Africa and the Transatlantic Slave Trade:
By Dr Hakim Adi
-Last updated 2012-10-05
This image shows the Fulani people
bringing captives to the coast to sell to European slave ships.
Slavery has long existed in human societies, but the
transatlantic slave
trade is unique in terms of the destructive impact it had on
Africa.
How did it shape the fortunes of an entire continent?
On
this page:
Beginnings
Enslavement and racism
West Africa before European
intervention
African enslavers
African resistance
The African Diaspora
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Beginnings
From the middle of the 15th
century, Africa entered into a unique relationship with Europe
that led to the devastation and depopulation of Africa, but
contributed to the wealth and development of Europe. From then
until the end of the 19th century, Europeans began to establish a
trade for African captives.
At first this trafficking only supplemented a trade in human
beings that already existed within Europe, in which Europeans had
enslaved each other. Some enslaved Africans had also reached
Europe, the Middle East and other parts of the world before the
mid-15th century, as a result of a trade in human beings that had
also long existed in Africa.
It is estimated that by the early 16th
century as much as 10 per cent of Lisbon's population was of
African descent
Many of these African captives crossed the Sahara and
reached Europe and other destinations from North Africa, or were
transported across the Indian Ocean.
The transatlantic slave trade began during the 15th century when
Portugal, and subsequently other European kingdoms, were finally
able to expand overseas and reach Africa. The Portuguese first
began to kidnap people from the west coast of Africa and to take
those they enslaved back to Europe.
It is estimated that by the early 16th century as much as
10% of Lisbon's population was of African descent. After the
European discovery of the American continent, the demand for
African labour gradually grew, as other sources of labour - both
European and American - were found to be insufficient.
The Spanish took the first African captives to the Americas
from Europe as early as 1503, and by 1518 the first captives were
shipped directly from Africa to America. The majority of African
captives were exported from the coast of West Africa, some 3,000
miles between what is now Senegal and Angola, and mostly from the
modern Benin, Nigeria and Cameroon.
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Enslavement and racism
A view of the slave fort at Bance
Island, c.1805 A view of the slave fort at Bance Island,
c.1805 © Historians still debate exactly how many
Africans were forcibly transported across the Atlantic during the
next four centuries. A comprehensive database compiled in the late
1990s puts the figure at just over 11 million people. Of those,
fewer than 9.6 million survived the so-called middle passage
across the Atlantic, due to the inhuman conditions in which they
were transported, and the violent suppression of any on-board
resistance. Many people who were enslaved in the African interior
also died on the long journey to the coast.
The total number of Africans taken from the continent's east coast
and enslaved in the Arab world is estimated to be somewhere
between 9.4 million and 14 million. These figures are imprecise
due to the absence of written records.
The forced removal of up to 25 million people from the continent
obviously had a major effect on the growth of the population in
Africa. It is now estimated that in the period from 1500 to 1900,
the population of Africa remained stagnant or declined.
The human and other resources that were taken from Africa
contributed to the capitalist development and wealth of Europe.
Africa was the only continent to be affected in this way,
and this loss of population and potential population was a major
factor leading to its economic underdevelopment.
The transatlantic trade also created the conditions for the
subsequent colonial conquest of Africa by the European powers and
the unequal relationship that still exist between Africa and the
world's big powers today.
Africa was impoverished by its relationship with Europe
while the human and other resources that were taken from Africa
contributed to the capitalist development and wealth of Europe and
other parts of the world.
The unequal relationship that was gradually created as a
consequence of the enslavement of Africans was justified by the
ideology of racism - the notion that Africans were naturally
inferior to Europeans.
This ideology, which was also perpetuated by colonialism, is
one of the most significant legacies of this period of history.
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West Africa before European
intervention
Africa's economic and social
development before 1500 may arguably have been ahead of Europe's.
It was gold from the great empires of West Africa, Ghana, Mali and
Songhay that provided the means for the economic take-off of
Europe in the 13th and 14th centuries and aroused the interest of
Europeans in western Africa.
The West African empire of Mali was larger than Western Europe and
reputed to be one of the richest and most powerful states in the
world.
In the 14th century, the West African
empire of Mali was larger than Western Europe and reputed to
be one of the richest and most powerful states in the world.
When the emperor of Mali, Mansa Musa visited Cairo in 1324,
it was said that he took so much gold with him that its price fell
dramatically and had not recovered its value even 12 years later.
The empire of Songhay was known, among other things, for the
university of Sankore based in Timbuktu.
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African enslavers
Historians have long debated how
and why African kingdoms and merchants entered into a trade that
was so disadvantageous to Africa and its inhabitants.
Some have argued that slavery was endemic at that time in
Africa and that, therefore, a demand from Europe quickly led to
the development of an organised trade.
The European demand for captives became so great that they could
only be acquired through initiating raiding and warfare
Others have queried the use of the term 'slave' when
referring to servitude in African societies, arguing that many of
those designated slaves by Europeans had definite rights, and
could sometimes own property or rise to public office.
Africans could become slaves as punishment for a crime, as payment
for a family debt, or most commonly of all, by being captured as
prisoners of war. With the arrival of European and American ships
offering trading goods in exchange for people, Africans had an
added incentive to enslave each other, often by kidnapping.
There is no doubt that Europeans were not capable of venturing
inland to capture the millions of people who were transported from
Africa. In the areas where slavery was not practised, such as
among the Xhosa people of southern Africa, European captains were
unable to buy slaves.
On the African side, the slave trade was generally the business of
rulers or wealthy and powerful merchants, concerned with their own
selfish or narrow interests, rather than those of the continent.
At that time, there was no concept of being African. Identity and
loyalty was based on kinship or membership of a specific kingdom
or society, rather than to the African continent.
Rich and powerful Africans were able to demand a variety of
consumer articles and in some places even gold for captives, who
may have been acquired through warfare or by other means,
initially without massive disruption to African societies.
However, by the mid-17th century the European demand for captives,
particularly for the sugar plantations in the Americas, became so
great that they could only be acquired through initiating raiding
and warfare.
There is no doubt that some societies preyed on others to
obtain captives in exchange for European firearms, in the belief
that if they did not acquire firearms in this way to protect
themselves, they would be attacked and captured by their rivals
and enemies who did possess such weapons.
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African resistance
However, some African rulers did
attempt to resist the devastation of the European demand for
captives. As early as 1526, King Afonso of Kongo, who had
previously enjoyed good relations with the Portuguese, complained
to the king of Portugal that Portuguese slave traders were
kidnapping his subjects and depopulating his kingdom.
King Agaja Trudo of Dahomey not only opposed the trade, but even
went as far as to attack the forts that the European powers had
constructed on the coast.
In 1630, Queen Njingha Mbandi of Ndongo (in modern Angola)
attempted to drive the Portuguese out of her realm, but was
finally forced to compromise with them.
In 1720, King Agaja Trudo of Dahomey not only opposed the
trade, but even went as far as to attack the forts that the
European powers had constructed on the coast. But his need for
firearms forced him to reach an agreement with the European slave
traders.
Other African leaders such as Donna Beatriz Kimpa Vita in Kongo
and Abd al-Qadir, in what is now northern Senegal, also urged
resistance against the forced export of Africans.
Many others, especially those who were threatened with
enslavement, as well as those held captive on the coast, rebelled
against enslavement and this resistance continued during the
middle passage. It is now thought that there were rebellions on at
least 20 percent of all slave ships crossing the Atlantic.
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The African Diaspora
The transatlantic slave trade led
to the greatest forced migration of a human population in history.
Millions of Africans were transported to the Caribbean, North and
South America, as well as Europe and elsewhere. An 'African
Diaspora' or dispersal of Africans outside Africa was created in
the modern world.
Africans from the continent and the Diaspora have sometimes
organised together for their common pan-African concerns, for
example against slavery or colonial rule.
Those in the Diaspora have often maintained links with the African
continent, while forming an important part, and sometimes the
majority, of new nations.
Africans from the continent and the Diaspora have sometimes
organised together for their common pan-African concerns, against
slavery or colonial rule for example, and so over time a
pan-African consciousness and various pan-African movements have
developed.
In recent years the African Union, the organisation of
African states, has recognised that the Diaspora, as well as
Africans from the continent, must be fully represented in its
discussions and decision making.
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Books
African
History: a Very Short Introduction by John Parker and Richard Rathbone
(Oxford, 2007)
The African Slave Trade from 15th to the 19th Centuries (UNESCO
Reports and Papers (2), 1999)
How Europe Underdeveloped Africa
by Walter Rodney (Bogle
l'Ouverture, 1983)
General History of Africa [vols.
1-8] by UNESCO
(publisher, date)
Encyclopedia of African History,
[vols 1-3] by K.
Shillington
(Fitzroy Dearborn, 2005)
Africa in History by B. Davidson (Weidenfeld
& Nicholson, 2001)
Links
BBC Ethics - Slavery
Anti-Slavery International - Working against modern slavery
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About the author
Dr
Hakim Adi (Ph.D SOAS, London University) is Reader in
the History of Africa and the African Diaspora at Middlesex
University, London, UK.
Hakim is the author of West Africans in Britain 1900-60:
Nationalism, Pan-Africanism
and Communism (Lawrence and Wishart, 1998) and (with
M. Sherwood) The 1945 Manchester
Pan-African Congress Revisited (New Beacon, 1995) and Pan-African History: Political
Figures from Africa and the Diaspora since 1787
(Routledge, 2003).
He has appeared in television documentaries and radio
programmes, and has written widely on the history of the African
Diaspora and Africans in Britain, including three history books
for children.
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Trevor Batten
<trevor at
tebatt dot net>
Baclayon 2013
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