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Africa in an Age of Transition

Africa in an Age of Transition. The Slave trade. Slavery had been practiced in Africa since ancient times The primary market for African slaves was Southwest Asia, where most slaves were used as domestic servants.

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Africa in an Age of Transition

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  1. Africa in an Age of Transition

  2. The Slave trade • Slavery had been practiced in Africa since ancient times • The primary market for African slaves was Southwest Asia, where most slaves were used as domestic servants. • There was some slavery in European countries but only as domestic servants e.i. Portugal

  3. Southwest Asia today

  4. Demand for slavery increased in the discovery of the Americas in the 1490s and planting of sugarcane. • Plantations, large agricultural estates, were set up along the coast of Brazil and on islands in the Caribbean to grow sugarcane.

  5. Growth of the Slave Trade • Triangular trade: Trade between Europe, Africa and Asia, and the American continents. • From Europe to Africa: Manufactured goods such as guns and cloth. • Africa to the Americas: a cargo of slaves • Americas to Europe: tobacco, molasses, sugar and raw cotton

  6. Triangular Trade

  7. 275,000 slaves exported during the sixteenth century, 2,000 to the Americas every year • 1 million in the seventeenth century and six million in the eighteenth century! • The journey of slaves from Africa to the Americas became known as the Middle Passage, the middle portion of the triangular trade route. Many slaves died on the journey.

  8. Sources of Slaves • Before the coming of Europeans in the fifteenth century, most slaves in Africa were prisoners of war. • Slaves were brought first from coastal regions, then moved farther inland to find their victims.

  9. King Alfonso of Congo said, “so great is the corruption that our country is being completely depopulated.” • Local rulers who traded slaves viewed the slave trade as a source of income.

  10. Effects of the Slave Trade • Led to the depopulation of some areas, and it deprived many African communities of their youngest and strongest men and women. • Increased warfare in Africa. • One Dutch slave trader remarked, “From us they have learned strife, quarreling, drunkenness, trickery, theft, unbridled desire for what is not one’s own, misdeeds unknown to them before, and the accursed lust for gold.” • The slave trade had a devastating effect on some African states like Benin.

  11. Political and Social Structures • The slave trade was one of the most noticeable effects of the European presence in Africa between 1500 and 1800. • Generally, European influence did not extend beyond the coastal regions.

  12. Traditional Political Systems • In general, traditional African political systems continued to exist, such as monarchies. • Other African states were more like collections of small territories joined together by relations of kinship or other loyalties. • Many Africans continued to live in small political units in which authority rested in a village leader.

  13. Foreign Influences • Affected little by European presence. • Indirect changes • Weakening of the old Songhai trading empire and strengthening of new Moroccan dynasty in the late sixteenth century. • Expanding of Islam and some Christianity by the Portuguese.

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