Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- List of contributors
- Introduction
- 1 Slavery and colonization
- 2 The Old World background of slavery in the Americas
- 3 Slavery and lagging capitalism in the Spanish and Portuguese American empires, 1492–1713
- 4 The Dutch and the making of the second Atlantic system
- 5 Precolonial western Africa and the Atlantic economy
- 6 A marginal institution on the margin of the Atlantic system: The Portuguese southern Atlantic slave trade in the eighteenth century
- 7 The apprenticeship of colonization
- 8 Exports and the growth of the British economy from the Glorious Revolution to the Peace of Amiens
- 9 The slave and colonial trade in France just before the Revolution
- 10 Slavery, trade, and economic growth in eighteenth-century New England
- 11 Economic aspects of the growth of slavery in the seventeenth-century Chesapeake
- 12 Credit in the slave trade and plantation economies
- Index
2 - The Old World background of slavery in the Americas
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 20 October 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- List of contributors
- Introduction
- 1 Slavery and colonization
- 2 The Old World background of slavery in the Americas
- 3 Slavery and lagging capitalism in the Spanish and Portuguese American empires, 1492–1713
- 4 The Dutch and the making of the second Atlantic system
- 5 Precolonial western Africa and the Atlantic economy
- 6 A marginal institution on the margin of the Atlantic system: The Portuguese southern Atlantic slave trade in the eighteenth century
- 7 The apprenticeship of colonization
- 8 Exports and the growth of the British economy from the Glorious Revolution to the Peace of Amiens
- 9 The slave and colonial trade in France just before the Revolution
- 10 Slavery, trade, and economic growth in eighteenth-century New England
- 11 Economic aspects of the growth of slavery in the seventeenth-century Chesapeake
- 12 Credit in the slave trade and plantation economies
- Index
Summary
THE preconditions on the eastern side of the Atlantic helped shape the development of the transatlantic slave trade and slavery in the Americas. The Old World background features were numerous, and there are many facets that could be considered. To deal with all of them would require more space and time than is available. Nevertheless, it is possible to address the most significant features. These include the decision to use imported slaves in the Americas, the role of disease in that decision, the distinctions between small-scale and large-scale slavery, the role of sugar, and the availability of black slaves.
At the time of their initial contacts with the peoples of the Americas, both the Spaniards and the Portuguese hoped to make use of the factory (feitoria, factoría) system, in which they would establish links with an existing trading network and exchange their goods for those of the local peoples. This was the policy the Portuguese had successfully followed as they progressed down the west coast of Africa. However, such a strategy depended on having a number of conditions present. These include a sufficiently developed trading network among the indigenous peoples and the presence of goods and commodities that the Europeans could acquire through exchange. Those conditions were present in Africa, but they were missing in the New World.
As the Spaniards explored and conquered the islands of the Caribbean and the American mainland, they found that they could not establish a commercial network of trading factories, because no preexisting trading networks were available.
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- Slavery and the Rise of the Atlantic System , pp. 43 - 61Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1991
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