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Slavery: Beginning of time- 18th century - Coggle Diagram
Slavery: Beginning of time- 18th century
Throughout history
Middle Ages (500-1500 A.D.)
Changes magnificantly
Global Warfare
Spanned across continents
Raiding
Conquering
Asia
Islamic invasions of India
Inslavement hundreds of thousends of Indians
Chinese Royals(Tang Dynasty)
Purchased Jewish and European slaves
Soldiers and Pirates took countless slaves
Korea
Indonesia
Persia
Turkey
Aboriginal tribes
Europe
Charles the Great
Unification West and Central Europe
War and violence
Involved taking slaves and selling them
Muslim countries showed massive interest
True beginning of global slave trade
Vikings
Taking slaves across europe
Mainly The Britisch Isles
Spain and Portugal
Holy War with the Mulims
Taking Womens en Children as slaves 'In the name of God or Allah'
Abolition
Western Europe
1500
Age of Enlightment
Liberals who fought for freedom
New ideas of freedom
No slavery in homeland
Heavily relied on slaves abroad
Slavers caught with slaves
Tried in court
Captured were set free
Still a provitiable commodity to their owners
America
Civil War (1861-1865)
Abraham Lincoln
Precidency1860
Signed the Emancipation Proclamation
All Enslaved Americans from bondage to freedom
Black Americans still fight for racial equality
1600 A.D-18th century
America
1619
Roughly the beginning of legal slave trading
Indentured servitude
ca. 1679
Slave trade booming
Royal African Slave Company
Britsch colonies
Colonist acquired in large numbers
Dramatic decrease in availability in indentured servants
Concentrated on the Caribbean
Plantations
Brazil
African Slaves
Household work
Field Work
Spanisch Americans
Romans and Greeks(600 B.C.)
Roman Empire
Growth
Capturing of slaves
Soldiers
Julius Ceasar and his army
Field work
Household
Government slaves
Maintain and build infrastructure
Build public buildings
Bath houses
Colosseums
Fighters --> Mostly slaves
During Campaigns of the Roman Army
Slave traders
Buy defeated soldiers and families
Sent prisoners to Rome or other major settlements
Some owners treated them well
Pay a small allowance for their slaves
Pay their freedom
Arrange the funding
Enough to buy free when they were too old
System of complete obidience
Stop funding of slave misbehaved
Give extras if slave well-behaved
Greek Empire
Accepted practice
3 or 4 slaves per household
Rules of war
Prisoners of war
Valued higher than other slaves
Often well-educated
Theachers
Doctors
Librarians