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The Atlantic slave trade: What too few textbooks told you - Anthony Hazard

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    Slavery, the treatment of human beings
    as property, deprived of personal rights
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    has occurred in many forms
    throughout the world.
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    Bue one institution stands out for both
    its global scale and its lasting legacy.
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    The Atlantic Slave Trade,
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    occurring from the late 15th
    to the mid 19th century,
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    and spanning three continents,
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    forcibly brought more than 10 million
    Africans to the Americas.
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    The impact it would leave affected
    not only these slaves
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    and their descendants,
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    but the economies and histories
    of large parts of the world.
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    There had been centuries of contact
    between Europe and Africa
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    via the Mediterranean.
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    But the Atlantic Slave Trade
    began in the late 1400s
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    with Portuguese colonies in West Africa,
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    and Spanish settlement
    of the Americas shortly after.
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    The crops grown in the new colonies,
    sugar cane, tobacco, and cotton,
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    were labor intensive,
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    and there were not enough settlers
    or indentured servants
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    to cultivate all the new land.
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    American Natives were enslaved,
    but many died from new diseases,
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    while others effectively resisted.
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    And so to meet the massive
    demand for labor,
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    the Europeans looked to Africa.
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    African slavery had existed
    for centuries in various forms.
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    Some slaves were indentured servants,
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    with a limited term
    and the chance to buy one's freedom.
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    Others were more like European serfs.
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    In some societies, slaves could
    be part of a master's family,
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    own land, and even rise
    to positions of power.
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    But when white captains came offering
    manufactured goods,
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    weapons, and rum for slaves,
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    African kings and merchants
    had little reason to hesitate.
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    They viewed the people they sold
    not as fellow Africans,
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    but criminals, debtors,
    or prisoners of war from rival tribes.
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    By selling them, kings enriched
    their own realms,
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    and strengthened them
    against neighboring enemies.
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    African kingdoms prospered
    from the slave trade,
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    but meeting the European's massive demand
    created intense competition.
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    Slavery replaced other criminal sentences,
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    and capturing slaves
    became a motivation for war,
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    rather than its result.
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    To defend themselves from slave raids,
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    neighboring kingdoms
    need European firearms,
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    which they also bought with slaves.
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    The slave trade had become an arms race,
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    altering societies and economies
    across the continent.
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    As for the slaves themselves,
    they faced unimaginable brutality.
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    After being marched
    to slave forts on the coast,
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    shaved to prevent lice, and branded,
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    they were loaded onto ships
    bound for the Americas.
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    About 20% of them
    would never see land again.
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    Most captains of the day
    were tight packers,
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    cramming as many men
    as possible below deck.
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    While the lack of sanitation
    caused many to die of disease,
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    and others were thrown
    overboard for being sick,
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    or as discipline,
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    the captain's ensured their profits
    by cutting off slave's ears
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    as proof of purchase.
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    Some captives took matters
    into their own hands.
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    Many inland Africans
    had never seen whites before,
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    and thought them to be cannibals,
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    constantly taking people away
    and returning for more.
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    Afraid of being eaten,
    or just to avoid further suffering,
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    they committed suicide
    or starved themselves,
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    believing that in death,
    their souls would return home.
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    Those who survived
    were completley dehumanized,
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    treated as mere cargo.
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    Women and children were kept above deck,
    and abused by the crew,
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    while the men were made to perform dances
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    in order to keep them exercised
    and curb rebellion.
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    What happened to those Africans
    who reached the New World
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    and how the legacy of slavery
    still affects their descendants today
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    is fairly well known.
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    But what is not often discussed
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    is the effect that the Atlantic
    Slave Trade had on Africa's future.
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    Not only did the continent lose tens
    of millions of its able-bodied population,
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    but because most of the slaves
    taken were men,
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    the long-term demographic
    effect was even greater.
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    When the slave trade was finally
    outlawed in the Americas and Europe,
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    the African kingdoms whose economies
    it had come to dominate collapsed,
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    leaving them open
    to conquest and colonization.
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    And the increased competition
    and influx of European weapons
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    fueled warfare and instability
    that continues to this day.
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    The Atlantic Slave Trade also contributed
    to the development of racist ideology.
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    Most African slavery had no deeper reason
    than legal punishment
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    or intertribal warfare,
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    but the Europeans
    who preached a universal religion,
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    and who had long ago
    outlawed enslaving fellow Christians,
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    needed justification for a practice
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    so obviously at odds
    with their ideals of equality.
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    So they claimed that
    Africans were biologically inferior,
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    and destined to be slaves,
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    making great efforts
    to justify this theory.
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    Thus, slavery in Europe and the Americas
    acquired a racial basis,
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    making it impossible for slaves
    and their future descendants
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    to attain equal status in society.
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    In all of these ways,
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    the Atlantic Slave Trade
    was an injustice on a massive scale
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    whose impact has continued
    long after its abolition.
Title:
The Atlantic slave trade: What too few textbooks told you - Anthony Hazard
Speaker:
Anthony Hazard
Description:

more » « less
Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TED-Ed
Duration:
05:39

English subtitles

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