Since they needed workforce and the natives were uncooperative, the portuguese used their vast number of colonies in Africa to "import" workers for the brazillian fields, since they were not familiar with the terrain and the climate and were nopt prone to escaping as easily as the natives.
The Portuguese brought Africans to the colony of Brazil to work as slaves on sugar plantations, as well as in mining and other labor-intensive industries. The transatlantic slave trade was key to the economic success of the colony, providing cheap labor to exploit the vast resources of Brazil.
Enslaved Africans brought their cultural traditions, music, dance, cuisine, spiritual beliefs, and languages to the Americas during the transatlantic slave trade. These cultural elements heavily influenced the development of various aspects of American culture in countries like the United States, Brazil, and the Caribbean.
BartolomΓ© de Las Casas did not advocate for the enslavement of Africans in Spain. In fact, he was strongly opposed to the enslavement and mistreatment of indigenous people in the Spanish colonies as well. Las Casas proposed the idea of importing African slaves instead of using indigenous people as a means to protect the rights and well-being of the indigenous populations.
Africans brought skills such as farming techniques, craftsmanship (including metalworking and woodworking), and knowledge of herbal medicine to the colonies. They also had experience in hunting, animal husbandry, and basket weaving, among other skills.
The primary causes of European migration to the Americas were economic opportunities, religious freedom, and the desire for political autonomy. The effects included the decimation of indigenous populations, the establishment of colonial systems, and the transatlantic slave trade, which brought millions of Africans to the Americas under brutal conditions.
European colonists brought enslaved Africans to their plantations in the Americas to provide cheap labor for cultivating crops like sugar, tobacco, and cotton. The transatlantic slave trade became a lucrative enterprise that helped fuel the economic prosperity of European colonies. Enslaved Africans were forcibly brought to the Americas to meet the labor demands of the expanding plantation economy.
The Portuguese brought millions of slaves to Brazil to work on plantations, particularly sugar plantations, to profit from the lucrative industry. Slavery was seen as a means to meet the labor demands of the expanding colonial economy.
Portuguese
For the same reason of USA farmers.
Since they needed workforce and the natives were uncooperative, the portuguese used their vast number of colonies in Africa to "import" workers for the brazillian fields, since they were not familiar with the terrain and the climate and were nopt prone to escaping as easily as the natives.
i dont know do you lol
so they could have them work the sugarcane field.
They brought them for their knowledge in farming and cleaning.
The Spanish were the first to bring Catholicism to the Americas, usually Franciscan priests accompanied each Spanish expedition and established missions along the way. In Brazil it was the Portuguese who brought the religion to Brazil.
congo
why in the worlld not you have the answer
voodoo
congo