Slavery in Old and New Worlds

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Slavery in Old and New Worlds

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Slavery in Old and New Worlds. Presentations. Eyewitness Accounts. Olaudah Equiano. Born in Nigeria Kidnapped at 11 B rought to Virginia Bought by naval captain Schooled in Great Britain Sold to Caribbean traders Purchased his freedom. Eyewitness Accounts. Olaudah Equiano. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Slavery in Old and New Worlds

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Slavery in Old and New Worlds

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Presentations

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Eyewitness

Accounts

Olaudah Equiano

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Born in NigeriaKidnapped at 11

Brought to VirginiaBought by naval

captainSchooled in Great

BritainSold to Caribbean

tradersPurchased his

freedom

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Eyewitness

Accounts

Olaudah Equiano

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Slavery and Racism

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Did racism bring about slavery – or the other way around?

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Ancient World – China, Egypt, Greece, Rome – relates to war

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Medieval World – Vikings, Mongols– relates to raiding

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Medieval World –Islamic Empires –relates to religion and sex

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Islamic Spain – 711-1492 AD

Slavery brought to Europe

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Islamic Spain – 711-1492 AD

Slavery brought to Europe

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Early Concepts of Race in EurasiaDivision between Islam and

Christians

Becomes racial in conflict over Spain – Black Moors vs. White

Spaniards

Race = Religion = Ability to Enslave

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Christian Spain –1492 AD

Slavery brought to Europe

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Crops &mining require labor

Native American Plagues

Slavery is brought to New World

Demand for Slaves

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1492-1600

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Slavery is brought to New WorldSpanish slavery- Religion- Economics- Race- Sex

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Slavery is brought to New WorldConquistadors &the “browning” of Spain and New World

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Racial Blurring

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1600sNumerous mixed ancestry

Slavery becomes a serious ethical issue in Spain

Declines in use – instead cheap labor utilized

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Enter England1534 – England splits from Catholic church

No longer under rule of Pope – including decree giving the New World to Spain

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Enter EnglandEngland had very few slaves – but was a major player in their trade

Slaves seen as Property – not People

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1600-1719

Spain

England

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English Colonialism

Economics and Demography

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English Colonialism• Tobacco and

Cotton plantations

• Originally used Irish servants and convicts

• Uprisings and rebellions

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English Colonialism• Direct

importation of Africans

• Strict racial divisions

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English Colonialism• Continued

“whiteness” of English

• No moral dilemma

• Slavery forms backbone of economy

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English Colonialism• Racism

deployed to control working poor

• Racism used to justify treatment of Africans

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EnglandSpain• Slaves as

People• Intermarriage • Never big in

trade• Laws decreed

by King and Pope

• Slaving declines in importance

• Slaves as Property

• Segregation• Primary trader• Laws decreed

by companies• Slaving always

remains important

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1719-1775

Spain

England

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EnglandSpainEngland begins to dominate in the Americas, partially because of their continued use of slavery while Spain loses influence

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Long-term Effects of Slavery• Impact on Africa• Impact on Europe• Impact on Americas

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Long-term Effects of Slavery

Nzinga Mbemba Letter

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Trans-Atlantic Trade

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Trans-Saharan Trade

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Indian Sea Trade

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Red Sea Trade

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Total Population Loss = 20 million

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Long-term Effects of SlaveryAfrica• Population Loss

• Ethnic Divisions• Raiding – Weapons – Slaving Spiral• Political Instability• Youth over Wisdom, Warlords over

Politicians• Destruction of Legal System

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Long-term Effects of SlaveryResults in an Africa plagued

by violence, instability, ethnic divisions, and poverty

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Raw Materials

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Long-term Effects of Slavery

EuropeIncreased raw materials = increased number of skilled workers &industrialization of

production

Explosion in wealth and middle class

Growth in large-scale international trade

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Long-term Effects of SlaveryResults in an Europe filled

with skilled workers, increased wealth, and

demand for industrialization

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People and Labor

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Long-term Effects of Slavery

AmericasRepopulationEconomic Base

New Ethnicities (Spain)Deep Racism (England)

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Long-term Effects of SlaveryResults in an America filled

with ethnic diversity, cash crops based on free labor,

and new conceptions of race

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The end of slaverySublimus Dei – 1537 (recinded

1538)Spain – 1542

Providence Plantation (Rhode Island) – 1652

Portugal – 1761Northeast US – 1770-1799