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The Age of Exploration Outcome: The Atlantic Slave Trade.

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The Age of Exploration Outcome: The Atlantic Slave Trade
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Page 1: The Age of Exploration Outcome: The Atlantic Slave Trade.

The Age of ExplorationOutcome: The Atlantic

Slave Trade

Page 2: The Age of Exploration Outcome: The Atlantic Slave Trade.

Constructive Response Questions

4. What was the Atlantic Slave Trade and what are some of its impacts today?

Page 3: The Age of Exploration Outcome: The Atlantic Slave Trade.

What Will We Learn?

1. Causes of the Slave Trade

2. The Process of Slavery

3. Consequences of the Atlantic Slave Trade

Page 4: The Age of Exploration Outcome: The Atlantic Slave Trade.

The Atlantic Slave Trade

1. Setting the Stage: a. Sugar plantations and tobacco farms required a lot of

labor to turn a profit

b. Native Americans were cheap but millions died from disease, warfare, and brutal treatment

Page 5: The Age of Exploration Outcome: The Atlantic Slave Trade.

The Atlantic Slave Trade

2. The Causes of African Slaverya. Slavery had existed in Africa for centuries but was relatively minor

b. Muslim traders ushered in an increase of slavery in Africa in the 7th century

c. Muslims transported about 17 million African slaves from 650-1600 d. In African and Muslim slavery, slaves had some legal rights and social

mobility

e. Africans were immune to the disease that killed many natives f. Many Africans had experience with farmingg. Africans weren’t likely to escape due to unfamiliarity with the new

landh. If escaped, skin color made it easier to catch i. By the end of the Atlantic slave trade, Europeans had transported 9.5 million

Africans to the Americas

Page 6: The Age of Exploration Outcome: The Atlantic Slave Trade.

African Captives in Yokes

Page 7: The Age of Exploration Outcome: The Atlantic Slave Trade.

The Atlantic Slave Trade

3. Slavery Spreads Throughout the Americasa. Spain and Portugal led the way with transportation

of slaves b. During the 17th century, more than 40% of all Africans

brought to the Americas went to sugar plantations in Brazil

c. As England’s presence in the Americas grew, it came to dominate the slave trade

d. African society was broken up into tribes

e. Many African rulers and merchants captured other Africans and traded with European traders for gold, guns, and other goods

Page 8: The Age of Exploration Outcome: The Atlantic Slave Trade.

“Black” Gold for Sale!

Page 9: The Age of Exploration Outcome: The Atlantic Slave Trade.

Triangle Trade

Page 10: The Age of Exploration Outcome: The Atlantic Slave Trade.

The Atlantic Slave Trade

4. A Forced Journey a. Transported Africans were part of the triangle trade

b. Europeans traveled south to Africa to capture or trade for slaves (side 1)

c. Europeans transported captured Africans across the ocean to the Americas (side2)

d. Europeans bought sugar, coffee, and tobacco to sell back to Europe (side 3)

e. The voyage that brought captured Africans across the ocean was called the middle passage

f. Millions died on these voyages

g. Africans were whipped and beaten aboard the ships

h. Surrounded by malnutrition, disease, and human feces on the voyages

i. Roughly 20% perished on the voyages

Page 11: The Age of Exploration Outcome: The Atlantic Slave Trade.

Middle Passage

Page 12: The Age of Exploration Outcome: The Atlantic Slave Trade.

“Coffin” Position: Onboard a Slave Ship

Page 13: The Age of Exploration Outcome: The Atlantic Slave Trade.
Page 14: The Age of Exploration Outcome: The Atlantic Slave Trade.

African Captives Thrown Overboard

Sharks followed the slave ships across the Atlantic!

Page 15: The Age of Exploration Outcome: The Atlantic Slave Trade.

The Atlantic Slave Trade

5. Slavery in the Americas a. Auctioned off as property upon arrival to Americas b. Families were broken up and sold to different buyers c. Worked in mines or fields or as domestic servants d. Were given little food and lived in small dreary huts e. Forced to work long hours and suffered beatings f. Was a lifelong condition and was hereditary as well g. Africans used music and stories of their ancestors as modes of

survival h. Found ways to resist

i. Broke tools ii. Worked slowlyiii. Ran away (dangerous) iv. Uprisings and revolts did occur

Page 16: The Age of Exploration Outcome: The Atlantic Slave Trade.
Page 17: The Age of Exploration Outcome: The Atlantic Slave Trade.

Inspection and Sale

Page 18: The Age of Exploration Outcome: The Atlantic Slave Trade.

Slave Master Brands

Page 19: The Age of Exploration Outcome: The Atlantic Slave Trade.

30 Lashes

Page 20: The Age of Exploration Outcome: The Atlantic Slave Trade.

Whipped Slave, early 19c

Page 21: The Age of Exploration Outcome: The Atlantic Slave Trade.

The Atlantic Slave Trade

6. Consequences of the Slave Tradea. Numerous cultures lost generations of their fittest members

b. African families torn apart c. Introduced guns to the African continent d. Labor contributed greatly to economic power of the

Americase. Brought African culture to the Americas (art, music, religion,

and food)

f. Large African American population in the Americas today

g. Mixed races due to forced population

Page 22: The Age of Exploration Outcome: The Atlantic Slave Trade.

Amistad

Page 23: The Age of Exploration Outcome: The Atlantic Slave Trade.

Constructive Response Questions

4. What was the Atlantic Slave Trade and what are some of its impacts today?


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