yes
Slaves sang work songs and used field hollers to make the physical labor of their work easier, maintain a sense of rhythm and unity among the workers, and express their emotions and cope with the hardships of their situation. These songs also served as a form of communication and a way to preserve cultural and spiritual traditions.
House slaves were sometimes resented by field slaves because they typically had better living conditions, closer proximity to the master, and less physically demanding work. This perceived preferential treatment could create jealousy and tensions between the two groups of slaves.
House slaves typically wore better quality clothing made from nicer fabrics compared to field slaves, who wore more practical and durable clothing suited for working in the fields. House slaves often had better access to more varied and higher quality food compared to field slaves, who typically received simpler and less varied meals to sustain them during their physically demanding work.
True. Plantation workers may include both indentured servants and slaves, who were historically used to perform labor on plantations. Indentured servants were often individuals who exchanged labor for passage to a new country, while slaves were forced into labor through ownership.
Two types of slaves in ancient Rome were household slaves who worked in the homes of their master, performing domestic duties, and agricultural slaves who worked in the fields and farms belonging to their master.
Slaves
Craftsman!
no
most were slaves
Most of the workers who built the pyramid were slaves.
Artisan slaves were often skilled workers who were trained in a specific craft, such as carpentry or metalworking. They were generally provided with better living conditions and treated with more respect than field slaves. Field slaves, on the other hand, were typically tasked with agricultural labor on plantations and endured harsher working conditions and treatment.
No. Indentured workers were very early in colonial history and slaves replaced them as workers.
The planted, plowed, and picked the crops.
Slaves began when farmers looked for workers to labor their fields, and blacks were the most convenient choice because whites regarded them as property.
This question seems to speak about US history. In the South, most crop workers were slaves. In the North, farmlands were worked by farm owners and their paid farm workers.
False - they were used as domestic servants not field hands. The massive use of African slaves as field hands was in the Carribean and Brazil (as well as the southern United States to a lesser extent).
no