1 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 (Narrator) This is the story of a world whose borders and territories 2 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 were drawn by the slave trade, 3 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 where violence, subjugation and profit imposed their own routes. 4 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 This criminal system shaped our history and our world. 5 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 On São Tomé, the Portuguese invented an economic model 6 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 with unprecedented profitability: the sugar plantation. 7 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 - (English voiceover) This was the first black colony, 8 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 the first slave society. 9 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 - (English voiceover) We witnessed the marriage of the black men 10 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 with sugar cane. 11 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 - (Narrator) In the 16th century, other European powers 12 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 were eager to follow their model. 13 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 Their greed would plunge an entire continent 14 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 into chaos and violence. 15 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 Nearly 13 million Africans were cast onto new slavery routes to the new world, 16 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 where the English, the French, and the Dutch hoped to become wealthy, 17 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 immeasurably wealthy. 18 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 (Intense music with strong bass drum beat) 19 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 Because the Caribbean has similar climatic features to São Tomé, 20 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 it eventually became the principal crossroads 21 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 of the slave trader's routes. 22 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 For people in the western world, 23 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 these islands are today associated with vacation. 24 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 Guadeloupe offers tourists a dream destination. 25 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 Sunshine and pristine nature, 26 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 rekindling myths of a lost paradise. 27 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 Holidaymakers tend to confine themselves to the beaches of Le Gosier, Sainte-Anne, 28 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 and Saint François. 29 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 But as this sign indicates, they are all too close 30 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 to another side of the islands heritage 31 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 that was anything but a paradise. 32 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 Just a few meters away from the bathers is a burial site 33 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 where countless skeletons were discovered. 34 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 Between 500 and 1,000 graves are still buried beneath the sand. 35 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 The Raisins Clairs beach is one of 15 slave cemeteries that have been excavated. 36 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 15, among the 1,000 that exist in the Caribbean. 37 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 89 skeletons have been exhumed by French archaeological research experts. 38 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 Judging by the state of the bones, they concluded that these men and women 39 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 had not reached the age of 30. 40 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 By the time of their death, the toll from working on the plantations 41 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 had so deformed their bodies that they seemed more like 75 year olds. 42 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 These people were human guinea pigs for the sugar experiment, 43 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 the collateral damage of an unprecedented trade war: The Sugar War. 44 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 74% of all slaves carried off, were carried off because of sugar. 45 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 If you want to understand the slave trade, you just need to know about sugar. 46 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 Sugar proved more addictive than pepper or cinnamon. 47 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 From the 17th century onward, Europeans craved this rare and expensive commodity 48 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 In London, Amsterdam, and Paris, sugar fever was rampant, 49 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 prompting a new generation of adventurers to go to any extremes to get it. 50 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 Shipowners and fitters, merchants and pirates, 51 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 all knew that to produce sugar, you needed a lot of slaves. 52 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 John Hawkins was one of these new entrepreneurs 53 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 for whom profit reigned supreme. 54 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 The English privateer was a pioneer in understanding that a fortune 55 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 could be made by shipping Black captives to the New World. 56 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 In the mid 16th century, he convinced Queen Elizabeth I 57 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 to lend him a ship, The Jesus of Lubec. 58 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 For the expedition, Hawkins conspicuously set the tone 59 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 by choosing a trussed up Black man on his emblem. 60 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 - (Male speaker) "I do confirm to your highness 61 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 "that I will bring home 40,000 marks without any offense of the least 62 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 to any of Your Highnesses, allies, or friends. 63 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 "I will conduct this enterprise and turn it to the benefit 64 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 "of your whole realm, with Your Highness' consent. 65 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 "The voyage I propose is to load negroes in Guinea 66 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 "and sell them in the West Indies, 67 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 "in truck of pearls, gold, and emeralds that I will bring back in abundance." 68 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 - (Narrator) 1620, a century after sugar plantations 69 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 were introduced in Brazil. 70 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 The Atlantic became the battleground for the sugar war. 71 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 England, The Netherlands and France wanted to break Spain and Portugal's hegemony. 72 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 In the Caribbean, the Dutch took control 73 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 of Curaçao, Sint Eustatius, and Saint Martin. 74 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 The French: Guadeloupe, Martinique, Grenada and Saint-Domingue. 75 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 The English occupied The Bahamas, Jamaica, Antigua, Barbados and Dominica. 76 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 Only Cuba and Puerto Rico remained under Spanish rule. 77 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 After the extermination of the native Arawak people, 78 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 the first sugar canes flourished on this fertile land. 79 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 - The Caribbean became a space of conquest for the Europeans very early on. 80 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 Really, it was the first place that Columbus landed in the new world, 81 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 the first place that the Spanish began to search for gold, 82 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 and the first place they began to enslave the Indians. 83 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 So they were thoroughgoing colonial spaces 84 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 created by design of Europ,ean planters and imperial policy makers 85 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 and for their profit, right? 86 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 There aren't so many places where you can completely overlay a territory like that. 87 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 So, in some ways, the Caribbean is the space where you find 88 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 the purest of Colonial territories. 89 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 Where the masters of the space actually get to create the space 90 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 to suit their own needs. 91 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 - (Narrator) In Guadalupe, every plot of land, 92 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 every single square inch of ground, 93 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 is connected to this violent and deeply rooted history. 94 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 Today, all that is left of sugar war is a field of ruins. 95 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 Of the 250 sugar refineries active in the late 19th century, 96 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 only two remain in operation. 97 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 In 2017, experts from France's 98 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 National Institute of Preventive Archeological Research 99 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 exhumed the remains of the Saint Jacques residence and sugar refinery 100 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 in Anse-Bertrand: 101 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 A mill, stock rooms, and three rows of so-called "negro huts" 102 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 where hundreds of slaves were penned up together. 103 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 In this brutal work camp, human beings were but one tool among others. 104 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 Each became a mechanized, emaciated body consumed by work until their final breath. 105 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 - Both the time in which the slaves were digging the cane holes 106 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 and the times in which they were harvesting 107 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 were really the peak of the labor on a plantation. 108 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 You could almost see the slaves wasting away 109 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 when they were digging these cane holes 110 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 because the work was so strenuous and they were getting fed so poorly. 111 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 You found women in all of the gangs, 112 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 often times doing the hardest, dirtiest labor on the plantation 113 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 alongside the men, or even before the men. 114 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 And one of the things that means, 115 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 when you find young women doing this quite debilitating labor, 116 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 is that the birth rates are very low and the mortality rates, 117 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 the infant mortality rate is shockingly high. 118 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 In the mid-18th century, people talked about 119 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 9 out of 10 infants born to enslaved Jamaican women dying, right, 120 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 within the first year. 121 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 So, there's no way in which the plantation can reproduce itself 122 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 under those kinds of conditions. 123 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 - (English voiceover) The plantation were managed by overseers 124 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 who saw the slaves in purely functional terms. 125 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 This was an absolute exploitation of the workforce. 126 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 It was a very particular society 127 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 because the average rate of life expectancy on a plantation 128 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 was extremely low, about 8 to 10 years after arriving. 129 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 - (English voiceover) The logic of the slave system 130 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 was one where the availability of the workforce had to be absolute. 131 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 And for this, man was conceived as an accessory of the land. 132 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 He appeared as such in house inventories. 133 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 Slaves are listed next to records for livestock or manufacturing implements. 134 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 That's the archaic aspect which was put to use by a capitalist system, 135 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 and which largely met market supply and demand, 136 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 with its fluctuations, needs, and competition - free competition. 137 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 - (Narrator) The sugar plantations saw slavery enter a new era. 138 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 The stronger the demand for sugar, the more the slave trade expanded, 139 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 and the more the slave traders sought support from banks 140 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 to finance their expeditions. 141 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 London is one of the oldest centers of global finance. 142 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 The city of London was the first to create a commodities exchange, 143 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 to develop credit markets and to issue banknotes on a massive scale. 144 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 Without the invention of a centralized banking system, 145 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 the explosion of the slave trade in the 17th century 146 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 would not have been possible. 147 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 Preparing for a slave expedition was expensive, 148 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 and having a financial arsenal 149 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 gave England a decisive advantage over its competitors. 150 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 You've got to remember that the State is getting a tremendous amount of revenue from the plantation complex, 151 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 so they had a very strong, vested interest in the slave trade. 152 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 If you had gone to the king of England in 1680 153 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 and said, "Look, I'm gonna give you a choice. 154 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 "You can either have these 13 colonies in North America, 155 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 "or you can have this one little island called Barbados." 156 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 You would have taken Barbados in a split second 157 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 because of the sugar revenues. 158 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 And this is something that's going to persist as a very important interest 159 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 for European states up until the very end of slavery. 160 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 To support the sugar war, 161 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 the city lent money on a colossal scale. 162 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 In the midst of these steel and glass buildings, 163 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 the two pillars of the English economy that financed the slave trade 164 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 are still prominent on the London skyline. 165 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 At the heart of the financial district is the 166 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 venerable bank of England, 167 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 the world's first central bank. 168 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 A couple of blocks away is Britain's most powerful insurance company, 169 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 the prestigious Lloyd's of London. 170 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 Atlantic slave traders had to take on heavy debts to charter their ships. 171 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 Without an insurance company, most would risk ruin on their first expedition. 172 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 The slave traders made investments as if playing a game of poker. 173 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 The risks were high, but if successful, the return would far outweigh any other type of investment. 174 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 Insurers like Lloyd's had everything to gain by participating in this game of chance. 175 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 A successful expedition could yield up to three times the initial stake. 176 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 In the Lloyd's archives, little evidence remains 177 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 of the profits of insuring these high-risk expeditions. 178 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 Most accounting records were lost in a fire in 1838, 179 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 the same year that slavery was abolished in the British Caribbean. 180 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 Ports had to adapt to this initial scramble for Africa and the Caribbean. 181 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 In London, Blackwall became the slave trade's principal wharf. 182 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 All manner of goods were sold here. 183 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 Precious fabrics, jewels, porcelain, weapons,