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Alotof people was involved in the middle passage. mianly slaves . but to get down to the real question. the mian countries that were invoved in the middle passage was Europe, Africa of course, the west indies or America . this all evaluated froom the triangular trade.
life was like dirt
The middle passage happened ages ago in America when the slave trade was around: Black and white where treated as two different people it was cast as racism. Blacks got whipped and turnt to slaves which was unfair as the whites got to have a good life.
slaves called the ships, the white man's kangoo house because they had only ever see a kangoo in there life....and just for info, this website has amazing answer so ha ha ha :)
it is stupid......get a life people
It was called the Middle Passage and they were chained into the bottom of the ship. Many would die on the trip. In the book To Be a Slave there are firsthand accounts of the trip and the life of a slave.
AnswerI'd love to answer your question, but could you please formulate your question better? Than, I shall see what I can do.The Frisianwhy is the middle passage so significant in history
Families may well have been totally separated for life. Slaves were considered property and not people. The Middle passage was a terrible voyage across the ocean. The slave hold became a foul smelling pit of sweat, urine, feces, vomit, and rotting flesh.
They were packed aboard in very small spaces, chained in place, unable to move. They were hungry, thirsty, dirty, and many died during the trip.
Nearly 20% of the People on Board has died. Slaves were treated harshly, slave owners whipped and beats the slaves.
Are you talking about the 3 stage trade between Europe, Africa, and Narth America? if so the first stage was to travel from Europe to Africa and capture slaves through battles between two tribes and trade tem for valuable things...possibly spices or guns.
This particular passage about both Bondage and Freedom is an excerpt. It is part of the narrative of the life of Frederick Douglass.