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With the onset of the Atlantic slave trade, Yoruba people from Nigeria and Benin were forcibly transported to America as slaves. Their religion expanded across many borders — to Trinidad, Cuba, Saint Lucia, Benin, Togo, Brazil, Guyana, Haiti, Jamaica, to name a few.
Dec 24, 2019
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The Yoruba people contributed significant cultural and economic influence upon the Atlantic slave trade during its run from approximately 1400 until 1900 CE ...
... slave trading. Oyo also maintained it traditional position as brokers and traders between Yorubas to the south and Hausas to the north. Enslaved laborers ...
“Slavery and the Slave Trade in the Context of West African History.” Journal of African History 10.3 (1969); Paul Lovejoy, “The Impact of the Atlantic Slave ...
Sep 1, 2022 · Yoruba and the curse of enslaved Africans ... Second, he primarily blamed the Yoruba people for slavery though virtually every society practised ...
This was not to the liking of Oyo, whose foreign trade was dependent on its being able to sell slaves to the Europeans on the Slave Coast. Nor was it really in ...
The debate focused on the legality of slavery, who could be enslaved or not and when enslavement was justifiable. Of special interest were slaves whose ...
Slave owners were interested in halting the rate of desertion and reasserting control of recovered slaves and colonial officers were now faced with the task of ...
History edit. Further information: Slave Coast of West Africa and Yoruba people in the Atlantic slave trade ... slaves from Nigeria and Benin during the Atlantic ...
... Yoruba slaves were in the majority in the transatlantic slave trade. While there are several figures on the Yoruba sold into slavery in Saint-Domingue, Curtin ( ...