There is no slavery today therefore there is no present relationship with the past.
the ralationship between robinson crusoe and friday seemes to be like the relationship between master and slave crusoe is the master and friday in the slave he should serve his master as soon as he lives
Slave code
West African slave traders
a serf helped a vassal because the serf came with the vassals land and that helped him with the land and any other needs for land he was not a slave but one step above the slave
The nature of the relationship between John Hancock and his servant, Frank is unknown. However, the closeness of Frank's grave to Hancock's indicates a close relationship. Oddly, there is no surname on the tombstone, This could have been because Frank was a slave, who were usually only identified by their first name.
between 1450 and 1850
In the 1400's there was no Atlantic slave trade. It didn't begin until the American colonies used the slaves as part of the triangular trade. The first slave arrived in 1619, but it wasn't until the invention of the cotton gin that the slave population grew to millions of slaves in the southern states. There is a direct relationship between the bales of cotton produced and the number of slaves.
It resulted in a triangular exchange between the Americas, Europe, and Africa rather than a direct exchange between colonies and their mother countries. -Jade
slaves hence the name Atlantic SLAVE trade
the amaricas
slave trade
the amaricas
More slaves were needed by the south. With the invention of the cotton gin the population increases with the amount of cotton bales produced. There is a direct relationship between the two. By 1860 there are 4 million slaves.
the ralationship between robinson crusoe and friday seemes to be like the relationship between master and slave crusoe is the master and friday in the slave he should serve his master as soon as he lives
Slave Passage
The Atlantic slave trade significantly contributed to the industrial revolution by providing a vast supply of cheap labor and raw materials, particularly in the production of cotton, sugar, and tobacco. The profits generated from slave labor and the commodities it produced fueled investment in industrial enterprises and infrastructure in Europe and the Americas. Additionally, the growth of industries and markets reliant on slave-produced goods created a symbiotic relationship that reinforced both the exploitation of enslaved people and the rapid technological advancements of the industrial revolution. Thus, the two phenomena are intricately linked, with the slave trade laying crucial economic foundations for industrial growth.
No. Slavery and the slave trade had been going on in Africa for centuries before the Atlantic Slave trade came into being.