Chapter 20
Africa and the Africans in the Age of the Atlantic Slave Trade
- I. Introduction
- A. Mahommah Gardo Baquaqua – symbol of slavery
- 1. Muslim trader > African slavery > African slave trade > Missionary
- B. Impact of outsiders on Africa
- 1. Islam first, then African developed at own pace, West had big impact
- C. Influence of Europe
- 1. Path of Africa becomes linked to European world economy
- 2. Diaspora – mass exodus of people leaving homeland
- 3. Slave trade dominated interactions
- 4. Not all of Africa affected to the same degree
- D. Effects of global interactions
- 1. Forced movement of Africans improved Western economies
- 2. Transfer of African culture > adapted to create new culture
- 3. Most of African still remained politically independent
- E. Trends
- 1. Islam increased position in East
- 2. Christianity stayed in Ethiopia
- 3. Growth of African kingdoms
- A. Mahommah Gardo Baquaqua – symbol of slavery
- II. The Atlantic Slave Trade
- A. Introduction
- 1. Portuguese voyagers
- 1. Set up forts – fairly low scale – not huge impact initially
- 2. Traders
- 1. Ivory, pepper, animal skins gold for slaves initially
- 2. Mulattos and Portuguese gradually spread inland
- 3. Commerce leads to political, social, religious relations
- 1. Impressed by power of many interior kingdoms – Benin
- 2. Attempts at Christian conversion
- a. Kongo most successful – king and kingdom converted
- b. Ambassadors/exchange of ideas
- c. Oddly, relationship ends when Kongo people get enslaved
- 4. First contact – preconceptions, appreciation, curiosity
- 1. Portuguese looked strange, some tribes started portraying them artistically
- 5. Portuguese exploration
- 1. Set up Portuguese settlements on the West coast
- 2. Goal primarily commercial/military, but also missionary
- 6. Patterns of contact – shared ideas
- 1. fortified trading stations
- 2. combination of force and diplomacy
- 3. alliances with local rulers
- 4. predominance of commercial relations - $ uniting factor – that’s odd
- 7. History of African slave trade
- 1. Slavery existed in Rome, replaced by serfdom in Middle Ages
- 2. Brought to Mediterranean intermittently by Iberian peninsula
- 3. After 1441, became common trading item
- a. trade more effective than raids
- 8. Added impetus
- 1. sugar plantations in Atlantic islands off Africa creates need
- 2. Later adapted to Americas
- 1. Portuguese voyagers
- B. Trend Toward Expansion
- 1. Numbers of slave
- a. 1450-1850 – 12 million slaves shipped
- b. Mortality rate 10-20% on ships
- a. Millions more die in capture process/resulting wars
- c. Largest period in 18th century – 7 million
- 2. Reason for high volume
- a. Mortality rates high
- b. Fertility low
- c. Reproduction level higher in S. USA
- a. Different labor – not sugar plantations, mining
- b. Reproduction encouraged
- c. Milder climate
- d. More concentration - 80-90% of pop in L. America, 25% in Brit America
- 3. Reasons for shifts in volume
- a. Sugar made Caribbean major terminal
- 4. Regions of concentration
- a. Brazil/Caribbean major destinations
- b. 3 million slaves also as part of Red Sea, Muslim trade, trans-Sahara
- 1. Numbers of slave
- C. Demographic Patterns
- 1. Types of captives
- a. Trans-Saharan focused on women
- b. Atlantic slave trade focused on men
- a. Heavy labor
- b. High mortality of children – didn’t want
- c. W/ capture – African tribes liked to keep women/children for self
- 2. Demographic effects
- a. Population cut by 50%
- b. Becomes skewed toward more women
- c. New crops – maize/manioc allowed numbers to recover
- 1. Types of captives
- D. Organization of the Trade
- 1. Relation to European power
- a. As Dutch/British emerge as power in Europe – want control of slave trade
- 1. British – Royal African Company
- b. Each has agents and forts
- a. As Dutch/British emerge as power in Europe – want control of slave trade
- 2. Merchant towns
- a. Mortality rates quite high – tropical diseases - malaria
- 3. Connections between Europeans and African traders
- a. Indies piece – basis of currency = adult male, everything related to that
- b. Brought to coast
- 1. African/mulatto agents purchased captives interior
- 2. Some taxed movement of slaves
- 3. Some states tried to establish monopolies
- c. Collaboration – European or African domination
- 4. Profitability of slave trade
- a. Yes, profitable
- a. Up to 300% for slaving voyage
- b. But…still dangerous, with risks
- a. On average 5-10% growth, better than other ventures
- b. Didn’t contribute a ton to $ for Industrial Revolution
- c. However…a huge part of triangular trade
- a. Led to increased production
- b. Economies needed cog in the cycle
- c. Huge part of increasingly integrated world economy
- a. Yes, profitable
- 1. Relation to European power
- A. Introduction
- III. African Societies, Slavery and the Slave Trade
- A. Introduction
- 1. African forms of servitude
- a. Variety of forms of servitude from peasant status to chattel (property) slavery
- b. Method of increasing wealth – land owned by state
- c. Variety of uses – servants, concubines, soldiers, administrators, field workers
- d. Some slaves part of lineage system
- e. Some exploited
- f. Denied choice about lives/actions
- g. Enslavement of women central feature
- a. Used to extend lineage
- b. Led to polygamy/harems
- h. Sudanic states - Muslim
- a. Slavery legal for nonbelievers, illegal for Muslims
- 1. But…still some Muslims were enslaved
- a. Slavery legal for nonbelievers, illegal for Muslims
- i. Rarely enslaved own people, usually neighboring tribes
- a. Expanding states major suppliers
- 2. Relation between preexisting slavery and new slave trade
- a. Pre-existing condition could be readily tapped by Europeans
- 1. African forms of servitude
- B. Slaving and African Politics
- 1. Intensified enslavement and altered nature of slavery
- 2. Many competing city-states
- a. Military importance
- b. Some historians argue that slavery led to more wars
- 3. Results
- a. Europe blocked coastal states from gaining to much political/economic power
- b. Interior kingdoms gained more power – turned to cycle of guns for slaves
- C. Asante and Dahomey
- 1. Asante on Gold Coast – example of empire that benefited from slave trade
- a. Controlled gold and slave trade
- b. Osei Tutu – 1717 – asantehene – supreme religious/civil ruler
- 2. Benin – controlled slavery, but never let dominate
- 3. Dahomey – controlled slavery by royal court – 1.8 million slaves
- 4. Creativity emerges with centralized states
- a. Leaders challenged by local officials
- b. Art flourished – oftentimes patronized by royal courts
- 1. Some art purchased by nobles
- 1. Asante on Gold Coast – example of empire that benefited from slave trade
- D. East Africa and the Sudan
- 1. Swahili Coast – East Coast
- a. Commercial centers come under control of Ottomans and Portuguese
- 2. Slave trade existed
- a. Most to harems of Arabia
- b. Some to Portuguese plantations
- 3. Some island plantations emerged off coast of Africa
- 4. Interior area not as affected
- 5. Islamization enters violent phase in 18th century
- a. Reform movement
- b. Effects
- 1. New political units
- 2. New Islam eliminated pagan practices
- 3. Literacy spread
- 1. Swahili Coast – East Coast
- A. Introduction
- IV. White Settlers and Africans in Southern Africa
- A. Introduction
- 1. Southern Africa barely affected
- 2. Politically chiefdoms
- a. Process of expansion as relatives spread
- 3. Dutch East India Company creates plantations in the South – Cape Colony
- a. As Dutch farmers, Boers/Afrikaners, pushed further inland – conflict
- b. In great trek – Boers moved far north to be free of Dutch rule
- B. The Mfecane and the Zulu Rise to Power
- 1. Shaka Zulu – iron discipline + new tactics takes over surrounding areas
- a. Erratic, cruel behavior brought region under control – created enemies
- 2. Mfecane – wars of crushing and wandering
- a. Forced migrations and campaigns led to conflicts
- 3. Pattern of conflict in the South
- a. competition between settlers and Africans for land
- b. expanding influence of European government control
- c. desire of Europeans to use Africans as laborers
- 1. Shaka Zulu – iron discipline + new tactics takes over surrounding areas
- A. Introduction
- V. The African Diaspora
- A. Introduction
- 1. Trade
- a. Imports: European firearms, Indian textiles, Indonesian cowrie shells, American tobacco
- b. Exports: ivory, gold, slaves
- 1. Price of these items steadily grew – benefited traders
- 1. Trade
- B. Slave Lives
- 1. Separation from friends/family
- 2. Forced march to coastal pens
- 3. Middle Passage – traumatic – up to 20% mortality
- a. Poor hygiene
- b. Dysentery
- c. Disease
- d. Bad treatment
- e. Reaction – suicide/mutiny
- 4. Retained languages, beliefs, traditions, memories
- C. Africans in the Americas
- 1. Large plantations – sugar, rice, cotton, tobacco
- 2. Mining
- 3. Replaced indigenous people/indentured servitude
- 4. Most agricultural, but some artisans, street vendors, household servants
- D. American Slave Societies
- 1. Saltwater slaves – African-born
- 2. Creole slaves – American-born
- a. Mulattos
- b. Sexual exploitation
- c. Miscegenation
- 3. Hierarchy based on skin color – race
- a. Free whites down to darkest slaves
- b. Creoles/mulattoes given more freedom
- 4. Variety of slavery in Americas
- a. Peru – blacks outnumber
- b. Caribbean – vastly outnumbered
- c. Brazil – large population
- 1. More diverse
- 2. tradition of manumission
- 3. More miscegenation
- d. USA South – depended more on reproduction less on imports
- 1. less dependent on Africa
- 2. reduced degree of African cultural reinforcement
- E. The People and Gods in Exile
- 1. Family problems
- a. Males outnumber females – maybe 3 to 1
- b. Families sold away at whim
- c. Marriages not legally/religiously sanctioned
- 2. Afro-American roots – African culture + new reality
- 3. Religion
- a. Converted to Catholicism in Spain/Portugal
- b. But…maintained old
- 1. obeah - English islands – maintain African practices
- c. Adaptation of old
- 1. Don’t have all the priestly class immigrate
- 2. Held both beliefs
- d. Harder for Muslim Africans to maintain
- 4. Resistance and Rebellion
- a. Running away
- 1. Some create runaway kingdoms
- b. Direct confrontation
- 1. Most famous – Suriname – former Dutch plantation colony
- c. Feigned laziness
- a. Running away
- 1. Family problems
- F. The End of the Slave Trade and the Abolition of Slavery
- 1. Result of economic, political and religious changes
- 2. Based on factors beyond Africans control
- a. Enlightenment, age of revolution, Christian revivalism, Industrial Revolution
- 3. Africans begin to trade other items – peanuts, cotton, palm oil
- 4. Enlightenment – seen as backward and immoral – slave trade symbolized cruelty
- 5. England led change – William Wilberforce – abolitionist
- a. Pressured other countries
- b. 1888 finally abolished in Brazil
- A. Introduction
- VI. Global Connections
- A. Africa and the African Diaspora in World Context
- 1. Africa placed at a disadvantage in world markets
- 2. Movement of millions of people
- 3. Created vibrant new cultural forms
- 4. Altered political, economic structures
- A. Africa and the African Diaspora in World Context
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