In order to decide the important beliefs and ideology that abolished slave trade in 1807 and ultimately helped to abolish slavery in 1833, this task ultimately led to these two different reforms morality Political, economic, and religious factors. It will explore the influence of enlightenment, uncontrollable influence, the role of the individual, and the slave's own resistance. In addition, we examine the attitudes of the Atlantic slave trade and slavery from various angles.
The abolition of slave trade was 1807. The efforts of the UK to try to abolish maritime slave trade since 1807 spread to the hinterland of slave trade in the continent of Africa. The treaty banning the Atlantic slave trade in the north of the Equator has brought about a concentration of slave trade activities in South - Central and Central Africa. In the second half of the century, legal items, especially trade controlled by ivory, exacerbated domestic slave trade and promoted economic exploitation of slaves. Commercial and abolished representatives in the UK view South South Africa as an area of new opportunities. The field that Britain first participated in is the abolition of free trade and death penalty between Portugal and Brazil. The British - Portuguese Treaty in the early 19th century was approved (or from the port of Angola and Mozambique, neglect of slave trade will follow the south of the equator)
Slave trade was abolished by the British government in 1807. French merely abolished slave trade in 1848. Ongoing Atlantic slave trade forced the British government to take responsibility for terminating slave trade. They captured the ship in Europe and released the slaves on board. This is becoming more difficult as the West African Kingdom is reluctant to abandon slave trade. The British government tried to influence the ascent rulers to prevent slavery in their kingdom without success. As a result, since the 1870's, the UK government began colonizing Asante to prevent the use of slave labor, but to manage Asante's abundant gold mine and to protect France 's commercial interests through the expansion of France It was also used as an excuse. Click here to read the course on colonial rule and African reaction