a. Brazil | ||
b. Spanish Caribbean | ||
c. British Caribbean | ||
d. British North America | ||
e. French Caribbean |
a. Dutch | ||
b. English | ||
c. Portuguese | ||
d. Spanish | ||
e. pirate |
a. African slaves | ||
b. English indentured servants | ||
c. Native peoples | ||
d. Both A and B | ||
e. Both B and C |
a. Copper | ||
b. Gold | ||
c. Cloth | ||
d. Tools | ||
e. Wine |
a. Tobacco | ||
b. Sugar | ||
c. Indigo | ||
d. Both A and B | ||
e. Both B and C |
a. Gold Coast | ||
b. Ivory Coast | ||
c. Windward Coast | ||
d. Bight of Biafra | ||
e. Senegambia |
a. Castile | ||
b. Aragon | ||
c. Portugal | ||
d. Brazil | ||
e. Hispaniola |
a. The increasing power of Islam | ||
b. Europeans' desire to expand Christendom | ||
c. The advent of the spice trade with the Far East | ||
d. The rise of imperialism | ||
e. All of the above |
a. Invasions of the Kingdom of Kongo | ||
b. The creation of sugar plantations in the Caribbean | ||
c. The establishment of a new trading post at Luanda | ||
d. The abolition of the Portuguese slave trade | ||
e. All of the above |
a. Canary Islands | ||
b. Madeira | ||
c. Cape Verde Islands | ||
d. Hispaniola | ||
e. All of the above |
a. It was built in the United States. | ||
b. It was auctioned by Lloyd's of London in the early 1800s. | ||
c. It was used in the Spanish slave trade. | ||
d. It was captured by the British navy. | ||
e. It was condemned to Bermuda. |
a. Cape Coast Castle | ||
b. Elmina Castle | ||
c. Bunce Island Castle | ||
d. Christiansborg Castle | ||
e. None of the above |
a. To access West African gold mines | ||
b. To cultivate sugar | ||
c. To cultivate grape vines | ||
d. To cultivate wheat | ||
e. All of the above |
a. Gold | ||
b. Ivory | ||
c. Salt | ||
d. Slaves | ||
e. Spices |
a. Permissibility of slavery | ||
b. Conversion of Amerindians to Catholicism | ||
c. Right of Spanish crown to colonize the Americas | ||
d. Support of the encomienda | ||
e. Transition from Amerindian to African slavery |
a. demand for labor in the Americas. | ||
b. pre-existing slavery in Africa. | ||
c. death of Amerindian labor force. | ||
d. demand for plantation produce. | ||
e. demand for precious metals. |
a. 1601-1650 | ||
b. 1651-1700 | ||
c. 1701-1750 | ||
d. 1751-1800 | ||
e. 1801-1850 |
a. Could be manumitted | ||
b. Arrived only intermittently on the island | ||
c. Arrived on the island in numbers that rivaled imported Africans | ||
d. Both A and B | ||
e. Both B and C |
a. Windward Coast | ||
b. Bight of Benin | ||
c. Kingdom of Kongo | ||
d. Bight of Biafra | ||
e. Gold Coast |
a. Gold Coast | ||
b. Senegambia | ||
c. Bight of Biafra | ||
d. Kingdom of Kongo | ||
e. Southeastern Africa |
a. Netherlands | ||
b. Spain | ||
c. England | ||
d. Portugal | ||
e. Denmark |
a. Brazil | ||
b. Hispaniola | ||
c. Curacao | ||
d. Surinam | ||
e. Cuba |
a. It was an impermanent condition. | ||
b. Conversion to Christianity led to freedom from slavery. | ||
c. Non-Christians were enslaved. | ||
d. Slavery was a permanent condition. | ||
e. Not all Africans in Virginia were slaves. |
a. It was a permanent condition. | ||
b. It was aimed at black Africans. | ||
c. It was a condition that occupied the lowest rung of society. | ||
d. It was based on a capitalist system. | ||
e. All of the above |
a. Early Modern Era | ||
b. Middle Ages | ||
c. The Renaissance | ||
d. Both A and B | ||
e. Both B and C |
a. Cholera | ||
b. Yellow fever | ||
c. Smallpox | ||
d. Dysentery | ||
e. Syphilis |
a. Indian slaves | ||
b. African slaves | ||
c. Indentured servants | ||
d. Both A and B | ||
e. Both B and C |
a. Guiana | ||
b. Trinidad | ||
c. Mexico | ||
d. Hispaniola | ||
e. Florida |
a. Cartagena de Indias | ||
b. New Orleans | ||
c. La Ciudad de Mexico | ||
d. St. Augustine | ||
e. Bahia |
a. Gold Coast | ||
b. Ivory Coast | ||
c. North America | ||
d. Brazil | ||
e. Other Caribbean islands |
a. 1500 | ||
b. 1550 | ||
c. 1600 | ||
d. 1650 | ||
e. 1700 |
a. Kenya | ||
b. Egypt | ||
c. Madagascar | ||
d. Mali | ||
e. Angola |
a. Curacao | ||
b. Dutch Brazil | ||
c. Surinam | ||
d. Guyana | ||
e. St. Maarten |
a. Ivory | ||
b. Gold | ||
c. Cloth | ||
d. Both A and B | ||
e. Both B and C |
a. Azores | ||
b. São Tomé | ||
c. Cape Verde | ||
d. Canary Islands | ||
e. Madeira |
a. To establish a commercial network in the Atlantic | ||
b. To defend a commercial network in the Atlantic | ||
c. To damage Portuguese interests in the Atlantic | ||
d. To damage English interests in the Atlantic | ||
e. None of the above |
a. Elizabeth I | ||
b. Charles I | ||
c. Charles II | ||
d. James I | ||
e. James II |
a. John Smith | ||
b. Charles II | ||
c. John Hawkins | ||
d. Walter Raleigh | ||
e. Francis Drake |
a. Liverpool | ||
b. London | ||
c. Manchester | ||
d. Greenwich | ||
e. Glasgow |
a. Brazil | ||
b. São Tomé | ||
c. Luanda | ||
d. Angola | ||
e. Atlantic Islands |
a. Demand for slaves in Brazil | ||
b. Increase in prices | ||
c. Rise of anti-slavery sentiment in Portugal | ||
d. Both A and B | ||
e. Both B and C |
a. Religious background | ||
b. Geographical origin | ||
c. Political loyalties | ||
d. Labor needs in Iberia | ||
e. All of the above |
a. Jihad | ||
b. Discovery of gold | ||
c. Importation of firearms | ||
d. Competition among European traders | ||
e. All of the above |
a. Forced labor | ||
b. Serfdom | ||
c. Chattel slavery | ||
d. Pawnship | ||
e. All of the above |
a. pens | ||
b. barracoons | ||
c. check points | ||
d. compartments | ||
e. ports |
a. collateral against debt | ||
b. chattel slaves | ||
c. forced laborers | ||
d. concubines | ||
e. serfs |
a. Abolition of the Atlantic slave trade | ||
b. Abolition of plantation slavery | ||
c. European colonization of Africa | ||
d. Globalization of the cotton market | ||
e. Introduction of Christianity |
a. Coastal societies tried to monopolize trade with Europeans. | ||
b. Inland societies rebuffed European traders. | ||
c. Many coastal societies became de-centralized states. | ||
d. Inland societies could not partake in the European trade. | ||
e. None of the above |
a. Serfdom | ||
b. Pawnship | ||
c. Plantation slavery | ||
d. Peonage | ||
e. Chattel slavery |
a. The Arab slave trade increased. | ||
b. The Arab slave trade decreased. | ||
c. European slave traders marginalized Arab slave traders. | ||
d. Both A and C | ||
e. Both B and C |
a. Conversion to Christianity | ||
b. Slave raiding | ||
c. Kidnapping | ||
d. Politico-religious struggle | ||
e. War |
a. Through tribute from vassal states | ||
b. By conquest | ||
c. By offspring of other slaves | ||
d. Through European slave traders | ||
e. Through those who worshiped foreign religions but failed to pay Kharaj and Jizya |
a. Because of differing religious beliefs | ||
b. Because they were prisoners of war | ||
c. Because of paganism | ||
d. Both A and B | ||
e. Both B and C |
a. Asante | ||
b. Mali | ||
c. Dahomey | ||
d. Benin | ||
e. All of the above |
a. Concubines | ||
b. Bodyguards | ||
c. Domestic servants | ||
d. Mine laborers | ||
e. Serfs |
a. Porters | ||
b. Concubines | ||
c. Merchants | ||
d. Soldiers | ||
e. Administrators |
a. gold mines | ||
b. silver mines | ||
c. large cattle ranches | ||
d. brazilwood estates | ||
e. tobacco plantations |
a. runaways | ||
b. maroons | ||
c. mulattoes | ||
d. quadroons | ||
e. rebels |
a. indentured servitude | ||
b. encomienda | ||
c. peonage | ||
d. serfdom | ||
e. pawnship |
a. All African slaves had to be brought to the New World via Spain. | ||
b. African slaves could not be purchased from rival Portuguese traders. | ||
c. Africans could be brought to the New World directly from Africa. | ||
d. African slaves could not be purchased from rival Dutch traders. | ||
e. None of the above |
a. Tobacco | ||
b. Rice | ||
c. Cotton | ||
d. Indigo | ||
e. Sugar |
a. São Tomé | ||
b. Brazil | ||
c. Madeira | ||
d. Canary Islands | ||
e. West Indies |
a. restricted the movement of peoples of African descent. | ||
b. assured that those with darker skin were of a lower social status than those with lighter skin. | ||
c. allowed slaves to report maltreatment to Louisiana authorities. | ||
d. provided Anglican religious instruction to slaves. | ||
e. stipulated that masters provide their slaves with adequate provisions. |
a. New York City | ||
b. Charleston | ||
c. Philadelphia | ||
d. Both A and B | ||
e. Both B and C |
a. Olaudah Equiano | ||
b. Phyllis Wheatley | ||
c. Venture Smith | ||
d. Ignatius Sancho | ||
e. Mary Prince |
a. Castration | ||
b. Whipping | ||
c. Branding | ||
d. Dismemberment | ||
e. All of the above |
a. Bricklaying | ||
b. Spinning | ||
c. Weaving | ||
d. Carpentry | ||
e. All of the above |
a. Free blacks | ||
b. Large landowners | ||
c. Poor whites | ||
d. Enslaved blacks | ||
e. Small landowners |
a. Haitian Revolution | ||
b. Sugar Revolution | ||
c. Market Revolution | ||
d. French Revolution | ||
e. Tobacco Revolution |
a. Norfolk | ||
b. Richmond | ||
c. Wilmington | ||
d. Savannah | ||
e. Charleston |
a. Less than 1 million | ||
b. Between 1 and 5 million | ||
c. Between 6 and 8 million | ||
d. Between 12 and 15 million | ||
e. Between 15 and 20 million |
a. Slaves were whipped. | ||
b. Slaves had to wear heavy iron hooks around their necks. | ||
c. Slaves had to wear and iron muzzle. | ||
d. Slaves were intentionally given diseases. | ||
e. Slaves were branded. |
a. He was a slave ship captain. | ||
b. He was a slave trader in Bonny. | ||
c. He was the governor of Sierra Leone. | ||
d. He was an Episcopal minister in New Calabar. | ||
e. He was a slave ship surgeon. |
a. Dysentery | ||
b. Small pox | ||
c. Attacks from rival pirate ships | ||
d. Both A and B | ||
e. Both B and C |
a. Dutch | ||
b. English | ||
c. Portuguese | ||
d. Spanish | ||
e. French |
a. 400 | ||
b. 500 | ||
c. 600 | ||
d. 700 | ||
e. 800 |
a. By limiting the number of captives | ||
b. By requiring surgeons to be carried on board | ||
c. By prohibiting slave trading in some areas | ||
d. Both A and B | ||
e. Both B and C |
a. Liverpool | ||
b. Bristol | ||
c. Edinburgh | ||
d. London | ||
e. Plymouth |
a. Jumping overboard | ||
b. Spreading disease among crewmembers | ||
c. Going on hunger strikes | ||
d. Partaking in insurrection | ||
e. All of the above |
a. They branded them. | ||
b. They washed them. | ||
c. They applied oil to their bodies. | ||
d. They disguised sores and disease. | ||
e. All of the above |
a. Crewmembers forced Africans to take food. | ||
b. Crewmembers whipped Africans. | ||
c. Crewmembers tortured Africans with hot coals. | ||
d. Crewmembers forced Africans' mouths open with metal instruments. | ||
e. None of the above |
a. Bâtiments | ||
b. Shipmate | ||
c. Sippi | ||
d. Comrade | ||
e. All of the above |
a. Age | ||
b. Religion | ||
c. Gender | ||
d. Ethnicity | ||
e. Height |
a. Ivory Coast | ||
b. Sierra Leone | ||
c. Windward Coast | ||
d. Angola | ||
e. Kingdom of Kongo |
a. Saint-Domingue | ||
b. Jamaica | ||
c. Demerara | ||
d. Cuba | ||
e. Curacao |
a. Portugal | ||
b. Spain | ||
c. France | ||
d. A and B | ||
e. B and C |
a. British navy | ||
b. American navy | ||
c. French navy | ||
d. Spanish navy | ||
e. African canoe men |
a. Louisiana | ||
b. Brazil | ||
c. Cuba | ||
d. Both A and B | ||
e. Both B and C |
a. treason | ||
b. piracy | ||
c. robbery | ||
d. bigotry | ||
e. negotiation |
a. Society to Effect the Abolition of the Slave Trade | ||
b. Amis de Noirs | ||
c. Friends of Africa | ||
d. Sons of Africa | ||
e. British Abolition Society |
a. South Carolina | ||
b. North Carolina | ||
c. Florida | ||
d. Texas | ||
e. Louisiana |
a. 1810s | ||
b. 1820s | ||
c. 1830s | ||
d. 1840s | ||
e. 1850s |
a. Evidence from the U.S. Census | ||
b. Evidence of conversion to Christianity | ||
c. Evidence of ports of entry | ||
d. Evidence of slave sales | ||
e. Evidence of church membership |
a. Supreme Court | ||
b. Admiralty Court | ||
c. Naval Court | ||
d. Abolition Court | ||
e. Courts of Mixed Commission |
a. 1807 | ||
b. 1808 | ||
c. 1836 | ||
d. 1867 | ||
e. 1888 |
a. Denmark | ||
b. France | ||
c. Britain | ||
d. United States | ||
e. Cuba |
a. Decrease in African population | ||
b. Increase in New World African population | ||
c. Higher birthrate levels for Africans in the Americas | ||
d. Increase in racial mixing | ||
e. Dispersal of Africans throughout the Americas |
a. Underdevelopment | ||
b. Disorganization | ||
c. Vulnerability to European hegemony | ||
d. Widespread famine | ||
e. Population decline |
a. 1787 | ||
b. 1800 | ||
c. 1807 | ||
d. 1808 | ||
e. 1860 |