It is estimated that approximately 1.2 to 2 million people died during the Middle Passage, the brutal transatlantic journey that transported enslaved Africans to the Americas. This figure represents about 15-20% of the total number of enslaved individuals who were forcibly transported between the 16th and 19th centuries. The deaths were due to a combination of factors, including disease, malnutrition, and inhumane conditions aboard slave ships.
6
It is estimated that between 10% to 20% of enslaved individuals did not survive the Middle Passage, the transatlantic voyage that transported them from Africa to the Americas. This mortality rate varied depending on factors such as the specific route, ship conditions, and the treatment of enslaved people during the journey. In total, millions of Africans were forcibly taken, and the Middle Passage is remembered as one of the most brutal aspects of the transatlantic slave trade.
It is estimated that 100,000,000 Africans descendants were killed during the middle passage. European Christians, Jews, and Africans were apart of the Middle Passage, which was known as the Black Holocaust, but not one African nor his or her descendant has ever received reparations. Even the Jews who were a major part of the Middle Passage never admitted to playing a major role in slavery. Many more Africans were killed during the Black Holocaust than the Jewish Holocaust, but racism and those insideously involved in the Black Holocaust is the reason African descendants never received reparations and an apology. Those who say "never again" once did and still do to a people to this day. Racism lives!
They viewed them as property rather than as people.
They viewed them as property rather than as people.
people
They viewed them as property rather than as people. APEX
The Middle Passage, the transatlantic journey enslaved Africans endured, resulted in an estimated death toll of 1.2 to 2.4 million people. Conditions aboard slave ships were horrendous, with overcrowding, disease, and malnutrition leading to high mortality rates. It is estimated that about 15-20% of those enslaved did not survive the journey. The exact numbers are difficult to determine due to a lack of comprehensive records.
Many thousands of people died from disastrous circumstances during the Middle Ages. During 1347 to 1352, an estimated 25 million people died of the Black Death, also called the Bubonic Plague. Jewish people were persecuted, which also resulted in thousands of deaths.
The survival rate for enslaved Africans during the Middle Passage varied, but it is estimated that about 15-20% of individuals did not survive the journey across the Atlantic. This means that approximately 80-85% of enslaved people made it to the Americas, although many suffered severe physical and psychological trauma. Conditions aboard slave ships were brutal, with overcrowding, disease, and inadequate nutrition contributing to high mortality rates.
Many Enslaved Africans went on a voyage called the Middle Passage.
it is stupid......get a life people