Before anyone could answer this question, they would have to know what a eurpern is and nobody knows what the hell a 'eurpern' is.
Slaves. It was a common practice in antiquity to buy and sell slaves and have absolute power over them.
Actually there are recorded documents that show that the Native Americans did buy slaves from slave traders, the Cherokee for example were known to buy slaves (African & American slaves). While this was not large scale slavery as practiced by the American's it did exist.
they were a person who is paid to buy or sell someone else. slaves.
they did not buy slaves they just made people slaves
They have an auction and then they sell off the slaves
some people that owned it some people that owned it
I am no history major, but from what i understand slaves were not generally bought. they were captured. there were some tribes that would sell their slaves they had captured from other tribes, but usually by the slaves were caught by the slave hunters. who would transport them to their markets. the golden triangle as it was called back in the gunboat deplomacy days was when a trader would sell opium in china, go to Africa and capture slaves and then after selling the slaves in America buy molassess and head back to England.
they would sell them in markets
They would set up auctions, most often in the local town squares.
"Starting in the 16th century up into the 19th century, traders would take manufactured goods from Europe to Africa sell and buying slaves. They would take the slaves to the Americas and sell them there and buy cotton, sugar, rum and other items to take back to Europe. This was known as the slave triangle. Spirits are connected because selling the slaves in the Caribbean to buy Rum was one of the more profitable trades."
Slave owners had complete control and ownership over their slaves, including the right to buy, sell, and lease them as property. They determined where slaves lived, what work they did, and could use physical punishment to discipline them. Slaves had no legal rights and were considered mere chattel under the law.
The northern states would buy crops like cotton to sell in their industries. Although the north didn't support slavery, they bought crops from plantations on which slaves worked.