Synopsis:
Africa's Slave Trade to Colonialism to Liberation / The history behind
Africa's slave trade, how it started, and where in Africa it began
first. African chiefs used to sell their own people in exchange for
valued goods, or treasured assets. Then, when the Europeans arrived they
began trading with them. The Europeans offered what they had in
exchange for slaves and the slave trade became a widely known, and
relevant phenomenon in most parts of the world. America and Europe
needed people who could do hard labor, who could do their work for them
which were rigorous tasks. Slave traders came along the African coast,
which was the Sub-region (South of the Sahara) to acquire slaves. They
would get them in large numbers and pack them inside the ships they came
with. Then, in the 1800s the slave trade was abolished by Abraham
Lincoln and then European colonialism/imperialism became the new system
in which mainly the Europeans created to strengthen their nations. The
necessity of raw materials, namely natural resources, led to European
colonization. Also, to establish colonies which were brought up in the
ways of the colonial powers, particularly Britain, France, Belgium,
Portugal, Germany, among others in order to extend their influence both
culturally, politically, socially, and religiously. The geographic
borders one sees on the map today of Africa, were designed by the
European colonial powers who wanted to divide the continent into
sections whereby it would be clear who's colony was where, and that each
colony would stay within boundaries. This was carried out in 1884 in
Berlin, Germany. Africa's resources were being exported immensely to the
nations which ruled over certain colonies there, thus being distributed
out to the rest of the world. After World War 2 and the establishment
of the United Nations, nationalists movements began which internal self
government came into focus and practice, thus leading to independence,
sovereignty, and the emancipation /liberation of the African continent.
Pan Africanists/nationalists/freedom fighters like Dr. Kwame Nkrumah,
Patrice Lumumba, Sekou Toure, among others came into being and agitated
for independence.
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