This document provides an outline of Chapter 18 which discusses the Atlantic system and Africa between 1550-1800. It covers the establishment of plantations in the West Indies growing tobacco and sugar using indentured servants and later African slaves. It describes the harsh conditions slaves faced on sugar plantations in the 18th century and the social hierarchy that developed in plantation societies. It also discusses how capitalism and private investment through companies, banks and stock markets helped develop the Atlantic economy.
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This document provides an outline of Chapter 18 which discusses the Atlantic system and Africa between 1550-1800. It covers the establishment of plantations in the West Indies growing tobacco and sugar using indentured servants and later African slaves. It describes the harsh conditions slaves faced on sugar plantations in the 18th century and the social hierarchy that developed in plantation societies. It also discusses how capitalism and private investment through companies, banks and stock markets helped develop the Atlantic economy.
This document provides an outline of Chapter 18 which discusses the Atlantic system and Africa between 1550-1800. It covers the establishment of plantations in the West Indies growing tobacco and sugar using indentured servants and later African slaves. It describes the harsh conditions slaves faced on sugar plantations in the 18th century and the social hierarchy that developed in plantation societies. It also discusses how capitalism and private investment through companies, banks and stock markets helped develop the Atlantic economy.
Copyright:
Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
Available Formats
Download as DOC, PDF, TXT or read online from Scribd
This document provides an outline of Chapter 18 which discusses the Atlantic system and Africa between 1550-1800. It covers the establishment of plantations in the West Indies growing tobacco and sugar using indentured servants and later African slaves. It describes the harsh conditions slaves faced on sugar plantations in the 18th century and the social hierarchy that developed in plantation societies. It also discusses how capitalism and private investment through companies, banks and stock markets helped develop the Atlantic economy.
Copyright:
Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
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Download as DOC, PDF, TXT or read online from Scribd
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Chapter 18 Outline
The Atlantic System and Africa (1550-1800)
I. Plantations in the West Indies
A. Colonization Before 1650 -Before 1650, the Europeans were manly focused on colonies in the West Indies. However their attention soon shifted towards colonizing the American mainland. (Virginia, New England, South Carolina, etc.) However after 1600 the French and English started to colonize islands in the West Indies, or the present-day Caribbean. Their aim was to create largely successful plantations that grew tobacco and sugar. Tobacco was especially important to the Europeans because despite King James warnings, the population smoked so much that tobacco exports became as valuable as gold and silver. -Making a large tobacco industry was not easy though. Hurricanes, epidemics, and attacks by the natives slowed down the forward progress, and to make it even harder, there was a shortage of supplies and laborers. Charter companies helped to ease this shortage by paying for these expensive colonies and receiving monopolies on exports in return. The indentured servant system helped as well, providing people with free passages to America in return for an obligation to work for a certain number of years. This helped the colonies become quite successful, however the larger and more productive plantations in Virginia and the rest of the American mainland soon eclipsed them. -The Dutch solved this problem when they introduced the cultivation of sugar and African slaves. Their was a problem however; the Dutch could not export the sugar because a war with the Spanish. So they formed the Dutch West India Company. This company was like a disguised Dutch Navy, which attacked the Spanish plantations in Brazil, then took control of them. After spending 15 years improving the Brazilian plantations, the Dutch West India Company entered the African slave trade, supplying its colonies and plantations with African slaves. Just like when they attack Brazil, the Dutch West India Company had political and economic reasons to enter the slave trade. -In 1654, the Portuguese kick the Dutch plantation owners out of Brazil, which was very important, as it led to these planters taking their sugar cultivation skills and the Brazilian economy with them. B. Sugar and Slaves -In the West Indies, sugar soon became more important than tobacco. By the 1700s, the West Indies had become the largest producer of sugar, beating Brazil. This meant that there was also a large spike in slave trade, as the plantation leaders needed more and more slaves. African slaves became popular, but historians still debate as to why this was. -There was also a large shift from indentured servants to slaves. This was because initially, slaves were very expensive and the poor tobacco farmers could not afford to buy them; instead they would pay half the price for an indentured servant. After the switch to sugar though, the farmers were able to afford the slaves, who turned out to be a better investment than servants. The slaves would have to work until their death on the plantation, whereas a servant would only work for a certain number of years, and then had to be released along with a small plot of land. In the West Indies, the increase in slave popularity led to a sharp decrease in indentured servitude, which then led to the European servants shifting from the Caribbean to the American mainland. II. Plantation Life in the Eighteenth Century A. Technology and Environment -The process of growing sugar cane was fairly easy, however in order to extract the sugar from the canes, plantation owners had to have their own mills and possessing areas. First the workers would clear the field with hoes and spades, then plant and water the canes. After about sixteen months, the canes were cut down with machetes, and then taken to a mill, usually owned by the plantation owner. The canes were then crushed between large rolling wheels, powered by either a windmill or watermill. The sap obtained was then carted to another building where it would be boiled into molasses and a dark syrup. The molasses was then either exported or made into rum in yet another building. The dark syrup was poured into molds where the rest of the liquid would evaporate, leaving behind packed sugar crystals. This possess would take place on a plantation anywhere from 100 acres to 2000 acres. -The sugar growing was environmentally safe, as they used natural power for the mills and used manure for fertilizer in the fields. However the repeated growing of sugar cane led to “dead” fields, which led to deforestation for new fields. By the 1700s, the entire West Indies ecology had been dramatically changed. The islands were filled with exhausted fields and deforested areas, and most of the surviving plants and animals had been introduced by the Spanish or French. B. Slaves Lives -In the West Indies, the population was made up of a small group of elite plantation owners, a small group of farmers and estate managers, government officials, and an overwhelmingly large group of African slaves. The slaves led very harsh lives, sometimes working more than eighteen hours a day. All of the slaves would work, with the exception of the infants and the sick. The slaves were kept in line by harsh punishments and threats of violence, and all of the slaves, women and children included, were forced to work. Most of the men slaves did not even work in the fields at all, instead they were blacksmiths or carpenters, or tended to the livestock. -Slaves needed to work from sunup to sundown in order to finish their daily tasks, and they had to constantly work well to avoid being punished. Slaves were not forced to work on Sundays, however they had to do so in order to tend to their own chores and plants. Slaves would often times sell what little they had in markets on Sundays. There was little or no time for any sort of recreation, and most slaves were very uneducated. In the West Indies there was a very high slave mortality rate due to the harsh conditions, and consequently a very low birth rate. Disease and epidemics were a problem too, and the high death rate served as a stimulus to the Atlantic slave trade. The white, single male plantation owners would even take advantage of a female slave and demand sexual favors. He might even take her to be his mistress, in which case she and her future children would be freed. -Slaves often rebelled and ran away from their plantations. To put an end to this, plantation owners would discourage the use of African language and heritage, and instead force them to learn Christianity and English. (Or French, Spanish, etc.) Plantation owners would also mix up slaves from different areas to discourage them from talking or bonding with one another. C. Free Whites and Free Blacks -In the Western Indies society, there were three types of three people. The most dominant were wealthy European plantation owners. They dominated the economy and the society. Next came the middle-class Europeans. They were usually farmers who grew crops for local consumption. Last came the free blacks. Although they held the same jobs and economic standing as the middle-class whites, they were socially inferior. Also, while the middle-class whites owned a few slaves to help on their farms, very few blacks owned or used slaves. -Not just anyone could be a plantation owner. The start up cost was monumental, costing over 100,000 dollars just to acquire a medium size plot of land. However those wealthy enough to start or own a plantation usually had a large amount of profit, and therefore a large political influence.
III. Creating the Atlantic Economy
A. Capitalism and Mercantilism -The creation of the Atlantic economy was largely due to the private investments of wealthy businessmen. The government sponsored exploratory trips and government controlled economies did not allow economic expansion and progression, as the royalty tried to create a monopoly on all of the exports and imports in a colony. This method not only proved to be expensive, but also very inefficient. -In order for the private investors to maximize profit and minimize risk, they relied on a system of banks, stock exchanges, and charter companies-something called capitalism. Capitalism had already been practiced in Europe, and it was transferred to the New World when the European economy slowed down. -Banks were at the center of European capitalism. In fact, by the 1600s, Dutch banks were so notoriously secure that government entrusted large sums of money to them. In order to generate revenue, these banks would take the deposited money and invest it in things like real estate, loans, trade, and the local industry. -The stock market was another capitalism tool, giving a higher rate of income than the low bank interest. Shares of companies were bought, and investors could buy insurance to protect themselves from financial loss. Companies could also buy insurance guaranteeing to cover cargo and ship loss. -The capitalism in these countries was nurtured by mercantilism. Mercantilism policies were adopted by countries in Europe, and these policy encouraged oversees trade; however they discouraged trade with foreign merchants. One of the first mercantilist capitalisms was the Dutch East India Company. The government gave this company a legalized monopoly over all of the Dutch trade in the Indian Ocean, encouraging the private investment groups to acquire stocks in the company. They were rewarded for their investment when the Dutch seized control over long-distance trading routes in the Indian Ocean. A similar thing happened in the Atlantic Ocean with the Dutch West India Company. This success prodded the rest of Europe to do the same. -In the 1650s, the French and English used military force in order to try to break the chokehold that the Dutch held over all of the trade in the Americas. They were successful and in 1678 drove the Dutch India Company into bankruptcy. The French and the English then tried to break the monopoly that other charter companies held to try and lower prices. Countries also tried to exclude foreigners from entering their economy by enforcing high tariffs and laws that forbade their colonies from trading with anyone else but the English. This also served to promote competition between citizens. These mercantilism policies helped make the Atlantic Ocean trading system one of the most important during the 17th and 18th centuries. B. The Atlantic Circuit -The Atlantic trade circuit was a three-leg circuit that was designed to maximize profit for everyone involved, including the ships and their crews. The Atlantic Ocean had many different water routes, all of which had different winds and currents. However most of the boats all sailed in the same circuit. The first leg was from Europe to West Africa. The merchants would sell the European goods and then use the money to purchase slaves. They then sailed these slaves to the American plantations, selling the slaves and purchasing American goods demanded in Europe like tobacco or sugar. They ship would then sail the final leg back to Europe trading American goods for European goods, and the cycle would start all over again. The idea was to take goods that were abundant in one place and move them to another where they were scarce, then vice versa. This seemed like a system where everyone would profit, however pirates, storms, and shipwrecks often brought on a loss of profit. This Atlantic triangle was the basic outline for Atlantic trade, however other voyages and trade supplemented this, like the trading voyages between Europe and the Indian Ocean merchants. This trade in the Atlantic helped to lower prices and increase supply of things like sugar and slaves, which were once scarce and very pricey. -Slave trade became especially important to the Atlantic trading system, as the plantations in Brazil, the West Indies, and the American mainland relied on the steady importations of slaves. Mercantilism ended up putting the slave trade into the hands of charter companies, who spent money remodeling their ships especially for slave transport. Many times slaves would die during the voyage, however the charter companies were fairly successful at limiting the slaves’ deaths. They would whip, beat, execute, and force-feed the slaves in order to keep them alive.
IV. Africa, the Atlantic, and Islam
A. The Gold Coast and the Slave Coast -In Africa, the first European contacts were more interested in trading than colonizing or conquering. At first the main focus was the massive amount of gold that was found in the country. However, during the 17th and 18th centuries, the gold trade slowly transitioned into slave trade. -The African merchants who traded with the Europeans were very selective and demanding when it came to quality. The Africans demanded goods of a certain quality and style, and if a merchant tried to sell something not suited to local tastes, he would have a very hard time finding a good price. They were so picky that European guidebooks on African trade state certain shapes and colors that the beads had to be if a merchant expected to sell them. Both sides sometimes tried to hoodwink one another in order to sell their product for the best price. B. Africa’s European and Islamic Contacts -The Islamic influence over Africa started in the first century of Islamic expansion, when the Muslims captured North Africa and turned it into a Muslim state. During the periods of European exploration, the Muslims also expanded the extent of their reach. They did so through the sub-Saharan trading network. When the Saharan caravans would come from the south and trade with the North Africans, the Muslims would pass on their cultural ideas and beliefs, as well as their system of government. The South African continent soon reflected this, developing rich trading cities like Songhai, which was ruled by Muslims and had an Islamic administrative system and government. The Islamic empire also had an impact on the economy in Africa. The Islamic merchants who traded in the Indian Ocean not only spread Islamic beliefs, but also helped to spread economic wealth. The Muslims, like the Europeans also had a large slave trade. Their religion did not hinder this; in fact the enslavement of pagans and non-Muslims was widely accepted. The slave trade was different however; in the fact that the slaves were treated marginally better in the Islamic states than on the American plantations. Also, the slaves tended to be soldiers or servants. The majority of the slaves were women, who maintained and entertained households. Also, there was a lot smaller flow of slaves into Africa than there was into Europe; About 8 million went to America, while only 2 million went to Islamic states.
Journal Of An Officer In The Commissariat Department Of The Army: Comprising A Narrative Of The Campaigns Under The Duke Of Wellington, In Portugal, Spain, France, And The Netherlands
Journal Of An Officer In The Commissariat Department Of The Army: Comprising A Narrative Of The Campaigns Under The Duke Of Wellington, In Portugal, Spain, France, And The Netherlands