Chapter 14


  • The European demand for slaves was clearly the chief cause of the tragic commerce, and from the point of sale on the African coast to the massive use of slave labor on American Plantations, the entire enterprise was in European hands.
  • West Africans convinced Europeans that such efforts were unwise and unnecessary, for African societies were quite capable of defending themselves against Europeans intrusion, and many were willing to sell their slaves peacefully.
  • African Sellers were looking for both European and Indian Textiles, cowrie shells, European metal goods, firearms, and gunpowder tobacco and alcohol.
  • For more than four centuries of the slave trade, millions of Africans underwent such experiences, but their numbers change over time.
  • During the sixteenth, slave exports from Africa.
  • Ten Percent of the Enslaved Africans experienced a major rebellion by desperate captives, and resistance continued in America.
  • Economically, the slave trade had a pretty good chance for Africa due to not investing in the productive capacities of their societies.
  • Different African Societies, the impact of the slave trade differed considerably from place to place.
  • As early as 1516, its ruler began to restrict the slave trade and soon forbade the export of male slaves altogether.

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