Money and Spice and clothes
African slaves sold in the transatlantic slave trade were typically captured by rival African tribes or groups during conflicts or raids. These captors would then sell the enslaved individuals to European traders at coastal trading posts. Local leaders often participated in the trade for economic gain, exchanging captives for goods such as firearms, textiles, and alcohol. As a result, the slave trade was not solely driven by European demand but involved complex interactions among various African societies.
Through slave traders who brought slaves through the Sahara desert to the Mediterranean Sea.
the slave traders captured them in war
slave traders went to africa because they wanted to get more slaves to sell or trade
From slave traders in central Africa
liquor, guns, and metal goods for the slaves
They were purchased by African Slave Traders
They were purchased by African Slave Traders
buying them for African slave traders
they captured them in war
by buying them from African slave traders
The slaves that West African slave traders sold to Europeans were usually captured in war.
they needed cheap labor for their american colonies
African slave traders obtained slaves through various means, including wars and raids on neighboring villages or tribes, kidnapping, and capturing individuals during conflicts. They also relied on domestic slave markets and trade networks managed by African middlemen to obtain slaves for sale to European and Arab traders.
The slaves that West African slave traders sold to Europeans were usually captured in war.
From slave traders in central Africa.
From slave traders in central Africa.