Depending if the resistance is on the slaver or at the plantation, it could be, for the slave ship, refusal to eat. The ships captain usually had special tools to pry open the slaves mouth to force them to eat. At a plantation, it was usually running away, or breaking the tools needed for farming
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AnswerThe most common resistance against slavery in the 19th century was abolitionism in the north. Many women of the north were abolitionist and expected their rights to be improved as well as the slaves when the time came.If slave masters increased workloads, provided meager rations, or punished too severely, slaves registered their displeasure by slowing work, feigning illness, breaking tools, or sabotaging production. These everyday forms of resistance vexed slave masters, but there was little they could do to stop them without risking more widespread breaks in production
slave resistance on plantations was unsuccessful because the plantation owners were united and if a slave tried to escape they would help each other find him/her. another reason is because slaves were often too scared to resist, they would be made to watch others being punished (most common if whipping) or have been punished themselves.
To give you a correct answer we need the era. You could be asking about ancient Rome.
iltutmish was the most famous in the slave dynasty.
slaves were the most important things in the slave trade