Liverpool's slave trade as a global business base and important elements in the economic growth of the UK In this article we will try to solve this problem in three stages. First, I will evaluate the importance of world trade, especially the British slave trade in the 18th century. Next, I will show you the importance of Liverpool as a British port and why and why it is relevant to the UK.
Slavery is the center of Britain's conservatism. This is a port that plays an important role in slave trade in the world like Liverpool, in particular, it is a trade which earns enormous wealth for the country. The finished product is loaded on a ship heading to Africa where it is traded as a slave. Later, these slaves are brought to the United States on the same ship where they (or at least those who survived the journey) are exchanged for sugar, coffee, or tobacco. These will be brought back to Liverpool, Liverpool will gain huge profits, this terrible triangle deal will begin again
Slave trade across the Atlantic Ocean has brought the rise of many port cities, especially Britain Bristol and Liverpool, France's Nantes and Bordeaux, Spain Seville. The town of the manufacturing center is growing in places connected to these ports. It is these manufacturing centers that the "industrial revolution" happened. In the UK, Manchester was the first center of the industrial revolution. The growth of Manchester occurred after Liverpool's growth. Why is Liverpool growing? This is the place where many slave trade vessels depart from the world's largest slave trade port.
African trade takes place by the emergence of port cities - especially Bristol, Liverpool, Nantes, Bordeaux, Seville -. Manufacturing centers often appear, directly or indirectly connected to these ports, causing England 's industrial revolution, the first industrial revolution center in Lancashire. The growth of trade The relationship between slavery and capitalism in the economic growth of England Eric Williams fully documented this in his famous book "Capitalism and Slavery." Williams explicitly explained the many benefits Britain gained from slavery trading and exploitation, and he names a number of personality and capitalist companies as beneficiaries.