Some Africans participated in the slave trade due to economic incentives, like receiving goods in exchange for slaves. They may have also been motivated by competition between different African groups and kingdoms. European incentives such as firearms and other technology also played a role in encouraging some Africans to collaborate in the capture and sale of other Africans.
Europeans used enslaved Africans primarily for forced labor in industries such as mining, agriculture, and construction. Enslaved Africans were also used as domestic servants and in other forms of manual labor.
Africans became slaves through various means, including capture in warfare, being sold by other African tribes or rulers, and being kidnapped by slave traders. European powers also played a significant role in the transatlantic slave trade by capturing and transporting Africans to the Americas to work on plantations.
During the age of exploration and colonization, Europeans often referred to Africans as "robust" because they observed their physical strength and endurance, which stood out compared to Europeans due to differences in environment and lifestyle. This term was often used in a descriptive (though sometimes stereotype-based) way to highlight certain physical attributes of the African people.
Africans traded gold, ivory, and other resources for goods such as firearms, textiles, and rum in the triangle trade. The main commodity that Africans were traded for in this trade route was slaves.
Many Africans have been historically sold into slavery, particularly during the transatlantic slave trade. This involved capturing and forcibly transporting Africans to the Americas to work on plantations and in other labor-intensive industries.
It was not the Europeans that raided the African villages, this was done by other Africans wanting to capture slaves to sell.
Mostly other Africans.
Slave traders obtained slaves through various means, including capturing them in war, purchasing them from other slave owners, or kidnapping them from their homes and communities. These slaves were then sold and transported to markets where they were traded for goods or money.
Other Africans captured and enslaved them.
Because other Africans sold them to the Europeans as slaves and the new world colonies needed workers.
Other Africans.
Europeans used enslaved Africans primarily for forced labor in industries such as mining, agriculture, and construction. Enslaved Africans were also used as domestic servants and in other forms of manual labor.
Sailors did not capture Africans, it was other African tribes that did this then took them to the coast as salves to be sold. The Imbangala economy was heavily focused on the slave trade.
They usually bought them from other Africans.
They raped, killed,exploited the Africans, they exploited them and their resources with out pay, abused them as chimpanzees and lots of more other unrealistic bad acts that are inhuman were done to Africans by Europeans.
The Europeans purchased the African slaves from other Africans, kings or tribal leaders.
Because other African tribes defeated them in battle and captured them as slaves, then sold them to Europeans. Note, it was other Africans that made slaves of Africans and took them from their homes, not Europeans.