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

The 1752 Massacre at Calabar: Old Calabar and the Slave Trade

5 min · 10. kesä 2026
jakson The 1752 Massacre at Calabar: Old Calabar and the Slave Trade kansikuva

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This episode of The Atlantic Slave Trade: Empire Built on Human Suffering explores the 1752 massacre at Old Calabar, a devastating event that exposed the brutal mechanics of the slave trade on the Bight of Biafra. Hosts Lucas and Luna delve into the complex role of the Efik people, the key figures of the era like Duke Ephraim and the slave trader John Bibby, and the infamous 'house system' that turned captives into commodities. They unpack the massacre that killed hundreds of Duke Town's inhabitants, the ensuing power struggles, and the chilling reality of how African intermediaries collaborated with European traders. The conversation touches on the use of the 'blood men'—executioners who killed the weak to avoid wasting ship space—and the long-term impact on the region, including the rise of the Aro Confederacy. This episode challenges simple narratives of victim and perpetrator, revealing a tangled web of commerce, survival, and betrayal that fueled the transatlantic slave trade. #OldCalabar #Efik #BightofBiafra #Massacre1752 #DukeEphraim #JohnBibby #SlaveCoast #Nigeria #CrossRiver #TransatlanticSlaveTrade #HouseSystem #BloodMen #AroConfederacy #AfricanIntermediaries #Slavery #History #FexingoHistory #AtlanticHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

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jakson Gold Coast Castles: Forts That Held the Atlantic Slave Trade kansikuva

Gold Coast Castles: Forts That Held the Atlantic Slave Trade

Lucas and Luna explore a corner of the Atlantic slave trade that the main revolt narratives rarely touch: the European-built castles and forts along Ghana's Gold Coast. They walk through Elmina Castle and Cape Coast Castle, describing the dungeons, the Door of No Return, and the logistics that made these stone fortresses the holding pens for millions of enslaved Africans before the Middle Passage. Lucas tells the story of how the Portuguese, Dutch, British, and Danes competed for the Gold Coast trade, how the castles operated as both trading posts and prisons, and what it meant for the African kingdoms—like the Denkyira, Fante, and Asante—who dealt with the Europeans. They touch on the legacy of these sites today, including Ghana's 1990s restoration and the 'Year of Return' tourism. The conversation also includes a brief, natural donation segment where Lucas and Luna reflect on why keeping the show ad-free matters. #GoldCoast #ElminaCastle #CapeCoastCastle #AtlanticSlaveTrade #GhanaHistory #DoorOfNoReturn #PortugueseEmpire #DutchWestIndiaCompany #RoyalAfricanCompany #AsanteEmpire #Fante #Denkyira #SlaveCastles #UNESCO #YearOfReturn #MiddlePassage #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

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Haiti's Indemnity: The Price of Freedom

In 1825, France demanded Haiti pay 150 million francs for its independence—a debt that crippled the nation for over a century. This episode explores the story of the Haitian indemnity, from the wars of liberation under Jean-Jacques Dessalines and Alexandre Pétion to the French gunboat diplomacy that forced the young republic to choose between re-enslavement and ruinous payments. We trace the indemnity's roots in the Bois Caïman ceremony of 1791, the audacity of Toussaint Louverture, and the betrayal after Haiti's victory at Vertières. We examine the role of Charles X, the French ordinance of 1825, and how Haitian presidents like Jean-Pierre Boyer negotiated—and later regretted—the deal. The episode also covers the internal Haitian tensions between the rural masses and the elite who shouldered the burden, the shift from French to American financial control, and the final payoff in 1947. It's a story of economic warfare, racial prejudice, and a debt that was never justly owed. #HaitianIndemnity #HaitianRevolution #JeanJacquesDessalines #ToussaintLouverture #AlexandrePétion #JeanPierreBoyer #CharlesX #Vertières #BoisCaïman #France #Haiti #Reparations #Slavery #Colonialism #History #FexingoHistory #SovereignDebt #CaribbeanHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

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jakson The Slave Trade's Bankers: How London Insured the Middle Passage kansikuva

The Slave Trade's Bankers: How London Insured the Middle Passage

We often picture slave ships leaving African ports with captains like Luke Collingwood calling the shots. But behind those voyages stood a far more invisible infrastructure: the bankers, insurers, and investors in London and Liverpool who made the trade possible. In this episode, Lucas and Luna trace the financial architecture of the Atlantic slave trade — from the Royal African Company's monopoly to the rise of private underwriting at Lloyd's Coffee House. They explore how insurance policies literally priced enslaved people as cargo, how 'general average' claims turned murder into a business expense, and how the 1781 Zong massacre was ultimately an insurance dispute. The conversation also examines the financial networks that propped up the trade across British, French, and Portuguese empires, and the early abolitionist strategy of targeting insurance and credit. Specific names include James Rogers (a Bristol banker who collapsed under debt), Anthony Bacon (a London merchant who traded slave-produced goods), and John Kennion (a Liverpool slave trader who went bankrupt). The episode touches on the 1807 Abolition Act's financial compensation for slave owners and the long shadow of these financial institutions. #SlaveTrade #Insurance #Lloyds #MiddlePassage #ZongMassacre #RoyalAfricanCompany #Liverpool #London #Banking #GeneralAverage #JamesRogers #AnthonyBacon #JohnKennion #Abolition #Compensation #1807AbolitionAct #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

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jakson The 1823 Demerara Slave Revolt: Missionaries and Martyrdom kansikuva

The 1823 Demerara Slave Revolt: Missionaries and Martyrdom

In August 1823, a massive slave revolt erupted in the British colony of Demerara (modern-day Guyana), involving over 10,000 enslaved people. Unlike many uprisings, this one was nonviolent in its demands, driven by a misinterpretation of new British policies and fueled by the teachings of Christian missionaries. The revolt was brutally suppressed, leading to the execution of its leader, Jack Gladstone, and the controversial trial and sentencing of missionary John Smith, whose death in prison sparked outrage in Britain and accelerated the abolitionist movement. This episode explores the key figures: Jack Gladstone, his father Quamina, and Governor John Murray; the role of the London Missionary Society and Smith's Bethel Chapel; the revolt's suppression by Colonel Leahy and the West India Regiments; and its aftermath, including the 1824 Order in Council and the abolition of slavery in the British Empire in 1834. We also discuss the legacy of Smith as a martyr and the impact of the revolt on British public opinion. #Demerara #JackGladstone #JohnSmith #Quamina #1823SlaveRevolt #BethelChapel #LondonMissionarySociety #JohnMurray #Leahy #WestIndiaRegiments #OrderInCouncil #BritishAbolition #Guyana #History #FexingoHistory #SlaveRevolt #Martyr #Missionaries Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

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In August 1791, on a humid night in the forests of Saint-Domingue, a Vodou ceremony at a place called Bois Caïman ignited the largest slave revolt in the Americas — one that would ultimately destroy the French empire's most profitable colony and create the first Black republic. This episode takes you inside that night: the priest Dutty Boukman, the mambo Cécile Fatiman, the animal sacrifice, and the oath of rebellion. We explore the political chaos of the French Revolution that made the uprising possible, the alliance between enslaved Africans and free people of color, and the brutal reprisals that followed. We also examine the role of Vodou as a unifying force — how a faith born of African traditions and Catholic symbolism gave revolutionaries a shared purpose. From the sugar plantations of the Plaine du Nord to the mountain forts of the former slaves, this is the story of a revolution that began with a prayer and ended with a nation. #HaitianRevolution #BoisCaïman #DuttyBoukman #CécileFatiman #Vodou #SaintDomingue #SlaveRevolt #ToussaintLouverture #FrenchRevolution #Mackandal #Marronnage #CodeNoir #PlaineDuNord #1791 #CaribbeanHistory #History #FexingoHistory #Resistance Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

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