The "many" he refers to are the Africans taken as free people and then forced into slavery in South America ... to secure slaves that they could trade. The slave trade devastated African life.
Scientists have created a groundbreaking map of strontium isotopes found across sub-Saharan Africa—which could help ...
Dr. Williams created a digital map that shows where those slave revolts took place. Her research has now ended up at the Smithsonian National Museum of African American History and Culture.
A map showing the Transatlantic Slave Trade of the 17th and 18th centuries. Source: The National Park Service Prominent British abolitionist William Wilberforce by W.M. Craig (circa 1810).
Dr. Chavis shows us that the fight against the legacy of the transatlantic slave trade is not just about seeking justice for ...
can never stop a trade ordained by God himself. The Russian serfs were freed in 1861 by Emperor Alexander II. Four years later slavery was abolished in the southern states of America following the ...
The National Museum of African American History and Culture illuminates the brutalities of slavery and Jim Crow while also celebrating black Americans' political, intellectual, and cultural ...
of the American Anti-Slavery Group, explain the increase in slave-taking since 1995 in terms of the growing intensity of the Sudanese war. But although war is the context for the slave trade, it ...
demanding a total abolition of the slave trade. Image caption, Phillis Wheatley was captured in West Africa and enslaved in Boston, North America. Wheatley was a talented poet. Unable to find a ...
Explore research into how our history and collections are connected to the transatlantic slave trade. Many museums in the UK have legacies that are rooted in colonialism. In the nineteenth century, ...
The "many" he refers to are the Africans taken as free people and then forced into slavery in South America ... to secure slaves that they could trade. The slave trade devastated African life.