Want this question answered?
Middle Passage
As more sugar plantations were created, farmers needed more workers so they needed more slaves. Slave owners also never felt like they had enough slaves, in other words they were very greedy, this caused more slaves being transpoted in the middle passage, the trade route from Europe to Africa, then the "middle" Africa to America. This was called the trianglular trade route.
Bartholomeu Dias did not find a trade route through Africa to get to Asia. He did, however, establish a trade route by sailing around the southern tip of Africa to get to Asia.
The triangular trade route was most likely used by colonial smugglers during the 1600s and 1700s. The triangular trade involved the transportation of goods, including slaves, between Europe, Africa, and the Americas. Smugglers took advantage of the system to transport illicit goods and evade custom duties and regulations imposed by colonial authorities.
In the triangular trade route, there were 3 main points of trading- Africa, Europe, and America. Manufactured goods went from Europe to Africa, slaves went from Africa to the Americas, and luxury goods from the Americas to Europe.
rum
9000 miles
2 possible answers : Europe to Africa to America OR africa west indies america OR EUROPE TO WEST INDIES TO AMERICA
The shortest route between South America and Africa would have you leaving from the nation of Brazil. Brazil remained a Portuguese colony until 1808.
The Middle Passage.
Britain to Africa to get the slaves to the Caribbean/America to sell slaves and back again
Middle Passage
The Thirteen Colonies(America), Africa, and Britain(Europe) -just learned this yesterday in Social Studies!
Europe, Africa, and America. Homeward, Middle, and outward passages.
The geometric name for the transatlantic trade route that dealt in African slaves was called the Triangle Route or the Middle Route. It went to Africa, North America and Europe.
The Thirteen Colonies(America), Africa, and Britain(Europe) -just learned this yesterday in Social Studies!
This trade route actually included Europe as well, and it was called the Triangular Trade. Sugar, Cotton and Tobacco going to Europe, Textiles, Rum and manufactured goods to Africa and Slaves to the Americas. Of course these are not the only things that were traded on this trade route be these are the more famous of them, but things such as diseases, while not intended were also traded.