Expansion of European Empires

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The major theme of Module Three is the rapid expansion of European empires during the 15th and 16th centuries and its eventual impact on the African slave trade. While there were many components that contributed to the exploration and growth of European empires, it ultimately came down to two key forces that continued to stoke the engines of expansion; religious zeal and trade. Certainly there were plenty of non-Christians in the eastern hemisphere and most of the goods that Europeans wanted could be imported from Asia and India. However, the Muslims of the Ottoman Empire, the Chinese and the Japanese were hostel towards Christianity; and the established trade routes out of Asia and India were controlled by Muslims, all of which did not have any interest in European exports.

With the possibility of converting new Christians curtailed in the Ottoman neighbors to the East, and a mounting trade deficit with Asia, the kings of Portugal, Spain and England – amongst others – started looking for alternatives to the trade status quo. At first the Dutch and Portuguese sought direct access to Chinese and Indian suppliers by staying along the African coast all the way around the continent in order to reach the source of silk and spice. However, in order for European trade ships to reach their goal, they had to sail through waters that were controlled by Muslim traders that were not willing to release their monopoly without a fight. Therefore, it wasn’t long before the process of rounding Africa was brought into question and it was believed a more direct route to Asia could be found by crossing the Atlantic.

Little did the brave (and potentially foolhardy) men of the era know at the time, but their Trans-Atlantic expeditions would...

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... say how large the African slave trade would have gotten on its own, without an almost insatiable demand for slaves being created in the West. However, thanks to colonial plantation owners, at its peak it has been estimated that the Trans-Atlantic slave trade was shipping between 18,000 and 32,000 men, women and children from their homeland each year. Considering the recorded slave trade lasted for at least 450 years, that means anywhere between 8.1 and 14.4 million people were torn from their homes and families only to endure inhuman treatment and humiliation. When one looks back at the root causes for exploiting other human beings on such a grotesque extent, it is difficult to justify the wholesale destruction of other people’s homes and cultures for the sake of a particular belief system and a desire for better tasting food.

Works Cited

The American Pageant

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