEKS 8C: Calculate percent composition and empirical and molecular formulas. Triangular trade helped colonial economies grow. Merchants and certain industries thrived. For example, shipbuilding and tobacco growing were very lucrative. Port cities such as Bristol in England and Newport, Rhode Island, grew quickly as a result.

TEKS 8C: Calculate percent composition and empirical and molecular formulas. h?q=video+on+the+atlantic+slave +trade&FORM=VIRE4#view=detail &mid=F507D75F6DD99702D85EF5 07D75F6DD99702D85E

TEKS 8C: Calculate percent composition and empirical and molecular formulas. The Middle Passage was a terrible journey in which many people died. Once on the ships, Africans were packed below the decks for a long voyage of weeks or months. This diagram from an actual slave ship shows how tightly African captives were packed into the cargo hold.

TEKS 8C: Calculate percent composition and empirical and molecular formulas. Most died of disease such as dysentery or smallpox. Others committed suicide. Slave ships were “floating coffins” in which up to half of the Africans on board died. There were also mutinies, storms at sea, and raids by pirates. Slave ships faced many dangers and horrors on their journeys.

TEKS 8C: Calculate percent composition and empirical and molecular formulas. The impact of the Atlantic slave trade on Africans was devastating. African states and societies were torn apart. As many as 2 million Africans died during the brutal Middle Passage. Some 11 million enslaved Africans were taken to the Americas by the time the slave trade ended in the mid-1800s.

TEKS 8C: Calculate percent composition and empirical and molecular formulas. 25 Point Formative Assessment Quiz