150 Crew Men Sailed Around The World.
In the United States African slave labor was used for tobacco crops. In terms of food crops in the New World, sugar cane harvesting was very labor-intensive and many slaves were used in these endeavors.
for many years
The European slave traders brought slaves to the New World from Africa. So many native Americans had died of smallpox that they couldn't be used for labor.
There were about 700 men on his voyage
you guys need to stop looking on the computer and solve your own problems. Just kidding no one really knows but it was a small amount.
you guys need to stop looking on the computer and solve your own problems. Just kidding no one really knows but it was a small amount.
106
Enslaved Africans faced extremely harsh conditions during the Middle Passage, the journey across the Atlantic Ocean to the Americas. They were crowded together in the holds of slave ships, often chained and subjected to unsanitary conditions, disease, and extreme cruelty by the crew. Many did not survive the voyage due to illnesses, malnutrition, and suicide.
exactly 143 men, with his galleon many didn't survive due to scurvies n all
150 Crew Men Sailed Around The World.
About 12 million were sent to the Americas, of whom 1.8 million died on the voyage. Most were sent to Brazil or the
The points of no return in the transatlantic slave trade were when captured Africans were transported from Africa to the Americas. Once they were forcibly taken from their homes and embarked on the slave ships, often enduring harsh conditions and cruelty, their lives were irreversibly changed. The Middle Passage, the second leg of the journey, marked a crucial point of no return as many enslaved individuals did not survive the brutal voyage.
It is difficult to estimate the exact number of slaves who survived slavery as many historical records are incomplete. However, it is known that some individuals did survive and eventually gained their freedom through various means such as escape, purchase, or emancipation.
Ferdinand Magellan was a Spanish explorer. During his voyage in circumnavigating the world, he sailed through cold weather and extreme rains for many years.
No. Many people never knew about it.
It took Christopher Columbus 71 days to reach the New World on his first voyage in 1492.