The volume of the slave trade in…
1684 CE to 1827 CE
Philip Curtin, a leading authority on the African slave trade, estimates that roughly six point three million slaves were shipped from West Africa to North America and South America, about four and a half million of that number between 1701 and 1810.
Perhaps five thousand a year are shipped from the Gold Coast alone.
The demographic impact of the slave trade on West Africa is probably substantially greater than the number actually enslaved because a significant number of Africans perish during slaving raids or while in captivity awaiting transshipment.
All nations with an interest in West Africa participate in the slave trade.
Relations between the Europeans and the local populations are often strained, and distrust leads to frequent clashes.
Disease causes high losses among the Europeans engaged in the slave trade, but the profits realized from the trade continue to attract them.
Locations
Groups
Dutch people
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Danes (Scandinavians)
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Ga-Adangme
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Akan people
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Portuguese people
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Fante people
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Ewe people
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English people
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Swedes (Scandinavians)
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Portuguese Empire
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Portuguese Gold Coast
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Gold Coast, Portuguese
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Denmark-Norway, Kingdom of
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Swedish Empire
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Netherlands, United Provinces of the (Dutch Republic)
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Gold Coast, Dutch
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Brandenburg-Prussia
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Gold Coast, Swedish
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Gold Coast, Danish
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England, (Stewart, Restored) Kingdom of
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Royal African Company
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Gold Coast Settlements, Prussian
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Gold Coast, Brandenburger
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England, (Orange and Stewart) Kingdom of
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England, (Stuart) Kingdom of
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Britain, Kingdom of Great
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