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The most inhuman part of the triangular trade was the middle passage, in which slaves were carried from Africa to the New World.
THE OUTWARD trade
the Americans
New Englanders exported Tobacco as part as the triangular trade.
Yes
it was a part of triangular trade
The continents involved in the triangular trade route were Europe, Africa, and the Americas. Europe traded manufactured goods to Africa in exchange for slaves, who were then transported to the Americas. In the Americas, the slaves were forced to work on plantations producing commodities like sugar, tobacco, and cotton, which were then sent back to Europe.
The Americans.
The European colonies in the Americas represented the location where the trade process originated in the triangular trade system. This is where goods like sugar, tobacco, and cotton were produced and then sent to Europe.
The middle passage, part of the Triangular Trade, carried slaves from Africa to America.
The middle passage was the most inhumane part of the triangular trade, where enslaved Africans were transported from Africa to the Americas in inhumane conditions. They were packed tightly into ships, with many dying from disease, malnutrition, and poor treatment during the long and treacherous journey.
Yes. The colonies supplied England with tobacco as part of the triangular trade.