Slave trade, capture of slaves, buying and selling. Slavery has been around the world since ancient times, and slave trade is also common. Slavic and Iranian from ancient times to the 19th century, sub-Saharan Africans from the 1 st century to the mid-20 th century, Germans of the Viking era, Celts, Romans etc. For example, from the 9th century to the 10th century, Vikings might sell East Slavic slaves to Arabs and Jewish merchants and take them to Verdun and León. Moore is sold throughout Spain and North Africa. Slave trade across the Atlantic is probably the most famous. In Africa, women and children, not males, are incorporated as labor slaves and descendants. In 1500, prisoners of war were taken to the coast and sold to Europeans. It is then shipped to the Caribbean Sea and Brazil, where it is auctioned and shot in the whole new world. In the 17th and 18th centuries, African slaves were exchanged for Caribbean molasses, American colony rum, and returned to Africa to find more slaves. The practice of slavery in many countries continued into the 21st century (illegal). In fact, the anti-slavery organization in the United States, non-profit abolition groups claim that about 27 million people are enslaved worldwide. Sexual slavery for women and children forced to prostitute - sometimes by their families - is an increasing practice all over the world.
Atlantic slave trade or slave trade across the Atlantic Ocean involves the transport of slave Africans, mainly slave traffickers in the Americas. Slave trade often used the triangular trade route and its intermediate passage, and existed in the 16th and 19th centuries. The majority of the people enslaved and transported by slave trade beyond the Atlantic were central and western African Africans sold to Western European slave merchants by other West Africans (a few were coastal slave merchants It was captured directly). They took them to the Americas. The South Atlantic Ocean and the Caribbean are particularly dependent on providing safe workforce for the production of commodity crops, making it possible to sell goods and clothing items in Europe. This is very important for Western European countries that competed to create overseas empires from the late 17th century to the 18th century.
From the 15th century to the 19th century, Atlantic slave trade or transatlantic slave trade took place on the Atlantic Ocean. The Atlantic slave trade is important for the conversion of Africans from a small part of the world's slave population of 1600 to the majority of the 1800s. Slave trade has changed from economic fringe to largest sector in a relatively short period of time. In addition, agricultural farms have increased markedly and become an important aspect of many societies. Finally, it changed the traditional distribution of slave customs.
The "slave trade law" in 1807, the formal abolition of the slave trade law is a bill that the British parliament prohibits the slave trade of the British Empire. It did not abolish slavery, but it urged the UK to take action to force other countries to abolish their slave trade. The abolition of the slave trade commission was formed in 1787 by a group of evangelical Protestants of Quaker who united against slavery and slave trade. Quaker believed for a long time that slavery is immoral and injuries to mankind for a long time. By 1807, the abolitionist group had factions that pretty much equaled at the British Parliament. With their height, they control 35-40 seats