|

|
|
THE HISTORY NOT MANY PEOPLE KNOW OR WANT TO HEAR ABOUT
*Between 10 and 28 million people taken from Africa into slavery
*17 million Africans sold into slavery on the coast
of the Indian Ocean, the Middle East, and North Africa
*12 million Africans taken to the Americas
*5 million Africans taken across the Sahara and East Africa into slavery in other parts of the world
* Europeans argued that Africans taken into captivity could then be "saved" by conversion to Christianity.
THE STORY MUST BE TOLD BUT WHO WILL TELL IT
BLACK HISTORY MONTH
|
|

Cape Coast Castle where the fit slaves were shipped through the doors of no return.
|
|

Dungeons where captured slaves were held in
|
|

Millions died along the journey from Africa to the
caribbean and the Americas.
|
|
Africans packed like Sardines on the slave ship
|
The
exact numbers of Africans shipped overseas during the
slave trade are hotly debated - estimates range
between 10 and 28 million.
What
is undisputed is the degree of savage cruelty endured
by men, women and children. Up to 20% of those chained
in the holds of the slave ships died before they even
reached their destination.
Between
1450 and 1850 at least 12 million Africans were taken
across the notorious Middle Passage of the
Atlantic
- mainly to colonies in
North America
,
South America
, and the
West Indies
.
The
Middle Passage was integral to a larger pattern of
commerce developed by European countries.
European
traders would export manufactured goods to the west
coast of
Africa
where they would be exchanged for slaves. The slaves
were then sold for huge profits in the
Americas
.
Traders
used the money to buy raw materials such as sugar,
cotton, coffee, metals, and tobacco which were shipped
back and sold in
Europe
.
Slavery
created and then relied on a large support network of
shipping services, ports, and finance and insurance
companies.New industries were created, processing the
raw materials harvested or extracted by slaves in the
Americas
The
slave trade contributed significantly to the
commercial and industrial revolutions. Cities such as
Liverpool
and
Amsterdam
grew wealthy as a result of the trade in humans.
In
Europe
, slavery was often justified by the state on
philanthropic grounds. They argued that Africans taken
into captivity could then be "saved" by
conversion to Christianity.
However,
Europe
did not have a monopoly on slavery. Muslim traders
also exported as many as 17 million slaves to the
coast of the
Indian Ocean
, the
Middle East
, and
North Africa
.
Some
historians say that between the years 1500 and 1900,
five million African slaves were transported via the
Red Sea
, the
Sahara
and
East Africa
to other parts of the world.
In
Africa
, unknown numbers of people - according to some
estimates at least four million - died in wars and
forced marches before even being shipped to another
continent.
Within
central
Africa
, the slave trade led to huge population upheavals.
Coastal tribes fled slave-raiding parties, and
captured slaves were redistributed to different
regions in
Africa
.
Slave
dealing also contributed to the expansion of powerful
West African kingdoms such as
Mali
and
Ghana
.
Despite
attempts to supress or even eradicate African culture,
slaves and their descendants carried skills and
traditions to their destination countries.
African
literary traditions - particularly oral storytelling
featuring the tortoise, hare, and spider - spread
throughout the
Caribbean
,
Latin America
, the
United States
and
Europe
.
By
the late 18th Century, a growing abolitionist
movement, fuelled by slave uprisings in the
West Indies
, resulted in most European countries making tentative
moves towards halting the trade.
Slave
narratives, particularly that of freed slave Olaudah
Equiano offering an African perspective, contributed
to the growing anti-slavery movement.
Britain
banned the slave trade in 1807 but a fierce debate in
the
United States
, which stoked civil war between the abolitionist
northern states and the pro-slavery south, delayed a
unified resolution.
Slavery
was eventually abolished in the
US
in 1865 by the 13th Amendment to the constitution. But
it was not until 1888 - when slavery was banned in
Brazil
- that the trade was outlawed across the American
continent.
|