The African continent, situated between Europe and …

Years: 1540 - 1683

The African continent, situated between Europe and the imagined treasures of the Far East, quickly became the destination of the European explorers of the fifteenth century.

The first Europeans to explore the West African coast were the Portuguese.

Other European sea powers soon followed, and trade was established with many of the coastal peoples of West Africa.

At first, the trade included gold, ivory, and pepper, but the establishment of American colonies in the sixteenth century spurs a demand for slaves, who soon become the major export from the West African coastal regions.

Local rulers, under treaties with the Europeans, procure goods and slaves from inhabitants of the interior.

By the end of the fifteenth century, commercial contacts with Europe had spawned strong European influences, which permeated areas northward from the West African coast.

Ivor Coast, like the rest of West Africa, is subject to these influences, but the absence of sheltered harbors along its coastline prevents Europeans from establishing permanent trading posts.

Seaborne trade, therefore, is irregular and plays only a minor  role in the penetration and eventual conquest by Europeans of Ivory Coast.

The slave trade, in particular, has little effect on the peoples of Ivory Coast.

A profitable trade in ivory, which gives the area its name, is carried out during the seventeenth century, but it brings about such a decline in elephants that the trade itself virtually has died out by the beginning of the eighteenth century.

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