Economic Aspects of Slavery in the Triangular Trade in the Early Modern Period

Slavery has existed since the beginning of human civilisation. However, there was a great upsurge in slavery during the early modern period and the Age of Discovery, when it gained enormous popularity and took new forms. The greatest European powers at the time conquered new territories in Central a...

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Main Authors: Igor JOSIPOVIĆ, Marko VUJEVA
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Hale Şıvgın 2021-06-01
Series:Gazi Akademik Bakış
Subjects:
Online Access:https://dergipark.org.tr/tr/download/article-file/1810635
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spelling doaj-f2d1cc0c55a24873a4dac6c73fc915a82021-07-02T19:55:17ZengHale ŞıvgınGazi Akademik Bakış1307-97781309-51372021-06-011428179197Economic Aspects of Slavery in the Triangular Trade in the Early Modern PeriodIgor JOSIPOVIĆhttps://orcid.org/0000-0001-5440-6653Marko VUJEVAhttps://orcid.org/0000-0001-5680-2377Slavery has existed since the beginning of human civilisation. However, there was a great upsurge in slavery during the early modern period and the Age of Discovery, when it gained enormous popularity and took new forms. The greatest European powers at the time conquered new territories in Central and North America, developing plans how to exploit them in the most profitable way possible. To unlock the economic potential of these territories, colonial countries started organising a plantation economy by using slave labour. Consequently, colonial countries generated large profits, while the international trade began to flourish. Since there was a labour shortage due to an increased volume of economic activities, colonial countries engaged in the triangular trade, which ensured cheap and large workforce – slaves. As a result, slaves from Africa were brought to plantations in the New World, the most sought-after products, such as sugar, cotton and indigo, came to Europe from colonies, while almost all products that were scarce in colonies were imported from Europe. Therefore, the objective of this paper was to analyse the impact and costs of slave labour and plantation economy on the efficiency of the triangular international trade.https://dergipark.org.tr/tr/download/article-file/1810635slaverytriangular tradecolonialismnew worldnorth and central america
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Igor JOSIPOVIĆ
Marko VUJEVA
spellingShingle Igor JOSIPOVIĆ
Marko VUJEVA
Economic Aspects of Slavery in the Triangular Trade in the Early Modern Period
Gazi Akademik Bakış
slavery
triangular trade
colonialism
new world
north and central america
author_facet Igor JOSIPOVIĆ
Marko VUJEVA
author_sort Igor JOSIPOVIĆ
title Economic Aspects of Slavery in the Triangular Trade in the Early Modern Period
title_short Economic Aspects of Slavery in the Triangular Trade in the Early Modern Period
title_full Economic Aspects of Slavery in the Triangular Trade in the Early Modern Period
title_fullStr Economic Aspects of Slavery in the Triangular Trade in the Early Modern Period
title_full_unstemmed Economic Aspects of Slavery in the Triangular Trade in the Early Modern Period
title_sort economic aspects of slavery in the triangular trade in the early modern period
publisher Hale Şıvgın
series Gazi Akademik Bakış
issn 1307-9778
1309-5137
publishDate 2021-06-01
description Slavery has existed since the beginning of human civilisation. However, there was a great upsurge in slavery during the early modern period and the Age of Discovery, when it gained enormous popularity and took new forms. The greatest European powers at the time conquered new territories in Central and North America, developing plans how to exploit them in the most profitable way possible. To unlock the economic potential of these territories, colonial countries started organising a plantation economy by using slave labour. Consequently, colonial countries generated large profits, while the international trade began to flourish. Since there was a labour shortage due to an increased volume of economic activities, colonial countries engaged in the triangular trade, which ensured cheap and large workforce – slaves. As a result, slaves from Africa were brought to plantations in the New World, the most sought-after products, such as sugar, cotton and indigo, came to Europe from colonies, while almost all products that were scarce in colonies were imported from Europe. Therefore, the objective of this paper was to analyse the impact and costs of slave labour and plantation economy on the efficiency of the triangular international trade.
topic slavery
triangular trade
colonialism
new world
north and central america
url https://dergipark.org.tr/tr/download/article-file/1810635
work_keys_str_mv AT igorjosipovic economicaspectsofslaveryinthetriangulartradeintheearlymodernperiod
AT markovujeva economicaspectsofslaveryinthetriangulartradeintheearlymodernperiod
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