The Atlantic slave trade or transatlantic slave trade involved the transportation by slave traders of enslaved African people, mainly to the Americas. The slave trade regularly used the triangular trade route and its Middle Passage,
and existed from the 16th to the 19th centuries. The vast majority of
those who were enslaved and transported in the transatlantic slave trade
were people from central and western Africa, who had been sold by other West Africans to Western European
slave traders (with a small number being captured directly by the slave
traders in coastal raids), who brought them to the Americas.
The South Atlantic and Caribbean economies especially were dependent on
the supply of secure labour for the production of commodity crops,
making goods and clothing to sell in Europe. This was crucial to those
western European countries which, in the late 17th and 18th centuries,
were vying with each other to create overseas empires.
The Portuguese, in the 16th century, were the first to engage in
the Atlantic slave trade. In 1526, they completed the first
transatlantic slave voyage to Brazil, and other European countries soon followed. Shipowners regarded the slaves as cargo to be transported to the Americas as quickly and cheaply as possible, there to be sold to work on coffee, tobacco, cocoa, sugar and cotton plantations,
gold and silver mines, rice fields, construction industry, cutting
timber for ships, in skilled labour, and as domestic servants. The first
Africans imported to the English colonies were classified as "indentured servants",
like workers coming from England, and also as "apprentices for life".
By the middle of the 17th century, slavery had hardened as a racial
caste, with the slaves and their offspring being legally the property of
their owners, and children born to slave mothers were also slaves. As
property, the people were considered merchandise or units of labour, and
were sold at markets with other goods and services.
The major Atlantic slave trading nations, ordered by trade volume, were: the Portuguese, the British, the French, the Spanish, and the Dutch Empires. Several had established outposts on the African coast where they purchased slaves from local African leaders.
These slaves were managed by a factor who was established on or near
the coast to expedite the shipping of slaves to the New World. Slaves
were kept in a factory while awaiting shipment. Current estimates are
that about 12 to 12.8 million Africans were shipped across the Atlantic
over a span of 400 years, although the number purchased by the traders was considerably higher, as the passage had a high death rate.
Near the beginning of the 19th century, various governments acted to
ban the trade, although illegal smuggling still occurred. In the early
21st century, several governments issued apologies for the transatlantic
slave trade.
Background
Atlantic travel
The Atlantic slave trade developed after trade contacts were established between the "Old World" (Afro-Eurasia) and the "New World" (the Americas).
For centuries, tidal currents had made ocean travel particularly
difficult and risky for the ships that were then available, and as such
there had been very little, if any, maritime contact between the peoples
living in these continents.
In the 15th century, however, new European developments in seafaring
technologies resulted in ships being better equipped to deal with the
tidal currents, and could begin traversing the Atlantic Ocean. Between
1600 and 1800, approximately 300,000 sailors engaged in the slave trade
visited West Africa.
In doing so, they came into contact with societies living along the
west African coast and in the Americas which they had never previously
encountered. Historian Pierre Chaunu
termed the consequences of European navigation "disenclavement", with
it marking an end of isolation for some societies and an increase in
inter-societal contact for most others.
Historian John Thornton
noted, "A number of technical and geographical factors combined to make
Europeans the most likely people to explore the Atlantic and develop
its commerce".
He identified these as being the drive to find new and profitable
commercial opportunities outside Europe as well as the desire to create
an alternative trade network to that controlled by the Muslim Empire of the Middle East, which was viewed as a commercial, political and religious threat to European Christendom. In particular, European traders wanted to trade for gold,
which could be found in western Africa, and also to find a maritime
route to "the Indies" (India), where they could trade for luxury goods
such as spices without having to obtain these items from Middle Eastern Islamic traders.
Although many of the initial Atlantic naval explorations were led
by Iberians, members of many European nationalities were involved,
including sailors from Portugal, Spain, the Italian kingdoms, England,
France and the Netherlands. This diversity led Thornton to describe the
initial "exploration of the Atlantic" as "a truly international
exercise, even if many of the dramatic discoveries were made under the
sponsorship of the Iberian monarchs". That leadership later gave rise to
the myth that "the Iberians were the sole leaders of the exploration".
African slavery
Slavery was prevalent in many parts of Africa
for many centuries before the beginning of the Atlantic slave trade.
There is evidence that enslaved people from some parts of Africa were
exported to states in Africa, Europe, and Asia prior to the European colonization of the Americas.
The Atlantic slave trade was not the only slave trade from
Africa, although it was the largest in volume and intensity. As Elikia
M'bokolo wrote in Le Monde diplomatique:
The African continent was bled of its human resources via all possible routes. Across the Sahara, through the Red Sea, from the Indian Ocean ports and across the Atlantic. At least ten centuries of slavery for the benefit of the Muslim countries (from the ninth to the nineteenth) ... Four million enslaved people exported via the Red Sea, another four million through the Swahili ports of the Indian Ocean, perhaps as many as nine million along the trans-Saharan caravan route, and eleven to twenty million (depending on the author) across the Atlantic Ocean.
According to John K. Thornton, Europeans usually bought enslaved people who were captured in endemic warfare between African states. Some Africans had made a business out of capturing Africans from neighboring ethnic groups or war captives and selling them.
A reminder of this practice is documented in the Slave Trade Debates of
England in the early 19th century: "All the old writers ... concur in
stating not only that wars are entered into for the sole purpose of
making slaves, but that they are fomented by Europeans, with a view to
that object." People living around the Niger River were transported from these markets to the coast and sold at European trading ports in exchange for muskets and manufactured goods such as cloth or alcohol. However, the European demand for slaves provided a large new market for the already existing trade.
While those held in slavery in their own region of Africa might hope to
escape, those shipped away had little chance of returning to Africa.
European colonization and slavery in West Africa
Upon discovering new lands through their naval explorations, European
colonisers soon began to migrate to and settle in lands outside their
native continent. Off the coast of Africa, European migrants, under the
directions of the Kingdom of Castile, invaded and colonised the Canary Islands
during the 15th century, where they converted much of the land to the
production of wine and sugar. Along with this, they also captured native
Canary Islanders, the Guanches, to use as slaves both on the Islands and across the Christian Mediterranean.
As historian John Thornton remarked, "the actual motivation for
European expansion and for navigational breakthroughs was little more
than to exploit the opportunity for immediate profits made by raiding
and the seizure or purchase of trade commodities". Using the Canary Islands as a naval base, Europeans, at the time primarily Portuguese
traders, began to move their activities down the western coast of
Africa, performing raids in which slaves would be captured to be later
sold in the Mediterranean.
Although initially successful in this venture, "it was not long before
African naval forces were alerted to the new dangers, and the Portuguese
[raiding] ships began to meet strong and effective resistance", with
the crews of several of them being killed by African sailors, whose
boats were better equipped at traversing the west African coasts and
river systems.
By 1494, the Portuguese king had entered agreements with the
rulers of several West African states that would allow trade between
their respective peoples, enabling the Portuguese to "tap into" the
"well-developed commercial economy in Africa ... without engaging in
hostilities".
"Peaceful trade became the rule all along the African coast", although
there were some rare exceptions when acts of aggression led to violence.
For instance, Portuguese traders attempted to conquer the Bissagos Islands in 1535. In 1571 Portugal, supported by the Kingdom of Kongo, took control of the south-western region of Angola
in order to secure its threatened economic interest in the area.
Although Kongo later joined a coalition in 1591 to force the Portuguese
out, Portugal had secured a foothold on the continent that it continued
to occupy until the 20th century.
Despite these incidences of occasional violence between African and
European forces, many African states ensured that any trade went on in
their own terms, for instance, imposing custom duties on foreign ships.
In 1525, the Kongolese king, Afonso I, seized a French vessel and its crew for illegally trading on his coast.
Historians have widely debated the nature of the relationship
between these African kingdoms and the European traders. The Guyanese
historian Walter Rodney
(1972) has argued that it was an unequal relationship, with Africans
being forced into a "colonial" trade with the more economically
developed Europeans, exchanging raw materials and human resources (i.e.
slaves) for manufactured goods. He argued that it was this economic
trade agreement dating back to the 16th century that led to Africa being
underdeveloped in his own time. These ideas were supported by other historians, including Ralph Austen (1987).
This idea of an unequal relationship was contested by John Thornton
(1998), who argued that "the Atlantic slave trade was not nearly as
critical to the African economy as these scholars believed" and that
"African manufacturing [at this period] was more than capable of
handling competition from preindustrial Europe".
However, Anne Bailey, commenting on Thornton's suggestion that Africans
and Europeans were equal partners in the Atlantic slave trade, wrote:
[T]o see Africans as partners implies equal terms and equal influence on the global and intercontinental processes of the trade. Africans had great influence on the continent itself, but they had no direct influence on the engines behind the trade in the capital firms, the shipping and insurance companies of Europe and America, or the plantation systems in Americas. They did not wield any influence on the building manufacturing centers of the West.
16th, 17th and 18th centuries
The Atlantic slave trade is customarily divided into two eras, known as the First and Second Atlantic Systems.
The First Atlantic system was the trade of enslaved Africans to,
primarily, South American colonies of the Portuguese and Spanish
empires; it accounted for slightly more than 3% of all Atlantic slave
trade. It started (on a significant scale) in about 1502 and lasted until 1580 when Portugal was temporarily united with Spain. While the Portuguese were directly involved in trading enslaved peoples, the Spanish empire relied on the asiento
system, awarding merchants (mostly from other countries) the license to
trade enslaved people to their colonies. During the first Atlantic
system, most of these traders were Portuguese, giving them a
near-monopoly during the era. Some Dutch, English, and French traders
also participated in the slave trade.
After the union, Portugal came under Spanish legislation that
prohibited it from directly engaging in the slave trade as a carrier. It
became a target for the traditional enemies of Spain, losing a large
share of the trade to the Dutch, English, and French.
The Second Atlantic system was the trade of enslaved Africans by
mostly English, Portuguese, French and Dutch traders. The main
destinations of this phase were the Caribbean colonies and Brazil, as European nations built up economically slave-dependent colonies in the New World.
Slightly more than 3% of the enslaved people exported from Africa were
traded between 1450 and 1600, and 16% in the 17th century.
It is estimated that more than half of the entire slave trade
took place during the 18th century, with the British, Portuguese and
French being the main carriers of nine out of ten slaves abducted in
Africa. By the 1690s, the English were shipping the most slaves from West Africa. They maintained this position during the 18th century, becoming the biggest shippers of slaves across the Atlantic. By the 18th century, Angola had become one of the principal sources of the Atlantic slave trade.
Following the British and United States' bans
on the African slave trade in 1808, it declined, but the period after
still accounted for 28.5% of the total volume of the Atlantic slave
trade. Between 1810 and 1860, over 3.5 million slaves were transported, with 850,000 in the 1820s.
A burial ground in Campeche, Mexico, suggests slaves had been brought there not long after Hernán Cortés completed the subjugation of Aztec and Mayan Mexico in the 16th century. The graveyard had been in use from approximately 1550 to the late 17th century.
Triangular trade
The first side of the triangle was the export of goods from Europe to
Africa. A number of African kings and merchants took part in the
trading of enslaved people from 1440 to about 1833. For each captive,
the African rulers would receive a variety of goods from Europe. These
included guns, ammunition, and other factory-made goods. The second leg
of the triangle exported enslaved Africans across the Atlantic Ocean to
the Americas and the Caribbean Islands. The third and final part of the
triangle was the return of goods to Europe from the Americas. The goods
were the products of slave-labour plantations and included cotton, sugar, tobacco, molasses and rum. Sir John Hawkins, considered the pioneer of the British slave trade, was the first to run the Triangular trade, making a profit at every stop.
Labour and slavery
The Atlantic slave trade was the result of, among other things, labour shortage, itself in turn created by the desire of European colonists to exploit New World land and resources for capital profits. Native peoples were at first utilized as slave labour by Europeans until a large number died from overwork and Old World diseases. Alternative sources of labour, such as indentured servitude,
failed to provide a sufficient workforce.
Many crops could not be sold for profit, or even grown, in Europe.
Exporting crops and goods from the New World to Europe often proved to
be more profitable than producing them on the European mainland. A vast
amount of labour was needed to create and sustain plantations that
required intensive labour to grow, harvest, and process prized tropical
crops. Western Africa (part of which became known as "the Slave Coast"), Angola and nearby Kingdoms and later Central Africa, became the source for enslaved people to meet the demand for labour.
The basic reason for the constant shortage of labour was that,
with large amounts of cheap land available and lots of landowners
searching for workers, free European immigrants were able to become
landowners themselves after a relatively short time, thus increasing the
need for workers.
Thomas Jefferson attributed the use of slave labour in part to
the climate, and the consequent idle leisure afforded by slave labour:
"For in a warm climate, no man will labour for himself who can make
another labour for him. This is so true, that of the proprietors of
slaves a very small proportion indeed are ever seen to labour."
In a 2015 paper, economist Elena Esposito argued that the enslavement
of Africans in colonial America was attributable to the fact that the
American south was sufficiently warm and humid for malaria to thrive;
the disease had debilitating effects on the European settlers.
Conversely, many enslaved Africans were taken from regions of Africa
which hosted particularly potent strains of the disease, so the Africans
had already developed natural resistance to malaria. This, Esposito
argued, resulted in higher malaria survival rates in the American south
among enslaved Africans than among European labourers, making them a
more profitable source of labour and encouraging their use.
African participation in the slave trade
Africans played a direct role in the slave trade, selling their captives or prisoners of war to European buyers. The prisoners and captives who were sold were usually from neighbouring or enemy ethnic groups.
These captive slaves were considered "other", not part of the people of
the ethnic group or "tribe"; African kings held no particular loyalty
to them. Sometimes criminals would be sold so that they could no longer
commit crimes in that area. Most other slaves were obtained from
kidnappings, or through raids that occurred at gunpoint through joint
ventures with the Europeans. But some African kings refused to sell any of their captives or criminals. King Jaja of Opobo, a former slave, refused to do business with the slavers completely.
Africans also participated in the slave trade through intermarriage, or cassare,
meaning "to set up house". It is derived from the Portuguese word
"casar", meaning "to marry". Cassare created political and economic
bonds between European and African slave traders. Cassare was a
pre-European practice used to integrate the "other" from a differing
African tribe. Powerful West African groups used these marriages as an
alliance used to strengthen their trade networks with European men by
marrying off African women from families with ties to the slave trade.
Early on in the Atlantic Slave trade, these marriages were common. The
marriages were even performed using African customs, which Europeans did
not object to, seeing how important the connections were.
European participation in the slave trade
Although Europeans were the market for slaves, Europeans rarely entered the interior of Africa, due to fear of disease and fierce African resistance.
In Africa, convicted criminals could be punished by enslavement, a
punishment which became more prevalent as slavery became more lucrative.
Since most of these nations did not have a prison system, convicts were
often sold or used in the scattered local domestic slave market.
As of 1778, Thomas Kitchin estimated that Europeans were bringing an estimated 52,000 slaves to the Caribbean yearly, with the French bringing the most Africans to the French West Indies (13,000 out of the yearly estimate). The Atlantic slave trade peaked in the last two decades of the 18th century, during and following the Kongo Civil War. Wars among tiny states along the Niger River's Igbo-inhabited region and the accompanying banditry also spiked in this period. Another reason for surplus supply of enslaved people was major warfare conducted by expanding states, such as the kingdom of Dahomey, the Oyo Empire, and the Asante Empire.
Slavery in Africa and the New World contrasted
Forms of slavery varied both in Africa and in the New World. In
general, slavery in Africa was not heritable – that is, the children of
slaves were free – while in the Americas, children of slave mothers were
considered born into slavery. This was connected to another
distinction: slavery in West Africa was not reserved for racial or
religious minorities, as it was in European colonies, although the case
was otherwise in places such as Somalia, where Bantus were taken as slaves for the ethnic Somalis.
The treatment of slaves in Africa was more variable than in the
Americas. At one extreme, the kings of Dahomey routinely slaughtered
slaves in hundreds or thousands in sacrificial rituals, and slaves as
human sacrifices were also known in Cameroon.
On the other hand, slaves in other places were often treated as part of
the family, "adopted children", with significant rights including the
right to marry without their masters' permission. Scottish explorer Mungo Park wrote:
The slaves in Africa, I suppose, are nearly in the proportion of three to one to the freemen. They claim no reward for their services except food and clothing, and are treated with kindness or severity, according to the good or bad disposition of their masters ... The slaves which are thus brought from the interior may be divided into two distinct classes – first, such as were slaves from their birth, having been born of enslaved mothers; secondly, such as were born free, but who afterwards, by whatever means, became slaves. Those of the first description are by far the most numerous ...
In the Americas, slaves were denied the right to marry freely and
masters did not generally accept them as equal members of the family.
New World slaves were considered the property of their owners, and
slaves convicted of revolt or murder were executed.
Slave market regions and participation
There were eight principal areas used by Europeans to buy and ship
slaves to the Western Hemisphere. The number of enslaved people sold to
the New World varied throughout the slave trade. As for the distribution
of slaves from regions of activity, certain areas produced far more
enslaved people than others. Between 1650 and 1900, 10.24 million
enslaved Africans arrived in the Americas from the following regions in
the following proportions:
- Senegambia (Senegal and the Gambia): 4.8%
- Upper Guinea (Guinea-Bissau, Guinea and Sierra Leone): 4.1%
- Windward Coast (Liberia and Ivory Coast): 1.8%
- Gold Coast (Ghana and east of Ivory Coast): 10.4%
- Bight of Benin (Togo, Benin and Nigeria west of the Niger Delta): 20.2%
- Bight of Biafra (Nigeria east of the Niger Delta, Cameroon, Equatorial Guinea and Gabon): 14.6%
- West Central Africa (Republic of Congo, Democratic Republic of Congo and Angola): 39.4%
- Southeastern Africa (Mozambique and Madagascar): 4.7%
Although the slave trade was largely global, there was considerable
intracontinental slave trade in which 8 million people were enslaved
within the African continent. Of those who did move out of Africa, 8 million were forced out of Eastern Africa to be sent to Asia.
African kingdoms of the era
There were over 173 city-states and kingdoms in the African regions affected by the slave trade between 1502 and 1853 when Brazil
became the last Atlantic import nation to outlaw the slave trade. Of
those 173, no fewer than 68 could be deemed nation states with political
and military infrastructures that enabled them to dominate their
neighbours. Nearly every present-day nation had a pre-colonial
predecessor, sometimes an African Empire with which European traders had to barter.
Ethnic groups
The different ethnic groups brought to the Americas closely
corresponds to the regions of heaviest activity in the slave trade. Over
45 distinct ethnic groups were taken to the Americas during the trade.
Of the 45, the ten most prominent, according to slave documentation of
the era are listed below.
- The BaKongo of the Democratic Republic of Congo and Angola
- The Mandé of Upper Guinea
- The Gbe speakers of Togo, Ghana, and Benin (Adja, Mina, Ewe, Fon)
- The Akan of Ghana and Ivory Coast
- The Wolof of Senegal and the Gambia
- The Igbo of southeastern Nigeria
- The Mbundu of Angola (includes both Ambundu and Ovimbundu)
- The Yoruba of southwestern Nigeria
- The Chamba of Cameroon
- The Makua of Mozambique
Human toll
The transatlantic slave trade resulted in a vast and as yet still
unknown loss of life for African captives both in and outside America.
Approximately 1.2 – 2.4 million Africans died during their transport to
the New World.
More died soon upon their arrival. The number of lives lost in the
procurement of slaves remains a mystery but may equal or exceed the
number who survived to be enslaved.
The savage nature of the trade led to the destruction of
individuals and cultures. The following figures do not include deaths of
enslaved Africans as a result of their labour, slave revolts, or
diseases suffered while living among New World populations.
Historian Ana Lucia Araujo
has noted that the process of enslavement did not end with arrival on
the American shores; the different paths taken by the individuals and
groups who were victims of the Atlantic slave trade were influenced by
different factors—including the disembarking region, the kind of work
performed, gender, age, religion, and language.
Estimates by Patrick Manning are that about 12 million slaves
entered the Atlantic trade between the 16th and 19th century, but about
1.5 million died on board ship. About 10.5 million slaves arrived in the
Americas. Besides the slaves who died on the Middle Passage, more
Africans likely died during the slave raids in Africa and forced marches
to ports. Manning estimates that 4 million died inside Africa after
capture, and many more died young. Manning's estimate covers the 12
million who were originally destined for the Atlantic, as well as the 6
million destined for Asian slave markets and the 8 million destined for
African markets. Of the slaves shipped to The Americas, the largest share went to Brazil and the Caribbean.
African conflicts
According to Kimani Nehusi, the presence of European slavers affected
the way in which the legal code in African societies responded to
offenders. Crimes traditionally punishable by some other form of
punishment became punishable by enslavement and sale to slave traders. According to David Stannard's American Holocaust, 50% of African deaths occurred in Africa as a result of wars between native kingdoms, which produced the majority of slaves.
This includes not only those who died in battles but also those who
died as a result of forced marches from inland areas to slave ports on
the various coasts.
The practice of enslaving enemy combatants and their villages was
widespread throughout Western and West Central Africa, although wars
were rarely started to procure slaves. The slave trade was largely a
by-product of tribal and state warfare as a way of removing potential dissidents after victory or financing future wars. However, some African groups proved particularly adept and brutal at the practice of enslaving, such as Oyo, Benin, Igala, Kaabu, Asanteman, Dahomey, the Aro Confederacy and the Imbangala war bands.
In letters written by the Manikongo, Nzinga Mbemba Afonso, to the King João III of Portugal,
he writes that Portuguese merchandise flowing in is what is fueling the
trade in Africans. He requests the King of Portugal to stop sending
merchandise but should only send missionaries. In one of his letters he
writes:
Each day the traders are kidnapping our people—children of this country, sons of our nobles and vassals, even people of our own family. This corruption and depravity are so widespread that our land is entirely depopulated. We need in this kingdom only priests and schoolteachers, and no merchandise, unless it is wine and flour for Mass. It is our wish that this Kingdom not be a place for the trade or transport of slaves ...
Many of our subjects eagerly lust after Portuguese merchandise that your subjects have brought into our domains. To satisfy this inordinate appetite, they seize many of our black free subjects ... They sell them. After having taken these prisoners [to the coast] secretly or at night ... As soon as the captives are in the hands of white men they are branded with a red-hot iron.
Before the arrival of the Portuguese, slavery had already existed in Kongo. Afonso
believed that the slave trade should be subject to Kongo law. When he
suspected the Portuguese of receiving illegally enslaved persons to
sell, he wrote to King João III in 1526 imploring him to put a stop to
the practice.
The kings of Dahomey sold war captives into transatlantic slavery; they would otherwise have been killed in a ceremony known as the Annual Customs. As one of West Africa's principal slave states, Dahomey became extremely unpopular with neighbouring peoples. Like the Bambara Empire to the east, the Khasso
kingdoms depended heavily on the slave trade for their economy. A
family's status was indicated by the number of slaves it owned, leading
to wars for the sole purpose of taking more captives. This trade led the
Khasso into increasing contact with the European settlements of Africa's west coast, particularly the French. Benin
grew increasingly rich during the 16th and 17th centuries on the slave
trade with Europe; slaves from enemy states of the interior were sold
and carried to the Americas in Dutch and Portuguese ships. The Bight of
Benin's shore soon came to be known as the "Slave Coast".
King Gezo of Dahomey said in the 1840s:
The slave trade is the ruling principle of my people. It is the source and the glory of their wealth ... the mother lulls the child to sleep with notes of triumph over an enemy reduced to slavery ...
In 1807, the UK Parliament passed the Bill that abolished the trading of slaves. The King of Bonny (now in Nigeria) was horrified at the conclusion of the practice:
We think this trade must go on. That is the verdict of our oracle and the priests. They say that your country, however great, can never stop a trade ordained by God himself.
Port factories
After being marched to the coast for sale, enslaved people were held
in large forts called factories. The amount of time in factories varied,
but Milton Meltzer states in Slavery: A World History that around 4.5% of deaths attributed to the transatlantic slave trade occurred during this phase. In other words, over 820,000 people are believed to have died in African ports such as Benguela, Elmina, and Bonny, reducing the number of those shipped to 17.5 million.
Atlantic shipment
After being captured and held in the factories, slaves entered the infamous Middle Passage. Meltzer's research puts this phase of the slave trade's overall mortality at 12.5%. Their deaths were the result of brutal treatment and poor care from the time of their capture and throughout their voyage.
Around 2.2 million Africans died during these voyages where they were
packed into tight, unsanitary spaces on ships for months at a time.
Measures were taken to stem the onboard mortality rate, such as enforced
"dancing" (as exercise) above deck and the practice of force-feeding
enslaved persons who tried to starve themselves.
The conditions on board also resulted in the spread of fatal diseases.
Other fatalities were suicides, slaves who escaped by jumping overboard.
The slave traders would try to fit anywhere from 350 to 600 slaves on
one ship. Before the African slave trade was completely banned by
participating nations in 1853, 15.3 million enslaved people had arrived
in the Americas.
Raymond L. Cohn, an economics professor whose research has focused on economic history and international migration, has researched the mortality rates
among Africans during the voyages of the Atlantic slave trade. He found
that mortality rates decreased over the history of the slave trade,
primarily because the length of time necessary for the voyage was
declining. "In the eighteenth century many slave voyages took at least
2½ months. In the nineteenth century, 2 months appears to have been the
maximum length of the voyage, and many voyages were far shorter. Fewer
slaves died in the Middle Passage over time mainly because the passage
was shorter."
Despite the vast profits of slavery, the ordinary sailors on slave ships
were badly paid and subject to harsh discipline. Mortality of around
20% was expected in a ship's crew during the course of a voyage; this
was due to disease, flogging, overwork or slave uprisings.
Disease (malaria or yellow fever) was the most common cause of death
among sailors. A high crew mortality rate on the return voyage was in
the captain's interests as it reduced the number of sailors who had to
be paid on reaching the home port.
The slave trade was hated by many sailors and those who joined
the crews of slave ships often did so through coercion or because they
could find no other employment.
Seasoning camps
Meltzer also states that 33% of Africans would have died in the first year at the seasoning camps found throughout the Caribbean. Jamaica held one of the most notorious of these camps. Dysentery was the leading cause of death. Around 5 million Africans died in these camps, reducing the number of survivors to about 10 million.
Diseases
Notable diseases not originally known as present in Americas before
1492 include those such as smallpox, malaria, bubonic plague, typhus,
influenza, measles, diphtheria, yellow fever, and whooping cough. During the Atlantic slave trade following the discovery of the New World,
diseases such as these possessed the capability of obliterating
populations such as the Natives by the masses as short amount of time as
a few weeks or months.
Smallpox
Smallpox
was one of the epidemics that surrounded the Atlantic slave trade from
the 15th to the 18th centuries. Diseases like smallpox were known for
causing a significant decrease in the indigenous population of the New World.
An explanation to aid in understanding the logistics behind the
extensive population decrease includes the topic of immunity. The native
population was not immune to this disease in that they did not have the
pathogen required to resist the disease. Those such as the European
colonizers and the African slaves brought to the New World, however, did
possess this pathogen due to having been previously exposed to
smallpox. It was known to be a common illness many underwent as
children, which in turn built up their immunity to withstand this
disease. As a result of the Native Americans no longer being able to
work the lands (as the labor required them to mine gold and silver),
European colonizers, such as the Portuguese took advantage of their
access to regions of the African continent such as Angola from which to
extract another source of labor in which Africans had proven to be prime
candidates in that they survived this case of the disease- also known
as variola intermedius- while the Natives had continued to fall to the various illnesses.
Effects of smallpox included fever, bodily eruptions, and was
very noticeable in the disfigurement seen of the face, hands, and feet.
This illness is a viral disease, contracted through contact with an
exposed individual and through the air, and no drug treatments for it
were available. Some Europeans, who believed the plague of syphilis in Europe to be the fault of the Amerindians, saw smallpox as the European revenge against the Natives.
Immunity
For many diseases, the African and Eurasian population were able to
have already acquired immunity- being able to resist an infection- due
to prior exposure as children in which they were less likely to receive
the same illness again. Upon arrival, these diseases were transmitted to
the Native populations who did not have immunity due to no prior
exposure having been from climates in which these germs, and pathogens
surrounding these diseases were not common. Having been exposed to the
illness as an adult, some effects would prove to be more enhanced than
if they were to be at an adolescent age.
Evolutionary history also played a role in being immune to the
diseases of the slave trade. Compared to African and Europeans, New
World populations did not have a history of exposure to the disease, and
therefore, no genetic resistance could be maintained as a result of
adaptation through evolution.
Levels and extent of immunity varies from disease to disease. For
smallpox and measles for example, those who survive are equipped with
the cellular immunity to combat the disease for the rest of their life
in that they cannot contract the disease again. There are also diseases
in which immunity does not guarantee that an individual is not
susceptible to becoming reinfected.
Inoculation
Due to a limited knowledge on the causation and range of effects of
diseases surrounding the event of the slave trade, there were little to
no methods for inoculation present during the time. In the late 16th
century with the increased presence of smallpox, there existed some
forms of inoculation or sometimes referred to as variolation in Africa
and the Middle East. One practice features Arab traders in Africa
"buying-off" the disease in which a cloth that had been previously
exposed to the sickness was to be tied to another child's arm to
increase immunity. Another practice involved taking pus from a smallpox
scab and putting it in the cut of a healthy individual in an attempt to
have a mild case of the disease in the future rather than the effects
becoming fatal.
As epidemiology advances, causes and effective treatments are
being discovered to combat historically destructive diseases such as
syphilis- which in today can be treated with simple antibiotics such as
penicillin and other medications that can inhibit and rid the body of
harmful bacteria.
European competition
The trade of enslaved Africans in the Atlantic has its origins in the explorations of Portuguese
mariners down the coast of West Africa in the 15th century. Before
that, contact with African slave markets was made to ransom Portuguese
who had been captured by the intense North African Barbary pirate attacks on Portuguese ships and coastal villages, frequently leaving them depopulated. The first Europeans to use enslaved Africans in the New World were the Spaniards, who sought auxiliaries for their conquest expeditions and labourers on islands such as Cuba and Hispaniola.
The alarming decline in the native population had spurred the first
royal laws protecting them (Laws of Burgos, 1512–13). The first enslaved
Africans arrived in Hispaniola in 1501. After Portugal had succeeded in establishing sugar plantations (engenhos) in northern Brazil
ca. 1545, Portuguese merchants on the West African coast began to
supply enslaved Africans to the sugar planters. While at first these
planters had relied almost exclusively on the native Tupani for slave labour, after 1570 they began importing Africans, as a series of epidemics
had decimated the already destabilized Tupani communities. By 1630,
Africans had replaced the Tupani as the largest contingent of labour on
Brazilian sugar plantations. This ended the European medieval household
tradition of slavery,
resulted in Brazil's receiving the most enslaved Africans, and revealed
sugar cultivation and processing as the reason that roughly 84% of
these Africans were shipped to the New World.
As Britain rose in naval power and settled continental North America and some islands of the West Indies, they became the leading slave traders. At one stage the trade was the monopoly of the Royal Africa Company, operating out of London. But, following the loss of the company's monopoly in 1689, Bristol and Liverpool merchants became increasingly involved in the trade. By the late 17th century, one out of every four ships that left Liverpool harbour was a slave trading ship. Much of the wealth on which the city of Manchester,
and surrounding towns, was built in the late 18th century, and for much
of the 19th century, was based on the processing of slave-picked cotton
and manufacture of cloth. Other British cities also profited from the slave trade. Birmingham, the largest gun-producing town in Britain at the time, supplied guns to be traded for slaves. 75% of all sugar produced in the plantations was sent to London, and much of it was consumed in the highly lucrative coffee houses there.
New World destinations
The first slaves to arrive as part of a labour force in the New World reached the island of Hispaniola (now Haiti and the Dominican Republic) in 1502. Cuba received its first four slaves in 1513. Jamaica received its first shipment of 4000 slaves in 1518. Slave exports to Honduras and Guatemala started in 1526.
The first enslaved Africans to reach what would become the United States arrived in July 1526 as part of a Spanish attempt to colonize San Miguel de Gualdape. By November the 300 Spanish colonists were reduced to 100, and their slaves from 100 to 70.
The enslaved people revolted in 1526 and joined a nearby Native
American tribe, while the Spanish abandoned the colony altogether
(1527). The area of the future Colombia received its first enslaved people in 1533. El Salvador, Costa Rica and Florida began their stints in the slave trade in 1541, 1563 and 1581, respectively.
The 17th century saw an increase in shipments. Africans arrived in the English colony of Jamestown,
Virginia in 1619. The first kidnapped Africans in English North America
were classed as indentured servants and freed after seven years.
Virginia law codified chattel slavery in 1656, and in 1662 the colony
adopted the principle of partus sequitur ventrem, which classified children of slave mothers as slaves, regardless of paternity. Irish immigrants took slaves to Montserrat in 1651, and in 1655 slaves were shipped to Belize.
By 1802, Russian colonists noted that "Boston" (U.S.-based) skippers were trading African slaves for otter pelts with the Tlingit people in Southeast Alaska.
Destination | Percentage |
---|---|
Portuguese America | 38.5% |
British America (minus North America) | 18.4% |
Spanish Empire | 17.5% |
French Americas | 13.6% |
British North America | 6.45% |
English Americas | 3.25% |
Dutch West Indies | 2.0% |
Danish West Indies | 0.3% |
The number of the Africans who arrived in each region is calculated from the total number of slaves imported, about 10,000,000.[107]
Economics of slavery
In France in the 18th century, returns for investors in plantations
averaged around 6%; as compared to 5% for most domestic alternatives,
this represented a 20% profit advantage. Risks—maritime and
commercial—were important for individual voyages. Investors mitigated it
by buying small shares of many ships at the same time. In that way,
they were able to diversify a large part of the risk away. Between
voyages, ship shares could be freely sold and bought.
By far the most financially profitable West Indian colonies in
1800 belonged to the United Kingdom. After entering the sugar colony
business late, British naval supremacy and control over key islands such
as Jamaica, Trinidad, the Leeward Islands and Barbados and the territory of British Guiana
gave it an important edge over all competitors; while many British did
not make gains, a handful of individuals made small fortunes. This
advantage was reinforced when France lost its most important colony, St. Domingue (western Hispaniola, now Haiti), to a slave revolt in 1791
and supported revolts against its rival Britain, after the 1793 French
revolution in the name of liberty. Before 1791, British sugar had to be
protected to compete against cheaper French sugar.
After 1791, the British islands produced the most sugar, and the
British people quickly became the largest consumers. West Indian sugar
became ubiquitous as an additive to Indian tea. It has been estimated
that the profits of the slave trade and of West Indian plantations created up to one-in-twenty of every pound circulating in the British economy at the time of the Industrial Revolution in the latter half of the 18th century.
Effects
Historian Walter Rodney
has argued that at the start of the slave trade in the 16th century,
although there was a technological gap between Europe and Africa, it was
not very substantial. Both continents were using Iron Age technology.
The major advantage that Europe had was in ship building. During the
period of slavery, the populations of Europe and the Americas grew
exponentially, while the population of Africa remained stagnant. Rodney
contended that the profits from slavery were used to fund economic
growth and technological advancement in Europe and the Americas. Based
on earlier theories by Eric Williams, he asserted that the industrial
revolution was at least in part funded by agricultural profits from the
Americas. He cited examples such as the invention of the steam engine by James Watt, which was funded by plantation owners from the Caribbean.
Other historians have attacked both Rodney's methodology and accuracy. Joseph C. Miller
has argued that the social change and demographic stagnation (which he
researched on the example of West Central Africa) was caused primarily
by domestic factors. Joseph Inikori provided a new line of argument,
estimating counterfactual demographic developments in case the Atlantic
slave trade had not existed. Patrick Manning has shown that the slave
trade did have a profound impact on African demographics and social
institutions, but criticized Inikori's approach for not taking other
factors (such as famine and drought) into account, and thus being highly
speculative.
Effect on the economy of West Africa
No scholars dispute the harm done to the enslaved people but the
effect of the trade on African societies is much debated, due to the
apparent influx of goods to Africans. Proponents of the slave trade,
such as Archibald Dalzel, argued that African societies were robust and not much affected by the trade. In the 19th century, European abolitionists, most prominently Dr. David Livingstone, took the opposite view, arguing that the fragile local economy and societies were being severely harmed by the trade.
Because the negative effects of slavery on the economies of
Africa have been well documented, namely the significant decline in
population, some African rulers likely saw an economic benefit from
trading their subjects with European slave traders. With the exception
of Portuguese controlled Angola, coastal African leaders "generally
controlled access to their coasts, and were able to prevent direct
enslavement of their subjects and citizens".
Thus, as African scholar John Thornton argues, African leaders who
allowed the continuation of the slave trade likely derived an economic
benefit from selling their subjects to Europeans. The Kingdom of Benin,
for instance, participated in the African slave trade, at will, from
1715 to 1735, surprising Dutch traders, who had not expected to buy
slaves in Benin.
The benefit derived from trading slaves for European goods was enough
to make the Kingdom of Benin rejoin the trans-Atlantic slave trade after
centuries of non-participation. Such benefits included military
technology (specifically guns and gunpowder), gold, or simply
maintaining amicable trade relationships with European nations. The
slave trade was, therefore, a means for some African elites to gain
economic advantages. Historian Walter Rodney estimates that by c.1770, the King of Dahomey
was earning an estimated £250,000 per year by selling captive African
soldiers and enslaved people to the European slave-traders. Many West
African countries also already had a tradition of holding slaves, which
was expanded into trade with Europeans.
The Atlantic trade brought new crops to Africa and also more
efficient currencies which were adopted by the West African merchants.
This can be interpreted as an institutional reform which reduced the
cost of doing business. But the developmental benefits were limited as
long as the business including slaving.
Both Thornton and Fage contend that while African political elite
may have ultimately benefited from the slave trade, their decision to
participate may have been influenced more by what they could lose by not
participating. In Fage's article "Slavery and the Slave Trade in the
Context of West African History", he notes that for West Africans "... there
were really few effective means of mobilizing labour for the economic
and political needs of the state" without the slave trade.
Effects on the British economy
Historian Eric Williams
in 1944 argued that the profits that Britain received from its sugar
colonies, or from the slave trade between Africa and the Caribbean, was a
major factor in financing Britain's industrial revolution. However, he
says that by the time of its abolition in 1833 it had lost its
profitability and it was in Britain's economic interest to ban it.
Other researchers and historians have strongly contested what has
come to be referred to as the "Williams thesis" in academia. David
Richardson has concluded that the profits from the slave trade amounted
to less than 1% of domestic investment in Britain. Economic historian Stanley Engerman
finds that even without subtracting the associated costs of the slave
trade (e.g., shipping costs, slave mortality, mortality of British
people in Africa, defense costs) or reinvestment of profits back into
the slave trade, the total profits from the slave trade and of West
Indian plantations amounted to less than 5% of the British economy during any year of the Industrial Revolution.
Engerman's 5% figure gives as much as possible in terms of benefit of
the doubt to the Williams argument, not solely because it does not take
into account the associated costs of the slave trade to Britain, but
also because it carries the full-employment assumption from economics
and holds the gross value of slave trade profits as a direct
contribution to Britain's national income. Historian Richard Pares,
in an article written before Williams' book, dismisses the influence of
wealth generated from the West Indian plantations upon the financing of
the Industrial Revolution, stating that whatever substantial flow of
investment from West Indian profits into industry there occurred after
emancipation, not before.
Seymour Drescher and Robert Anstey argue the slave trade remained
profitable until the end, and that moralistic reform, not economic
incentive, was primarily responsible for abolition. They say slavery
remained profitable in the 1830s because of innovations in agriculture.
Karl Marx in his influential economic history of capitalism Das Kapital wrote that "... the
turning of Africa into a warren for the commercial hunting of
black-skins, signaled the rosy dawn of the era of capitalist
production". He argued that the slave trade was part of what he termed
the "primitive accumulation" of capital, the 'non-capitalist'
accumulation of wealth that preceded and created the financial
conditions for Britain's industrialisation.
Demographics
The demographic effects of the slave trade is a controversial and
highly debated issue. Although scholars such as Paul Adams and Erick D.
Langer have estimated that sub-Saharan Africa represented about 18
percent of the world's population in 1600 and only 6 percent in 1900,
the reasons for this demographic shift have been the subject of much
debate. In addition to the depopulation Africa experienced because of
the slave trade, African nations were left with severely imbalanced
gender ratios, with females comprising up to 65 percent of the
population in hard-hit areas such as Angola.
Moreover, many scholars (such as Barbara N. Ramusack) have suggested a
link between the prevalence of prostitution in Africa today with the
temporary marriages that were enforced during the course of the slave
trade.
Walter Rodney
argued that the export of so many people had been a demographic
disaster which left Africa permanently disadvantaged when compared to
other parts of the world, and it largely explains the continent's
continued poverty. He presented numbers showing that Africa's population stagnated during this period, while those of Europe and Asia
grew dramatically. According to Rodney, all other areas of the economy
were disrupted by the slave trade as the top merchants abandoned
traditional industries in order to pursue slaving, and the lower levels
of the population were disrupted by the slaving itself.
Others have challenged this view. J. D. Fage compared the demographic effect on the continent as a whole. David Eltis has compared the numbers to the rate of emigration from Europe
during this period. In the 19th century alone over 50 million people
left Europe for the Americas, a far higher rate than were ever taken
from Africa.
Other scholars accused Walter Rodney of mischaracterizing the
trade between Africans and Europeans. They argue that Africans, or more
accurately African elites, deliberately let European traders join in an
already large trade in enslaved people and that they were not
patronized.
As Joseph E. Inikori argues, the history of the region shows that
the effects were still quite deleterious. He argues that the African
economic model of the period was very different from the European model,
and could not sustain such population losses. Population reductions in
certain areas also led to widespread problems. Inikori also notes that
after the suppression of the slave trade Africa's population almost
immediately began to rapidly increase, even prior to the introduction of
modern medicines.
Legacy of racism
Walter Rodney states,
The role of slavery in promoting racist prejudice and ideology has been carefully studied in certain situations, especially in the USA. The simple fact is that no people can enslave another for four centuries without coming out with a notion of superiority, and when the colour and other physical traits of those peoples were quite different it was inevitable that the prejudice should take a racist form.
Eric Williams
argued that "A racial twist [was] given to what is basically an
economic phenomenon. Slavery was not born of racism: rather, racism was
the consequence of slavery."
End of the Atlantic slave trade
In Britain, America, Portugal and in parts of Europe, opposition
developed against the slave trade. Davis says that abolitionists assumed
"that an end to slave imports would lead automatically to the
amelioration and gradual abolition of slavery". In Britain and America, opposition to the trade was led by the Religious Society of Friends (Quakers) and establishment Evangelicals such as William Wilberforce.
Many people joined the movement and they began to protest against the
trade, but they were opposed by the owners of the colonial holdings. Following Lord Mansfield's decision in 1772, slaves became free upon entering the British isles. Under the leadership of Thomas Jefferson,
the new state of Virginia in 1778 became the first state and one of the
first jurisdictions anywhere to stop the importation of slaves for
sale; it made it a crime for traders to bring in slaves from out of
state or from overseas for sale; migrants from other states were allowed
to bring their own slaves. The new law freed all slaves brought in
illegally after its passage and imposed heavy fines on violators. Denmark,
which had been active in the slave trade, was the first country to ban
the trade through legislation in 1792, which took effect in 1803. Britain banned the slave trade in 1807, imposing stiff fines for any slave found aboard a British ship. The Royal Navy moved to stop other nations from continuing the slave trade and declared that slaving was equal to piracy and was punishable by death. The United States Congress passed the Slave Trade Act of 1794, which prohibited the building or outfitting of ships in the U.S. for use in the slave trade. In 1807 Congress outlawed the importation of slaves beginning on 1 January 1808, the earliest date permitted by the United States Constitution for such a ban.
William Wilberforce was a driving force in the British Parliament in the fight against the slave trade in the British Empire.
On 22 February 1807, the House of Commons passed a motion 283 votes to
16 to abolish the Atlantic slave trade. The United States abolished the
slave trade the same year, but not its internal slave trade which became the dominant character in American slavery until the 1860s.
In 1805 the British Order-in-Council had restricted the importation of
slaves into colonies that had been captured from France and the
Netherlands.
Britain continued to press other nations to end its trade; in 1810 an
Anglo-Portuguese treaty was signed whereby Portugal agreed to restrict
its trade into its colonies; an 1813 Anglo-Swedish treaty whereby Sweden
outlawed its slave trade; the Treaty of Paris 1814
where France agreed with Britain that the trade is "repugnant to the
principles of natural justice" and agreed to abolish the slave trade in
five years; the 1814 Anglo-Netherlands treaty where the Dutch outlawed
its slave trade.
The Royal Navy's West Africa Squadron,
established in 1808, grew by 1850 to a force of some 25 vessels, which
were tasked with combating slavery along the African coast.
Between 1807 and 1860, the Royal Navy's Squadron seized approximately
1,600 ships involved in the slave trade and freed 150,000 Africans who
were aboard these vessels.
Several hundred slaves a year were transported by the navy to the
British colony of Sierra Leone, where they were made to serve as
"apprentices" in the colonial economy until the Slavery Abolition Act 1833.
The last recorded slave ship to land on U.S. soil was the Clotilde, which in 1859 illegally smuggled a number of Africans into the town of Mobile, Alabama. The Africans on board were sold as slaves; however, slavery in the U.S. was abolished five years later following the end of the American Civil War in 1865. The last survivor of the voyage was Cudjoe Lewis, who died in 1935.
The last country to ban the Atlantic slave trade was Brazil
in 1831. However, a vibrant illegal trade continued to ship large
numbers of enslaved people to Brazil and also to Cuba until the 1860s,
when British enforcement and further diplomacy finally ended the
Atlantic slave trade. In 1870 Portugal ended the last trade route with
the Americas where the last country to import slaves was Brazil. In
Brazil, however, slavery itself was not ended until 1888, making it the
last country in the Americas to end involuntary servitude.
The historian Walter Rodney contends that it was a decline in the
profitability of the triangular trades that made it possible for
certain basic human sentiments to be asserted at the decision-making
level in a number of European countries- Britain being the most crucial
because it was the greatest carrier of African captives across the
Atlantic. Rodney states that changes in productivity, technology, and
patterns of exchange in Europe and the Americas informed the decision by
the British to end their participation in the trade in 1807. In 1809
President James Madison outlawed the slave trade with the United States.
Nevertheless, Michael Hardt and Antonio Negri
argue that it was neither a strictly economic nor moral matter. First,
because slavery was (in practice) still beneficial to capitalism,
providing not only an influx of capital but also disciplining hardship
into workers (a form of "apprenticeship" to the capitalist industrial
plant). The more "recent" argument of a "moral shift" (the basis of the
previous lines of this article) is described by Hardt and Negri as an
"ideological" apparatus in order to eliminate the sentiment of guilt in
western society. Although moral arguments did play a secondary role,
they usually had major resonance when used as a strategy to undercut
competitors' profits. This argument holds that Eurocentric history has
been blind to the most important element in this fight for emancipation,
precisely, the constant revolt and the antagonism of slaves' revolts.
The most important of those being the Haitian Revolution.
The shock of this revolution in 1804, certainly introduces an essential
political argument into the end of the slave trade, which happened only
three years later.
Legacy
African diaspora
The African diaspora which was created via slavery has been a complex interwoven part of American history and culture. In the United States, the success of Alex Haley's book Roots: The Saga of an American Family, published in 1976, and the subsequent television miniseries based upon it Roots, broadcast on the ABC network in January 1977, led to an increased interest and appreciation of African heritage amongst the African-American community. The influence of these led many African Americans to begin researching their family histories
and making visits to West Africa. In turn, a tourist industry grew up
to supply them. One notable example of this is through the Roots Homecoming Festival held annually in the Gambia, in which rituals are held through which African Americans can symbolically "come home" to Africa.
Issues of dispute have however developed between African Americans and
African authorities over how to display historic sites that were
involved in the Atlantic slave trade, with prominent voices in the
former criticising the latter for not displaying such sites sensitively,
but instead treating them as a commercial enterprise.
"Back to Africa"
In 1816, a group of wealthy European-Americans, some of whom were
abolitionists and others who were racial segregationists, founded the American Colonization Society
with the express desire of returning African Americans who were in the
United States to West Africa. In 1820, they sent their first ship to Liberia,
and within a decade around two thousand African Americans had been
settled in the west African country. Such re-settlement continued
throughout the 19th century, increasing following the deterioration of
race relations in the southern states of the US following Reconstruction in 1877.
Rastafari movement
The Rastafari movement, which originated in Jamaica,
where 92% of the population are descended from victims of the Atlantic
slave trade, has made great efforts to publicize the slavery and to
ensure it is not forgotten, especially through reggae music.
Apologies
Worldwide
In 1998, UNESCO designated 23 August as International Day for the Remembrance of the Slave Trade and its Abolition. Since then there have been a number of events recognizing the effects of slavery.
At the 2001 World Conference Against Racism in Durban, South Africa,
African nations demanded a clear apology for slavery from the former
slave-trading countries. Some nations were ready to express an apology,
but the opposition, mainly from the United Kingdom, Portugal, Spain, the Netherlands, and the United States
blocked attempts to do so. A fear of monetary compensation might have
been one of the reasons for the opposition. As of 2009, efforts are
underway to create a UN Slavery Memorial as a permanent remembrance of the victims of the Atlantic slave trade.
Benin
In 1999, President Mathieu Kerekou of Benin (formerly the Kingdom of Dahomey) issued a national apology for the role Africans played in the Atlantic slave trade. Luc Gnacadja, minister of environment and housing for Benin, later said: "The slave trade is a shame, and we do repent for it." Researchers estimate that 3 million slaves were exported out of the Slave Coast bordering the Bight of Benin.
France
On 30 January 2006, Jacques Chirac (the then French President) said that 10 May would henceforth be a national day of remembrance for the victims of slavery in France, marking the day in 2001 when France passed a law recognising slavery as a crime against humanity.
Ghana
President Jerry Rawlings of Ghana apologized for his country's involvement in the slave trade.
Netherlands
At a UN conference on the Atlantic slave trade in 2001, the Dutch
Minister for Urban Policy and Integration of Ethnic Minorities Roger van Boxtel
said that the Netherlands "recognizes the grave injustices of the
past." On 1 July 2013, at the 150th anniversary of the abolition of
slavery in the Dutch West Indies, the Dutch government expressed "deep
regret and remorse" for the involvement of the Netherlands in the
Atlantic slave trade. The Dutch government has remained short of a
formal apology for its involvement in the Atlantic slave trade, as an
apology implies that it considers its own actions of the past as
unlawful, and could lead to litigation for monetary compensation by
descendants of the enslaved.
Nigeria
In 2009, the Civil Rights Congress of Nigeria has written an open letter to all African chieftains
who participated in trade calling for an apology for their role in the
Atlantic slave trade: "We cannot continue to blame the white men, as
Africans, particularly the traditional rulers, are not blameless. In
view of the fact that the Americans and Europe have accepted the cruelty
of their roles and have forcefully apologized, it would be logical,
reasonable and humbling if African traditional rulers ... [can] accept
blame and formally apologize to the descendants of the victims of their
collaborative and exploitative slave trade."
Uganda
In 1998, President Yoweri Museveni of Uganda
called tribal chieftains to apologize for their involvement in the
slave trade: "African chiefs were the ones waging war on each other and
capturing their own people and selling them. If anyone should apologise
it should be the African chiefs. We still have those traitors here even
today."
United Kingdom
On 9 December 1999, Liverpool City Council passed a formal motion apologizing for the City's part in the slave trade. It was unanimously agreed that Liverpool
acknowledges its responsibility for its involvement in three centuries
of the slave trade. The City Council has made an unreserved apology for
Liverpool's involvement and the continual effect of slavery on
Liverpool's black communities.
On 27 November 2006, British Prime Minister Tony Blair
made a partial apology for Britain's role in the African slavery trade.
However African rights activists denounced it as "empty rhetoric" that
failed to address the issue properly. They feel his apology stopped shy
to prevent any legal retort. Blair again apologized on March 14, 2007.
On 24 August 2007, Ken Livingstone (Mayor of London) apologized publicly for London's role in the slave trade.
"You can look across there to see the institutions that still have the
benefit of the wealth they created from slavery", he said pointing
towards the financial district, before breaking down in tears. He
claimed that London was still tainted by the horrors of slavery. Jesse Jackson praised Mayor Livingstone and added that reparations should be made.
United States
On 24 February 2007, the Virginia General Assembly passed House Joint Resolution Number 728
acknowledging "with profound regret the involuntary servitude of
Africans and the exploitation of Native Americans, and call for
reconciliation among all Virginians". With the passing of that
resolution, Virginia
became the first of the 50 United States to acknowledge through the
state's governing body their state's involvement in slavery. The passing
of this resolution came on the heels of the 400th-anniversary
celebration of the city of Jamestown, Virginia, which was the first permanent English colony to survive in what would become the United States. Jamestown is also recognized as one of the first slave ports of the American colonies. On 31 May 2007, the Governor of Alabama, Bob Riley,
signed a resolution expressing "profound regret" for Alabama's role in
slavery and apologizing for slavery's wrongs and lingering effects.
Alabama is the fourth state to pass a slavery apology, following votes
by the legislatures in Maryland, Virginia, and North Carolina.
On 30 July 2008, the United States House of Representatives
passed a resolution apologizing for American slavery and subsequent
discriminatory laws. The language included a reference to the
"fundamental injustice, cruelty, brutality and inhumanity of slavery and
Jim Crow" segregation. On 18 June 2009, the United States Senate
issued an apologetic statement decrying the "fundamental injustice,
cruelty, brutality, and inhumanity of slavery". The news was welcomed by
President Barack Obama.