mamdmd
They all went to the colonies. They were all sent from the British.
The most important colonial export in the British trans-Atlantic trade was sugar. Produced primarily in the Caribbean colonies, sugar became a highly sought-after commodity in Europe, driving immense profits for British merchants and plantation owners. This demand for sugar also fueled the transatlantic slave trade, as enslaved Africans were forcibly transported to work on sugar plantations. The sugar trade significantly shaped the economic and social dynamics of both the colonies and Britain.
because when they traded they were able to learn the different ways people lived and traded?. Good Luck:)
The growth of the Atlantic slave trade was primarily driven by the demand for labor in the Americas, particularly in plantation economies that produced sugar, tobacco, and cotton. European colonial powers sought to maximize profits from these lucrative crops, leading to the establishment of a transatlantic trade network that supplied enslaved Africans as cheap labor. Additionally, the decline of Indigenous populations and the increasing profitability of slave-based agriculture fueled the expansion of this inhumane trade, creating a vicious cycle of exploitation and economic gain.
For the money and the slave labor; the same reason everyone else participated in the slave trade.
They didn't join, they started the transatlantic slave trade...
European slave traders captured slaves in Africa during the transatlantic slave trade.
african slave trade was a horrible time
London benefited from the slave trade economically by becoming a major hub for the transatlantic slave trade, which brought wealth and prosperity to the city through the growth of industries, such as banking, insurance, and shipping. The influx of wealth from the slave trade also helped finance infrastructure projects and urban development in London.
the slave trade stoped when Abe was president
The word "transatlantic" says it: it was the trade across the Atlantic ocean from Africa to the Americas.
Slave ships during the transatlantic slave trade typically flew the flag of the country that owned the ship, such as Portugal, Spain, England, or the Netherlands.
the Americans
Slave trade
The Triangular Trade and the Middle Passage.
The transatlantic slave trade.
yes