Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of maps
- Preface to the second edition
- Africans
- 1 The frontiersmen of mankind
- 2 The emergence of food-producing communities
- 3 The impact of metals
- 4 Christianity and Islam
- 5 Colonising society in western Africa
- 6 Colonising society in eastern and southern Africa
- 7 The Atlantic slave trade
- 8 Regional diversity in the nineteenth century
- 9 Colonial invasion
- 10 Colonial change, 1918–1950
- 11 Independent Africa, 1950–1980
- 12 Industrialisation and race in South Africa, 1886–1994
- 13 In the time of AIDS
- Notes
- Further reading
- Index
- Books in the series
7 - The Atlantic slave trade
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of maps
- Preface to the second edition
- Africans
- 1 The frontiersmen of mankind
- 2 The emergence of food-producing communities
- 3 The impact of metals
- 4 Christianity and Islam
- 5 Colonising society in western Africa
- 6 Colonising society in eastern and southern Africa
- 7 The Atlantic slave trade
- 8 Regional diversity in the nineteenth century
- 9 Colonial invasion
- 10 Colonial change, 1918–1950
- 11 Independent Africa, 1950–1980
- 12 Industrialisation and race in South Africa, 1886–1994
- 13 In the time of AIDS
- Notes
- Further reading
- Index
- Books in the series
Summary
a history of africa must give a central place to the Atlantic slave trade, both for its moral and emotional significance and for its potential importance in shaping the continent's development. The view taken here is that its effects were extensive, complex, and understandable only in light of the character that African societies had already taken during their long struggle with nature. At the least, slave exports interrupted western Africa's demographic growth for two centuries. The trade stimulated new forms of political and social organisation, wider use of slaves within the continent, and more brutal attitudes towards suffering. Sub-Saharan Africa already lagged technologically, but the Atlantic trade helped to accentuate its backwardness. Yet amidst this misery, it is vital to remember that Africans survived the slave trade with their political independence and social institutions largely intact. Paradoxically, this shameful period also displayed human resilience at its most courageous. The splendour of Africa lay in its suffering.
ORIGINS AND GROWTH
The Atlantic slave trade began in 1441 when a young Portuguese sea-captain, Antam Gonçalvez, kidnapped a man and woman on the Western Saharan coast to please his employer, Prince Henry the Navigator – successfully, for Gonçalvez was knighted. Four years later, the Portuguese built a fort on Arguin Island, off the Mauritanian coast, from which to purchase slaves and, more particularly, gold, which was especially scarce at this time.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- AfricansThe History of a Continent, pp. 131 - 163Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2007