work on plantations in the Atlantic islands
Africans. Some African leaders sold their own people into slavery as a source of income, no matter the effects on the people. a majority of them were sent to Brazil, The Caribbean Islands, and Portugal.
your moma
Slavery was accepted all through the world until about the early 19th century.
Portugal; slavery
Portugal; slavery
The first Europeans to arrive in Africa were Portuguese. Once there, they realized that some Africans "owned" other Africans, and purchased the first slaves. Portugal was also the first nation to abolish slavery.
The enslavement of Africans in the 17th century was different from previous forms of slavery in that it was based on race, with Africans being specifically targeted for bondage. This racialized form of slavery led to the development of the transatlantic slave trade, where millions of Africans were forcibly transported to the Americas to work on plantations. Additionally, African slaves in this period were often subjected to harsher treatment and enduring chattel slavery, meaning they were treated as property for life.
Slavery for Africans, particularly in the context of the transatlantic slave trade, lasted for several centuries, beginning in the late 15th century and continuing until the 19th century. The trade involved the forced transportation of millions of Africans to the Americas, where they were subjected to brutal conditions and labor. While the transatlantic slave trade officially ended in the 19th century, slavery in various forms persisted in some regions long after abolition. Overall, the impact of slavery has had lasting effects on African societies and the diaspora.
Slavery has existed for thousands of years, but the transatlantic slave trade involving the forced migration of Africans to the Americas began in the early 16th century and intensified in the 17th century.
the africans did not magrate they were captured in forced in slavery
There is no slavery in Portugal.
They weren't. They went and go to Portugal and Spain as migrant workers who tend to settle. They were forcibly taken to the luso-hispanic colonies in the Americas to work as slave labour until slavery was banned, first by Portugal, then by all other nations.