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  2. Atlantic slave trade - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Atlantic_slave_trade

    Map of Meridian Line set under the Treaty of Tordesillas The Slave Trade by Auguste François Biard, 1840. The Atlantic slave trade is customarily divided into two eras, known as the first and second Atlantic systems. Slightly more than 3% of the enslaved people exported from Africa were traded between 1525 and 1600, and 16% in the 17th century.

  3. Slavery in the United States - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Slavery_in_the_United_States

    After Great Britain and the United States outlawed the international slave trade in 1807, British slave trade suppression activities began in 1808 through diplomatic efforts and the formation of the Royal Navy's West Africa Squadron in 1809. The United States denied the Royal Navy the right to stop and search U.S. ships suspected as slave ships ...

  4. African-American history - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/African-American_history

    The European colonization of the Americas, and the resulting Atlantic slave trade, led to a large-scale transportation of enslaved Africans across the Atlantic; of the roughly 10–12 million Africans who were sold by the Barbary slave trade, either to European slavery or to servitude in the Americas, approximately 388,000 landed in North America.

  5. African-American slave owners - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/African-American_slave_owners

    African American history and culture scholar Henry Louis Gates Jr. wrote: ... the percentage of free black slave owners as the total number of free black heads of families was quite high in several states, namely 43 percent in South Carolina, 40 percent in Louisiana, 26 percent in Mississippi, 25 percent in Alabama and 20 percent in Georgia. [11]

  6. Black Cargoes: A History of the Atlantic Slave Trade 1518–1865

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Black_Cargoes:_A_History_of...

    Another illustration in Black Cargoes (and reprinted in a New York Times review of the book) was taken from a Harper's Weekly magazine article, a wood engraving after a daguerreotype of slaves on the captured slave-ship, Wildfire, brought to Key West in 1860, well after the slave trade was prohibited in the United States in 1808. The legend in ...

  7. List of slave traders of the United States - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_slave_traders_of...

    This is a list of slave traders of the United States, people whose occupation or business was the slave trade in the United States, i.e. the buying and selling of human chattel as commodities, primarily African-American people in the Southern United States, from the United States Declaration of Independence in 1776 until the defeat of the ...

  8. Slave trade in the United States - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Slave_trade_in_the_United...

    The internal slave trade in the United States, also known as the domestic slave trade, the Second Middle Passage [1] and the interregional slave trade, [2] was the mercantile trade of enslaved people within the United States. It was most significant after 1808, when the importation of slaves from Africa was prohibited by federal law.

  9. Slavery in the colonial history of the United States - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Slavery_in_the_colonial...

    The Carolinians transformed the Indian slave trade during the late 17th and early 18th centuries by treating such slaves as a trade commodity to be exported, mainly to the West Indies. Historian Alan Gallay estimates that between 1670 and 1715, an estimated 24,000 to 51,000 captive Native Americans were exported from South Carolina to the ...