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Implications of the slave trade for African societiesThe slave sellers and European 'factories'

The Atlantic slave trade had a negative impact on African societies and the long-term impoverishment of West Africa. For some it intensified effects already present among its rulers and kingdoms.

Part of HistoryTrade in enslaved African people

The slave sellers and European 'factories' on the West African coast

The process of enslaving

Moors capturing black people to make them slaves

European 鈥榝actories鈥 were created on the coast to control the slave trade.

The factories or forts were the holding place for enslaved people as they waited for the slave ships.

Europeans factors (people who collected the enslaved people on the coast) seldom ventured inland to capture the millions of people who were transported from Africa as captives. An African middleman would usually sell enslaved people to the European factor.

Most Africans became enslaved through capture in wars and by raiding parties.

Wars and raids

Warfare became more attractive to those that might more easily profit from it. War created captives, and thus potential enslaved people to profit from. Wars were not usually fought just for captives but the temptation to go to war increased.

As the demand for enslaved people grew, in some areas the impact destabilised existing kingdoms. Existing systems of governance based on kinship and consent were destroyed . In new kingdoms, such as Dahomey (established around 1600), raiding for enslaved people became a way of life for the armed elite. Frequent slave raiding meant it became harder to distinguish insider from outsider, as ethnic boundaries were churned up.

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