This article examines the phenomenon of New World-based slave trading, which encompasses slave-trading voyages that embarked from ports in the Americas. Much of the existing literature takes a European-based ‘triangular trade’ as the norm in the slave trade, but it is now clear that almost 40 per cent of all transatlantic slaving voyages sailed from ports in the New World. Slave traders based in the Americas needed to find appropriate and economical trade goods, which was difficult since European and Asian manufactures dominated African markets for captives. A comparative examination of the four largest American slave-trading polities (Barbados, Brazil, Cuba and British North America/the United States) reveals that all of them succeeded in ...
So far, little research has been done on the effect of the Atlantic slave trade on the social and po...
To research this article I received funding from the European Research Council (ERC) under the Europ...
The case of the African “colonists” of Montevideo illustrates the rebirthof slave trading networks b...
An Odious Commerce: U.S. Slave Traders and the Persistence of the Transatlantic Slave Trade This boo...
Beginning in the sixteenth century, as large quantities of produce were unloaded at ports throughout...
Abstract: The slave trade within the Americas, after the initial disembarkation of African captives ...
<p>Abstract copyright UK Data Service and data collection copyright owner.</p>The Trans-Atlantic sla...
The transatlantic slave trade, which persisted for 366 years, marks the single largest migration of ...
As the transatlantic slave trade escalated in the eighteenth century, a secondary market of trade be...
Le commerce des esclaves à New York, 1698-1741. Les origines géographiques d’une population déportée...
Studies of the South Atlantic commercial world typically focus on connections between Angola and Bra...
In this essay we use new and overlooked sources to provide a chronology for the early slave trade fr...
This article aims to analyse some of the multilateral flows of capital that contributed to weaving a...
Since 1999, intensive research efforts have vastly increased what is known about the history of coer...
This piece has studied the basic facts of black slavery and its consequences on the African contine...
So far, little research has been done on the effect of the Atlantic slave trade on the social and po...
To research this article I received funding from the European Research Council (ERC) under the Europ...
The case of the African “colonists” of Montevideo illustrates the rebirthof slave trading networks b...
An Odious Commerce: U.S. Slave Traders and the Persistence of the Transatlantic Slave Trade This boo...
Beginning in the sixteenth century, as large quantities of produce were unloaded at ports throughout...
Abstract: The slave trade within the Americas, after the initial disembarkation of African captives ...
<p>Abstract copyright UK Data Service and data collection copyright owner.</p>The Trans-Atlantic sla...
The transatlantic slave trade, which persisted for 366 years, marks the single largest migration of ...
As the transatlantic slave trade escalated in the eighteenth century, a secondary market of trade be...
Le commerce des esclaves à New York, 1698-1741. Les origines géographiques d’une population déportée...
Studies of the South Atlantic commercial world typically focus on connections between Angola and Bra...
In this essay we use new and overlooked sources to provide a chronology for the early slave trade fr...
This article aims to analyse some of the multilateral flows of capital that contributed to weaving a...
Since 1999, intensive research efforts have vastly increased what is known about the history of coer...
This piece has studied the basic facts of black slavery and its consequences on the African contine...
So far, little research has been done on the effect of the Atlantic slave trade on the social and po...
To research this article I received funding from the European Research Council (ERC) under the Europ...
The case of the African “colonists” of Montevideo illustrates the rebirthof slave trading networks b...