The main permanent impact of human mobility across borders and across culture is the rise of Western rule and cultural exploitation; now it embodies globalization. In this article I will explain the cultural value that enables Western dominance and its impact on the ecosystem after it has been globalized. The highest is a product of cultural power and supports the European rule and the biological susceptibility of conquered people against European diseases.
Between 1750 and 1914, European people, by the end of the nineteenth century, dominated the majority of Asia and almost all African countries, and their European and American cousins, dominated their world hegemony I placed a position. Then I ruled the United States. Even the Pacific islands that are too small are governed by Europeans, Europeans, Americans. Three historical developments - revolution, industrialization, and imperialism - will help explain how the European, European and American people dominate the world
The development of the modern African historical area is itself an example of Western historians reassessing views on the past. In the era of slave trade and colonialism, the leaders of society in Europe, Europe and the Americans think that Black Africa is "no history" and little or no civilization known in the Nile Valley in Africa I believed there was no relationship. There are only a handful of professional historians, most of them are African Americans, before the outbreak of the African independence movement after World War II to understand their rich and vibrant past I made a lot of supporters. information.
Boston is part of this worldwide story. The first slave trade of the US colonies departed from Massachusetts. Desire ship left Salem in 1637, carried an American prisoner of war from the Pecot war, and sold it as a slave in the Caribbean. Boston was the most probable return port when imported into the northern colonies of England with the first known African. It is estimated that 166 trans-Atlantic cruises are taking place from Boston. In the 18th century, the local newspaper issued more than 1,000 slave sales advertisements from ship to market, warehouse, cafe, and home. Boston is further cooperating in triangular trade as a major exporter of rum made from sugar which is produced in the Caribbean and sometimes sold as a slave to Africa.