The Sub-Saharan long distance commodity and slave trade as well as the syncretic interweaving of Islamic culture and traditional African culture accounts for Africa’s major influence as a superpower. Traders from all over the world were drawn to Africa’s riches in gold‚ ivory‚ and human beings. The fact that Africa was rich in resources posed influence in itself. Considering that a great number of the visiting traders were Muslims and they begin to intermarry and form relationships – economic
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routes were brought up in this chapter‚ which were the Silk Road‚ the Indian Ocean‚ and the trans-Saharan trade route. These routes were used to transport goods‚ livestock‚ ideas‚ and shape new cultures. The Silk Road connected China to the Middle East across Central Asia and Iran. This route was necessitated by the Chinese demand for western products such as horses and the Western demand for more trade. General Zhang led eighteen expeditions and is credited to have brought back alfalfa‚ wine grapes
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Trans-Atlantic Slave Trade (Essay) The Trans-Atlantic slave trade had a massive impact the British‚ West Indies‚ Africa‚ and the emerging African American culture. The British were impacted with massive profits‚ to the disadvantage of many parts of Africa‚ where large amounts of men and women from all around the continent were forced into slavery. The West Indies were impacted by being turned into sugar plantations‚ and an African American Culture was born from all the African slaves that were
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The trans-Atlantic slave trade in pre-colonial Africa had immense repercussions on the continent’s state formation and the political culture that developed. This triangle trade‚ as it is often referred to as‚ began in Europe. Europeans needed raw materials from the colonies in the America’s in order to keep their economy stable. When the Americans did not produce these materials fast enough‚ or in large enough quantities‚ there was a call for slaves. Enslaving Africans fulfilled this need. All in
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country-systems where trade happens without governmental‚ or any other interference‚ no tariffs or any other barriers. The goal of free trade areas is to eliminate exactly these hurdles for free trade. Free trade areas are trade blocs consisting of states who signed a Free Trade Agreement (FTA) which eliminates things as tariffs‚ import quotas and preferences on‚ in the best case‚ all goods and services between them. The goal of such FTA’s basically is to reduce barriers to exchange so that trade can grow.
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Africa has seen four great phases of slave trades. The trans-Saharan‚ Red Sea and Indian Ocean slave trades are oldest slave trades which the continent experienced during 800 AD. In these slave trades‚ Africans were carried from the southern Saharan desert‚ internal of the Red Sea‚ and internal of the coast of Eastern Africa‚ and were transported to Northern Africa and the Middle East. Trans-Atlantic Slave trade is the most researched and a largest slave trade of all during Africa. In the early 1500s
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itself with the help of the trans-Atlantic trade. Great Britain was then able to have adequate supremacy over the colonies to impose several acts such as the Navigation Acts and Molasses Act. Trade routes linked the American Colonies‚ West Indies‚ Africa and England. England‚ being the mother country‚ wanted a favorable balance of trade. The triangular trade is an example of mercantilism‚ or the idea that the mother country gains wealth and power by controlling the trade of its colonies. By taking
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The Trans-Atlantic Trade System refers to all of the trade done between Europe‚ Africa‚ and the Americas across the Atlantic Ocean. Sugar‚ slaves‚ and spirits fueled the entire triangular trade. Slaves were exchanged from Africa for rum‚ rum was produced as a byproduct of sugar‚ sugar was grown by slaves in the Americas‚ and Europe developed manufactured goods to aid the production of sugar. All three continents and their exports fit together to form the Trans-Atlantic Trade System. Plantation systems
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The African Slave trade: African slaves and the Trans Atlantic‚ Triangular Trade. A short history of the Trans Atlantic slave trade. How did African Slavery begin? For many centuries‚ Africans were a commodity‚ like land tax‚ they were expendable to the Congo chiefs. In 1440‚The Portuguese realised this‚ and so‚ as well as exploiting Africa for it’s gold and spices‚ they also had a monopoly on the African slave trade. They needed a labour force for their sugar plantations and mines in Brazil
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after the 15th century‚ though‚ due to the background of their slaves. Slavery was not necessarily racial or ethnic in origin prior to 15th century slavery. It was often captured enemies of war from many different places. However‚ when the Trans-Atlantic trade began‚ the majority of the slaves were African. Another difference is that the Africans were treated as objects‚ whereas prior to the 14th century‚ they were not legally the same as objects. Another difference is the jobs that they occupied
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