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Atlantic Slave Trade

2015
The Atlantic slave trade remained one of the least studied areas in modern Western historiography until the middle of the twentieth century. This late start was not due to any lack of sources, for the materials available for its study were abundant in both printed and manuscript form from the very beginning.
openaire   +1 more source

Borgu in the Atlantic Slave Trade

African Economic History, 1999
slaves for internal West African (and ultimately trans-Saharan) markets. This involvement in the slave trade had diverse aspects, in which Borgu might figure as both a victim and a beneficiary of the trade. First, inhabitants of Borgu were among those enslaved and sold.
R, Law, P E, Lovejoy
openaire   +2 more sources

Measuring the Atlantic Slave Trade: An Assessment of Curtin and Anstey

The Journal of African History, 1976
The main historical problem to which Professor Curtin addressed himself in the Census relates to the total number of slaves imported from Africa into all the slave-importing Atlantic regions during the entire period of the Atlantic slave trade.
J. Inikori
semanticscholar   +1 more source

The Impact of the Atlantic Slave Trade on the Societies of the Western Sudan

Social science history, 1990
Studies of the history of the Atlantic slave trade in Africa have focused on demography and within it on the number of slaves exported from Africa (Curtin 1969; Lovejoy 1982, 1983; Manning 1981). Seen from the perspective of African history, the question
Martin Klein
semanticscholar   +1 more source

The Atlantic Slave Trade

African Studies Review, 1999
Martin A. Klein, Herbert S. Klein
  +4 more sources

Anthologizing the Atlantic Slave Trade Literature

African Studies Review, 2008
The ever-prolific Jeremy Black has assembled these four volumes of eighty five photo-reproduced articles in English. Ashgate, of course, specializes in this style of print reader and has produced a vast array of topically orga nized collections, supplementing the growing availability of at least some of the same materials in digital formats.
openaire   +1 more source

1. The Atlantic slave trade

2014
Slavery had long existed in Europe and Africa, but the history of the Atlantic slave trade begins in the 1440s with Portuguese exploration of West Africa. ‘The Atlantic slave trade’ charts the increased demand for slave labor in Portugal and the Christian justification of African enslavement.
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Cancer risk among World Trade Center rescue and recovery workers: A review

Ca-A Cancer Journal for Clinicians, 2022
Paolo Boffetta   +2 more
exaly  

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