The ledgers recorded names, ages, prices—human beings reduced to inventory. Yet those same people preserved songs, stories, and kinship ties the ledgers could never capture.
Slavery in the early modern era was not incidental to colonial expansion—it was the foundation. European empires extracted wealth from the Americas through systematically enslaved labor. African societies faced demographic collapse and political upheaval through centuries of capture and sale. Enslaved people endured Middle Passage horrors, plantation brutality, and legal erasure of personhood while maintaining family bonds, cultural memory, and resistance strategies that would eventually dismantle the system.
This book traces the structural architecture of slavery across three continents. It examines how Portuguese, Spanish, Dutch, French, and British traders established coastal fortresses and negotiated with African kingdoms—some coerced, some complicit—to supply human captives. It follows forced migration routes carrying twelve million people across the Atlantic, documenting mortality rates, shipboard rebellions, and the calculated economics of human cargo.
Gideon Hart
Gideon Hart is a nonfiction author who writes about leadership, philosophy, and the psychology of decision-making. His work explores how discipline, resilience, and long-term thinking shape both personal growth and success in times of uncertainty.
transatlantic slave trade slavery colonial empires plantation economies history abolition movements slave narratives primary sources structural racism origins forced labor systems