The plundering and burning of the sugar plantations in France’s wealthiest colony had destroyed the established market for East African slaves in the Americas. The Sao José was thus a pioneer, hoping to find a new market for East African slaves in Brazil. This was no easy matter, as traders in Angola and the Congo monopolised the sale of slaves to Portuguese America.
The story of East Africa's role in the transatlantic slave trade - 8 views
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The East African slave rebellion and the plundering and burning of the sugar plantains in France's wealthiest colony, destroyed the market for East African slaves in the Americas. The Sao Jose pioneered hoping to find a new market for East African slaves in Brazil. This was not easy as traders in Angola and Congo then monopolized the sale of slaves to the Portuguese America.
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East Africa was a late participant in the transatlantic slave trade. It was only in the 1770s that a regular trade in slaves to the French islands of Mauritius and Réunion began from points on the East African coast. Small numbers of slaves had been carried around the Cape for more than a century. But as planters on St Domingue cried out for labour, this trade became more profitable and systematic, particularly as the French king agreed to subsidise the shipment of slaves to the island.
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East Africa was late in participating in the transatlantic slave trade. In the 1770s the French traded slaves from the Island of Mauritius to the East African coast. Trade became more profitable due to the St Domingue labor the French king then agreed to subsidize the shipment of slaves to the island
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Rebellions were frequent and slave ships carried large crews and the firepower needed to suppress any resistance. The East Africa slave trade reached its peak in 1789-90 when about 46 ships, carrying more than 16,000 slaves, circumnavigated the Cape. Almost all were bound for the sugar and coffee plantations of northern St Domingue.
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The East African Slave Trade, 1861-1895: The "Southern" Complex.pdf - 6 views
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The history of the nineteenth-century "southern" East African slave trade, comprising the coast and its hinterland from Kilwa southwards, has hitherto been given scant attention. This stems partly from the nature of source material, which, like the British Blue Books, tends to concentrate on the "northern" complex supplying slaves from the Swahili coast to the Muslim markets of the north, and partly from the traditional assumption by historians that the Mozambique slave export trade to non-Muslim regions largely died out in the 1860s following the closure of the Brazilian and Cuban mark
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ter than has traditionally been assumed: French labour demands were too small to account for the scale of the Muslim slave trade from East Africa in the nineteenth century, especially when the traffic from Mozambique to Brazil is taken into account. Instead we must keep in mind the substantial slave trade which existed before the French arrival and also its destinatio
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However, Austen, like so many Africanists before him, misses the vital role of Madagascar in the East African slave trade
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The Mozambique and Apassa Slave Trade - Document - Nineteenth Century Collections Online - 4 views
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,John Hawkins—afterwards knighted—having discovered that great riches might be gained by transporting negroes from the African coast to the West Indies, was incited to personally engage in that trade, and laid certain plans before his "worshipful friends" in London, who entered very heartily into his schemes. Some of these friends being wealthy, and of high rank, he was soon placed in possession of three ships, with which, in 1562, he sailed for Sierra Leone
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John Hawkins was knighted by the Queen which granted him a higher status/title. Hawkins then discovered the riches that one can acquire from transporting and trading negroes from the coast. Hawkins then personally began to engage in the slave trading industry as well as his friends who had high rankings as well.
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the Portuguese, whose colonists in both East and West Africa, we are told, still actively participate in the slave traffic, and whose authorities often wink at, if they do not directly share in, the same trade.
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Portuguese colonists actively participated in slave trade in East Africa even though some authorities did not participate in slave trade those who did were pardoned from it. Slave trade was seen or viewed as "normal" as that is the term the English colonists used to justify their participation is slave trade.
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vigorous denunciations
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"An appeal to some supernatural power to inflict evil on someone or some group" www.vocabulary.com
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10.4324_9781315206714-1_chapterpdf.pdf - 3 views
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Over the next four centuries millions of Europeans and three times as many Africans were shipped across that ocean from their ancestral continents. Recent historiography has sought to understand these human flows both more precisely and more interactively
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While the creation of the early modern European Atlantic long received most attention, there has been a burst of interest in the African Atlantic that dominated transatlantic migrations for nearly two centuries after the 1630’s.
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The prevailing explanation has had recourse to predominantly economic motives and forces. The opening of the Atlantic invited the creation of a virtually unconstrained form of capitalism, whose beneficiaries purchased human chattels from Africa as their labor force. 3 This model of untrammeled economic behavior has recently elicited a further question. Was African slavery was really the optimal source of labor for the rapid development of the Americas?
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