As long as there is a historical record, slavery exists in various forms throughout the world. Contemporary slavery continues to exist on a small scale, but massive slavery on a world scale is abolished. For example, the end of African slavery by Americans from the 18th century to the 19th century. For many countries, these slave-like pastors are causing shame and embarrassment.
Slavery in the United States is a legal system of slavery of mainly African and African-Americans, which existed in the United States from the 18th century to the 19th century. Since the early colonial era, British slavery was legal in all 13 colonies in the 1776 independence declaration. It lasted approximately half of the state until 1865 when the thirteenth fix was banned nationwide. As an economic system, slavery was largely replaced by tenant farmers.
Slavery is the legal and economic system in which people are regarded as property. Since the settlement of the 17th century, North America slavery existed. In the United States, slavery in the northern province, which is defined as the north of the Mason-Dickson line, which formed the border between Pennsylvania and Maryland, was extinct at the beginning of the civil war. Slavery continued to exist in the south until the Federal Forces suppressed the 13 th revision and officially abolished in 1865. International slave trade ended in the early 19th century by the British Navy.
For over 200 years, slavery is the legal system of the United States. What underlies the institution itself is mainly the struggle for our young country to attract workers. That is, slavery is caused by both economic and economic reasons. During the American Revolutionary War, slavery existed in all colonies, and the status of slavery was institutionalized to be an racial class related to African descent. In other words, having other people is (a) the driving force of American industry and the economy, and (b) the whole race is classified as a mechanism other than human beings.