The article discusses the Atlantic dinamycs between Salvador of Bahia and Porto Novo in eighteenth-century bight of Benin. In spite of the focus on the Bahian trade at Ouidah, the eastern ports of trade – the so-called “portos de baixo” (lower ports) – represented important points of deportation for Africans to the Americas. The article will also explore the dinamycs between Porto Novo and Dahomey, the major enslaving kingdom of the bight of the Benin in the eighteenth century, who claimed the “monopoly” over the trade in the region. The slave trade’s political game involved local African polities, slave traders of several European powers and colonial authorities. To look at the interactions between these two regions in the Atlantic will sh...
This paper discusses the first interferences by British cruisers in the transatlantic slave trade ca...
This article reiterate the tradition of negotiations between Portuguese and various African peoples ...
The case of the African “colonists” of Montevideo illustrates the rebirthof slave trading networks b...
Abstract: In 1715, a French observer commented that Salvador appeared to be a "New Guinea", due to t...
This paper examines the relations between Bahia and Costa da Mina at the dawn of the Second Slavery ...
O artigo procura mostrar como se construiu a hegemonia portuguesa no contrabando de escravos para o ...
UID/HIS/04666/2013This article focuses on the slave trade between the West African coast and Portuga...
O artigo analisa a população africana batizada na freguesia da Conceição da Praia, na cidade de Salv...
This article aims to analyse some of the multilateral flows of capital that contributed to weaving a...
The article tries to show how the Portuguese built their hegemony in the slave smuggling business to...
The objective of this article is to review the role of Brazilian commodities in the purchase of Afri...
This article explores the nature of the European slave trade on the West African coast in the early ...
The article deals with the diplomacy of the slave trade, the single most important and most contenti...
The article discusses the Atlantic dinamycs between Salvador of Bahia and Porto Novo in eighteenth-c...
This article analyses the African identities found in the Sé parish, Salvador city, Bahia, in the fi...
This paper discusses the first interferences by British cruisers in the transatlantic slave trade ca...
This article reiterate the tradition of negotiations between Portuguese and various African peoples ...
The case of the African “colonists” of Montevideo illustrates the rebirthof slave trading networks b...
Abstract: In 1715, a French observer commented that Salvador appeared to be a "New Guinea", due to t...
This paper examines the relations between Bahia and Costa da Mina at the dawn of the Second Slavery ...
O artigo procura mostrar como se construiu a hegemonia portuguesa no contrabando de escravos para o ...
UID/HIS/04666/2013This article focuses on the slave trade between the West African coast and Portuga...
O artigo analisa a população africana batizada na freguesia da Conceição da Praia, na cidade de Salv...
This article aims to analyse some of the multilateral flows of capital that contributed to weaving a...
The article tries to show how the Portuguese built their hegemony in the slave smuggling business to...
The objective of this article is to review the role of Brazilian commodities in the purchase of Afri...
This article explores the nature of the European slave trade on the West African coast in the early ...
The article deals with the diplomacy of the slave trade, the single most important and most contenti...
The article discusses the Atlantic dinamycs between Salvador of Bahia and Porto Novo in eighteenth-c...
This article analyses the African identities found in the Sé parish, Salvador city, Bahia, in the fi...
This paper discusses the first interferences by British cruisers in the transatlantic slave trade ca...
This article reiterate the tradition of negotiations between Portuguese and various African peoples ...
The case of the African “colonists” of Montevideo illustrates the rebirthof slave trading networks b...