The Atlantic Slave Trade: Empire Built on Human Suffering — Fexingo History

The Royal African Company: A Corporation of Slavers

7 min · 18. juni 2026
episode The Royal African Company: A Corporation of Slavers cover

Description

This episode dives into the history of the Royal African Company, the English corporation that held a monopoly on the West African slave trade for decades. Lucas and Luna explore its founding in 1660 under King Charles II, its key figures like Prince Rupert and the Duke of York, and its brutal operations from fortified castles on the Gold Coast. They discuss how the company shipped enslaved Africans to English colonies in the Caribbean and North America, the 'Company of Royal Adventurers' predecessor, and the eventual loss of its monopoly in 1698. The conversation also touches on the company's financial structure, the infamous Cape Coast Castle, and the resistance of African kingdoms like the Asante. By examining this early corporate model of human trafficking, the episode reveals how state-backed commerce and private profit drove the Atlantic slave trade on an industrial scale. #RoyalAfricanCompany #CapeCoastCastle #GoldCoast #KingCharlesII #DukeOfYork #PrinceRupert #AsanteEmpire #SlaveTrade #Monopoly #EnglishColonies #Caribbean #Barbados #Virginia #CompanyOfRoyalAdventurers #17thCentury #History #FexingoHistory #AtlanticSlaveTrade Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

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148 episodes

episode The 1791 Haitian Revolution Begins: Vodou Ceremony at Bois Caïman artwork

The 1791 Haitian Revolution Begins: Vodou Ceremony at Bois Caïman

This episode of The Atlantic Slave Trade: Empire Built on Human Suffering steps back from the well-known revolts of the 19th century to explore the opening act of the Haitian Revolution — the only successful slave revolt in history to create an independent nation. We focus on the August 1791 ceremony at Bois Caïman, where enslaved leader Dutty Boukman, a Vodou priest from Jamaica, and Cécile Fatiman, a mambo, gathered hundreds of rebels in the northern hills of Saint-Domingue. The episode examines the religious fusion of Vodou, the political context of the French Revolution, and the brutal conditions on the island's sugar plantations, where half a million enslaved people outnumbered whites ten to one. Lucas and Luna discuss Boukman's alleged prayer, the role of the maroon leader François Mackandal decades earlier, and how the uprising that began with the destruction of 1,800 plantations within weeks transformed into a thirteen-year war. We also consider the lasting debate over whether Bois Caïman was a literal event or a foundational myth — and why that question matters for understanding Haitian national identity. #HaitianRevolution #BoisCaïman #DuttyBoukman #CécileFatiman #Vodou #SaintDomingue #Slavery #SlaveRevolt #FrenchRevolution #CaribbeanHistory #ToussaintLouverture #Mackandal #Maroons #SugarPlantations #WorldHistory #BlackHistory #FexingoHistory #History Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

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Yesterday5 min
episode The 1792 Danish Ban: Europe's First Slave Trade Abolition artwork

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Yesterday7 min
episode Cuban Cimarrones: Maroon Communities of the Slave Era artwork

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