The transatlantic slave trade between 1518 and …

Years: 1684 - 1827

The transatlantic slave trade between 1518 and 1870 supplies the greatest proportion of the Caribbean population.

As sugarcane cultivation increases and spreads from island to island—and to the neighboring mainland as well—more Africans are brought to replace those who have died under the rigorous demands of labor on the plantations, in the sugar factories, and in the mines.

Acquiring and transporting Africans to the New World has become a big and extremely lucrative business.

From a modest trickle in the early sixteenth century, the trade increases to an annual import rate of about two thousand in 1600, thirteen thousand in 1700, and fifty-five thousand in 1810.

About thirty-two thousand slaves per year are imported between 1811 and 1830.

As with all trade, the operation fluctuates widely, affected by regular market factors of supply and demand as well as by the irregular and often unexpected interruptions of international war.

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