Evolution Of Slavery

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Evolution of Slavery By Shawn McCrory Beginning in the 1600’s millions of Africans were kidnapped, enslaved, and shipped to the Americas under terrible conditions. Almost two million people died at sea during the rough journey. For the next two hundred year, the enslavement of africans in the United States created wealth and opportunity for millions of Americans. As American slavery grew, an elaborate and enduring ideology about the inferiority of black people was created to legitimate and defend slavery. This mythology survived slavery’s formal destruction following the Civil War. In the South, where the enslavement of black people was widely used, rebellions to ending slavery existed for another hundred years following the passage of …show more content…

In fact, an opposite view and opinion has risen in many Southern communities that celebrates the slavery era, honors and respects slavery’s principal pieces and defenders, and refuses to acknowledge or address the problems created by slavery. It didn’t all start in the Americas though. The modern history of Europe and Africa is overwhelmingly full of Europeans forcibly deporting Africans into European states. Equally Europeans forced political, social, religious, and economic exercises on Africans during the colonial period and afterwards. Europeans were as much interested in African culture as they expected the Africans to be interested in theirs. All the available evidence says that they saw the Africans as equal partners in civilization, government, and socialality. The Africans, it seems, also believed this. During this heavy period at the start of the cultural exchange between the two sides of the world, Africans regularly came to Europe to study their culture. For example, in 1518, Henry of the Congo traveled to the Vatican City and became the first bishop of the Congo. All this would change, however. The two hemispheres were headed for a collision. The thing that broke this initial historical

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