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History of slavery
History of slavery
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The history of slavery spans many different cultures, nationalities, and religions from ancient times to the present day. Likewise, its victims have come from many different ethnicities and religious groups. The social, economic, and legal positions of slaves have differed vastly in different systems of slavery in different times and places.[1] Slavery has been found in some hunter-gatherer populations, particularly as hereditary slavery,[2][3] but the conditions of agriculture with increasing social and economic complexity offer greater opportunity for mass chattel slavery.[4] Slavery was institutionalized by the time the first civilizations emerged (such as Sumer in Mesopotamia,[5] which dates back as far as 3500 BC). Slavery features in the Mesopotamian Code of Hammurabi (c. 1750 BC), which refers to it as an established institution.[6] Slavery was widespread in the ancient world in Europe, Asia, the Middle East, Africa,[7][8][4] and the Americas.[9]

Slavery became less common throughout Europe during the Early Middle Ages but continued to be practiced in some areas. Both Christians and Muslims captured and enslaved each other during centuries of warfare in the Mediterranean and Europe.[10] Islamic slavery encompassed mainly Western and Central Asia, Northern and Eastern Africa, India, and Europe from the 7th to the 20th century. Islamic law approved of enslavement of non-Muslims, and slaves were trafficked from non-Muslim lands: from the North via the Balkan slave trade and the Crimean slave trade; from the East via the Bukhara slave trade; from the West via Andalusian slave trade; and from the South via the Trans-Saharan slave trade, the Red Sea slave trade and the Indian Ocean slave trade.

Beginning in the 16th century, European merchants, starting mainly with merchants from Portugal, initiated the transatlantic slave trade. Few traders ventured far inland, attempting to avoid tropical diseases and violence. They mostly purchased imprisoned Africans (and exported commodities including gold and ivory) from West African kingdoms, transporting them to Europe's colonies in the Americas. The merchants were sources of desired goods including guns, gunpowder, copper manillas, and cloth, and this demand for imported goods drove local wars and other means to the enslavement of Africans in ever greater numbers.[11] In India and throughout the New World, people were forced into slavery to create the local workforce. The transatlantic slave trade was eventually curtailed after European and American governments passed legislation abolishing their nations' involvement in it. Practical efforts to enforce the abolition of slavery included the British Preventative Squadron and the American African Slave Trade Patrol, the abolition of slavery in the Americas, and the widespread imposition of European political control in Africa.

In modern times, human trafficking remains an international problem. Slavery in the 21st century continues and generates an estimated $150 billion in annual profits.[12] Populations in regions with armed conflict are especially vulnerable, and modern transportation has made human trafficking easier.[13] In 2019, there were an estimated 40.3 million people worldwide subject to some form of slavery, and 25% were children.[12] 24.9 million are used for forced labor, mostly in the private sector; 15.4 million live in forced marriages.[12] Forms of slavery include domestic labour, forced labour in manufacturing, fishing, mining and construction, and sexual slavery.[12]

Prehistoric and ancient slavery

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Slaves in chains during the period of Roman rule at Smyrna (present-day İzmir), 200 AD.
Left: C. 1480 BC, fugitive-slave treaty between Idrimi of Alakakh (now Tell Atchana) and Pillia of Kizzuwatna (now Cilicia). Right: Ancient Egyptian mummy soles depicting two captive foreigners, a Syrian (left) and a Nubian (right),[14] between 332 BC and 395 c.e. (Ptolemaic or Roman period).

Evidence of slavery predates written records; the practice has existed in many cultures[15][8] and can be traced back 11,000 years ago due to the conditions created by the invention of agriculture during the Neolithic Revolution.[16][8][7][dubiousdiscuss] Economic surpluses and high population densities were conditions that made mass slavery viable.[17][18]

Slavery occurred in civilizations including ancient Egypt, ancient China, the Akkadian Empire, Assyria, Babylonia, Persia, ancient Israel,[19][20][21] ancient Greece, ancient India, the Roman Empire, the Arab Islamic Caliphates and Sultanates, Nubia, Aksum the pre-colonial empires of Sub-Saharan Africa, and the pre-Columbian civilizations of the Americas.[22] Ancient slavery consists of a mixture of debt-slavery, punishment for crime, prisoners of war, child abandonment, and children born to slaves.[23]

Africa

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13th-century Africa – Map of the main trade routes and states, kingdoms and empires.
13th century slave market in Yemen.[25]

Writing in 1984, French historian Fernand Braudel noted that slavery had been endemic in Africa and part of the structure of everyday life throughout the 15th to the 18th century. "Slavery came in different guises in different societies: there were court slaves, slaves incorporated into princely armies, domestic and household slaves, slaves working on the land, in industry, as couriers and intermediaries, even as traders".[26] During the 16th century, Europe began to outpace the Arab world in the export traffic, with its trafficking of slaves from Africa to the Americas.[27] The Dutch imported slaves from Asia into their colony at the Cape of Good Hope (now Cape Town, Western Cape, South Africa) in the 17th century.[28] In 1807 Britain (which already held a small coastal territory, intended for the resettlement of former slaves, in Freetown, Sierra Leone) made the slave trade within its empire illegal with the Slave Trade Act 1807, and worked to extend the prohibition to other territory,[29]: 42  as did the United States in 1808.[30]

In Senegambia, between 1300 and 1900, close to one-third of the population was enslaved. In early Islamic states of the Western Sudan, including Ghana (750–1076), Mali (1235–1645), Segou (1712–1861), and Songhai (1275–1591), about a third of the population was enslaved. The earliest Akan state of Bonoman which had third of its population being enslaved in the 17th century. In Sierra Leone in the 19th century about half of the population consisted of slaves. In the 19th century at least half the population was enslaved among the Duala of the Cameroon, the Igbo and other peoples of the lower Niger, the Kongo, and the Kasanje kingdom and Chokwe of Angola. Among the Ashanti and Yoruba a third of the population consisted of slaves as well as Bono.[31] The population of the Kanem was about one third enslaved. It was perhaps 40% in Bornu (1396–1893). Between 1750 and 1900 from one- to two-thirds of the entire population of the Fulani jihad states consisted of slaves. The population of the Sokoto caliphate formed by Hausas in northern Nigeria and Cameroon was half-slave in the 19th century. It is estimated that up to 90% of the population of Arab-Swahili Zanzibar was enslaved. Roughly half the population of Madagascar was enslaved.[32][33][page needed][34][35][36]

Slavery in Ethiopia persisted until 1942. The Anti-Slavery Society estimated that there were 2,000,000 slaves in the early 1930s, out of an estimated population of between 8 and 16 million.[37] It was finally abolished by order of emperor Haile Selassie on 26 August 1942.[38]

When British rule was first imposed on the Sokoto Caliphate and the surrounding areas in northern Nigeria at the turn of the 20th century, approximately 2 million to 2.5 million people living there were enslaved.[39] Slavery in northern Nigeria was finally outlawed in 1936.[40]

Writing in 1998 about the extent of trade coming through and from Africa, the Congolese journalist Elikia M'bokolo wrote "The African continent was bled of its human resources via all possible routes. Across the Sahara, through the Red Sea, from the Indian Ocean ports and across the Atlantic. At least ten centuries of slavery for the benefit of the Muslim countries (from the ninth to the nineteenth)." He continues: "Four million slaves exported via the Red Sea, another four million through the Swahili ports of the Indian Ocean, perhaps as many as nine million along the trans-Saharan caravan route, and eleven to twenty million (depending on the author) across the Atlantic Ocean"[41]

Sub-Saharan Africa

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Arab slave-trading caravan transporting Sub-Saharan African slaves across the Sahara, 19th-century engraving

Zanzibar was once East Africa's main slave-trading port, during the Indian Ocean slave trade and under Omani Arabs in the 19th century, with as many as 50,000 slaves passing through the city each year.[42]

Prior to the 16th century, the bulk of slaves exported from Africa were shipped from East Africa to the Arabian peninsula. Zanzibar became a leading port in this trade.[43] Arab traders of slaves differed from European ones in that they would often conduct raiding expeditions themselves, sometimes penetrating deep into the continent. They also differed in that their market greatly preferred the purchase of enslaved females over males.[44]

The increased presence of European rivals along the East coast led Arab traders to concentrate on the overland slave caravan routes across the Sahara from the Sahel to North Africa. The German explorer Gustav Nachtigal reported seeing slave caravans departing from Kukawa in Bornu bound for Tripoli and Egypt in 1870. The trade of slaves represented the major source of revenue for the state of Bornu as late as 1898. The eastern regions of the Central African Republic have never recovered demographically from the impact of 19th-century raids from the Sudan and still have a population density of less than 1 person/km2.[45] During the 1870s, European initiatives against the trade of slaves caused an economic crisis in northern Sudan, precipitating the rise of Mahdist forces. Mahdi's victory created an Islamic state, one that quickly reinstituted slavery.[46][47]

European involvement in the East African trade of enslaved people began when Portugal established Estado da Índia in the early 16th century. From then until the 1830s, c. 200 enslaved people were exported from Portuguese Mozambique annually and similar figures has been estimated for enslaved people brought from Asia to the Philippines during the Iberian Union (1580–1640).[48][49][citation needed]

The Middle Passage, the crossing of the Atlantic to the Americas, endured by slaves laid out in rows in the holds of ships, was only one element of the well-known triangular trade engaged in by Portuguese, American, Dutch, Danish-Norwegians,[50] French, British and others. Ships having landed with slaves in Caribbean ports would take on sugar, indigo, raw cotton, and later coffee, and make for Liverpool, Nantes, Lisbon or Amsterdam. Ships leaving European ports for West Africa would carry printed cotton textiles, some originally from India, copper utensils and bangles, pewter plates and pots, iron bars more valued than gold, hats, trinkets, gunpowder and firearms and alcohol. Tropical shipworms were eliminated in the cold Atlantic waters, and at each unloading, a profit was made.[citation needed]

The Atlantic slave trade peaked in the late 18th century when the largest number of people were captured and enslaved on raiding expeditions into the interior of West Africa. These expeditions were typically carried out by African states, such as the Bono State, Oyo empire (Yoruba), Kong Empire, Kingdom of Benin, Imamate of Futa Jallon, Imamate of Futa Toro, Kingdom of Koya, Kingdom of Khasso, Kingdom of Kaabu, Fante Confederacy, Ashanti Confederacy, Aro Confederacy and the kingdom of Dahomey.[51][52] Europeans rarely entered the interior of Africa, due to fear of disease and moreover fierce African resistance. The slaves were brought to coastal outposts where they were traded for goods. The people captured on these expeditions were shipped by European traders to the colonies of the New World. It is estimated that over the centuries, twelve to twenty million slaves were shipped from Africa by European traders, of whom some 15 percent died during the terrible voyage, many during the arduous journey through the Middle Passage. The great majority were shipped to the Americas, but some also went to Europe and Southern Africa. [citation needed]

Arab slave traders and their captives along the Ruvuma river (in today's Tanzania and Mozambique), 19th-century drawing by David Livingstone.

While talking about the trade of slaves in East Africa in his journals, David Livingstone said

To overdraw its evil is a simple impossibility.[53]

While travelling in the African Great Lakes Region in 1866, Livingstone described a trail of slaves:

19th June 1866 – We passed a woman tied by the neck to a tree and dead, the people of the country explained that she had been unable to keep up with the other slaves in a gang, and her master had determined that she should not become anyone's property if she recovered.
26th June. – ...We passed a slave woman shot or stabbed through the body and lying on the path: a group of men stood about a hundred yards off on one side, and another of the women on the other side, looking on; they said an Arab who passed early that morning had done it in anger at losing the price he had given for her, because she was unable to walk any longer.
27th June 1866 – To-day we came upon a man dead from starvation, as he was very thin. One of our men wandered and found many slaves with slave-sticks on, abandoned by their masters from want of food; they were too weak to be able to speak or say where they had come from; some were quite young.[54]

The strangest disease I have seen in this country seems really to be broken-heartedness, and it attacks free men who have been captured and made slaves... Twenty one were unchained, as now safe; however all ran away at once; but eight with many others still in chains, died in three days after the crossing. They described their only pain in the heart, and placed the hand correctly on the spot, though many think the organ stands high up in the breast-bone.[55]

African participation in the slave trade

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Gezo, King of Dahomey

African states played a key role in the trade of slaves, and slavery was a common practice among Sub Saharan Africans even before the involvement of the Arabs, Berbers and Europeans. There were three types: those who were enslaved through conquest, instead of unpaid debts, or those whose parents gave them as property to tribal chiefs. Chieftains would barter their slaves to Arab, Berber, Ottoman or European buyers for rum, spices, cloth or other goods.[56] Selling captives or prisoners was a common practice among Africans, Turks, Berbers and Arabs during that era. However, as the Atlantic trade of slaves increased its demand, local systems which primarily serviced indentured servitude expanded. European trading of slaves, as a result, was the most pivotal change in the social, economic, cultural, spiritual, religious, political dynamics of the concept of trading in slaves. It ultimately undermined local economies and political stability as villages' vital labour forces were shipped overseas as slave raids and civil wars became commonplace. Crimes which were previously punishable by some other means became punishable by enslavement.[57]

The inspection and sale of a slave.

Slavery already existed in Kingdom of Kongo prior to the arrival of the Portuguese. Because it had been established within his kingdom, Afonso I of Kongo believed that the slave trade should be subject to Kongo law. When he suspected the Portuguese of receiving illegally slaves to sell, he wrote letters to the King João III of Portugal in 1526 imploring him to put a stop to the practice.[58]

The kings of Dahomey sold their war captives into transatlantic slavery, who otherwise may have been killed in a ceremony known as the Annual Customs. As one of West Africa's principal slave states, Dahomey became extremely unpopular with neighbouring peoples.[59][60][61] Like the Bambara Empire to the east, the Khasso kingdoms depended heavily on the slave trade for their economy. A family's status was indicated by the number of slaves it owned, leading to wars for the sole purpose of taking more captives. This trade led the Khasso into increasing contact with the European settlements of Africa's west coast, particularly the French.[62] Benin grew increasingly rich during the 16th and 17th centuries on the trade of slaves with Europe; slaves from enemy states of the interior were sold, and carried to the Americas in Dutch and Portuguese ships. The Bight of Benin's shore soon came to be known as the "Slave Coast".[63]

In the 1840s, King Gezo of Dahomey said:[64][65]

"The slave trade is the ruling principle of my people. It is the source and the glory of their wealth...the mother lulls the child to sleep with notes of triumph over an enemy reduced to slavery."

200th anniversary of the British act of parliament abolishing slave trading, commemorated on a British two pound coin.

In 1807 the United Kingdom made the international trade of slaves illegal with the Slave Trade Act. The Royal Navy was deployed to prevent slavers from the United States, France, Spain, Portugal, Holland, West Africa and Arabia. The King of Bonny (now in Nigeria) allegedly became dissatisfied of the British intervention in stopping the trade of slaves:[66]

"We think this trade must go on. That is the verdict of our oracle and the priests. They say that your country, however great, can never stop a trade ordained by God himself."

Joseph Miller states that African buyers would prefer males, but in reality, women and children would be more easily captured as men fled. Those captured would be sold for various reasons such as food, debts, or servitude. Once captured, the journey to the coast killed many and weakened others. Disease engulfed many, and insufficient food damaged those who made it to the coasts. Scurvy was common, and was often referred to as mal de Luanda ("Luanda sickness," after the port in Angola).[67] The assumption for those who died on the journey died from malnutrition. As food was limited, water may have been just as bad. Dysentery was widespread and poor sanitary conditions at ports did not help. Since supplies were poor, slaves were not equipped with the best clothing, meaning they were even more exposed to diseases.[67]

On top of the fear of disease, people were afraid of why they were being captured. The popular assumption was that Europeans were cannibals. Stories and rumours spread that whites captured Africans to eat them.[67] Olaudah Equiano accounts his experience about the sorrow slaves encountered at the ports. He talks about his first moment on a slave ship and asked if he was going to be eaten.[68] Yet, the worst for slaves has only begun, and the journey on the water proved to be more harrowing. For every 100 Africans captured, only 64 would reach the coast, and only about 50 would reach the New World.[67]

Others believe that slavers had a vested interest in capturing rather than killing, and in keeping their captives alive; and that this coupled with the disproportionate removal of males and the introduction of new crops from the Americas (cassava, maize) would have limited general population decline to particular regions of western Africa around 1760–1810, and in Mozambique and neighbouring areas half a century later. There has also been speculation that within Africa, females were most often captured as brides, with their male protectors being a "bycatch" who would have been killed if there had not been an export market for them.

British explorer Mungo Park encountered a group of slaves when traveling through Mandinka country:

They were all very inquisitive, but they viewed me at first with looks of horror, and repeatedly asked if my countrymen were cannibals. They were very desirous to know what became of the slaves after they had crossed the salt water. I told them that they were employed in cultivation the land; but they would not believe me ... A deeply-rooted idea that the whites purchase negroes for the purpose of devouring them, or of selling them to others that they may be devoured hereafter, naturally makes the slaves contemplate a journey towards the coast with great terror, insomuch that the slatees are forced to keep them constantly in irons, and watch them very closely, to prevent their escape.[69]

During the period from the late 19th century and early 20th century, demand for the labour-intensive harvesting of rubber drove frontier expansion and forced labour. The personal monarchy of Belgian King Leopold II in the Congo Free State saw mass killings and slavery to extract rubber.[70]

Africans on ships

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Illustration of slave ship used to transport slaves to Europe and the Americas

Surviving the voyage was the main struggle. Close quarters meant everyone was infected by any diseases that spread, including the crew. Death was so common that ships were called tumbeiros, or floating tombs.[71] What shocked Africans the most was how death was handled in the ships. Smallwood says the traditions for an African death were delicate and community-based. On ships, bodies would be thrown into the sea. Because the sea represented bad omens, bodies in the sea represented a form of purgatory and the ship a form of hell. Any Africans who made the journey would have survived extreme disease and malnutrition, as well as trauma from being on the open ocean and the death of their friends.[71]

North Africa

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Christian slaves in Algiers, 1706

In Algiers during the time of the Regency of Algiers in North Africa in the 19th century, up to 1.25 million Christians and Europeans were captured and forced into slavery on the Barbary coast.[72] This eventually led to the Bombardment of Algiers in 1816 by the British and Dutch, forcing the Dey of Algiers to free many slaves.[73]

Modern times

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The trading of children has been reported in modern Nigeria and Benin. In parts of Ghana, a family may be punished for an offense by having to turn over a virgin female to serve as a sex slave within the offended family. In this instance, the woman does not gain the title or status of "wife". In parts of Ghana, Togo, and Benin, shrine slavery persists, despite being illegal in Ghana since 1998. In this system of ritual servitude, sometimes called trokosi (in Ghana) or voodoosi in Togo and Benin, young virgin girls are given as slaves to traditional shrines and are used sexually by the priests in addition to providing free labor for the shrine.[citation needed]

An article in the Middle East Quarterly in 1999 reported that slavery is endemic in Sudan.[74] Estimates of abductions during the Second Sudanese Civil War range from 14,000 to 200,000 people.[75]

During the Second Sudanese Civil War people were taken into slavery; estimates of abductions range from 14,000 to 200,000. Abduction of Dinka women and children was common.[76] In Mauritania it is estimated that up to 600,000 men, women and children, or 20% of the population, are currently enslaved, many of them used as bonded labor.[77] Slavery in Mauritania was criminalized in August 2007.[78]

During the Darfur conflict that began in 2003, many people were kidnapped by Janjaweed and sold into slavery as agricultural labor, domestic servants and sex slaves.[79][80][81]

In Niger, slavery is also a current phenomenon. A Nigerien study has found that more than 800,000 people are enslaved, almost 8% of the population.[82][83][84] Niger installed an anti-slavery provision in 2003.[85][86] In a landmark ruling in 2008, the ECOWAS Community Court of Justice declared that the Republic of Niger failed to protect Hadijatou Mani Koraou from slavery, and awarded Mani CFA 10,000,000 (approximately US$20,000) in reparations.[87]

Sexual slavery and forced labor are common in the Democratic Republic of Congo.[88][89][90]

Many pygmies in the Republic of Congo and Democratic Republic of Congo belong from birth to Bantus in a system of slavery.[91][92]

Evidence emerged in the late 1990s of systematic slavery in cacao plantations in West Africa; see the chocolate and slavery article.[64]

According to the U.S. State Department, more than 109,000 children were working on cocoa farms alone in Ivory Coast in "the worst forms of child labour" in 2002.[93]

On the night of 14–15 April 2014, a group of militants attacked the Government Girls Secondary School in Chibok, Nigeria. They broke into the school, pretending to be guards,[94] telling the girls to get out and come with them.[95] A large number of students were taken away in trucks, possibly into the Konduga area of the Sambisa Forest where Boko Haram were known to have fortified camps.[95] Houses in Chibok were also burned down in the incident.[96] According to police, approximately 276 children were taken in the attack, of whom 53 had escaped as of 2 May.[97] Other reports said that 329 girls were kidnapped, 53 had escaped and 276 were still missing.[98][99][100] The students have been forced to convert to Islam[101] and into marriage with members of Boko Haram, with a reputed "bride price" of 2,000 each ($12.50/£7.50).[102][103] Many of the students were taken to the neighbouring countries of Chad and Cameroon, with sightings reported of the students crossing borders with the militants, and sightings of the students by villagers living in the Sambisa Forest, which is considered a refuge for Boko Haram.[103][104]

On 5 May 2014 a video in which Boko Haram leader Abubakar Shekau claimed responsibility for the kidnappings emerged. Shekau claimed that "Allah instructed me to sell them...I will carry out his instructions"[105] and "[s]lavery is allowed in my religion, and I shall capture people and make them slaves."[106] He said the girls should not have been in school and instead should have been married since girls as young as nine are suitable for marriage.[105][106]

Libyan slave trade

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During the Second Libyan Civil War Libyans started capturing[107] some of the Sub-Saharan African migrants trying to get to Europe through Libya and selling them on slave markets.[108][109] Slaves are often ransomed to their families and in the meantime until ransom can be paid, they may be tortured, forced to work, sometimes worked to death, and eventually they may be executed or left to starve if the payment has not been made after a period of time. Women are often raped and used as sex slaves and sold to brothels.[110][111][112][113]

Many child migrants also suffer from abuse and child rape in Libya.[114][115]

Americas

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A young boy with an enslaved woman, Brazil, 1860.

To participate in the slave trade in Spanish America, bankers and trading companies had to pay the Spanish king for the license, called the Asiento de Negros, but an unknown amount of the trade was illegal. After 1670 when the Spanish Empire declined substantially they outsourced part of the slave trade to the Dutch (1685–1687), the Portuguese, the French (1698–1713) and the English (1713–1750), also providing organized depots in the Caribbean islands to the Dutch, British and French America. As a result of the War of the Spanish Succession (1701–1714), the British government obtained the monopoly (asiento de negros) of selling African slaves in Spanish America, which was granted to the South Sea Company. Meanwhile, slave trading became a core business for privately owned enterprises in the Americas.

Among indigenous peoples

[edit]

In Pre-Columbian Mesoamerica the most common forms of slavery were those of prisoners of war and debtors. People unable to pay back debts could be sentenced to work as slaves to the people owed until the debts were worked off, as a form of indentured servitude. Warfare was important to Maya society, because raids on surrounding areas provided the victims required for human sacrifice, as well as slaves for the construction of temples.[116] Most victims of human sacrifice were prisoners of war or slaves.[117] Slavery was not usually hereditary; children of slaves were born free. In the Inca Empire, workers were subject to a mita instead of taxes which they paid by working for the government. Each ayllu, or extended family, would decide which family member to send to do the work. It is unclear if this labor draft or corvée counts as slavery. The Spanish adopted this system, particularly for their silver mines in Bolivia.[118]

Other slave-owning societies and tribes of the New World were, for example, the Tehuelche of Patagonia, the Comanche of Texas, the Caribs of Dominica, the Tupinambá of Brazil, the fishing societies, such as the Yurok, that lived along the west coast of North America from what is now Alaska to California, the Pawnee and Klamath.[119] Many of the indigenous peoples of the Pacific Northwest Coast, such as the Haida and Tlingit, were traditionally known as fierce warriors and slave-traders, raiding as far as California. Slavery was hereditary, the slaves being prisoners of war.[clarification needed] Among some Pacific Northwest tribes, about a quarter of the population was enslaved.[120][121] One slave narrative was composed by an Englishman, John R. Jewitt, who had been taken alive when his ship was captured in 1802; his memoir provides a detailed look at life as a slave, and asserts that a large number were held.

Brazil

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Slavery in Brazil, Johann Moritz Rugendas.
A Guaraní family captured by Indian slave hunters. By Jean Baptiste Debret

Slavery was a mainstay of the Brazilian colonial economy, especially in mining and sugarcane production.[122] 35.3% of all slaves from the Atlantic Slave trade went to Colonial Brazil. 4 million slaves were obtained by Brazil, 1.5 million more than any other country.[123] Starting around 1550, the Portuguese began to trade enslaved Africans to work the sugar plantations, once the native Tupi people deteriorated. Although Portuguese Prime Minister Sebastião José de Carvalho e Melo, 1st Marquis of Pombal prohibited the importation of slaves into Continental Portugal on 12 February 1761, slavery continued in her overseas colonies. Slavery was practiced among all classes. Slaves were owned by upper and middle classes, by the poor, and even by other slaves.[124]

From São Paulo, the Bandeirantes, adventurers mostly of mixed Portuguese and native ancestry, penetrated steadily westward in their search for Indians to enslave. Along the Amazon River and its major tributaries, repeated slaving raids and punitive attacks left their mark. One French traveler in the 1740s described hundreds of miles of river banks with no sign of human life and once-thriving villages that were devastated and empty. In some areas of the Amazon Basin, and particularly among the Guarani of southern Brazil and Paraguay, the Jesuits had organized their Jesuit Reductions along military lines to fight the slavers. In the mid-to-late 19th century, many Amerindians were enslaved to work on rubber plantations.[125][126][127]

Resistance and abolition

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Slaves that escaped formed Maroon communities which played an important role in the histories of Brazil and other countries such as Suriname, Puerto Rico, Cuba, and Jamaica. In Brazil, the Maroon villages were called palenques or quilombos. Maroons survived by growing vegetables and hunting. They also raided plantations. At these attacks, the maroons would burn crops, steal livestock and tools, kill slavemasters, and invite other slaves to join their communities.[128]

Jean-Baptiste Debret, a French painter who was active in Brazil in the first decades of the 19th century, started out with painting portraits of members of the Brazilian Imperial family, but soon became concerned with the slavery of both blacks and indigenous inhabitants. His paintings on the subject (two appear on this page) helped bring attention to the subject in both Europe and Brazil itself.

The Clapham Sect, a group of evangelical reformers, campaigned during much of the 19th century for Britain to use its influence and power to stop the traffic of slaves to Brazil. Besides moral qualms, the low cost of slave-produced Brazilian sugar meant that the British West Indies were unable to match the market prices of Brazilian sugar, and each Briton was consuming 16 pounds (7 kg) of sugar a year by the 19th century. This combination led to intensive pressure from the British government for Brazil to end this practice, which it did by steps over several decades.[129]

First, foreign trade of slaves was banned in 1850. Then, in 1871, the sons of the slaves were freed. In 1885, slaves aged over 60 years were freed. The Paraguayan War contributed to ending slavery as many slaves enlisted in exchange for freedom. In Colonial Brazil, slavery was more a social than a racial condition.[5] Some of the greatest figures of the time, like the writer Machado de Assis and the engineer André Rebouças had black ancestry.

Brazil's 1877–78 Grande Seca (Great Drought) in the cotton-growing northeast led to major turmoil, starvation, poverty and internal migration. As wealthy plantation holders rushed to sell their slaves south, popular resistance and resentment grew, inspiring numerous emancipation societies. They succeeded in banning slavery altogether in the province of Ceará by 1884.[130] Slavery was legally ended nationwide on 13 May by the Lei Áurea ("Golden Law") of 1888. It was an institution in decadence at these times, as since the 1880s the country had begun to use European immigrant labor instead. Brazil was the last nation in the Western Hemisphere to abolish slavery.[131]

British and French Caribbean

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Slaves cutting the sugar cane, British colony of Antigua, 1823

Slavery was commonly used in the parts of the Caribbean controlled by France and the British Empire. The Lesser Antilles islands of Barbados, St. Kitts, Antigua, Martinique and Guadeloupe, which were the first important societies of slaves in the Caribbean, began the widespread use of enslaved Africans by the end of the 17th century, as their economies converted from sugar production.[132]

England had multiple sugar colonies in the Caribbean, especially Jamaica, Barbados, Nevis, and Antigua, which provided a steady flow of sugar sales; forced labor of slaves produced the sugar.[133] By the 1700s, there were more slaves in Barbados than in all the English colonies on the mainland combined. Since Barbados did not have many mountains, English planters were able to clear land for sugarcane. Indentured servants were initially sent to Barbados to work in the sugar fields. These indentured servants were treated so poorly that future indentured servants stopped going to Barbados, and there were not enough people to work the fields. This is when the British started bringing in enslaved Africans. For the English planters in Barbados, reliance on enslaved labor was necessary for them to be able to profit from production of cane-origin sugar for the growing market for sugar in Europe and other markets.[18]

In the Treaty of Utrecht, which ended the War of the Spanish Succession (1702–1714), the various European powers negotiating the terms of the treaty also discussed colonial issues as well.[134] Of special importance in the negotiations at Utrecht was the successful negotiation between the British and French delegations for Britain to obtain a thirty-year monopoly on the right to sell slaves in Spanish America, called the Asiento de Negros. Queen Anne also allowed her North American colonies like Virginia to make laws that promoted the importation of slaves. Anne had secretly negotiated with France to get its approval regarding the Asiento.[135] In 1712, she delivered a speech which included a public announcement of her success in taking the Asiento away from France; many London merchants celebrated her economic coup.[136] Most of the trade of slaves involved sales to Spanish colonies in the Caribbean, and to Mexico, as well as sales to European colonies in the Caribbean and in North America.[137] Historian Vinita Ricks says the agreement allotted Queen Anne "22.5% (and King Philip V, of Spain 28%) of all profits collected for the Asiento monopoly. Ricks concludes that the Queen's "connection to slave trade revenue meant that she was no longer a neutral observer. She had a vested interest in what happened on slave ships."[138]

By 1778, the French were importing approximately 13,000 Africans for enslavement yearly to the French West Indies.[139]

To regularise slavery, in 1685 Louis XIV had enacted the Code Noir, a slave code accorded certain human rights to slaves and responsibilities to the master, who was obliged to feed, clothe and provide for the general well-being of his human property. Free people of color owned one-third of the plantation property and one-quarter of the slaves in Saint Domingue (later Haiti).[140] Slavery in the First Republic was abolished on 4 February 1794. When it became clear that Napoleon intended to re-establish slavery in Saint-Domingue (Haiti), Jean-Jacques Dessalines and Alexandre Pétion switched sides, in October 1802. On 1 January 1804, Dessalines, the new leader under the dictatorial 1801 constitution, declared Haiti a free republic.[141] Thus Haiti became the second independent nation in the Western Hemisphere, after the United States, as a result of the only successful slave rebellion in world history.[142]

18th-century painting of Dirk Valkenburg showing plantation slaves during a Ceremonial dance.

Whitehall in England announced in 1833 that slaves in British colonies would be completely freed by 1838. In the meantime, the government told slaves they had to remain on their plantations and would have the status of "apprentices" for the next six years.

In Port-of-Spain, Trinidad, on 1 August 1834, an unarmed group of mainly elderly Negroes being addressed by the Governor at Government House about the new laws, began chanting: "Pas de six ans. Point de six ans" ("Not six years. No six years"), drowning out the voice of the Governor. Peaceful protests continued until a resolution to abolish apprenticeship was passed and de facto freedom was achieved. Full emancipation for all was legally granted ahead of schedule on 1 August 1838, making Trinidad the first British colony with slaves to completely abolish slavery.[143]

After Great Britain abolished slavery, it began to pressure other nations to do the same. France, too, abolished slavery. By then Saint-Domingue had already won its independence and formed the independent Republic of Haiti, though France still controlled Guadeloupe, Martinique and a few smaller islands.

Canada

[edit]

Slavery in Canada was practised by First Nations and continued during the European colonization of Canada.[144] It is estimated that there were 4,200 slaves in the French colony of Canada and later British North America between 1671 and 1831.[145] Two-thirds of these were of indigenous ancestry (typically called panis)[146] whereas the other third were of African descent.[145] They were house servants and farm workers.[147] The number of slaves of color increased during British rule, especially with the arrival of United Empire Loyalists after 1783.[148] A small portion of Black Canadians today are descended from these slaves.[149]

The practice of slavery in the Canadas ended through case law; having died out in the early 19th century through judicial actions litigated on behalf of slaves seeking manumission.[150] The courts, to varying degrees, rendered slavery unenforceable in both Lower Canada and Nova Scotia. In Lower Canada, for example, after court decisions in the late 1790s, the "slave could not be compelled to serve longer than he would, and ... might leave his master at will."[151] Upper Canada passed the Act Against Slavery in 1793, one of the earliest anti-slavery acts in the world.[152] The institution was formally banned throughout most of the British Empire, including the Canadas in 1834, after the passage of the Slavery Abolition Act 1833 in the British parliament. These measures resulted in a number of Black people (free and slaves) from the United States moving to Canada after the American Revolution, known as the Black Loyalists; and again after the War of 1812, with a number of Black Refugees settling in Canada. During the mid-19th century, British North America served as a terminus for the Underground Railroad, a network of routes used by enslaved African-Americans to escape a slave state.

Latin America

[edit]
Funeral at slave plantation during Dutch colonial rule, Suriname. Colored lithograph printed circa 1840–1850, digitally restored.

During the period from the late 19th century and early 20th century, demand for the labor-intensive harvesting of rubber drove frontier expansion and slavery in Latin America and elsewhere. Indigenous peoples were enslaved as part of the rubber boom in Ecuador, Peru, Colombia, and Brazil.[153] In Central America, rubber tappers participated in the enslavement of the indigenous Guatuso-Maleku people for domestic service.[154]

United States

[edit]

Early events

[edit]

In late August 1619, the frigate White Lion, a privateer ship owned by Robert Rich, 2nd Earl of Warwick, but flying a Dutch flag arrived at Point Comfort, Virginia (several miles downstream from the colony of Jamestown, Virginia) carried the first recorded slaves from Africa to Virginia. The approximately 20 Africans were from the present-day Angola. They had been removed by the White Lion's crew from a Portuguese cargo ship, the São João Bautista.[155][156]

Historians are undecided if the legal practice of slavery began in the colony because at least some of them had the status of indentured servant. Alden T. Vaughn says most agree that both black slaves and indentured servants existed by 1640.[157]

Only a small fraction of the enslaved Africans brought to the New World came to British North America, perhaps as little as 5% of the total. The vast majority of slaves were sent to the Caribbean sugar colonies, Brazil, or Spanish America.

By the 1680s, with the consolidation of England's Royal African Company, enslaved Africans were arriving in English colonies in larger numbers, and the institution continued to be protected by the British government. Colonists now began purchasing slaves in larger numbers.

Slavery in American colonial law

[edit]
Well-dressed plantation owner and family visiting the slave quarters.
  • 1640: Virginia courts sentence John Punch to lifetime slavery, marking the earliest legal sanctioning of slavery in English colonies.[158]
  • 1641: Massachusetts legalizes slavery.[159]
  • 1650: Connecticut legalizes slavery.
  • 1652: Rhode Island bans the enslavement or forced servitude of any white or negro for more than ten years or beyond the age of 24.[160][161]
  • 1654: Virginia sanctions "the right of Negros to own slaves of their own race" after African Anthony Johnson, former indentured servant, sued to have fellow African John Casor declared not an indentured servant but "slave for life."[162]
  • 1661: Virginia officially recognizes slavery by statute.
  • 1662: A Virginia statute declares that children born would have the same status as their mother.
  • 1663: Maryland legalizes slavery.
  • 1664: Slavery is legalized in New York and New Jersey.[163]
  • 1670: Carolina (later, South Carolina and North Carolina) is founded mainly by planters from the overpopulated British sugar island colony of Barbados, who brought relatively large numbers of African slaves from that island.[164]
  • 1676: Rhode Island bans the enslavement of Native Americans.[165]

Development of slavery

[edit]

The shift from indentured servants to enslaved African was prompted by a dwindling class of former servants who had worked through the terms of their indentures and thus became competitors to their former masters. These newly freed servants were rarely able to support themselves comfortably, and the tobacco industry was increasingly dominated by large planters. This caused domestic unrest culminating in Bacon's Rebellion. Eventually, chattel slavery became the norm in regions dominated by plantations.

The Fundamental Constitutions of Carolina established a model in which a rigid social hierarchy placed slaves under the absolute authority of their master. With the rise of a plantation economy in the Carolina Lowcountry based on rice cultivation, a society of slaves was created that later became the model for the King Cotton economy across the Deep South. The model created by South Carolina was driven by the emergence of a majority enslaved population that required repressive and often brutal force to control. Justification for such an enslaved society developed into a conceptual framework of white supremacy in the American colonies.[166]

Several local slave rebellions took place during the 17th and 18th centuries: Gloucester County, Virginia Revolt (1663);[167] New York Slave Revolt of 1712; Stono Rebellion (1739); and New York Slave Insurrection of 1741.[168]

Early United States law

[edit]
James Hopkinson's plantation, South Carolina ca. 1862.

Within the British Empire, the Massachusetts courts began to follow England when, in 1772, England became the first country in the world to outlaw the slave trade within its borders (see Somerset v Stewart) followed by the Knight v. Wedderburn decision in Scotland in 1778. Between 1764 and 1774, seventeen slaves appeared in Massachusetts courts to sue their owners for freedom.[169] In 1766, John Adams' colleague Benjamin Kent won the first trial in the present-day United States to free a slave (Slew vs. Whipple).[170][171][172][173][174][175]

The Republic of Vermont allowed the enslavement of children in its constitution of 1777 suggesting that people "ought not" enslave adults, but there was no enforcement of this suggestion. Vermont entered the United States in 1791 with the same constitutional provisions.[176] Through the Northwest Ordinance of 1787 under the Congress of the Confederation, slavery was prohibited in the territories north west of the Ohio River. In 1794, Congress banned American vessels from being used in the slave trade, and also banned the export of slaves from America to other countries.[177] However, little effort was made to enforce this legislation. The slave ship owners of Rhode Island were able to continue in trade, and the USA's slaving fleet in 1806 was estimated to be nearly 75% as large as that of Britain, with dominance of the transportation of slaves into Cuba.[29]: 63  By 1804, abolitionists succeeded in passing legislation that ended legal slavery in every northern state (with slaves above a certain age legally transformed to indentured servants).[178] Congress passed an Act Prohibiting Importation of Slaves as of 1 January 1808; but not the internal slave trade.[179]

Despite the actions of abolitionists, free blacks were subject to racial segregation in the Northern states.[180] While the United Kingdom did not ban slavery throughout most of the empire, including British North America till 1833, free blacks found refuge in the Canadas after the American Revolutionary War and again after the War of 1812. Refugees from slavery fled the South across the Ohio River to the North via the Underground Railroad. Midwestern state governments asserted States Rights arguments to refuse federal jurisdiction over fugitives. Some juries exercised their right of jury nullification and refused to convict those indicted under the Fugitive Slave Act of 1850.

After the passage of the Kansas–Nebraska Act in 1854, armed conflict broke out in Kansas Territory, where the question of whether it would be admitted to the Union as a slave state or a free state had been left to the inhabitants. The radical abolitionist John Brown was active in the mayhem and killing in "Bleeding Kansas." The true turning point in public opinion is better fixed at the Lecompton Constitution fraud. Pro-slavery elements in Kansas had arrived first from Missouri and quickly organized a territorial government that excluded abolitionists. Through the machinery of the territory and violence, the pro-slavery faction attempted to force the unpopular pro-slavery Lecompton Constitution through the state. This infuriated Northern Democrats, who supported popular sovereignty, and was exacerbated by the Buchanan administration reneging on a promise to submit the constitution to a referendum—which would surely fail. Anti-slavery legislators took office under the banner of the newly formed Republican Party. The Supreme Court in the Dred Scott decision of 1857 asserted that one could take one's property anywhere, even if one's property was chattel and one crossed into a free territory. It also asserted that African Americans could not be federal citizens. Outraged critics across the North denounced these episodes as the latest of the Slave Power (the politically organized slave owners) taking more control of the nation.[181]

American Civil War

[edit]

The enslaved population in the United States stood at four million.[182] Ninety-five percent of blacks lived in the South, constituting one third of the population there as opposed to 1% of the population of the North. The central issue in politics in the 1850s involved the extension of slavery into the western territories, which settlers from the Northern states opposed. The Whig Party split and collapsed on the slavery issue, to be replaced in the North by the new Republican Party, which was dedicated to stopping the expansion of slavery. Republicans gained a majority in every northern state by absorbing a faction of anti-slavery Democrats, and warning that slavery was a backward system that undercut liberal democracy and economic modernization.[183] Numerous compromise proposals were put forward, but they all collapsed. A majority of Northern voters were committed to stopping the expansion of slavery, which they believed would ultimately end slavery. Southern voters were overwhelmingly angry that they were being treated as second-class citizens. In the election of 1860, the Republicans swept Abraham Lincoln into the Presidency and his party took control with legislators into the United States Congress. The states of the Deep South, convinced that the economic power of what they called "King Cotton" would overwhelm the North and win support from Europe voted to secede from the U.S. (the Union). They formed the Confederate States of America, based on the promise of maintaining slavery. War broke out in April 1861, as both sides sought wave after wave of enthusiasm among young men volunteering to form new regiments and new armies. In the North, the main goal was to preserve the union as an expression of American nationalism.

Company I of the 36th Colored Regiment USCT

Rebel leaders Jefferson Davis, Robert E. Lee, Nathan Bedford Forrest and others were slavers and slave-traders.

By 1862 most northern leaders realized that the mainstay of Southern secession, slavery, had to be attacked head-on. All the border states rejected President Lincoln's proposal for compensated emancipation. However, by 1865 all had begun the abolition of slavery, except Kentucky and Delaware. The Emancipation Proclamation was an executive order issued by Lincoln on 1 January 1863. In a single stroke, it changed the legal status, as recognized by the U.S. government, of 3 million slaves in designated areas of the Confederacy from "slave" to "free." It had the practical effect that as soon as a slave escaped the control of the Confederate government, by running away or through advances of the Union Army, the slave became legally and actually free. Plantation owners, realizing that emancipation would destroy their economic system, sometimes moved their human property as far as possible out of reach of the Union Army. By June 1865, the Union Army controlled all of the Confederacy and liberated all of the designated slaves. The owners were never compensated.[184] About 186,000 free blacks and newly freed people fought for the Union in the Army and Navy, thereby validating their claims to full citizenship.[185]

The severe dislocations of war and Reconstruction had a severe negative impact on the black population, with a large amount of sickness and death.[186][187] After liberation, many of the Freedmen remained on the same plantation. Others fled or crowded into refugee camps operated by the Freedmen's Bureau. The Bureau provided food, housing, clothing, medical care, church services, some schooling, legal support, and arranged for labor contracts.[188] Fierce debates about the rights of the Freedmen, and of the defeated Confederates, often accompanied by killings of black leaders, marked the Reconstruction Era, 1863–1877.[189]

Slavery was never reestablished, but after President Ulysses S. Grant left the White House in 1877, white-supremacist "Redeemer" Southern Democrats took control of all the southern states, and blacks lost nearly all the political power they had achieved during Reconstruction. By 1900, they also lost the right to vote – they had become second class citizens. The great majority lived in the rural South in poverty working as laborers, sharecroppers or tenant farmers; a small proportion owned their own land. The black churches, especially the Baptist Church, was the center of community activity and leadership.[190]

Asia

[edit]
A plate in the Boxer Codex possibly depicting alipin (slaves) in the pre-colonial Philippines.
A contract from the Tang dynasty that records the purchase of a 15-year-old slave for six bolts of plain silk and five Chinese coins.

Slavery has existed all throughout Asia, and forms of slavery still exist today. In the ancient Near East and Asia Minor slavery was common practice, dating back to the very earliest recorded civilisations in the world such as Sumer, Elam, Ancient Egypt, Akkad, Assyria, Ebla and Babylonia, as well as amongst the Hattians, Hittites, Hurrians, Mycenaean Greece, Luwians, Canaanites, Israelites, Amorites, Phoenicians, Arameans, Ammonites, Edomites, Moabites, Byzantines, Philistines, Medes, Phrygians, Lydians, Mitanni, Kassites, Parthians, Urartians, Colchians, Chaldeans and Armenians.[191][192][193]

Slavery in the Middle East first developed out of the slavery practices of the Ancient Near East,[194] and these practices were radically different at times, depending on social-political factors such as the Muslim slave trade. Two rough estimates by scholars of the number of slaves held over twelve centuries in Muslim lands are 11.5 million[195] and 14 million.[196][197]

Under Sharia (Islamic law),[194][198] children of slaves or prisoners of war could become slaves, but only if they are non-Muslim, leading to the Islamic world to import many slaves from other regions, predominantly Europe.[199] Manumission of a slave was encouraged as a way of expiating sins.[200] Many early converts to Islam, such as Bilal ibn Rabah al-Habashi, were poor and former slaves.[201][202][203][204]

Byzantine Empire

[edit]

Slavery played a notable role in the economy of the Byzantine Empire. Many slaves were sourced from wars within the Mediterranean and Europe while others were sourced from trading with Vikings visiting the empire. Slavery's role in the economy and the power of slave owners slowly diminished while laws gradually improved the rights of slaves.[205][206][207] Under the influence of Christianity, views of slavery shifted leading to slaves gaining more rights and independence, and although slavery became rare and was seen as evil by many citizens it was still legal.[208][209]

During the Arab–Byzantine wars many prisoners of war were ransomed into slavery while others took part in Arab–Byzantine prisoner exchanges. Exchanges of prisoners became a regular feature of the relations between the Byzantine Empire and the Abbasid Caliphate.[210][211][212]

After the fall of the Byzantine empire thousands of Byzantine citizens were enslaved, with 30,000–50,000 citizens being enslaved by the Ottoman Empire after the Fall of Constantinople.[213][214]

Ottoman Empire

[edit]
Ottoman Turks with captives from the Hundred Years' Croatian–Ottoman War

Slavery was a legal and important part of the economy of the Ottoman Empire and Ottoman society[215] until the slavery of Caucasians was banned in the early 19th century, although slaves from other groups were allowed.[216] In Constantinople (present-day Istanbul), the administrative and political center of the Empire, about a fifth of the population consisted of slaves in 1609.[217] Even after several measures to ban slavery in the late 19th century, the practice continued largely unaffected into the early 20th century. As late as 1908, female slaves were still sold in the Ottoman Empire. Sexual slavery was a central part of the Ottoman slave system throughout the history of the institution.[218][219]

A member of the Ottoman slave class, called a kul in Turkish, could achieve high status. Harem guards and janissaries are some of the better-known positions a slave could hold, but slaves were actually often at the forefront of Ottoman politics. The majority of officials in the Ottoman government were bought slaves, raised as slaves of the Sultan, and integral to the success of the Ottoman Empire from the 14th century into the 19th. Many officials themselves owned a large number of slaves, although the Sultan himself owned by far the largest amount.[220] By raising and specially training slaves as officials in palace schools such as Enderun, the Ottomans created administrators with intricate knowledge of government and fanatic loyalty.

Ottomans practiced devşirme, a sort of "blood tax" or "child collection", young Christian boys from the Balkans and Anatolia were taken from their homes and families, brought up as Muslims, and enlisted into the most famous branch of the kapıkulu, the Janissaries, a special soldier class of the Ottoman army that became a decisive faction in the Ottoman invasions of Europe.[221]

During the various 18th and 19th century persecution campaigns against Christians as well as during the culminating Assyrian, Armenian and Greek genocides of World War I, many indigenous Armenian, Assyrian and Greek Christian women and children were carried off as slaves by the Ottoman Turks and their Kurdish allies. Henry Morgenthau, Sr., U.S. Ambassador in Constantinople from 1913 to 1916, reports in his Ambassador Morgenthau's Story that there were gangs trading white slaves during his term in Constantinople.[222] He also reports that Armenian girls were sold as slaves during the Armenian Genocide.[223][224]

According to Ronald Segal, the male:female gender ratio in the Atlantic slave trade was 2:1, whereas in Islamic lands the ratio was 1:2. Another difference between the two was, he argues, that slavery in the west had a racial component, whereas the Qur'an explicitly condemned racism. This, in Segal's view, eased assimilation of freed slaves into society.[225] Men would often take their female slaves as concubines; in fact, most Ottoman sultans were sons of such concubines.[225]

Ancient history

[edit]

Ancient India

[edit]

Scholars differ as to whether or not slaves and the institution of slavery existed in ancient India. These English words have no direct, universally accepted equivalent in Sanskrit or other Indian languages, but some scholars translate the word dasa, mentioned in texts like Manu Smriti,[226] as slaves.[227] Ancient historians who visited India offer the closest insights into the nature of Indian society and slavery in other ancient civilizations. For example, the Greek historian Arrian, who chronicled India about the time of Alexander the Great, wrote in his Indika,[228]

The Indians do not even use aliens as slaves, much less a countryman of their own.

— The Indika of Arrian[228]

Ancient China

[edit]
  • Qin dynasty (221–206 BC) Men sentenced to castration became eunuch slaves of the Qin dynasty state and as a result they were made to do forced labor, on projects like the Terracotta Army.[229] The Qin government confiscated the property and enslaved the families of those who received castration as a punishment for rape.[230]
    • Slaves were deprived of their rights and connections to their families.[231]
  • Han dynasty (206 BC – 220 AD) One of Emperor Gao's first acts was to set free from slavery agricultural workers who were enslaved during the Warring States period, although domestic servants retained their status.
    • Men punished with castration during the Han dynasty were also used as slave labor.[232]
    • Deriving from earlier Legalist laws, the Han dynasty set in place rules that the property of and families of criminals doing three years of hard labor or sentenced to castration were to have their families seized and kept as property by the government.[233]

During the millennium long Chinese domination of Vietnam, Vietnam was a great source of slave girls who were used as sex slaves in China.[234][235] The slave girls of Viet were even eroticized in Tang dynasty poetry.[234]

The Tang dynasty purchased Western slaves from the Radhanite Jews.[236] Tang Chinese soldiers and pirates enslaved Koreans, Turks, Persians, Indonesians, and people from Inner Mongolia, Central Asia, and northern India.[237][238][239][240] The greatest source of slaves came from southern tribes, including Thais and aboriginals from the southern provinces of Fujian, Guangdong, Guangxi, and Guizhou. Malays, Khmers, Indians, and black Africans were also purchased as slaves in the Tang dynasty.[241] Slavery was prevalent until the late 19th century and early 20th century China.[242] All forms of slavery have been illegal in China since 1910.[243]

Postclassical history

[edit]

Indian subcontinent

[edit]

The Islamic invasions, starting in the 8th century, also resulted in hundreds of thousands of Indians being enslaved by the invading armies, one of the earliest being the armies of the Umayyad commander Muhammad bin Qasim.[244][245][246][247][248] Qutb-ud-din Aybak, a Turkic slave of Muhammad Ghori rose to power following his master's death. For almost a century, his descendants ruled North-Central India in form of Slave Dynasty. Several slaves were also brought to India by the Indian Ocean trades; for example, the Siddi are descendants of Bantu slaves brought to India by Arab and Portuguese merchants.[249]

Andre Wink summarizes the slavery in 8th and 9th century India as follows,

(During the invasion of Muhammad al-Qasim), invariably numerous women and children were enslaved. The sources insist that now, in dutiful conformity to religious law, 'the one-fifth of the slaves and spoils' were set apart for the caliph's treasury and despatched to Iraq and Syria. The remainder was scattered among the army of Islam. At Rūr, a random 60,000 captives reduced to slavery. At Brahamanabad 30,000 slaves were allegedly taken. At Multan 6,000. Slave raids continued to be made throughout the late Umayyad period in Sindh, but also much further into Hind, as far as Ujjain and Malwa. The Abbasid governors raided Punjab, where many prisoners and slaves were taken.

— Al Hind, André Wink[250]

In the early 11th century Tarikh al-Yamini, the Arab historian Al-Utbi recorded that in 1001 the armies of Mahmud of Ghazna conquered Peshawar and Waihand (capital of Gandhara) after Battle of Peshawar (1001), "in the midst of the land of Hindustan", and captured some 100,000 youths.[245][246] Later, following his twelfth expedition into India in 1018–19, Mahmud is reported to have returned with such a large number of slaves that their value was reduced to only two to ten dirhams each. This unusually low price made, according to Al-Utbi, "merchants [come] from distant cities to purchase them, so that the countries of Central Asia, Iraq and Khurasan were swelled with them, and the fair and the dark, the rich and the poor, mingled in one common slavery". Elliot and Dowson refer to "five hundred thousand slaves, beautiful men and women.".[247][251][252] Later, during the Delhi Sultanate period (1206–1555), references to the abundant availability of low-priced Indian slaves abound. Levi attributes this primarily to the vast human resources of India, compared to its neighbors to the north and west (India's Mughal population being approximately 12 to 20 times that of Turan and Iran at the end of the 16th century).[253]

Slavery and empire-formation tied in particularly well with iqta and it is within this context of Islamic expansion that elite slavery was later commonly found. It became the predominant system in North India in the thirteenth century and retained considerable importance in the fourteenth century. Slavery was still vigorous in fifteenth-century Bengal, while after that date it shifted to the Deccan where it persisted until the seventeenth century. It remained present to a minor extent in the Mughal provinces throughout the seventeenth century and had a notable revival under the Afghans in North India again in the eighteenth century.

— Al Hind, André Wink[254]

The Delhi sultanate obtained thousands of slaves and eunuch servants from the villages of Eastern Bengal (a widespread practice which Mughal emperor Jahangir later tried to stop). Wars, famines, pestilences drove many villagers to sell their children as slaves. The Muslim conquest of Gujarat in Western India had two main objectives. The conquerors demanded and more often forcibly wrested both land owned by Hindus and Hindu women. Enslavement of women invariably led to their conversion to Islam.[255] In battles waged by Muslims against Hindus in Malwa and Deccan plateau, a large number of captives were taken. Muslim soldiers were permitted to retain and enslave POWs as plunder.[256]

The first Bahmani sultan, Alauddin Bahman Shah is noted to have captured 1,000 singing and dancing girls from Hindu temples after he battled the northern Carnatic chieftains. The later Bahmanis also enslaved civilian women and children in wars; many of them were converted to Islam in captivity.[257][258] About the Mughal empire, W.H. Moreland observed, "it became a fashion to raid a village or group of villages without any obvious justification, and carry off the inhabitants as slaves."[259][260][261]

During the rule of Shah Jahan, many peasants were compelled to sell their women and children into slavery to meet the land revenue demand.[262] Slavery was officially abolished in British India by the Indian Slavery Act, 1843. However, in modern India, Pakistan and Nepal, there are millions of bonded laborers, who work as slaves to pay off debts.[263][264][265]

Modern history

[edit]

Iran

[edit]

Reginald Dyer, recalling operations against tribes in Iranian Baluchistan in 1916, stated in a 1921 memoir that the local Balochi tribes would regularly carry out raids against travellers and small towns. During these raids, women and children would often be abducted to become slaves, and would be sold for prices varying based on quality, age and looks. He stated that the average price for a young woman was 300 rupees, and the average price for a small child 25 rupees. The slaves, it was noted, were often half starved.[266]

Japan

[edit]

Slavery in Japan was, for most of its history, indigenous, since the export and import of slaves was restricted by Japan being a group of islands. In late-16th-century Japan, slavery was officially banned; but forms of contract and indentured labor persisted alongside the period penal codes' forced labor. During the Second Sino-Japanese War and the Pacific War, the Imperial Japanese Armed Forces used millions of civilians and prisoners of war from several countries as forced laborers.[267][268][269]

Korea

[edit]

In Korea, slavery was officially abolished with the Gabo Reform of 1894. During the Joseon period, in times of poor harvest and famine, many peasants voluntarily sold themselves into the nobi system in order to survive.[270]

Southeast Asia

[edit]

In Southeast Asia, there was a large slave class in Khmer Empire who built the enduring monuments in Angkor Wat and did most of the heavy work.[271] Between the 17th and the early 20th centuries one-quarter to one-third of the population of some areas of Thailand and Burma were slaves.[272] By the 19th century, Bhutan had developed a slave trade with Sikkim and Tibet, also enslaving British subjects and Brahmins.[273][274] According to the International Labour Organization (ILO), during the early 21st century an estimated 800,000 people are subject to forced labor in Myanmar.[275]

Slavery in pre-Spanish Philippines was practiced by the tribal Austronesian peoples who inhabited the culturally diverse islands. The neighboring Muslim states conducted slave raids from the 1600s into the 1800s in coastal areas of the Gulf of Thailand and the Philippine islands.[276][277] Slaves in Toraja society in Indonesia were family property. People would become slaves when they incurred a debt. Slaves could also be taken during wars, and slave trading was common. Torajan slaves were sold and shipped out to Java and Siam. Slaves could buy their freedom, but their children still inherited slave status. Slavery was abolished in 1863 in all Dutch colonies.[278][279]

Islamic State slave trade

[edit]

According to media reports from late 2014, the Islamic State (IS) was selling Yazidi and Christian women as slaves.[280] According to Haleh Esfandiari of the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars, after IS militants have captured an area "[t]hey usually take the older women to a makeshift slave market and try to sell them."[281] In mid-October 2014, the UN estimated that 5,000 to 7,000 Yazidi women and children were abducted by IS and sold into slavery.[282] In the digital magazine Dabiq, IS claimed religious justification for enslaving Yazidi women whom they consider to be from a heretical sect. IS claimed that the Yazidi are idol worshipers and their enslavement is part of the old shariah practice of spoils of war.[283][284][285][286][287] According to The Wall Street Journal, IS appeals to apocalyptic beliefs and claims "justification by a Hadith that they interpret as portraying the revival of slavery as a precursor to the end of the world".[288]

IS announced the revival of slavery as an institution.[289] In 2015 the official slave prices set by IS were following:[290][291]

  • Children aged 1 to 9 were sold for 200,000 dinars ($169).
  • Women and children 10 to 20 years sold for 150,000 dinars ($127).
  • Women 20 to 30 years old for 100,000 dinar ($85).
  • Women 30 to 40 years old are 75,000 dinar ($63).
  • Women 40 to 50 years old for 50,000 dinar ($42).

However some slaves have been sold for as little as a pack of cigarettes.[292] Sex slaves were sold to Saudi Arabia, other Persian Gulf states and Turkey.[293]

Europe

[edit]
Captives in Rome, a nineteenth-century painting by Charles W. Bartlett

Ancient history

[edit]

Ancient Greece

[edit]

Records of slavery in Ancient Greece go as far back as Mycenaean Greece. The origins are not known, but it appears that slavery became an important part of the economy and society only after the establishment of cities.[294] Slavery was common practice and an integral component of ancient Greece, as it was in other societies of the time. It is estimated that in Athens, the majority of citizens owned at least one slave. Most ancient writers considered slavery not only natural but necessary, but some isolated debate began to appear, notably in Socratic dialogues. The Stoics produced the first condemnation of slavery recorded in history.[21]

During the 8th and the 7th centuries BC, in the course of the two Messenian Wars, the Spartans reduced an entire population to a pseudo-slavery called helotry.[295] According to Herodotus (IX, 28–29), helots were seven times as numerous as Spartans. Following several helot revolts around the year 600 BC, the Spartans restructured their city-state along authoritarian lines, for the leaders decided that only by turning their society into an armed camp could they hope to maintain control over the numerically dominant helot population.[296] In some Ancient Greek city-states, about 30% of the population consisted of slaves, but paid and slave labor seem to have been equally important.[297]

Rome

[edit]

Romans inherited the institution of slavery from the Greeks and the Phoenicians.[298] As the Roman Republic expanded outward, it enslaved entire populations, thus ensuring an ample supply of laborers to work in Rome's farms, quarries and households. The people subjected to Roman slavery came from all over Europe and the Mediterranean. Slaves were used for labor, and also for amusement (e.g. gladiators and sex slaves). In the late Republic, the widespread use of recently enslaved groups on plantations and ranches led to slave revolts on a large scale; the Third Servile War led by Spartacus was the most famous and most threatening to Rome.

Other European tribes

[edit]

Various tribes of Europe are recorded by Roman sources as owning slaves.[299] Strabo records slaves as an export commodity from Britannia.[300] An iron gang-chain dated to 100 BCE-50 CE was found at Llyn Cerrig Bach in Anglesey; it was over 3 metres long with neck-rings for five captives.[301]

Post-classical history

[edit]

The chaos of invasion and frequent warfare also resulted in victorious parties taking slaves throughout Europe in the early Middle Ages. St. Patrick, himself captured and sold as a slave, protested against an attack that enslaved newly baptized Christians in his "Letter to the Soldiers of Coroticus". As a commonly traded commodity, like cattle, slaves could become a form of internal or trans-border currency.[302] Slavery during the Early Middle Ages had several distinct sources.

The Vikings raided across Europe, where they took slaves. While the Vikings kept some slaves as servants, known as thralls, they sold most captives in the Byzantine via the Black Sea slave trade or Islamic markets such as the Khazar slave trade, Volga Bulgarian slave trade and Bukhara slave trade. In the West, their target populations were primarily English, Irish, and Scottish, while in the East they were mainly Slavs (saqaliba). The Viking slave-trade slowly ended in the 11th century, as the Vikings settled in the European territories they had once raided. They converted serfs to Christianity and themselves merged with the local populace.[303]

In central Europe, specifically the Frankish/German/Holy Roman Empire of Charlemagne, raids and wars to the east generated a steady supply of slaves from the Slavic captives of these regions. Because of high demand for slaves in the wealthy Muslim empires of Northern Africa, Spain, and the Near East, especially for slaves of European descent, a market for these slaves rapidly emerged. So lucrative was this market that it spawned an economic boom in central and western Europe, today known as the Carolingian Renaissance.[304][305][306] This boom period for slaves stretched from the early Muslim conquests to the High Middle Ages but declined in the later Middle Ages as the Islamic Golden Age waned.

Medieval Spain and Portugal saw almost constant warfare between Muslims and Christians. Al-Andalus sent periodic raiding expeditions to loot the Iberian Christian kingdoms, bringing back booty and slaves. In a raid against Lisbon, Portugal in 1189, for example, the Almohad caliph Yaqub al-Mansur took 3,000 female and child captives. In a subsequent attack upon Silves, Portugal in 1191, his governor of Córdoba took 3,000 Christian slaves.[307]

Ottoman Empire

[edit]
A Meccan merchant (right) and his Circassian slave. Entitled, "Vornehmer Kaufmann mit seinem cirkassischen Sklaven" [Distinguished merchant and his circassian slave] by Christiaan Snouck Hurgronje, c. 1888.

The Byzantine–Ottoman wars and the Ottoman wars in Europe resulted in the taking of large numbers of Christian slaves and using or selling them in the Islamic world too.[308] After the battle of Lepanto the victors freed approximately 12,000 Christian galley slaves from the Ottoman fleet.[309]

Similarly, Christians sold Muslim slaves captured in war. The Order of the Knights of Malta attacked pirates and Muslim shipping, and their base became a centre for slave trading, selling captured North Africans and Turks. Malta remained a slave market until well into the late 18th century. One thousand slaves were required to man the galleys (ships) of the Order.[310][page needed][311]

Eastern Europe

[edit]

Poland banned slavery in the 14th century; in Lithuania, slavery was formally abolished in 1588; the institution was replaced by the second enserfment. Slavery remained a minor institution in Russia until 1723, when Peter the Great converted the household slaves into house serfs. Russian agricultural slaves were formally converted into serfs earlier, in 1679.[312]

British Isles

[edit]

Capture in war, voluntary servitude and debt slavery became common within the British Isles before 1066. The Bodmin manumissions show both that slavery existed in 9th and 10th Century Cornwall and that many Cornish slave owners did set their slaves free. Slaves were routinely bought and sold. Running away was also common and slavery was never a major economic factor in the British Isles during the Middle Ages. Ireland and Denmark provided markets for captured Anglo-Saxon and Celtic slaves. Pope Gregory I reputedly made the pun, Non Angli, sed Angeli ("Not Angles, but Angels"), after a response to his query regarding the identity of a group of fair-haired Angles, slave children whom he had observed in the marketplace. After the Norman Conquest, the law no longer supported chattel slavery and slaves became part of the larger body of serfs.[313][314]

France

[edit]

In the early Middle Ages, the city of Verdun was the centre of the thriving European slave trade in young boys who were sold to the Islamic emirates of Iberia where they were enslaved as eunuchs.[315] The Italian ambassador Liutprand of Cremona, as one example in the 10th century, presented a gift of four eunuchs to Emperor Constantine VII.[316]

Barbary pirates and Maltese corsairs

[edit]
Ottoman advances resulted in many captive Christians being carried deep into Muslim territory.

Barbary pirates and Maltese corsairs both raided for slaves and purchased slaves from European merchants, often the Radhanites, one of the few groups who could easily move between the Christian and Islamic worlds.[317][318]

Genoa and Venice

[edit]

In the late Middle Ages, from 1100 to 1500, the European slave-trade continued, though with a shift from being centered among the Western Mediterranean Islamic nations to the Eastern Christian and Muslim states. The city-states of Venice and Genoa controlled the Eastern Mediterranean from the 12th century and the Black Sea from the 13th century. They sold both Slavic and Baltic slaves, as well as Georgians, Turks, and other ethnic groups of the Black Sea and Caucasus via the Black Sea slave trade. The sale of European slaves by Europeans slowly ended as the Slavic and Baltic ethnic groups Christianized by the Late Middle Ages.[319]

From the 1440s into the 18th century, Europeans from Italy, Spain, Portugal, France, and England were sold into slavery by North Africans. In 1575, the Tatars captured over 35,000 Ukrainians; a 1676 raid took almost 40,000. About 60,000 Ukrainians were captured in 1688; some were ransomed, but most were sold into slavery.[320][321] Some 150,000–200,000 of the Roma people were enslaved over five centuries in Romania until abolition in 1864 (see Slavery in Romania).[322]

Mongols

[edit]
Giovanni Maria Morandi, The ransoming of Christian slaves held in Turkish hands, 17th century

The Mongol invasions and conquests in the 13th century also resulted in taking numerous captives into slavery.[323] The Mongols enslaved skilled individuals, women and children and marched them to Karakorum or Sarai, whence they were sold throughout Eurasia. Many of these slaves were shipped to the slave market in Novgorod.[324][325][326]

Slave commerce during the Late Middle Ages was mainly in the hands of Venetian and Genoese merchants and cartels, who were involved in the slave trade with the Golden Horde.[327] In 1382 the Golden Horde under Khan Tokhtamysh sacked Moscow, burning the city and carrying off thousands of inhabitants as slaves. Between 1414 and 1423, some 10,000 eastern European slaves were sold in Venice.[328] Genoese merchants organized the slave trade from the Crimea to Mamluk Egypt. For years, the Khanates of Kazan and Astrakhan routinely made raids on Russian principalities for slaves and to plunder towns. Russian chronicles record about 40 raids by Kazan Khans on the Russian territories in the first half of the 16th century.[329]

In 1441 Haci I Giray declared independence from the Golden Horde and established the Crimean Khanate.[330] For a long time, until the early 18th century, the Tatar khanate maintained an extensive slave-trade with the Ottoman Empire and the Middle East. In a process called the "harvesting of the steppe" they enslaved many Slavic peasants. Muscovy recorded about 30 major raids into Muscovite territories between 1558 and 1596.[331]

Moscow was repeatedly a target.[332] In 1521, the combined forces of Crimean Khan Mehmed Giray and his Kazan allies attacked the city and captured thousands of slaves.[333] In 1571, the Crimean Tatars attacked and sacked Moscow, burning everything but the Kremlin and taking thousands of captives as slaves.[334] In Crimea, about 75% of the population consisted of slaves.[335]

The Vikings and Scandinavia

[edit]

In the Viking era beginning circa 793, the Norse raiders often captured and enslaved militarily weaker peoples they encountered. The Nordic countries called their slaves thralls (Old Norse: Þræll).[303] The thralls were mostly from Western Europe, among them many Franks, Frisians, Anglo-Saxons, and both Irish and Britonnic Celts. Many Irish slaves travelled in expeditions for the colonization of Iceland.[336] The Norse also took German, Baltic, Slavic and Latin slaves. The slave trade was one of the pillars of Norse commerce during the 9th through 11th centuries. The 10th-century Persian traveller Ibn Rustah described how Swedish Vikings, the Varangians or Rus, terrorized and enslaved the Slavs taken in their raids along the Volga River and sold them to slavery in the Abbasid Caliphate via the Volga Bulgarian slave trade and the Samanid slave trade. The thrall system was finally abolished in the mid-14th century in Scandinavia.[337]

Early Modern history

[edit]
One of the four chained slaves depicted at the bottom of the 17th-century Monument of the Four Moors in Livorno, Italy.

Mediterranean powers frequently sentenced convicted criminals to row in the war-galleys of the state (initially only in time of war).[338] After the revocation of the Edict of Nantes in 1685 and Camisard rebellion, the French Crown filled its galleys with French Huguenots, Protestants condemned for resisting the state.[339] Galley-slaves lived and worked in such harsh conditions that many did not survive their terms of sentence, even if they survived shipwreck and slaughter or torture at the hands of enemies or of pirates.[340] Naval forces often turned 'infidel' prisoners-of-war into galley-slaves. Several well-known historical figures served time as galley slaves after being captured by the enemy—the Ottoman corsair and admiral Turgut Reis and the Knights Hospitaller Grand Master Jean Parisot de la Valette among them.[341]

Denmark-Norway was the first European country to ban the slave trade.[342] This happened with a decree issued by King Christian VII in 1792, to become fully effective by 1803. Slavery as an institution was not banned until 1848. At this time Iceland was a part of Denmark-Norway but slave trading had been abolished in Iceland in 1117 and had never been reestablished.[343]

Slavery in the French Republic was abolished on 4 February 1794, including in its colonies. The lengthy Haitian Revolution by its slaves and free people of color established Haiti as a free republic in 1804 ruled by blacks, the first of its kind.[141] At the time of the revolution, Haiti was known as Saint-Domingue and was a colony of France.[344] Napoleon Bonaparte gave up on Haiti in 1803, but reestablished slavery in Guadeloupe and Martinique in 1804, at the request of planters of the Caribbean colonies. Slavery was permanently abolished in the French empire during the French Revolution of 1848.[345]

Although exact figures are difficult to ascertain, it is estimated that over a million Muslims were enslaved in Europe during the early modern period (1500-1800).[346][347] Likewise, historian Salvatore Bono estimates that in total, around 400,000 to 500,000 Muslim men, women and children (primarily North Africans and Turks) were enslaved in various parts of Italian peninsula during the early modern period.[347][348] These slaves were captured by Christian corsairs, pirates, and privateers, as well as the Knights Hospitaller of Malta, who raided Muslim coastal areas in the Mediterranean, in addition to prisoners of war.[348] These slaves came by land too, as the Holy Roman Empire and Republic of Venice enslaved large numbers of Ottoman Muslims during the reconquests and anti-Ottoman campaigns in the Balkans.[349][350] In Western Europe, Muslim males would often be used as galley slaves (which were notoriously brutal and unforgiving) and construction workers, while Muslim females often became concubines and domestic servants.[349][348]

Portugal

[edit]
Portrait of an African Man, c. 1525–1530. The insignia on his hat alludes to possible Spanish or Portuguese origins.

The 15th-century Portuguese exploration of the African coast is commonly regarded as the harbinger of European colonialism. In 1452, Pope Nicholas V issued the papal bull Dum Diversas, granting Afonso V of Portugal the right to reduce any "Saracens, pagans and any other unbelievers" to hereditary slavery which legitimized slave trade under Catholic beliefs of that time. This approval of slavery was reaffirmed and extended in his Romanus Pontifex bull of 1455. These papal bulls came to serve as a justification for the subsequent era of the slave trade and European colonialism, although for a short period as in 1462 Pius II declared slavery to be "a great crime".[351] Unlike Portugal, Protestant nations did not use the papal bull as a justification for their involvement in the slave trade. The position of the church was to condemn the slavery of Christians, but slavery was regarded as an old established and necessary institution which supplied Europe with the necessary workforce. In the 16th century, African slaves had replaced almost all other ethnicities and religious enslaved groups in Europe.[352] Within the Portuguese territory of Brazil, and even beyond its original borders, the enslavement of Native Americans was carried out by the Bandeirantes.

Among many other European slave markets, Genoa, and Venice were some well-known markets, their importance and demand growing after the great plague of the 14th century which decimated much of the European workforce.[353] The maritime town of Lagos, Portugal, was the first slave market created in Portugal for the sale of imported African slaves, the Mercado de Escravos, which opened in 1444.[354][355] In 1441, the first slaves were brought to Portugal from northern Mauritania.[355] Prince Henry the Navigator, major sponsor of the Portuguese African expeditions, as of any other merchandise, taxed one fifth of the selling price of the slaves imported to Portugal.[355] By the year 1552 African slaves made up 10 percent of the population of Lisbon.[356][357]

In the second half of the 16th century, the Crown gave up the monopoly on slave trade and the focus of European trade in African slaves shifted from import to Europe to slave transports directly to tropical colonies in the Americas—in the case of Portugal, especially Brazil.[355] In the 15th century, one-third of the slaves were resold to the African market in exchange of gold.[352]

Importation of black slaves was prohibited in mainland Portugal and Portuguese India in 1761, but slavery continued in Portuguese overseas colonies.[358] At the same time, was stimulated the trade of black slaves ("the pieces", in the terms of that time) to Brazil and two companies were founded, with the support and direct involvement of the Marquis of Pombal - the Company of Grão-Pará and Maranhão and the General Company of Pernambuco and Paraíba - whose main activity was precisely the trafficking of slaves, mostly black Africans, to Brazilian lands.[359][358]

Slavery was finally abolished in all Portuguese colonies in 1869.

Spain

[edit]
Emperor Charles V captured Tunis in 1535, liberating 20,000 Christian slaves

The Spaniards were the first Europeans to use African slaves in the New World on islands such as Cuba and Hispaniola, due to a shortage of labor caused by the spread of diseases, and so the Spanish colonists gradually became involved in the Atlantic slave trade. The first African slaves arrived in Hispaniola in 1501;[360] by 1517, the natives had been "virtually annihilated" mostly to diseases.[361] The problem of the justness of Native American's slavery was a key issue for the Spanish Crown. It was Charles V who gave a definite answer to this complicated and delicate matter. To that end, on 25 November 1542, the Emperor abolished slavery by decree in his Leyes Nuevas. This bill was based on the arguments given by the best Spanish theologists and jurists who were unanimous in the condemnation of such slavery as unjust; they declared it illegitimate and outlawed it from America—not just the slavery of Spaniards over Natives—but also the type of slavery practiced among the Natives themselves[362] Thus, Spain became the first country to officially abolish slavery.

However, in the Spanish colonies of Cuba and Puerto Rico, where sugarcane production was highly profitable based on slave labor, African slavery persisted until 1873 in Puerto Rico "with provisions for periods of apprenticeship",[363] and 1886 in Cuba.[364]

Netherlands

[edit]

Although slavery was illegal inside the Netherlands it flourished throughout the Dutch Empire in the Americas, Africa, Ceylon and Indonesia.[365] The Dutch Slave Coast (Dutch: Slavenkust) referred to the trading posts of the Dutch West India Company on the Slave Coast, which lie in contemporary Ghana, Benin, Togo and Nigeria. Initially the Dutch shipped slaves to Dutch Brazil, and during the second half of the 17th century they had a controlling interest in the trade to the Spanish colonies. Today's Suriname and Guyana became prominent markets in the 18th century. Between 1612 and 1872, the Dutch operated from some 10 fortresses along the Gold Coast (now Ghana), from which slaves were shipped across the Atlantic. Dutch involvement on the Slave Coast increased with the establishment of a trading post in Offra in 1660. Willem Bosman writes in his Nauwkeurige beschrijving van de Guinese Goud- Tand- en Slavekust (1703) that Allada was also called Grand Ardra, being the larger cousin of Little Ardra, also known as Offra. From 1660 onward, Dutch presence in Allada and especially Offra became more permanent.[366] A report from this year asserts Dutch trading posts, apart from Allada and Offra, in Benin City, Grand-Popo, and Savi.

The Offra trading post soon became the most important Dutch office on the Slave Coast. According to a 1670 report, annually 2,500 to 3,000 slaves were transported from Offra to the Americas. These numbers were only feasible in times of peace, however, and dwindled in time of conflict. From 1688 onward, the struggle between the Aja king of Allada and the peoples on the coastal regions, impeded the supply of slaves. The Dutch West India Company chose the side of the Aja king, causing the Offra office to be destroyed by opposing forces in 1692.

Domestic slave at the center of the composition of "Family Group in a Landscape" (1645-1648) by Fran Hals, now in Thyssen-Bornemisza National Museum, Madrid.
A domestic slave[367] in a dutch family, as painted by Frans Hals. Display at Thyssen.


By 1650 the Dutch had the pre-eminent slave trade in Europe and South East Asia. Later, trade shifted to Ouidah. On the instigation of Governor-General of the Dutch Gold Coast Willem de la Palma, Jacob van den Broucke was sent in 1703 as "opperkommies" (head merchant) to the Dutch trading post at Ouidah, which according to sources was established around 1670.[368][369] Political unrest caused the Dutch to abandon their trading post at Ouidah in 1725, and they then moved to Jaquim, at which place they built Fort Zeelandia.[370] The head of the post, Hendrik Hertog, had a reputation for being a successful slave trader. In an attempt to extend his trading area, Hertog negotiated with local tribes and mingled in local political struggles. He sided with the wrong party, however, leading to a conflict with Director-General Jan Pranger and to his exile to the island of Appa in 1732. The Dutch trading post on this island was extended as the new centre of the slave trade. In 1733, Hertog returned to Jaquim, this time extending the trading post into Fort Zeelandia. The revival of the slave trade at Jaquim was only temporary, however, as his superiors at the Dutch West India Company noticed that Hertog's slaves were more expensive than at the Gold Coast. From 1735, Elmina became the preferred spot to trade slaves.[371] As of 1778, it was estimated that the Dutch were shipping approximately 6,000 Africans for enslavement in the Dutch West Indies each year.[139]

Slavery also characterised the Dutch possessions in Indonesia, Ceylon, and South Africa, where Indonesians have made a significant contribution to the Cape Coloured population of that country. The Dutch part in the Atlantic slave trade is estimated at 5–7 percent, as they shipped about 550,000–600,000 African slaves across the Atlantic, about 75,000 of whom died on board before reaching their destinations. From 1596 to 1829, the Dutch traders sold 250,000 slaves in the Dutch Guianas, 142,000 in the Dutch Caribbean, and 28,000 in Dutch Brazil.[372] In addition, tens of thousands of slaves, mostly from India and some from Africa, were carried to the Dutch East Indies.[373] The Netherlands abolished slavery in 1863. Although the decision was made in 1848, it took many years for the law to be implemented. Furthermore, slaves in Suriname would be fully free only in 1873, since the law stipulated that there was to be a mandatory 10-year transition.

Barbary corsairs

[edit]
Burning of a Village in Africa, and Capture of its Inhabitants (p. 12, February 1859, XVI)[374]

Barbary Corsairs continued to trade in European slaves into the Modern time-period.[319] Muslim pirates, primarily Algerians with the support of the Ottoman Empire, raided European coasts and shipping from the 16th to the 19th centuries, and took thousands of captives, whom they sold or enslaved. Many were held for ransom, and European communities raised funds such as Malta's Monte della Redenzione degli Schiavi to buy back their citizens. The raids gradually ended with the naval decline of the Ottoman Empire in the late 16th and 17th centuries, as well as the European conquest of North Africa throughout the 19th century.[319]

From 1609 to 1616, England lost 466 merchant ships to Barbary pirates. 160 English ships were captured by Algerians between 1677 and 1680.[375] Many of the captured sailors were made into slaves and held for ransom. The corsairs were no strangers to the South West of England where raids were known in a number of coastal communities. In 1627 Barbary Pirates under command of the Dutch renegade Jan Janszoon (Murat Reis), operating from the Moroccan port of Salé, occupied the island of Lundy.[376] During this time there were reports of captured slaves being sent to Algiers.[377][378]

Ireland, despite its northern position, was not immune from attacks by the corsairs. In June 1631 Janszoon, with pirates from Algiers and armed troops of the Ottoman Empire, stormed ashore at the little harbor village of Baltimore, County Cork. They captured almost all the villagers and took them away to a life of slavery in North Africa.[379] The prisoners were destined for a variety of fates—some lived out their days chained to the oars as galley slaves, while others would spend long years in the scented seclusion of the harem or within the walls of the sultan's palace. Only two of them ever saw Ireland again.

The Congress of Vienna (1814–15), which ended the Napoleonic Wars, led to increased European consensus on the need to end Barbary raiding.[379] The sacking of Palma on the island of Sardinia by a Tunisian squadron, which carried off 158 inhabitants, roused widespread indignation. Britain had by this time banned the slave trade and was seeking to induce other countries to do likewise. States that were more vulnerable to the corsairs complained that Britain cared more for ending the trade in African slaves than stopping the enslavement of Europeans and Americans by the Barbary States.

Bombardment of Algiers by Lord Exmouth in August 1816, Thomas Luny

In order to neutralise this objection and further the anti-slavery campaign, in 1816 Britain sent Lord Exmouth to secure new concessions from Tripoli, Tunis, and Algiers, including a pledge to treat Christian captives in any future conflict as prisoners of war rather than slaves. He imposed peace between Algiers and the kingdoms of Sardinia and Sicily. On his first visit, Lord Exmouth negotiated satisfactory treaties and sailed for home. While he was negotiating, a number of Sardinian fishermen who had settled at Bona on the Tunisian coast were brutally treated without his knowledge.[379] As Sardinians they were technically under British protection, and the government sent Exmouth back to secure reparation. On 17 August, in combination with a Dutch squadron under Admiral Van de Capellen, Exmouth bombarded Algiers.[379] Both Algiers and Tunis made fresh concessions as a result.

The Barbary states had difficulty securing uniform compliance with a total prohibition of slave-raiding, as this had been traditionally of central importance to the North African economy. Slavers continued to take captives by preying on less well-protected peoples. Algiers subsequently renewed its slave-raiding, though on a smaller scale.[379] Europeans at the Congress of Aix-la-Chapelle in 1818 discussed possible retaliation. In 1820 a British fleet under Admiral Sir Harry Neal bombarded Algiers. Corsair activity based in Algiers did not entirely cease until France conquered the state in 1830. [379]

Crimean Khanate

[edit]

The Crimeans frequently mounted raids into the Danubian principalities, Poland-Lithuania, and Muscovy to enslave people whom they could capture; for each captive, the khan received a fixed share (savğa) of 10% or 20%. These campaigns by Crimean forces were either sefers ("sojourns" – officially declared military operations led by the khans themselves), or çapuls ("despoiling" – raids undertaken by groups of noblemen, sometimes illegally because they contravened treaties concluded by the khans with neighbouring rulers).

For a long time, until the early 18th century, the Crimean Khanate maintained a massive slave trade with the Ottoman Empire and the Middle East, exporting about 2 million slaves from Russia and Poland-Lithuania over the period 1500–1700.[380] Caffa (modern Feodosia) became one of the best-known and significant trading ports and slave markets.[381] In 1769 the last major Tatar raid saw the capture of 20,000 Russian and Ruthenian slaves.[382]

Author and historian Brian Glyn Williams writes:

Fisher estimates that in the sixteenth century the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth lost around 20,000 individuals a year and that from 1474 to 1694, as many as a million Commonwealth citizens were carried off into Crimean slavery.[383]

Early modern sources are full of descriptions of sufferings of Christian slaves captured by the Crimean Tatars in the course of their raids:

It seems that the position and everyday conditions of a slave depended largely on his/her owner. Some slaves indeed could spend the rest of their days doing exhausting labor: as the Crimean vizir (minister) Sefer Gazi Aga mentions in one of his letters, the slaves were often "a plough and a scythe" of their owners. Most terrible, perhaps, was the fate of those who became galley-slaves, whose sufferings were poeticized in many Ukrainian dumas (songs). ... Both female and male slaves were often used for sexual purposes.[382]

British slave trade

[edit]
Illustration from the book: The Black Man's Lament, or, how to make sugar by Amelia Opie. (London, 1826)

Britain played a prominent role in the Atlantic slave trade, especially after 1640, when sugar cane was introduced to the region. At first, most were white Britons, or Irish, enslaved as indentured labour – for a fixed period – in the West Indies. These people may have been criminals, political rebels, the poor with no prospects or others who were simply tricked or kidnapped. Slavery was a legal institution in all of the 13 American colonies and Canada (acquired by Britain in 1763). The profits of the slave trade and of West Indian plantations amounted to under 5% of the British economy at the time of the Industrial Revolution.[384]

A little-known incident in the career of Judge Jeffreys refers to an assize in Bristol in 1685 when he made the mayor of the city, then sitting fully robed beside him on the bench, go into the dock and be fined £1000 for being a "kidnapping knave"; some Bristol traders at the time were known to kidnap their own countrymen and ship them away as slaves.[385]

Somersett's case in 1772 was generally taken at the time to have decided that the condition of slavery did not exist under English law in England. In 1785, English poet William Cowper wrote: "We have no slaves at home – Then why abroad? Slaves cannot breathe in England; if their lungs receive our air, that moment they are free. They touch our country, and their shackles fall. That's noble, and bespeaks a nation proud. And jealous of the blessing. Spread it then, And let it circulate through every vein."[386] The decision proved to be a milestone in the British abolitionist movement, though slavery was not abolished in the British Empire until the passage of the 1833 Slavery Abolition Act.[387] In 1807, following many years of lobbying by the abolitionist movement, led primarily by William Wilberforce, the British Parliament voted to make the slave trade illegal anywhere in the Empire with the Slave Trade Act 1807. Thereafter Britain took a prominent role in combating the trade, and slavery itself was abolished in the British Empire (except for India) with the Slavery Abolition Act 1833. Between 1808 and 1860, the West Africa Squadron seized approximately 1,600 slave ships and freed 150,000 Africans who were aboard.[388] Action was also taken against African leaders who refused to agree to British treaties to outlaw the trade. Akitoye, the 11th Oba of Lagos, is famous for having used British involvement to regain his rule in return for suppressing slavery among the Yoruba people of Lagos in 1851. Anti-slavery treaties were signed with over 50 African rulers.[389] In 1839, the world's oldest international human rights organization, British and Foreign Anti-Slavery Society (now Anti-Slavery International), was formed in Britain as by Joseph Sturge, which worked to outlaw slavery in other countries.[390]

After 1833, the freed African slaves declined employment in the cane fields. This led to the importation of indentured labour again – mainly from India, and also China.

In 1811, Arthur William Hodge was executed for the murder of a slave in the British West Indies. He was not, however, as some[who?] have claimed, the first white person to have been lawfully executed for the murder of a slave.[391][392]

Late Modern history

[edit]

Germany

[edit]
Polish Jews are lined up by German soldiers to do forced labour, September 1939, German-occupied Poland
Registration of Jews by Nazis for forced labor, 1941

During World War II Nazi Germany operated several categories of Arbeitslager (Labor Camps) for different categories of inmates. The largest number of them held Polish gentiles and Jewish civilians forcibly abducted in occupied countries (see Łapanka) to provide labor in the German war industry, repair bombed railroads and bridges or work on farms. By 1944, 20% of all workers were foreigners, either civilians or prisoners of war.[393][394][395][396]

Allied powers

[edit]

As agreed by the Allies at the Yalta conference, Germans were used as forced labor as part of the reparations to be extracted. By 1947, it is estimated that 400,000 Germans (both civilians and POWs) were being used as forced labor by the U.S., France, the UK and the Soviet Union. German prisoners were for example forced to clear minefields in France and the Low Countries. By December 1945, it was estimated by French authorities that 2,000 German prisoners were being killed or injured each month in accidents.[397] In Norway the last available casualty record, from 29 August 1945, shows that by that time a total of 275 German soldiers died while clearing mines, while 392 had been injured.[398]

Soviet Union

[edit]

The Soviet Union took over the already extensive katorga system and expanded it immensely, eventually organizing the Gulag to run the camps. In 1954, a year after Stalin's death, the new Soviet government of Nikita Khrushchev began to release political prisoners and close down the camps. By the end of the 1950s, virtually all "corrective labor camps" were reorganized, mostly into the system of corrective labor colonies. Officially, the Gulag was terminated by the MVD order 20 25 January 1960.[399][verification needed]

During the period of Stalinism, the Gulag labor camps in the Soviet Union were officially called "Corrective labor camps." The term "labor colony"; more exactly, "Corrective labor colony", (Russian: исправительно-трудовая колония, abbr. ИТК), was also in use, most notably the ones for underaged (16 years or younger) convicts and captured besprizorniki (street children, literally, "children without family care"). After the reformation of the camps into the Gulag, the term "corrective labor colony" essentially encompassed labor camps[citation needed].

A total of around 14 million prisoners passed through the Gulag labor camps.[400]

Oceania

[edit]

In the first half of the 19th century, small-scale slave raids took place across Polynesia to supply labor and sex workers for the whaling and sealing trades, with examples from both the westerly and easterly extremes of the Polynesian triangle. By the 1860s this had grown to a larger scale operation with Peruvian slave raids in the South Sea Islands to collect labor for the guano industry.

Hawaii

[edit]

Ancient Hawaii was a caste society. People were born into specific social classes. Kauwa were those of the outcast or slave class. They are believed to have been war captives or their descendants. Marriage between higher castes and the kauwa was strictly forbidden. The kauwa worked for the chiefs and were often used as human sacrifices at the luakini heiau. (They were not the only sacrifices; law-breakers of all castes or defeated political opponents were also acceptable as victims.)[401]

The kapu system was abolished during the ʻAi Noa in 1819, and with it the distinction between the kauwā slave class and the makaʻāinana (commoners).[402] The 1852 Constitution of the Kingdom of Hawaii officially made slavery illegal.[403]

New Zealand

[edit]

Before the arrival of European settlers, New Zealand comprised many individual polities, with each Māori tribe (iwi) a separate entity equivalent to a nation. In the traditional Māori society of Aotearoa, prisoners of war became taurekareka, slaves – unless released, ransomed or eaten.[404] With some exceptions, the child of a slave remained a slave.

As far as it is possible to tell, slavery seems to have increased in the early-19th century with increased numbers of prisoners being taken by Māori military leaders (such as Hongi Hika and Te Rauparaha) to satisfy the need for labor in the Musket Wars, to supply whalers and traders with food, flax and timber in return for western goods. The intertribal Musket Wars lasted from 1807 to 1843; northern tribes who had acquired muskets captured large numbers of slaves. About 20,000 Māori died in the wars. An unknown number of slaves were captured. Northern tribes used slaves (called mokai) to grow large areas of potatoes for trade with visiting ships. Chiefs started an extensive sex trade in the Bay of Islands in the 1830s, using mainly slave girls. By 1835 about 70 to 80 ships per year called into the port. One French captain described the impossibility of getting rid of the girls who swarmed over his ship, outnumbering his crew of 70 by 3 to 1. All payments to the girls were stolen by the chief.[405] By 1833 Christianity had become established in the north of New Zealand, and large numbers of slaves were freed.

Slavery was outlawed in 1840 via the Treaty of Waitangi, although it did not end completely until government was effectively extended over the whole of the country with the defeat of the King movement in the Wars of the mid-1860s.

Chatham Islands

[edit]

One group of Polynesians who migrated to the Chatham Islands became the Moriori who developed a largely pacifist culture. It was originally speculated that they settled the Chathams direct from Polynesia, but it is now widely believed they were disaffected Māori who emigrated from the South Island of New Zealand.[406][407][408][409] Their pacifism left the Moriori unable to defend themselves when the islands were invaded by mainland Māori in the 1830s.

Two Taranaki tribes, Ngati Tama and Ngati Mutunga, displaced by the Musket Wars, carried out a carefully planned invasion of the Chatham Islands, 800 km east of Christchurch, in 1835. About 15% of the Polynesian Moriori natives who had migrated to the islands at about 1500 CE were killed, with many women being tortured to death. The remaining population was enslaved for the purpose of growing food, especially potatoes. The Moriori were treated in an inhumane and degrading manner for many years. Their culture was banned and they were forbidden to marry.[410]

Some 300 Moriori men, women and children were massacred and the remaining 1,200 to 1,300 survivors were enslaved.[411][412]

Some Māori took Moriori partners. The state of enslavement of Moriori lasted until the 1860s although it had been discouraged by CMS missionaries in northern New Zealand from the late 1820s. In 1870 Ngati Mutunga, one of the invading tribes, argued before the Native Land Court in New Zealand that their gross mistreatment of the Moriori was standard Māori practice or tikanga.[413]

Rapa Nui / Easter Island

[edit]

The isolated island of Rapa Nui/Easter Island was inhabited by the Rapanui, who suffered a series of slave raids from 1805 or earlier, culminating in a near genocidal experience in the 1860s. The 1805 raid was by American sealers and was one of a series that changed the attitude of the islanders to outside visitors, with reports in the 1820s and 1830s that all visitors received a hostile reception. In December 1862, Peruvian slave raiders took between 1,400 and 2,000 islanders back to Peru to work in the guano industry; this was about a third of the island's population and included much of the island's leadership, the last ariki-mau and possibly the last who could read Rongorongo. After intervention by the French ambassador in Lima, the last 15 survivors were returned to the island, but brought with them smallpox, which further devastated the island.

Abolitionist movements

[edit]
Abolition of Slavery by country and year
Proclamation of the abolition of slavery by Victor Hugues in the Guadeloupe, 1 November 1794

Slavery has existed, in one form or another, throughout the whole of human history. So, too, have movements to free large or distinct groups of slaves. However, abolitionism should be distinguished from efforts to help a particular group of slaves, or to restrict one practice, such as the slave trade.

Drescher (2009) provides a model for the history of the abolition of slavery, emphasizing its origins in Western Europe. Around the year 1500, slavery had virtually died out in Western Europe, but was a normal phenomenon practically everywhere else. The imperial powers – the British, French, Spanish, Portuguese and Dutch empires, and a few others – built worldwide empires based primarily on plantation agriculture using slaves imported from Africa. However, the powers took care to minimize the presence of slavery in their homelands. In 1807 Britain and soon after, the United States also, both criminalized the international slave trade. The Royal Navy was increasingly effective in intercepting slave ships, freeing the captives and taking the crew for trial in courts.

Although there were numerous slave revolts in the Caribbean, the only successful uprising came in the French colony of Haiti in the 1790s, where the slaves rose up, killed the mulattoes and whites, and established the independent Republic of Haiti.

The continuing profitability of slave-based plantations and the threats of race war slowed the development of abolition movements during the first half of the 19th century. These movements were strongest in Britain, and after 1840 in the United States. The Northern states of the United States abolished slavery, partly in response to the United States Declaration of Independence, between 1777 and 1804. Britain ended slavery in its empire in the 1830s. However, the plantation economies of the southern United States, based on cotton, and those in Brazil and Cuba, based on sugar, expanded and grew even more profitable. The bloody American Civil War ended slavery in the United States in 1865. The system ended in Cuba and Brazil in the 1880s because it was no longer profitable for the owners. Slavery continued to exist in Africa, where Arab slave traders raided black areas for new captives to be sold in the system. European colonial rule and diplomatic pressure slowly put an end to the trade, and eventually to the practice of slavery itself.[414]

Britain

[edit]
A painting of the 1840 Anti-Slavery Conference.
Protector of Slaves Office (Trinidad), Richard Bridgens, 1838.[415]

In 1772, the Somersett Case (R. v. Knowles, ex parte Somersett)[416] of the English Court of King's Bench ruled that it was unlawful for a slave to be forcibly taken abroad. The case has since been misrepresented as finding that slavery was unlawful in England (although not elsewhere in the British Empire). A similar case, that of Joseph Knight, took place in Scotland five years later and ruled slavery to be contrary to the law of Scotland.

Following the work of campaigners in the United Kingdom, such as William Wilberforce, Henry Dundas, 1st Viscount Melville and Thomas Clarkson, who founded the Society for Effecting the Abolition of the Slave Trade (Abolition Society) in May 1787, the Slave Trade Act 1807 was passed by Parliament on 25 March 1807, coming into effect the following year. The act imposed a fine of £100 for every slave found aboard a British ship. The intention was to outlaw entirely the Atlantic slave trade within the whole British Empire.[citation needed]

The significance of the abolition of the British slave trade lay in the number of people hitherto sold and carried by British slave vessels. Britain shipped 2,532,300 Africans across the Atlantic, equalling 41% of the total transport of 6,132,900 individuals. This made the British Empire the biggest slave-trade contributor in the world due to the magnitude of the empire, which made the abolition act all the more damaging to the global trade of slaves.[417] Britain used its diplomatic influence to press other nations into treaties to ban their slave trade and to give the Royal Navy the right to interdict slave ships sailing under their national flag.[418]

The Slavery Abolition Act 1833, passed on 1 August 1833, outlawed slavery itself throughout the British Empire, with the exception of India. On 1 August 1834 slaves became indentured to their former owners in an apprenticeship system for six years. Full emancipation was granted ahead of schedule on 1 August 1838.[419] Britain abolished slavery in both Hindu and Muslim India with the Indian Slavery Act, 1843.[420]

The Society for the Mitigation and Gradual Abolition of Slavery Throughout the British Dominions (later London Anti-slavery Society ), was founded in 1823, and existed until 1838.[421]

Domestic slavery practised by the educated African coastal elites (as well as interior traditional rulers) in Sierra Leone was abolished in 1928. A study found practices of domestic slavery still widespread in rural areas in the 1970s.[422][423]

The British and Foreign Anti-Slavery Society, founded in 1839 and having gone several name changes since, still exists as Anti-Slavery International.[424]

France

[edit]

There were slaves in Metropolitan France (especially in trade ports such as Nantes or Bordeaux).,[citation needed] but the institution was never officially authorized there. The legal case of Jean Boucaux in 1739 clarified the unclear legal position of possible slaves in France, and was followed by laws that established registers for slaves in mainland France, who were limited to a three-year stay, for visits or learning a trade. Unregistered "slaves" in France were regarded as free. However, slavery was of vital importance to the economy of France's Caribbean possessions, especially Saint-Domingue.

Abolition

[edit]

In 1793, influenced by the French Declaration of the Rights of Man and of the Citizen of August 1789 and alarmed as the massive slave revolt of August 1791 that had become the Haitian Revolution threatened to ally itself with the British, the Revolutionary French commissioners Léger-Félicité Sonthonax and Étienne Polverel declared general emancipation to reconcile them with France. In Paris, on 4 February 1794, Abbé Grégoire and the Convention ratified this action by officially abolishing slavery in all French territories outside mainland France, freeing all the slaves both for moral and security reasons.

Napoleon restores slavery

[edit]

Napoleon came to power in 1799 and soon had grandiose plans for the French sugar colonies; to achieve them he reintroduced slavery. Napoleon's major adventure into the Caribbean—sending 30,000 troops in 1802 to retake Saint Domingue (Haiti) from ex-slaves under Toussaint L'Ouverture who had revolted. Napoleon wanted to preserve France's financial benefits from the colony's sugar and coffee crops; he then planned to establish a major base at New Orleans. He therefore re-established slavery in Haiti and Guadeloupe, where it had been abolished after rebellions. Slaves and black freedmen fought the French for their freedom and independence. Revolutionary ideals played a central role in the fighting[citation needed] for it was the slaves and their allies who were fighting for the revolutionary ideals of freedom and equality, while the French troops under General Charles Leclerc fought to restore the order of the ancien régime. The goal of re-establishing slavery explicitly contradicted the ideals of the French Revolution. The French soldiers were unable to cope with tropical diseases, and most died of yellow fever. Slavery was reimposed in Guadeloupe but not in Haiti, which became an independent black republic.[425] Napoleon's vast colonial dreams for Egypt, India, the Caribbean Louisiana and even Australia were all doomed for lack of a fleet capable of matching Britain's Royal Navy. Realizing the fiasco Napoleon liquidated the Haiti project, brought home the survivors and sold off the huge Louisiana territory to the US in 1803.[426]

Napoleon and slavery

[edit]

In 1794 slavery was abolished in the French Empire. After seizing Lower Egypt in 1798, Napoleon Bonaparte issued a proclamation in Arabic, declaring all men to be free and equal. However, the French bought males as soldiers and females as concubines. Napoleon personally opposed the abolition and restored colonial slavery in 1802, a year after the capitulation of his troops in Egypt.[427]

Napoleon decreed the abolition of the slave trade upon his returning from Elba in an attempt to appease Britain. His decision was confirmed by the Treaty of Paris on 20 November 1815 and by order of Louis XVIII on 8 January 1817. However, trafficking continued despite sanctions.[428]

"Avenue Schœlcher 1804-1893", Houilles (France)

Victor Schœlcher and the 1848 abolition

[edit]

Slavery in the French colonies was finally abolished in 1848, three months after the beginning of the revolution against the July Monarchy. It was in large part the result of the tireless 18-year campaign of Victor Schœlcher. On 3 March 1848, he had been appointed under-secretary of the navy, and caused a decree to be issued by the provisional government which acknowledged the principle of the enfranchisement of the slaves through the French possessions. He also wrote the decree of 27 April 1848 in which the French government announced that slavery was abolished in all of its colonies.[citation needed]

United States

[edit]

In 1688, four German Quakers in Germantown presented a protest against the institution of slavery to their local Quaker Meeting. It was ignored for 150 years but in 1844 it was rediscovered and was popularized by the abolitionist movement. The 1688 Petition was the first American public document of its kind to protest slavery, and in addition was one of the first public documents to define universal human rights.

The American Colonization Society, the primary vehicle for returning black Americans to greater freedom in Africa, established the colony of Liberia in 1821–23, on the premise that former American slaves would have greater freedom and equality there.[429] Various state colonization societies also had African colonies which were later merged with Liberia, including the Republic of Maryland, Mississippi-in-Africa, and Kentucky in Africa. These societies assisted in the movement of thousands of African Americans to Liberia, with ACS founder Henry Clay stating; "unconquerable prejudice resulting from their color, they never could amalgamate with the free whites of this country. It was desirable, therefore, as it respected them, and the residue of the population of the country, to drain them off". Abraham Lincoln, an enthusiastic supporter of Clay, adopted his position on returning the blacks to their own land.[430]

Slaves in the United States who escaped ownership would often make their way to the Northern United States and Canada via the "Underground Railroad". The more famous of the African American abolitionists include former slaves Harriet Tubman, Sojourner Truth and Frederick Douglass. Many more people who opposed slavery and worked for abolition were northern whites, such as William Lloyd Garrison and John Brown. Slavery was legally abolished in 1865 by the Thirteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution.

While abolitionists agreed on the evils of slavery, there were differing opinions on what should happen after African Americans were freed. By the time of Emancipation, African-Americans were now native to the United States and did not want to leave. Most believed that their labor had made the land theirs as well as that of the whites.[431]

Congress of Vienna

[edit]

The Declaration of the Powers, on the Abolition of the Slave Trade, of 8 February 1815 (Which also formed ACT, No. XV. of the Final Act of the Congress of Vienna of the same year) included in its first sentence the concept of the "principles of humanity and universal morality" as justification for ending a trade that was "odious in its continuance".[432]

Twentieth century

[edit]
Liberated Russian slave workers, Nazi Germany, April 1945

During the 20th century the issue of slavery was addressed by the League of Nations, who founded commissions to investigate and eradicate the institution of slavery and slave trade worldwide. Their efforts continued the work of the first international attempt to address the issue made by the Brussels Anti-Slavery Conference 1889–90, which had concluded with the Brussels Conference Act of 1890. The 1890 Act was revised by the Convention of Saint-Germain-en-Laye 1919, and when the League of Nations was founded in 1920, a need was felt to revise and continue the struggle against slavery.

The Temporary Slavery Commission (TSC) was founded by the League in 1924, which conducted a global investigation and filed a report, and a convention was drawn up in view of hastening the total abolition of slavery and the slave trade.[433] The 1926 Slavery Convention, which was founded upon the investigation of the TSC of the League of Nations, was a turning point in banning global slavery.

In 1932, the League formed the Committee of Experts on Slavery (CES) to review the result and enforcement of the 1926 Slavery Convention, which resulted in a new international investigation under the first permanent slavery committee, the Advisory Committee of Experts on Slavery (ACE).[434] The ACE conducted a major international investigation on slavery and slave trade, inspecting all the colonial empires and the territories under their control between 1934 and 1939.

Article 4 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, adopted in 1948 by the UN General Assembly, explicitly banned slavery. After World War II, legal chattel slavery was formally abolished by law in almost the entire world, with the exception of the Arabian Peninsula and some parts of Africa. Chattel slavery was still legal in Saudi Arabia, in Yemen, in the Trucial States and in Oman, and slaves were supplied to the Arabian Peninsula via the Red Sea slave trade.

When the League of Nations was succeeded by the United Nations (UN) after the end of the World War II, Charles Wilton Wood Greenidge of the Anti-Slavery International worked for the UN to continue the investigation of global slavery conducted by the ACE of the League, and in February 1950 the Ad hoc Committee on Slavery of the United Nations was inaugurated,[435] which ultimately resulted in the introduction of the Supplementary Convention on the Abolition of Slavery.[436]

The United Nations 1956 Supplementary Convention on the Abolition of Slavery was convened to outlaw and ban slavery worldwide, including child slavery. In November 1962, Faisal of Saudi Arabia finally prohibited the owning of slaves in Saudi Arabia, followed by the abolition of slavery in Yemen in 1962, slavery in Dubai 1963 and slavery in Oman in 1970.

In December 1966, the UN General Assembly adopted the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, which was developed from the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. Article 4 of this international treaty bans slavery. The treaty came into force in March 1976 after it had been ratified by 35 nations.

As of November 2003, 104 nations had ratified the treaty. However, illegal forced labour involves millions of people in the 21st century, 43% for sexual exploitation and 32% for economic exploitation.[437]

In May 2004, the 22 members of the Arab League adopted the Arab Charter on Human Rights, which incorporated the 1990 Cairo Declaration on Human Rights in Islam,[438] which states:

Human beings are born free, and no one has the right to enslave, humiliate, oppress or exploit them, and there can be no subjugation but to God the Most-High.

— Article 11, Cairo Declaration on Human Rights in Islam, 1990

Currently, the Anti-trafficking Coordination Team Initiative (ACT Team Initiative), a coordinated effort between the U.S. Departments of Justice, Homeland Security, and Labor, addresses human trafficking.[439] The International Labour Organization estimates that there are 20.9 million victims of human trafficking globally, including 5.5 million children, of which 55% are women and girls.[440]

Contemporary slavery

[edit]

According to the Global Slavery Index, slavery continues into the 21st century. It claims that as of 2018, the countries with the most slaves were: India (8 million), China (3.86 million), Pakistan (3.19 million) and North Korea (2.64 million).[441] The countries with highest prevalence of slavery were North Korea (10.5%) and Eritrea (9.3%).[13]

Historiography

[edit]

Historiography in the United States

[edit]
Wes Brady, ex-slave, Marshall, Texas, 1937. This photograph was taken as part of the Federal Writers' Project Slave Narrative Collection, which has often been used as a primary source by historians.

For much of the 19th and early 20th centuries, historians portrayed American slavery primarily through the lens of white slaveholders. Influenced by the Lost Cause narrative, early scholars such as Ulrich Bonnell Phillips described slavery as a paternalistic system and characterized enslaved people as passive dependents. This interpretation persisted partly because slaveholders left behind extensive written records, whereas most enslaved people, being denied education, could not document their experiences.[442] In contrast, Black scholars working at historically Black colleges began promoting alternative perspectives earlier, though their work was largely excluded from mainstream historiography.[443]

A major shift occurred in the mid-20th century with the work of historians like Kenneth M. Stampp, whose book The Peculiar Institution (1956) rejected romanticized accounts and highlighted the brutality and resistance inherent in slavery.[444] Later scholars, including John Blassingame, Eugene Genovese, and Herbert Gutman, used sources such as slave narratives, WPA interviews, folklore, and archaeology to reconstruct the lives of the enslaved. Their work portrayed enslaved people as active agents who built communities, preserved culture, and exercised autonomy within an oppressive system.[445][446] In parallel, economic historians like Robert Fogel and Stanley Engerman argued controversially in Time on the Cross (1974) that slavery was economically efficient and that the material conditions of enslaved laborers were in some respects better than those of free laborers—an argument that drew sharp criticism for minimizing slavery’s human cost.[447]

Recent historiography increasingly places American slavery in a global and comparative context. Scholars examine how slavery in the United States resembled or diverged from other forms, such as slavery in the Caribbean, Brazil, or the Islamic world. Compared to the relatively high mortality and low reproduction rates in Caribbean slavery, American slavery saw a self-reproducing, indeed naturally expanding, slave population,[448] which shaped family structures and resistance differently.[449]

Economics of slavery in the West Indies

[edit]

One of the most controversial aspects of the British Empire is its role in first promoting and then ending slavery. In the 18th-century British merchant ships were the largest element in the "Middle Passage" which transported millions of slaves to the Western Hemisphere. Most of those who survived the journey wound up in the Caribbean, where the Empire had highly profitable sugar colonies, and the living conditions were bad (the plantation owners lived in Britain). Parliament ended the international transportation of slaves in 1807 and used the Royal Navy to enforce that ban. In 1833 it bought out the plantation owners and banned slavery. Historians before the 1940s argued that moralistic reformers such as William Wilberforce were primarily responsible.[450]

Historical revisionism arrived when West Indian historian Eric Williams, a Marxist, in Capitalism and Slavery (1944), rejected this moral explanation and argued that abolition was now more profitable, for a century of sugarcane raising had exhausted the soil of the islands, and the plantations had become unprofitable. It was more profitable to sell the slaves to the government than to keep up operations. The 1807 prohibition of the international trade, Williams argued, prevented French expansion on other islands. Meanwhile, British investors turned to Asia, where labor was so plentiful that slavery was unnecessary. Williams went on to argue that slavery played a major role in making Britain prosperous. The high profits from the slave trade, he said, helped finance the Industrial Revolution. Britain enjoyed prosperity because of the capital gained from the unpaid work of slaves.[451]

Since the 1970s numerous historians have challenged Williams from various angles and Gad Heuman has concluded, "More recent research has rejected this conclusion; it is now clear that the colonies of the British Caribbean profited considerably during the Revolutionary and Napoleonic Wars."[452][453] In his major attack on the Williams's thesis, Seymour Drescher argues that Britain's abolition of the slave trade in 1807 resulted not from the diminishing value of slavery for Britain but instead from the moral outrage of the British voting public.[454] Critics have also argued that slavery remained profitable in the 1830s because of innovations in agriculture so the profit motive was not central to abolition.[455] Richardson (1998) finds Williams's claims regarding the Industrial Revolution are exaggerated, for profits from the slave trade amounted to less than 1% of domestic investment in Britain. Richardson further challenges claims (by African scholars) that the slave trade caused widespread depopulation and economic distress in Africa—indeed that it caused the "underdevelopment" of Africa. Admitting the horrible suffering of slaves, he notes that many Africans benefited directly because the first stage of the trade was always firmly in the hands of Africans. European slave ships waited at ports to purchase cargoes of people who were captured in the hinterland by African dealers and tribal leaders. Richardson finds that the "terms of trade" (how much the ship owners paid for the slave cargo) moved heavily in favor of the Africans after about 1750. That is, indigenous elites inside West and Central Africa made large and growing profits from slavery, thus increasing their wealth and power.[456]

Economic historian Stanley Engerman finds that even without subtracting the associated costs of the slave trade (e.g., shipping costs, slave mortality, mortality of British people in Africa, defense costs) or reinvestment of profits back into the slave trade, the total profits from the slave trade and of West Indian plantations amounted to less than 5% of the British economy during any year of the Industrial Revolution.[457] Engerman's 5% figure gives as much as possible in terms of benefit of the doubt to the Williams argument, not solely because it does not take into account the associated costs of the slave trade to Britain, but also because it carries the full-employment assumption from economics and holds the gross value of slave trade profits as a direct contribution to Britain's national income.[458] Historian Richard Pares, in an article written before Williams's book, dismisses the influence of wealth generated from the West Indian plantations upon the financing of the Industrial Revolution, stating that whatever substantial flow of investment from West Indian profits into industry there was occurred after emancipation, not before.[459]

See also

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General
People
Ideals and organizations
Other

Notes

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References

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Bibliography

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[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Slavery, defined as the ownership of human beings as property subjected to forced labor without remuneration or personal autonomy, has persisted as a foundational institution across nearly all human societies from the dawn of to the recent past. Originating primarily from the enslavement of war captives, debtors, and criminals, it served economic, military, and social functions in civilizations ranging from ancient and to medieval Islamic empires, African kingdoms, Asian dynasties, and European colonies. indicates its ubiquity, with slaveholding documented in the earliest texts of circa 2100 BCE and codified in laws like the Babylonian around 1750 BCE, which treated slaves as transferable assets while permitting under certain conditions. In classical antiquity, societies such as Greece and Rome developed "slave societies" where unfree labor dominated agriculture, mining, and households, comprising 20-40% of the population in peak periods and enabling elite leisure and cultural achievements. Medieval expansions included the trans-Saharan and Indian Ocean trades under Islamic rule, which over 13 centuries exported an estimated 11-17 million Africans northward and eastward, often involving severe practices like mass castration of males for palace service and high en-route mortality exceeding 80% in some caravans. African polities, including empires like Dahomey and Ashanti, institutionalized slavery internally for labor and warfare, supplying captives to both Arab and later European traders through raids and judicial punishments. The transatlantic slave trade, peaking from the 16th to 19th centuries, forcibly transported approximately 12.5 million Africans across the Atlantic to labor on plantations, representing a concentrated episode driven by European for commodities like and , though dwarfed in duration and total volume by antecedent non-racial trades. Abolitionist movements, rooted in philosophical critiques of human equality and religious imperatives against perpetual bondage, achieved legal bans in Britain (1833) and the (1865), precipitating a global cascade of emancipations by the mid-20th century, despite persistent clandestine forms and legacies shaping demographics and economies. Controversies surrounding slavery's history often stem from selective emphases in academic and media narratives, which, influenced by ideological biases, underrepresent non-Western perpetration and overemphasize European variants, obscuring the practice's roots in universal power asymmetries rather than modern racial constructs.

Origins and Early Forms

Prehistoric Evidence

The absence of written records precludes direct documentation of in prehistoric eras, but archaeological findings of intergroup violence provide indirect evidence of practices akin to and coerced labor, particularly as precursors to formalized systems. In late and contexts, skeletal remains from conflict sites suggest that warfare among bands could result in the subjugation of survivors for labor or other utility, though nomadic lifestyles limited long-term enslavement due to logistical constraints on guarding captives. For instance, at the site in , dated to approximately 10,000 years ago, analysis of 27 individuals revealed blunt force trauma, arrow wounds, and bindings on some extremities, indicating a raid where potential captives were restrained before execution or exploitation, extending the timeline of organized violence potentially linked to resource competition. Similar patterns appear in the cemetery in , around 13,000–14,000 years ago, where over 60 skeletons exhibit perimortem projectile injuries consistent with , implying survivors might have been integrated as subordinates in victorious bands. The , commencing around 10,000 BCE in regions like the and , marked a shift toward and , fostering conditions for institutionalized through surplus production and labor demands exceeding kin-based workforces. War captives likely supplied coerced labor for farming, construction, and herding, as inferred from increased evidenced by disparate burial treatments—elite graves with goods versus mass interments of trauma-afflicted individuals suggesting lower-status foreigners. Sites such as Talheim, (ca. 5000 BCE), yield a mass grave of 34 executed individuals, including women and children with axe wounds, interpreted as defeated group members possibly held briefly as laborers before ritual killing, reflecting emerging patterns of captive exploitation amid territorial disputes over arable land. In the of northern Mesopotamia (ca. 6000–5000 BCE), skeletal anomalies like unhealed fractures and nutritional stress in non-local remains hint at subjugated outsiders performing menial tasks, though distinguishing from temporary bondage remains challenging without textual corroboration. This universality of captive labor in early settled societies stemmed from technological limitations—lacking or draft animals initially, communities relied on to amplify and defend holdings, with empirical models positing 's in agricultural surpluses despite initial inefficiencies in caloric yield compared to . Anthropological analogies from low-technology societies further support that debt-based peonage emerged alongside obligations in proto-farming villages, where resource scarcity during lean seasons compelled for food or tools, evolving into heritable status by phases. However, source interpretations vary, with some archaeologists cautioning against over-attributing status disparities to versus or clientage, emphasizing the need for multimodal evidence like isotopic analysis of mobility in traumatized remains.

Definitions and Cultural Variations

Slavery refers to a system in which individuals are owned as chattel , subjected to coerced labor without personal , and deprived of , including the inability to form independent social relations or inherit status freely. This condition entails permanent violent domination, natal alienation—where the slave's lineage is severed from kin and community—and treatment as an alienable asset that can be bought, sold, or transferred at the owner's discretion. Unlike voluntary servitude, which involves contractual agreement and potential termination, imposes involuntary, indefinite bondage without for the enslaved. Key distinctions separate slavery from related forms of dependency such as and . Serfdom binds individuals to specific land holdings, granting them limited personal rights and preventing outright sale as commodities, whereas slaves lack such ties to territory and are fully commodified. , by contrast, is typically finite, originating from a negotiated agreement for labor in exchange for passage or debt repayment, and does not extend hereditarily to offspring. These differences underscore slavery's core attributes of —children born into the status—and total lack of , rendering the enslaved legally indistinguishable from movable goods. Cultural variations in slavery manifested in the duration and social embedding of bondage, though the foundational elements of and remained consistent. Some systems permitted temporary enslavement, such as for repayment or redeemable through service, contrasting with lifelong or hereditary forms that perpetuated status across generations. Integration levels differed as well: in certain contexts, slaves were incorporated into structures with partial privileges like limited property , while others enforced complete , excluding slaves from networks and civic participation. Anthropological and historical examinations reveal slavery's ubiquity, appearing in the vast of complex pre-industrial societies as a mechanism for labor extraction and .

Ancient Slavery

Near East and Egypt

Slavery emerged in the during the Sumerian period around 3000 BCE, primarily through the enslavement of war captives and debtors who could not repay loans, forming a foundational institution in urban economies centered on temple and complexes. In and later Akkadian society, slaves known as arad or geme performed agricultural labor, household tasks, and craft work, with evidence from tablets documenting sales and contracts that treated them as while allowing limited legal capacities, such as testifying in court under oath. By the Old Babylonian period (c. 2000–1600 BCE), slavery was integral to household and state operations, with slaves often acquired via warfare or self-sale into bondage to avoid during famines. The , promulgated around 1750 BCE by the Babylonian king , systematically regulated slavery, distinguishing slaves (ardu) from free persons and freemen in legal penalties and rights. Key provisions included marking slaves with shears on the forehead to identify runaways, whose capture warranted rewards and whose flight without permission could result in death upon recapture; after three years of service for slaves; and punishments scaled by , such as cutting off a slave's for striking a free person. Slaves could own property, marry free persons (with children following the mother's status), and even hold other slaves, reflecting a form of dependent labor rather than absolute chattel devoid of agency. These laws aimed to stabilize by curbing abuses while preserving elite control over labor, with foreign slaves redeemable through purchase or royal edicts. In , slavery coexisted with labor systems from (c. 2686–2181 BCE), but war captives from , , and formed a distinct class of chattel slaves (bꜣk or sqr-ꜥnḫ), integrated into royal estates, temples, and households for , , and domestic service. Tomb inscriptions and reliefs, such as those from the Middle Kingdom tombs at depicting bound Asiatic captives, provide visual evidence of enslavement following military campaigns, where pharaohs like (r. 1479–1425 BCE) boasted of capturing over 100,000 prisoners in a single Levantine expedition, many redirected to labor duties. While not the primary workforce for iconic projects like the pyramids—archaeological finds of workers' villages with bread ovens and medical care indicate skilled, seasonally conscripted free —foreign captives supplemented forced labor in quarries, canal maintenance, and Nubian gold mines, with estimates suggesting thousands deployed annually in state initiatives during peak New Kingdom expansions. Egyptian slaves, often house-born or purchased alongside Nubian and Asiatic imports, received rations and could rise to supervisory roles, but lacked full legal personhood, as evidenced by New Kingdom records valuing a free worker equivalent to three slaves in labor exchanges. Royal decrees, like those of (c. 1186–1155 BCE), occasionally manumitted slaves for or service, integrating them as freemen, though the institution persisted as a tool of imperial control over conquered populations. Unlike Mesopotamian codes, Egyptian law treated slaves more as state dependents than private commodities, with tomb art emphasizing their subjugation to symbolize pharaonic power over foreigners.

Greco-Roman World

In of the 5th century BCE, slaves formed a significant portion of the population, estimated at 20-30%, enabling the economic foundation that supported citizen participation in democratic institutions. Slaves were primarily acquired through warfare, , and , performing labor in households, , and crafts, which freed male citizens for political and military duties. The Laurion silver mines exemplified this reliance, employing up to 20,000 slaves in hazardous extraction and processing, generating wealth that funded ' naval power and cultural achievements. Philosophers like defended slavery as natural for certain individuals lacking deliberative capacity, arguing in his that some are "slaves by nature" suited only for bodily labor under rational masters. This view justified the subjugation of war captives and barbarians, portraying as beneficial to both parties when hierarchical roles aligned with innate differences. However, such rationalizations coexisted with practical realities where slaves' coerced labor underpinned the necessary for philosophical inquiry and assembly participation. In the and Empire, slavery expanded dramatically following conquests, reaching a peak of 2-3 million slaves in alone by the 1st century BCE, comprising up to 30-40% of the population there. Enslaved individuals powered large-scale latifundia estates producing grain and wine, as well as urban services, with war prisoners from , , and the East replenishing numbers after major victories like those in the . Gladiatorial games featured thousands of slaves trained as combatants, entertaining crowds while symbolizing Roman dominance, though revolts like ' in 73 BCE exposed vulnerabilities. Manumission offered a pathway to , with rates estimated at 10-20% lifetime for urban slaves, particularly those over 30, often through testamentary grants or negotiated payments, integrating freedmen into as clients or small traders. Stoic thinkers critiqued abusive treatment without rejecting the institution; Seneca urged masters to view slaves as fellow humans sharing rational souls, as in his Letters emphasizing moral equality despite legal bondage. , a former slave, echoed this by prioritizing internal of mind over external status, influencing views that dignified endurance under servitude. These perspectives highlighted tensions between slavery's economic indispensability and emerging ethical qualms, yet the system persisted as integral to Rome's expansion and hierarchy until supply dwindled in the late .

Ancient Asia

In ancient Indian society during the (c. 1500–500 BCE), emerged primarily from warfare and conquest, with the describing dasas—non- indigenous groups subjugated by invaders—as servile laborers or enemies reduced to bondage following battles. These dasas were often incorporated into households for menial tasks, though the system lacked the chattel permanence of later Western forms and included protections against extreme abuse in texts like the later . Over time, such servitude evolved into hereditary roles akin to the lower varnas, particularly the Shudras, blending enslavement with rigid rather than pure property ownership. Debt bondage constituted another pathway into servitude, where individuals or families pledged labor to creditors to settle obligations, a practice evidenced in Vedic and post-Vedic literature as a response to economic distress in agrarian communities. Unlike outright enslavement, this form allowed potential redemption through repayment, though cycles of indebtedness often perpetuated indefinite subjugation, reflecting causal links between , , and loss of in early Indo-Aryan polities. In ancient , the (c. 1600–1046 BCE) employed slaves mainly as war captives from neighboring tribes, with inscriptions recording their use in ritual human sacrifices to ancestors or deities; archaeological evidence from tombs reveals decapitated foreigners who endured prior enslavement before execution. Sacrificial scales were immense, including one inscription under King documenting over 9,000 victims, underscoring slavery's role in over productive labor. By the (221–206 BCE), slavery supplemented corvée systems of forced state labor, mobilizing vast peasant levies for infrastructure; historical records indicate recruitment of up to 500,000 commoners alongside soldiers for northern defensive walls—precursors to the Great Wall—while 70,000 worked on the , contributing to peasant revolts from overexertion. Tributary relations with states further supplied slaves as gifts or , integrating bondage into imperial expansion, though the economy relied more on free peasant farming than slave-based production.

Pre-Columbian Americas and Africa

In Mesoamerican societies, such as the , slavery manifested as tlacotin, where individuals became slaves primarily through capture in (xochiyaoyotl), judicial punishment for crimes, or self-sale due to or losses. Owners held to slaves' labor, including agricultural work, domestic service, and , while bearing responsibility for their maintenance; slaves could accumulate , marry free persons, and even purchase or own sub-slaves, distinguishing the system from hereditary chattel bondage. Many captives faced ritual sacrifice to deities like Huitzilopochtli, serving religious and political functions to legitimize Aztec expansion, with estimates of thousands sacrificed annually from wars against neighboring polities. Among North American indigenous groups, slavery arose from intertribal conflicts, where captives—often women and children—were taken to replenish population losses from warfare or disease, integrated through into networks or exploited for labor in , farming, or household tasks. Practices varied by ; for instance, the Haudenosaunee () Confederacy mourned dead by adopting captives to symbolically replace kin, though some endured permanent servitude marked by kinlessness and restricted autonomy, without heritability to offspring. Northwest Coast societies, like the Haida and , treated high-status captives as hereditary slaves (šáyí) for menial labor or displays, deriving from raids emphasizing prestige and resource control rather than economic . In pre-colonial , slavery systems originated in warfare, judicial processes, and , with captives from raids integrated as domestic laborers, soldiers, or pawns redeemable for loans. West African kingdoms like the Asante Empire enslaved war prisoners and debtors through pawnship—temporary bondage where individuals or kin secured debts via labor or sale—often escalating to permanent status if unredeemed, fueling internal markets for labor in , agriculture, and craft production. Male slaves faced harsh conditions in military roles or heavy toil, while females often received milder treatment in households, reflecting gendered hierarchies; raids by Asante forces against northern groups supplied thousands annually for these purposes before external trades intensified. Such practices, embedded in kinship and tribute economies, prioritized warfare for captives over ritual sacrifice, though some societies like the Yoruba used slaves in funerary rites.

Medieval Slavery

Europe and Byzantium

In , the early medieval period witnessed a marked decline in classical chattel , transitioning toward amid the fragmentation of Roman institutions and the rise of . During the Carolingian era (c. 751–888 CE), legal and economic structures increasingly tied unfree laborers to manorial estates, granting them limited rights in exchange for perpetual service, as evidenced by capitularies and polyptychs documenting servile tenures rather than absolute ownership. Church doctrines promoting further eroded slaveholding, with monastic records showing frequent emancipations, though outright lingered in border regions and among elites. Viking raids from the late 8th to 11th centuries disrupted this trend by capturing thousands of slaves annually from , Britain, and , funneling them into markets like —Europe's largest slave entrepôt—and for sale, often to Mediterranean buyers. These thralls, termed thræll in , supported elite households and fueled long-distance trade, yet their integration into local economies remained limited compared to Roman precedents. By c. 1000 CE, slavery comprised a marginal fraction of Western Europe's population—estimated at under 5% in core regions—yielding to as demographic recovery and manorial self-sufficiency reduced reliance on imported captives. The , by contrast, preserved Roman slave practices under continuity of imperial law, including the Justinianic Corpus ( CE), which defined slaves as property (res mancipi) while permitting and imposing duties on owners to provide sustenance. Slaves sourced from Slavic, Persian, and Caucasian wars staffed households, mines, and galleys, with legal texts like the Ecloga (741 CE) adapting Roman norms to Christian ethics by prohibiting excessive cruelty. , frequently enslaved foreigners castrated for loyalty, dominated administrative roles; for instance, (d. c. 985 CE), an Armenian slave risen to parakoimōmenos, wielded influence over emperors and , exemplifying how slavery enabled upward mobility in the palace bureaucracy. This system persisted without the West's feudal pivot, sustaining slavery as a socioeconomic pillar into the despite occasional imperial edicts curbing abuses.

Islamic Caliphates and Arab Trade

The institution of in the Islamic caliphates, beginning with the in the CE, integrated captives from conquests and into domestic, , and agricultural roles, with the practice persisting under the Umayyad, Abbasid, and later dynasties until the early . Quranic verses regulated without prohibiting it, permitting owners sexual access to female slaves (concubines) and ownership of males for labor or service, while encouraging as an act of piety or expiation for sins, such as in 90:13 and 5:89. This framework perpetuated by allowing war captives as primary sources, fostering slave systems like the mamluks—elite slave soldiers who could rise to power—and domestic eunuchs, rather than mandating abolition. The Arab-Muslim slave trade operated through trans-Saharan caravans from West and to North African markets and the Indian Ocean routes from to the , , and beyond, enduring from the CE into the with peaks under Abbasid expansion and Omani dominance. Historians estimate 11 to 17 million Africans were enslaved via these networks, with trans-Saharan routes accounting for roughly two-thirds of the volume, often involving high mortality from desert marches where slaves carried heavy loads and received minimal sustenance. Male slaves faced systematic to produce eunuchs for palace guards and harems, a practice with 90% mortality rates in some cases, as performed by traders before sale to evade religious prohibitions on by owners, yielding non-reproducing servants valued for loyalty. Female slaves served primarily as concubines or domestics, while uncastrated males labored in plantations or mines, as in the salt works of the . A notable instance of resistance was the (869–883 CE) in southern under the , where tens of thousands of East African slaves (termed Zanj), imported for draining marshes and agricultural toil under brutal conditions, rose under , establishing a proto-state, burning plantations, and besieging before suppression by caliphal forces. This uprising, involving up to 15,000 fighters at its height, underscored the scale of chattel slavery in caliphal estates, where slaves received inadequate food and faced ethnic solidarity in revolt, though some scholars debate its purely slave composition versus inclusion of free poor. Despite incentives, such as contracts (muktabah) allowing slaves to buy freedom per 24:33, the trade's economic imperatives—supplying labor for sugar plantations in and pearling in the Gulf—sustained enslavement, with abolition efforts only succeeding piecemeal in the 19th–20th centuries under European pressure.

Sub-Saharan Africa

In pre-colonial Sub-Saharan Africa, indigenous slavery systems were embedded in the social, economic, and political fabric of numerous societies, serving to mobilize labor in contexts of land abundance and labor scarcity. Slaves were acquired primarily through intertribal warfare, punitive raids, judicial sanctions, debt pawning, and famine-induced surrenders, where weaker groups exchanged servitude for survival aid from dominant polities. These systems, as analyzed by historian Paul E. Lovejoy, emphasized productive roles in agriculture, mining, and trade rather than mere domestic service, enabling elite accumulation of wealth and state expansion without relying solely on kinship labor. In West African empires like (c. 1235–1600 CE), slaves were essential to economic output and governance. They toiled in gold mines that underpinned the empire's trans-Saharan commerce and served as porters hauling salt, gold, and other goods across desert routes. Slaves also filled administrative and military functions; for instance, the enslaved court official Sakura effectively ruled from 1298 to 1308 CE, demonstrating how servitude could confer influence within state hierarchies. The subsequent (c. 1464–1591 CE) expanded these practices, integrating slaves into its vast economy centered on salt and gold extraction. Enslaved laborers endured harsh conditions in the salt mines, operated under overseers, while others supported agricultural estates, with groups of 50 to 100 managed by slave chiefs known as fanfa. War captives bolstered standing armies, reinforcing imperial conquests and internal control. Debt bondage via pawnship—pledging individuals as loan collateral—was a recurrent internal mechanism, especially in commercial hubs, allowing creditors to extract labor until repayment. Famine periods amplified this, as communities bartered freedom for provisions, sustaining elite power amid ecological stresses. In matrilineal societies, such as those among the Akan-influenced groups, slave status inheritance often traced through maternal lines, facilitating partial assimilation or lineage-based manumission distinct from patrilineal norms elsewhere. These dynamics highlight slavery's adaptability to local kinship structures, with African rulers actively leveraging captives for state-building rather than passive subjugation.

Medieval Asia

In the Mongol Empire, spanning the 13th and early 14th centuries, conquests under leaders like and his successors generated massive forced migrations and enslavement of war captives across , with slaves integrated into military units, households, and labor forces to support imperial expansion. These captives, drawn from regions like , Persia, and , numbered in the hundreds of thousands during major campaigns, such as the invasions of the Khwarezmian Empire (1219–1221), where entire cities were depopulated for enslavement. The empire's administrative policies formalized slavery through registers of human assets, facilitating a transcontinental trade network that distributed slaves for elite service, craftsmanship, and soldiery, though pre-imperial Mongol society had minimal domestic slavery. The (1206–1526) in northern institutionalized slavery through jihad-inspired raids and warfare against Hindu kingdoms, yielding captives who were marched to markets in Delhi for sale, , or allocation to military elites as ghulams (slave soldiers) and concubines in harems. Historical chronicles, such as those by , record annual enslavements in the tens of thousands during expeditions under sultans like (r. 1296–1316), with Hindu women and children particularly targeted for domestic and reproductive roles, often leading to via conversion or service. Slaves could form families and rise in status, but the system reinforced Muslim dominance, with markets regulating prices based on skills, , and origin; for instance, skilled artisans fetched higher values than laborers. This contrasted with pre-Islamic Indian bondage, which emphasized debt and over chattel ownership. In (1368–1644), encompassed hereditary bondservants (nubi or zhaohu) tied to agricultural estates or imperial workshops, sourced from war debtors, criminals, or levies, but lacked the full alienability of Greco-Roman chattel systems, as slaves retained partial familial rights and could not be freely resold without state oversight. Official slaves, including eunuchs castrated from captives or volunteers, numbered up to 70,000 by the early under Yongle (r. 1402–1424), managing palace administration and collection from vassals like Korea and , who sent thousands annually as slaves or potential eunuchs. mechanisms formalized this, with border states delivering slaves as diplomatic currency, though Confucian reforms periodically limited private enslavement to curb abuses, distinguishing it from more commodified forms elsewhere.

Early Modern Slavery

European Renaissance and Initial Trades

The resurgence of large-scale in during the coincided with maritime explorations sponsored by and , driven by quests for trade routes, gold, and labor to support emerging economies. initiated systematic raids along West Africa's coast, with captains Antão Gonçalves and Nuno Tristão capturing the first recorded groups of Africans—initially a dozen men and women—in 1441 near Cabo Branco (modern ), marking the onset of direct European procurement of sub-Saharan slaves for export to . These expeditions expanded rapidly; by 1444, Portuguese forces under Lançarote de Freitas raided coastal villages, seizing over 200 captives in a single operation, which were auctioned in , establishing a profitable model that integrated into the kingdom's economy. Papal endorsements provided religious and legal sanction for these activities, framing enslavement as a means to combat non-Christian threats and facilitate conversion. Pope Nicholas V's bull (June 18, 1452) explicitly authorized King to invade, conquer, and reduce Saracens, pagans, and other non-believers to perpetual servitude, portraying it as a just war measure. This was reinforced by (January 8, 1455), which praised Portugal's captures of over 800 "infidels" and granted exclusive rights to trade and enslave along the African coast, emphasizing slavery's role in curbing "barbarous" practices among pagans. These bulls reflected the Church's alignment with Iberian expansionism, prioritizing economic and strategic gains over prior medieval restraints on enslaving fellow Christians. Portugal solidified its West African foothold with fortified trading posts, exemplified by , constructed in 1482 under on the Gold Coast (modern ) to secure gold and ivory exchanges while facilitating slave shipments. Initially focused on with local rulers—who supplied captives from interior wars—the castle processed hundreds of slaves annually by the late , serving as a prototype for European coastal enclaves that minimized inland penetration. Concurrently, Spain's conquest of the Canary Islands from 1402 to 1496 introduced encomienda-like labor systems that prefigured American colonial exploitation. Castilian forces under Jean de Béthencourt and others subjugated the indigenous Guanches, enslaving thousands through raids and deportations to mainland Spain and Portugal, where they labored in households and early sugar plantations. By the 1460s, Guanche slaves numbered in the thousands, fueling island agriculture and exports, with survivors integrated via forced tribute and heritable servitude that echoed the encomienda's grant of indigenous labor to conquerors in exchange for nominal protection and Christianization. This model, tested on Atlantic islands, demonstrated slavery's viability for monocrop estates like sugarcane, setting precedents for transoceanic ventures without yet extending to the full Americas.

Ottoman Empire and Barbary Coast

The integrated slavery into its military, administrative, and domestic structures, with a significant portion of slaves sourced from Christian populations in via the system and maritime raids. The , initiated in the late under Sultan Murad I and systematized by the , entailed the periodic levy of boys aged 8 to 18 from Christian families in Balkan territories such as , , and . These youths were forcibly converted to , rigorously trained in , and deployed primarily as Janissaries, the empire's elite infantry corps, or in palace administration; estimates indicate over 200,000 boys were conscripted across three centuries until the system's decline in the mid-17th century. Complementing the , Ottoman-allied Barbary corsairs operating from North African ports like , , and Tripoli—nominally under Ottoman —conducted extensive raids on European shipping and coastal settlements from the 16th to early 19th centuries. These operations captured primarily white Europeans, including sailors, fishermen, and villagers from regions spanning , , , , and even , for enslavement in galleys, , , and households. Historian Robert C. Davis, drawing on ransom records, demographic data, and slave narratives, calculated that Barbary powers enslaved between 1 and 1.25 million Europeans from 1530 to 1780, with annual captures necessitating replenishment due to high mortality rates exceeding 20% yearly from disease, overwork, and abuse. Enslaved Europeans in the Ottoman and Barbary domains faced varied fates, with men often chained to oars in —enduring brutal conditions that propelled Ottoman naval power—or labored in quarries and farms, while women entered harems as concubines or domestics, sometimes rising to influence if bearing children to masters. slavery demanded constant recruitment, as slaves rowed without pay under threat of flogging and starvation, contributing to the empire's Mediterranean dominance until European naval advancements curtailed raids. negotiations, facilitated by religious orders like the and Mercedarians, redeemed thousands but left many in perpetual bondage, underscoring the economic reliance on white slave labor amid Islamic legal prohibitions on enslaving fellow .

Asian Empires

In the Mughal Empire (1526–1857), slavery primarily derived from prisoners of war captured during military campaigns, with estimates suggesting tens of thousands enslaved per major conquest, such as those following Babur's invasions or Akbar's expansions into Rajasthan and Gujarat. Eunuchs, often sourced from Central Asia, Persia, or Africa via castration in regions like Bengal, served in harems and administration, numbering in the hundreds at the imperial court and valued at three times the price of ordinary slaves due to their roles as guards and intermediaries. Akbar (r. 1556–1605) promulgated farmans promoting manumission for converts to Islam and prohibiting harsh treatment, allowing skilled slaves—known as chelas or sahelis after freeing—to ascend to elite service positions, though enforcement varied and hereditary elements persisted among nobles. Under the (1644–1912), slavery manifested as hereditary household bondage (booi nian) among Manchu elites, comprising about 2–5% of the banner population, with slaves inherited patrilineally and used for domestic labor or military service; private sales of debtors or criminals supplemented this, but imperial edicts from the (r. 1661–1722) onward restricted public markets to curb social instability. Bondservants (nubi) in regions, often resulting from famine-induced sales or judicial punishment, numbered in the millions by the , performing agricultural and artisanal tasks, though Qing legal codes emphasized redemption rights and prohibited , distinguishing it from chattel systems elsewhere. In during the late Sengoku and early periods (pre-1868), nuhi—hereditary slaves bound to estates or temples through birth or war—comprised a diminishing class, with records indicating their use in forced labor until Toyotomi Hideyoshi's 1590 edict banning human sales and exports, motivated by concerns over social disruption from Portuguese traders shipping Japanese captives to ; this effectively dismantled organized domestic by the early 17th century, transitioning survivors into roles. Debt slavery prevailed in early modern Southeast Asian rice economies, such as those of the (1351–1767) and (1587–1755), where smallholders defaulting on loans—often for seeds or taxes amid monsoon-dependent yields—pledged labor or kin, affecting up to 20–30% of rural populations in and mainland realms; war captives from inter-kingdom raids augmented supplies, with slaves integrated into wet-rice cultivation but redeemable through payment, reflecting fluid bondage tied to agrarian credit cycles rather than permanent alienation.

Transatlantic and Colonial Slavery

Mechanisms and Scale of the Atlantic Trade

The transatlantic slave trade functioned through a system of routes spanning the 16th to 19th centuries, wherein European vessels carried manufactured goods such as textiles, firearms, and alcohol from ports in to coastal regions of West and to exchange for enslaved Africans; these captives were then transported across the Atlantic Ocean to the in the grueling , after which ships returned to laden with plantation-produced commodities like , , , and . This cyclical exchange maximized profits by linking disparate markets while minimizing empty voyages, with major European powers including , Britain, , , the , and operating fleets of specialized designed to pack hundreds of captives into cramped, unsanitary holds. In terms of scale, approximately 12.5 million Africans were embarked on transatlantic slave ships between the early 16th and mid-19th centuries, with around 10.7 million surviving to disembark in the Americas, according to comprehensive estimates derived from shipping records, port logs, and contemporary accounts compiled in the Slave Voyages database. Portugal and Brazil accounted for the largest share, transporting about 5.8 million captives, primarily to Brazilian ports, while Britain followed with roughly 3.1 million, mainly directed to the Caribbean and North America; other nations contributed smaller but significant volumes, such as France with 1.4 million and Spain with 1.1 million. These figures reflect documented voyages totaling over 36,000, though underreporting and unrecorded trips likely mean the true totals were somewhat higher. The , the transatlantic leg of the journey lasting 1 to 3 months depending on winds and routes, exacted a heavy toll with mortality rates averaging 10-20% due to , , , and brutal conditions including shackling, minimal food rations, and poor ventilation below decks. Early voyages in the saw rates exceeding 20%, declining to around 10% by the late as ship designs improved slightly and voyages shortened, yet cumulative deaths still approached 1.8 million, representing the direct loss during ocean transit alone. Factors exacerbating mortality included —often 1.5 to 2 square feet per person—and outbreaks of , , and , with crews sometimes jettisoning sick captives to preserve cargo value. Regulatory mechanisms in the Spanish Empire, such as the asiento de negros, granted temporary monopolies to foreign contractors (asientistas) for supplying enslaved Africans to Spanish American colonies, starting with Portuguese grantees in the 16th century and later extending to Dutch, French, and British entities like the South Sea Company from 1713 to 1739. These contracts stipulated annual quotas and fixed prices but were undermined by widespread smuggling, as asientistas and independent traders illicitly introduced excess captives and contraband goods like textiles and silver to evade duties and restrictions, with estimates suggesting up to 50% of slaves entering Spanish territories arrived via unauthorized channels. Similar monopolistic practices and illicit trade persisted under other flags, fueling the trade's expansion despite intermittent royal edicts and international treaties attempting to curb excesses.

African Roles in Supply and Trade

African polities in West Africa, including the Kingdom of Dahomey and the , actively engaged in warfare and raids against neighboring groups to capture individuals for sale into the Atlantic slave trade. Dahomey's expansion under King Agaja in the early involved conquering coastal regions like and Whydah, which facilitated direct access to European traders and intensified inland. Similarly, the utilized cavalry forces to conduct raids and extract tribute in slaves from subordinate Yoruba states and non-Yoruba neighbors, profiting from the sale of captives at coastal markets. This participation created a self-reinforcing cycle where European firearms, exchanged for slaves, enhanced African military capabilities, enabling further captures and escalating regional conflicts. Empirical analysis of British slave trade records indicates that increases in gunpowder imports correlated with surges in slave exports, as armed groups raided to acquire more weapons or avoid subjugation. Dahomey, for instance, integrated imported guns into its army, supporting annual "customs" rituals that included slave exports estimated at around 6,000 individuals during peak periods in the 18th century. Oyo's dominance similarly relied on this trade, with wars against groups like the Nupe yielding captives funneled to ports such as Lagos and Badagry. The majority of slaves—approximately 90%—embarked from African ports originated from non-coastal interior regions, transported by African intermediaries through established caravan routes and markets. These captives were typically war prisoners from inter-African conflicts amplified by external demand, rather than coastal populations directly seized by Europeans. African rulers controlled the supply chain, negotiating prices and volumes at trading posts, where European forts like those at Ouidah served as warehouses dependent on local suppliers. This structure underscores how endogenous African agency drove the volume and sourcing of exports, with kingdoms like Dahomey amassing total outflows exceeding 1 million over two centuries.

Plantations in the Americas

Plantation agriculture in the Americas, beginning in the 16th century, centered on export-oriented crops including sugar, tobacco, indigo, rice, and cotton, which required intensive labor supplied predominantly by enslaved Africans transported via the transatlantic trade. Brazil received the largest share, with estimates of approximately 4.8 million slaves disembarked between the 16th and 19th centuries to fuel sugar production in the Northeast and later coffee and mining in other regions. Portuguese bandeirantes, originating from São Paulo, initially captured indigenous peoples for enslavement in the interior during the 16th and 17th centuries, but Jesuit missions established reductions to evangelize and protect native Guaraní populations, culminating in the Battle of Mbororé on March 11, 1641, where Guaraní militias armed by Jesuits decisively defeated a bandeirante expedition, halting many such raids. As papal and royal decrees increasingly restricted indigenous enslavement, African imports intensified for plantation work, with sugar mills (engenhos) dominating the economy by the mid-16th century. Resistance to enslavement included the formation of quilombos, semi-autonomous communities of escaped slaves; Quilombo dos Palmares, the largest, sustained a population estimated at over 30,000 across multiple villages from around 1605 until its destruction in 1694 after repeated Portuguese military campaigns. In the Caribbean, European powers—Spanish, Portuguese, British, French, and Dutch—developed sugar plantations from the early 17th century, importing roughly 4 million slaves overall to colonies like Jamaica, Barbados, Saint-Domingue (Haiti), and Suriname, where the crop's labor demands drove demographic imbalances with slaves outnumbering Europeans. The French Code Noir, promulgated by Louis XIV in 1685 for the Antilles, mandated Catholic baptism for slaves, prohibited their sale apart from families under certain conditions, and regulated manumission and punishments, yet enforced absolute owner authority, including corporal discipline and denial of legal personhood. Sugar processing involved brutal tasks like boiling cane juice in hot vats, contributing to high mortality; scholarly analyses indicate average life expectancy for newly arrived slaves on such plantations was around seven years, attributable to exhaustion, tropical diseases, inadequate nutrition, and accidents, with death rates often exceeding birth rates and necessitating sustained imports to sustain operations. In the , plantations initially focused on in and from the 1610s and rice in the from the 1680s, employing about 388,000 imported slaves, though populations grew mainly through natural increase unlike in the . The invention of the by in 1793 mechanized seed separation, transforming short-staple into a viable and spurring expansion into upland areas of the ; output surged from 3,000 bales in 1790 to over 4 million by 1860, entrenching slavery on larger gang-labor plantations where enslaved workers faced regimented field tasks from dawn to dusk. This shift integrated southern agriculture into global markets, with slave labor efficiency enabling the region's dominance in raw supply.

Comparisons with Concurrent Global Trades

The transatlantic slave trade, spanning roughly four centuries from the early 16th to the mid-19th century, exported an estimated 12 million Africans across the Atlantic, with mortality rates during capture, march to ports, and totaling around 15-40% depending on the phase. In parallel, the Arab-dominated trades across trans-Saharan, , and routes, active from the into the 20th (over 13 centuries), involved 10-18 million sub-Saharan Africans, with annual exports from alone reaching comparable peaks to the Atlantic's in the early despite the longer timeframe diluting per-century volume. These trades exhibited elevated mortality, including 80-90% death rates among males subjected to castration for production, exceeding Atlantic voyage losses. Ottoman Empire slavery during the 16th-19th centuries drew from concurrent African sources via the and systems, alongside Caucasian and European captives, importing 1-1.5 million via Mediterranean routes between 1530 and 1780 alone, though on a smaller scale than the Atlantic trade's peak annual flows. This integrated captives, domestic servants, and military slaves (e.g., Janissaries from ), emphasizing non-hereditary, non-racial enslavement based on conquest rather than skin color. Asian systems, including networks and internal Chinese practices, overlapped temporally: Portuguese and Dutch traders exported tens of thousands of Africans and Asians in the 16th-17th centuries, while broader regional trades in and involved hundreds of thousands via , , and , often supplying plantations and households without rigid racial ideologies. Historically, slavery's foundations were predominantly non-racial, rooted in warfare, debt bondage, and conquest across and , with cumulative global participation likely in the tens to hundreds of millions over millennia rather than isolated to any single trade. Coerced labor in these concurrent systems—whether Arab agricultural estates, Ottoman households, or Asian mining—enhanced economic output by suppressing wages and enabling surplus extraction, contributing to GDP growth in participating empires akin to Atlantic efficiencies. This underscores that transatlantic operations were not exceptional in leveraging unfree labor for productivity but part of enduring global patterns.

19th-Century Developments

Expansion and Economic Integration

In the United States, slavery expanded dramatically in the 19th century to support the cotton economy, which became integral to national exports and global trade. Cotton production rose from approximately 3,000 bales in 1790 to over 4 million bales by 1860, fueled by the invention of the in 1793 and the spread of short-staple cotton cultivation in the . This output accounted for nearly 60% of U.S. exports by 1860, with the labor of enslaved Africans and their descendants enabling the shift from subsistence to cash-crop across states like and . This American cotton boom intertwined with European industrialization, particularly in Britain's textile mills, where demand for raw cotton drove imports from slave-grown fields. By the 1850s, Britain received over 70% of the U.S. cotton crop, powering the expansion of mechanized spinning and weaving in cities like Manchester, which processed millions of pounds annually to produce fabrics for global markets. The reliance on coerced labor in the Americas thus subsidized industrial growth in Europe, as cheap cotton inputs lowered production costs and facilitated the rise of factory systems. In , slavery persisted and expanded through illegal transatlantic trade despite formal bans, integrating into commodity production for European consumption. Brazil and Cuba imported an estimated 1.5 million enslaved Africans clandestinely between 1810 and the 1860s, evading British naval patrols and local enforcement to supply labor for , , and plantations. These imports sustained economic output in regions where natural among slaves was insufficient, linking peripheral slave economies to industrial cores via exports like Brazilian , which reached European markets in increasing volumes.

Resistance and Revolts

The (869–883 CE), involving East African slaves in the Abbasid Caliphate's marshlands near , stands as one of the most destructive slave uprisings in pre-modern history, led by the messianic figure and drawing in tens of thousands of participants who captured cities and disrupted Abbasid control for over a decade before suppression by caliphal forces. Estimates of total fatalities range widely from tens of thousands to as high as 500,000–2.5 million, reflecting the rebellion's devastation of southern Iraq's agriculture and urban centers through guerrilla tactics and sieges. In the context of transatlantic slavery, the (1791–1804) marked the only successful large-scale slave-led overthrow of a colonial system, beginning with coordinated arson and attacks by enslaved Africans in northern that killed hundreds of white planters and escalated into a prolonged war against French, British, and Spanish forces. Leaders such as mobilized up to 100,000 fighters, resulting in approximately 100,000 black deaths out of a pre-revolt enslaved population of 500,000 and 24,000 white fatalities from the colony's 40,000 Europeans, culminating in Haiti's independence declaration on January 1, 1804. Attempts at revolt in the United States remained limited in scale and swiftly crushed, as exemplified by on August 21–22, 1831, in , where Turner, an enslaved preacher, and 60–70 followers killed 55–60 white individuals, including women and children, over two days before state militias dispersed the group. Retaliatory killings by white vigilantes claimed over 100 black lives, many uninvolved, and Turner was captured, tried, and executed on November 11, 1831, prompting stricter across Southern states. In Brazil, the Malê Revolt of January 25, 1835, in Salvador da Bahia involved around 600 Muslim enslaved Africans (termed Malês, primarily from Nagô and Hausa ethnic groups) who launched an urban uprising with knives and clubs, aiming to seize control and establish an Islamic governance amid a population where slaves comprised nearly one-third of 's residents. Authorities suppressed the revolt within hours through superior , executing over 80 participants and exiling hundreds more, though exact combat casualties remain undocumented; the event heightened fears of slave conspiracy and influenced subsequent restrictions on African religious practices. These uprisings, while mostly unsuccessful outside Haiti, underscored slaves' capacity for organized violence against their captors, often drawing on cultural or religious solidarity, yet faced overwhelming odds from armed state responses and internal divisions.

Global Abolition Processes

The process of abolishing slavery worldwide unfolded unevenly, with Western powers leading due to shifts in economic structures favoring wage labor over coerced plantation systems, while non-Western empires retained servile institutions longer amid agrarian dependencies. In Britain, the Slave Trade Act of March 25, 1807, prohibited the transatlantic trade, followed by the Slavery Abolition Act of August 28, 1833, which emancipated over 800,000 enslaved individuals in most colonies effective August 1, 1834, after a transitional apprenticeship period. The government allocated £20 million in compensation to owners—roughly 40% of its annual budget—to mitigate resistance from vested interests, reflecting calculations that slave-based sugar and cotton production had become less viable amid industrial demands for free workers and naval enforcement costs. Economic evidence indicates slave revolts, such as those in the Caribbean, eroded slave asset values, tipping planter support toward abolition by reducing expected returns and highlighting risks of unrest over moral campaigns alone. France achieved abolition via a decree of April 27, 1848, from the provisional Second Republic government, immediately freeing approximately 250,000 slaves in colonies like and , though without upfront compensation, which strained plantation finances and prompted later indemnities. This abrupt measure stemmed from revolutionary upheaval but aligned with broader recognition that slave economies lagged behind free-labor competitors, exacerbating fiscal burdens from earlier Napoleonic reinstatements. The ratified the on December 6, 1865, prohibiting except as punishment for crime, amid postwar reconstruction that prioritized national unity over segregated labor systems whose inefficiencies had been exposed by needs. delayed until the of May 13, 1888, the last Western abolition, as coffee exporters faced a post-1850 trade ban slave demographic collapse—dropping from 1.5 million to under 700,000 by 1887—and competition from European immigrants willing to work for wages, rendering a drag on modernization without owner compensation. In contrast, abolition persisted into the early in empires less integrated into global free-trade networks. The enacted formal bans on the African slave trade in 1857 and expanded prohibitions culminating in 1909 under the Young Turk constitution, driven by European diplomatic pressures and internal fiscal reforms to replace household and military slavery with conscripted labor, though enforcement lagged due to entrenched economic roles in rural and elite spheres. Qing China issued an imperial edict on December 31, 1910, mandating the gradual end to domestic slavery systems like nupu, amid dynasty-ending upheavals and foreign treaty obligations, as agrarian hierarchies resisted wage transitions that threatened landholding stability without viable alternatives. These later timelines underscore how economic incentives—declining marginal productivity of slaves versus free labor in capital-intensive sectors—propelled Western abolitions, while subsistence-oriented empires prioritized continuity over disruptive reforms.

20th- and 21st-Century Slavery

State-Imposed Systems in Totalitarian Regimes

In the , several totalitarian regimes systematically imposed forced labor on millions as a core mechanism of control, economic exploitation, and punishment, functioning as state-enforced . These systems differed from private or colonial slavery by being directly administered by governments to serve ideological and industrial goals, often targeting political dissidents, ethnic groups, and conquered populations. Prisoners were compelled to perform grueling work under lethal conditions, with minimal or no compensation, and death rates were exacerbated by , , and executions. The Soviet Union's system, formalized in 1930 under the OGPU (predecessor to the ), expanded massively during Joseph Stalin's rule from 1929 to 1953, encompassing a network of forced labor camps, colonies, and special settlements across remote regions like and . Approximately 18 million people passed through the during this period, drawn from arrests for political crimes, quotas under Article 58 of the penal code, and mass deportations of kulaks and ethnic minorities. Inmates extracted resources such as gold, timber, and nickel, contributing significantly to infrastructure projects like the , completed in 1933 at the cost of tens of thousands of lives due to inadequate tools and oversight. Mortality rates peaked during the 1930s Great Terror and famines, with estimates of 1.5 to 2 million deaths from , , and purges. The system persisted until Stalin's death in 1953, after which partial amnesties reduced its scale, though forced labor elements endured into the Khrushchev era. Nazi Germany's forced labor program, intensified after 1938 and peaking during World War II, mobilized around 12 million civilians and prisoners from occupied territories, including over 5 million Soviet citizens designated as Ostarbeiter (Eastern workers) deported from 1941 onward. Administered by the SS, Organisation Todt, and the German Labor Front, it encompassed concentration camps, subcamps, and factories where laborers built armaments, infrastructure like the Atlantic Wall, and synthetic fuel plants under Fritz Sauckel's recruitment directives, which explicitly treated workers as expendable. Jews, Poles, and Slavs faced the harshest conditions, marked by branding, starvation rations, and systematic extermination through labor (Vernichtung durch Arbeit), with death tolls exceeding 2.5 million from the program's estimated 20 million total victims when including prisoners of war and camp inmates. The system collapsed with Germany's defeat in 1945, but its scale reflected the regime's racial hierarchy and total war economy. In Maoist China, the (reform through labor) system, established in 1949 following the Communist victory, operated thousands of camps mirroring practices, subjecting political prisoners, intellectuals, and counterrevolutionaries to indefinite forced labor in , , and manufacturing. Activist , imprisoned for 19 years from 1960 to 1979, documented over 1,000 camps holding millions at peak times, with estimates of total prisoners across the system's decades-long operation reaching tens of millions, including during the (1957) and (1966–1976). Labor output supported state industries like steel production, often under quotas that ensured high mortality from exhaustion and abuse, though official records remain suppressed. The evolved into laojiao () variants but retained coercive elements into the 21st century, with Wu attributing 20–40 million deaths to the system based on smuggled documents and survivor accounts.

Post-Colonial and Modern Forms

Post-colonial societies have seen the persistence of slavery-like practices outside formal state imposition, primarily through , for forced labor and sexual exploitation, and coerced recruitment into non-state armed groups. These forms often exploit economic vulnerabilities in agrarian or informal economies, where individuals are trapped by indebtedness, , or , lacking due to weak enforcement or . Empirical estimates from international labor organizations indicate millions affected, though challenges lead to underreporting and wide ranges in figures. Debt bondage, a system where laborers work to repay loans with interest that perpetually increases, remains prevalent in South Asia's brick kiln industries. In Pakistan, approximately 3.5 to 5 million workers, including children, toil in nearly 20,000 kilns under bonded conditions, often migrating seasonally from rural areas and surrendering wages to kiln owners who control essentials like food and shelter. Similarly, in , millions are ensnared in comparable forced labor arrangements in brick production, agriculture, and textiles, with the estimating over 11 million people in modern slavery nationwide, a significant portion in such hereditary debt traps passed across generations. These practices thrive amid poverty and caste dynamics, where advances from employers bind families indefinitely, as documented in field reports by monitors. Human trafficking for sexual exploitation constitutes another major form, involving the of victims into commercial sex through abduction, , or threats. The (ILO) estimated 4.8 million people in forced sexual exploitation globally as of 2016, predominantly women and girls from and , many sourced from post-colonial regions with porous borders and trafficking networks. Updated ILO data from 2022 places total modern slavery at 50 million, with sexual exploitation comprising a substantial share, often intersecting with in destination countries like those in the and . Victims endure physical confinement and violence, with profitability driving traffickers despite international conventions. In conflict zones of Africa and Asia, non-state actors recruit children as soldiers, porters, or sexual slaves, embodying forced labor under duress. Recent assessments indicate around 21,000 children recruited by armed groups and some government forces across Africa in the past five years, particularly in the Democratic Republic of Congo and Sahel regions, where groups like militias exploit orphans and displaced youth. In Asia, similar patterns persist in Myanmar and Afghanistan, with thousands coerced into insurgent ranks for combat or support roles, as reported by UNICEF monitoring. These children face indoctrination, drug dependency, and high mortality, with demobilization efforts hampered by ongoing instability and lack of accountability.

Current Prevalence and Forms

In 2021, an estimated 49.6 million people worldwide were living in modern slavery, encompassing and . Of this total, 27.6 million individuals were subjected to , while 22 million were in . Forced labour generates approximately $236 billion in annual illegal profits for perpetrators, primarily through exploitation in supply chains and services. The majority of forced labour—about 86%—occurs in the private economy, including industries such as , , , and domestic work, with the remainder involving state-imposed systems or commercial sexual exploitation. Children constitute roughly 25% of modern victims, often in hazardous labour or sexual exploitation. Countries with the highest absolute numbers include , with an estimated 11 million people in modern , followed by and other large economies where opaque limits precision. In terms of prevalence per capita, leads, with rates exceeding 100 per 1,000 people, driven by state-mandated labour systems. Post-2020, vulnerabilities to modern slavery have intensified due to the pandemic's economic disruptions, which increased and exploitation without a corresponding rise in detected cases, as reporting mechanisms weakened. Digital technologies have facilitated trafficking by enabling anonymous and online sales of victims, particularly in sex exploitation and networks. These trends reflect persistent structural factors like and weak , rather than isolated events.

Economic and Social Dimensions

Profitability Across Systems

Cliometric analyses, employing quantitative methods to evaluate historical , have demonstrated that often yielded substantial returns in various s, countering earlier narratives portraying it as inherently inefficient or moribund. In the antebellum United States South, and Stanley Engerman's seminal work estimated that investments in slaves generated internal rates of return ranging from 8% to 10% annually between and , comparable to or exceeding yields from railroads and , with overall efficiency driven by gang labor s and specialization in and . This profitability underpinned the region's expansion, as slave prices rose steadily—averaging $1,200 per prime field hand by —reflecting strong market demand and that financed industrial inputs for the North. In , slavery underpinned key extractive sectors like , , and urban services, with economic models indicating positive net profitability for owners despite high initial acquisition costs from warfare. Walter Scheidel's analysis posits that slaves comprised up to 30-40% of Italy's population by the late , generating surpluses through large-scale latifundia estates that supplied imperial markets, though revolts like Spartacus's in 73 BCE imposed temporary disruptions without undermining systemic viability. Recent studies of Pompeii further quantify slavery's role, estimating it as the primary income source for much of the urban economy via rental and household labor, with slave prices calibrated to wages yielding returns exceeding free labor alternatives in labor-intensive trades. The , spanning the 7th to 19th centuries, similarly exhibited high profitability across East African, trans-Saharan, and routes, with traders realizing margins from slave sales that sustained networks transporting an estimated 11-17 million . In Islamic caliphates, eunuchs and slaves (mamluks) commanded premiums—up to 10 times field slaves' value—due to specialized roles, funding expansions despite logistical costs in arid terrains. However, profitability was tempered by elevated operational costs, including supervision, housing, and medical maintenance, which cliometric comparisons reveal as higher per worker than free labor in mobile or skill-intensive sectors. High turnover—via runaways, mortality (10-20% annually in transatlantic voyages), and rebellions—necessitated continuous replenishment, elevating effective labor costs; for instance, antebellum Southern planters faced implicit turnover premiums equivalent to 5-10% of slave values yearly, favoring slavery in fixed, relation-specific tasks like tobacco curing over itinerant free wage work. In Greco-Roman contexts, manumission rates (up to 50% within a generation) reflected owners recouping investments amid these frictions, yet slavery persisted where free labor markets were thin or coerced alternatives unavailable. Thus, while viable, slavery's economics hinged on scale, coercion, and sector-specific advantages over free alternatives.

Long-Term Impacts on Societies

The transatlantic slave trade, spanning roughly 1500 to 1866, extracted an estimated 12.5 million Africans from coastal and interior regions, primarily West and , resulting in net population losses due to embarkation mortality, warfare, and disrupted reproduction. This depopulation exacerbated gender imbalances, with male exports outnumbering females by ratios up to 2:1 in peak periods, leading to and reduced agricultural output in affected societies. Empirical studies link higher slave export intensity to persistent , including lower trust levels and ethnic fractionalization, as oral traditions and institutional memories fostered interpersonal mistrust that hindered cooperative economic activities into the . Conversely, slave trade revenues facilitated state-building in select African polities by funding military capabilities and centralized administration; for instance, the Kingdom of Dahomey leveraged export profits from the late 17th century onward to maintain a standing army of up to 10,000 soldiers, enabling territorial expansion and monopolization of trade routes. Similar dynamics occurred in the Asante Empire, where gold and slave exports from the 18th century supported bureaucratic growth and infrastructure like roads, though these gains were uneven and often came at the cost of internal instability from raid-dependent economies. In the Americas, slavery drove widespread genetic admixture through coerced unions and rape, with genomic analyses revealing African ancestry proportions ranging from 5-20% in North American populations to over 40% in parts of Brazil and the Caribbean by the 19th century, reflecting embarkation patterns from regions like the Bight of Benin. Plantation monocultures, such as sugar in the Caribbean and cotton in the U.S. South, depleted soil nutrients at rates exceeding natural replenishment—e.g., nitrogen losses up to 100 kg per hectare annually in Jamaican estates—forcing constant land clearance and contributing to long-term erosion that reduced arable productivity by 20-50% in former plantation zones. European economies, particularly Britain's, benefited from capital inflows tied to slavery; profits from the and re-exports of slave-produced goods constituted up to 5% of national income by the late , easing credit constraints and channeling investments into industrial sectors like textiles, where slave supplied 90% of raw materials for Manchester mills by 1830. Dynamic models confirm this wealth spurred domestic , amplifying proto-industrial growth in slavery-intensive ports like , though its overall contribution remained secondary to domestic savings and technological innovations.

Myths and Empirical Realities

A common misconception portrays slavery as a peculiar institution primarily associated with Western societies, particularly in the context of the transatlantic trade. In reality, has been a ubiquitous feature of human societies across nearly all civilizations and epochs, from ancient and to classical and , imperial , pre-Columbian , sub-Saharan African kingdoms, and the Islamic world. Archaeological and textual evidence, including the from circa 1750 BCE, demonstrates its institutionalization in early agrarian states for labor extraction and social control. Another persistent myth holds that slavery was inherently racial, with the transatlantic trade exemplifying a norm rather than an aberration. Empirical records indicate that the overwhelming majority of historical involved war captives, debtors, or criminals from diverse ethnic backgrounds, without rigid racial justifications; race-based chattel , hereditary and tied to skin color, emerged distinctly in the during the 16th to 19th centuries and constituted a minority form globally. For instance, Roman slavery encompassed Europeans, Africans, and Asians alike, while Ottoman and systems enslaved millions across racial lines over centuries. This non-racial character prevailed in approximately 90% of documented cases, underscoring that modern racial ideologies retroactively distorted interpretations of pre-modern servitude. Claims that the Atlantic slave trade formed the economic foundation of European capitalism, particularly Britain's Industrial Revolution, are overstated according to quantitative assessments. Economic historians Ronald Findlay and Kevin O'Rourke estimate that profits from the slave trade and related plantation produce accounted for less than 5% of British GDP at its 18th-century peak, with broader Atlantic commerce contributing modestly to capital accumulation but not driving structural industrialization. Critiques of Eric Williams' 1944 thesis, which posited slavery as the primary engine of British wealth, highlight that domestic innovations in textiles and steam power were far more pivotal, as slave trade revenues represented under 1% of total investment in key sectors. The narrative that European powers alone orchestrated and benefited from the slave trade ignores the active complicity of non-European actors. African elites in kingdoms such as Dahomey and Asante captured and sold over 90% of transatlantic slaves, amassing wealth in firearms, textiles, and luxury goods that bolstered their military dominance and internal slave economies. Similarly, Arab and Swahili traders dominated the Indian Ocean and trans-Saharan networks, trafficking an estimated 10-18 million Africans between the 7th and 20th centuries—comparable in total volume to the Atlantic trade despite higher mortality rates from castration practices and desert marches. These intermediaries profited substantially, with Zanzibar's Omani sultans deriving up to 50% of revenues from clove plantations worked by East African slaves.

Historiography and Interpretations

Evolution of Historical Scholarship

In the nineteenth century, historical scholarship on predominantly consisted of moralistic narratives shaped by contemporary debates over abolition, with pro-slavery apologists portraying the as a civilizing force and abolitionists compiling eyewitness accounts of brutality to fuel reform efforts. These accounts prioritized ethical judgments over systematic analysis, often lacking empirical rigor due to ideological commitments on both sides. Post-World War II scholarship shifted toward social histories emphasizing the agency and cultural adaptations of enslaved individuals, exemplified by Eugene D. Genovese's : The World the Slaves Made (1974), which examined paternalistic relations between masters and slaves through a Marxist lens, drawing on slave narratives and plantation records to depict slaves as active shapers of their social world rather than passive victims. This victim-centered approach highlighted resistance, family structures, and religious practices among the enslaved, influencing subsequent studies of dynamics. The 1970s introduced , applying econometric techniques to quantify slavery's economic dimensions, as in Robert William Fogel and Stanley L. Engerman's Time on the Cross: The Economics of American Negro Slavery (1974), which analyzed data, records, and shipping logs to argue that slave labor exhibited high and comparable to free labor systems, challenging narratives of inherent economic inefficiency. Though criticized for underemphasizing coercion's role, this quantitative turn compelled historians to incorporate statistical evidence, fostering debates on profitability metrics like output per worker. Into the twenty-first century, digital databases revolutionized empirical research, with the Slave Voyages project aggregating archival data on approximately 36,000 transatlantic voyages from 1514 to 1866, providing verifiable estimates of 12.5 million Africans embarked and enabling granular analysis of trade routes, mortality rates, and port activities. This facilitated a global historiographical pivot away from Eurocentric focuses on Western culpability toward integrated studies of interconnected systems, including intra-African and Islamic trades. Recent works underscore African agency, as in Paul E. Lovejoy's Transformations in Slavery (1983, revised editions), which details how West African states and merchants actively expanded enslavement mechanisms for political and economic gain, using oral traditions and Arabic manuscripts to quantify regional slave supplies independent of European demand. Such scholarship counters earlier oversimplifications by evidencing causal roles of local elites in trade volumes exceeding 10 million captives across centuries.

Key Debates on Causality and Scale

Historians debate the total scale of slavery across global trades, particularly comparing the trans-Saharan and Indian Ocean Arab slave trades to the Atlantic trade. Estimates for the Atlantic slave trade, based on shipping records, indicate approximately 12.5 million Africans were embarked between the 16th and 19th centuries, with about 10.7 million surviving to disembark in the Americas. In contrast, the Arab slave trade, spanning over 1,300 years from the 7th to 20th centuries, is estimated to have involved 17 to 18 million Africans, including 6 to 10 million via trans-Saharan routes and additional millions through East African ports, though these figures rely on fragmentary records and archaeological evidence rather than comprehensive voyage databases. Proponents of higher Arab totals argue the longer duration and practices like castration of males, which caused high mortality and prevented demographic reproduction, amplify its demographic impact despite lower annual volumes. Scholars also highlight potential undercounts in non-Atlantic systems, particularly intra-African slavery and Asian trades. In , internal enslavement persisted and expanded after transatlantic abolition, as war captives were redirected domestically, with estimates suggesting millions more retained within the continent than exported. Asian slavery, including networks and European colonial systems in the region, involved millions but receives less quantification due to decentralized records and cultural integration of slaves into households rather than plantations, leading to arguments that its scale rivals or exceeds documented Atlantic figures when including and temple servitude. These debates underscore challenges in cross-cultural comparisons, where Atlantic trade's paper trail contrasts with oral traditions and destroyed archives elsewhere, prompting calls for integrated databases beyond Eurocentric sources. On causality, economists and historians contest whether primarily caused long-term inequality and or emerged endogenously from pre-existing scarcities. Empirical studies link Africa's slave exports to persistent mistrust, ethnic fractionalization, and reduced , suggesting exports disrupted social norms and incentivized predation over cooperation, contributing to contemporary . In the , high slave concentrations correlated with greater inequality, which in turn stifled broad-based in and , as elite control of economies entrenched path-dependent barriers to growth. Counterarguments posit as a response to labor scarcity relative to land abundance, as seen in antebellum U.S. where unfree labor filled gaps that free regions addressed via and , implying inequality predated and enabled slave systems rather than resulting solely from them. Recent historiography revises classifications of "slave societies," extending beyond classical models like , , and the antebellum U.S. to encompass non-Western states where slaves comprised significant economic portions, such as Ottoman harems, Mughal , and Qing . Noel Lenski's edited volume argues for a global framework assessing slavery's structural integration—demographic prevalence, ideological centrality, and economic dominance—rather than binary free/slave dichotomies, revealing how Asian and Islamic systems featured pervasive enslavement without the chattel-racial focus of Atlantic variants. This approach challenges Eurocentric narratives by highlighting endogenous drivers like warfare and kinship raids in non-Western contexts, while debates persist on whether such societies' brutality—measured by , reproduction rates, or violence—exceeded Atlantic benchmarks, with evidence of higher per-slave mortality in Arab trades due to overland marches and genital .

References

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