yes, their masters controlled everything.if the slaves tried they would get whip or punished
They didn't join, they started the transatlantic slave trade...
ivory coast
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The Americans.
1. The colonies in the Americas depended on slave labor to work on their plantations. The owners tried to make as much money as possible, so they wanted cheap labor.2. People who enslaved Africans and then sold them made a great deal of money.3. Some African tribes actually helped the slave traders and allowed their people to be captured. Also, many African nations could not defeat the slave traders.4. Many European nations who participated in the slave trade had more and better weapons to capture slaves, and the Africans were helpless to defend themselves.
african slave trade was a horrible time
many african communiteis faced economic disaster
The old African empires crumbled due to warring.
The African diaspora began with the transatlantic slave trade, where millions of Africans were forcibly taken from their homelands and transported to the Americas to be enslaved. This mass movement of people spread African culture, traditions, and heritage across the world.
They didn't join, they started the transatlantic slave trade...
Exploration expanded the reach of the African slave trade by opening up new markets for enslaved people in the Americas. European powers sought slaves to work in their colonies, leading to an increase in demand for African captives. This demand resulted in intensified slave raids and increased the scale of the transatlantic slave trade.
On a ship. The conquistadors brought horses with them. (Horses are not native to the Americas.)
European slave traders captured slaves in Africa during the transatlantic slave trade.
The majority of Black people in Haiti are descendants of African slaves who were brought to the island by European colonizers during the transatlantic slave trade, primarily from West and Central Africa.
Some Africans were involved in the transatlantic slave trade as intermediaries who captured and enslaved people to sell to European slave traders. Additionally, some African rulers and merchants profited from the trade by selling enslaved individuals in exchange for goods and weapons.
African kingdoms that provided slave labor to the Americas engaged in the capture, sale, and trade of individuals as slaves. This practice was driven by economic incentives, as well as alliances and warfare among different African kingdoms. The transatlantic slave trade had devastating impacts on African societies, with millions of people forcibly taken from their homes and families.
The African slave system typically involved slaves being integrated into society and having the potential to gain social mobility, while the colonial slave system focused on dehumanizing slaves and perpetuating generational enslavement. Additionally, the African slave system often relied on war captives or debtors, whereas the colonial slave system relied heavily on transatlantic slave trade.