Slavery Routes - Part 4
March 26, 2021The final installment of this four-part series examines how slave revolts influenced public opinion.
Africa was long at the center of the slave trade. In the 18th century, the abolitionist movement began gathering momentum in London, Paris and Washington. After the slave rebellion in the French colony of Saint Domingue (modern-day Haiti), and in the face of growing public outrage, Europe’s major powers abolished the trans-Atlantic slave trade in 1807. But Europe was in the midst of the Industrial Revolution, and couldn’t afford to give up its slave workforce.
To satisfy its need for raw materials, it relocated the frontiers of slavery and turned a blind eye to new forms of human exploitation in Brazil, the United States and Africa. When the slave trade was abolished in 1807, there were more Africans in captivity than ever before. Within 50 years, nearly 2.5 million men, women and children were deported. The ban was far from the end of slavery.
Broadcasting Hours:
DW English
WED 31.03.2021 – 01:15 UTC
WED 31.03.2021 – 05:15 UTC
THU 01.04.2021 – 09:15 UTC
SAT 03.04.2021 – 02:15 UTC
SUN 04.04.2021 – 08:15 UTC
Cape Town UTC +2 | Delhi UTC +5,5 | Hong Kong UTC +8
Lagos UTC +1 | Cape Town UTC +2 | Nairobi UTC +3
San Francisco UTC -7 | Edmonton UTC -6 | New York UTC -4
London UTC +1 | Berlin UTC +2 | Moscow UTC +3
DW Deutsch+
THU 01.04.2021 – 09:15 UTC
SUN 04.04.2021 – 08:15 UTC
Vancouver UTC -7 | New York UTC -4 | Sao Paulo UTC -3