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

The 1713 Asiento: Britain's License to Traffic in Human Beings

11 min · 26. kesä 2026
jakson The 1713 Asiento: Britain's License to Traffic in Human Beings kansikuva

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In 1713, the Treaty of Utrecht ended the War of the Spanish Succession and granted Britain a unique prize: the asiento, a monopoly contract to supply enslaved Africans to Spain's American colonies. This episode follows the asiento's journey from a Portuguese monopoly through Genoese, Dutch, and French hands to its final, most lucrative incarnation under the British South Sea Company. We trace the political maneuverings in Madrid and London, the staggering profits that fueled the South Sea Bubble, and the human cost calculated in the 144,000 enslaved people delivered over three decades. Meet the key figures: King Philip V, Queen Anne, the Duke of Manchester, and the company directors who turned human misery into shareholder dividends. We explore how the asiento reshaped Atlantic trade routes, entrenched slavery in Spanish America, and provided a legal cover for British smuggling. A story of imperial ambition, financial speculation, and the commodification of human life that defined the early 18th-century Atlantic world. #Asiento #TreatyOfUtrecht #SouthSeaCompany #TransatlanticSlaveTrade #BritishEmpire #SpanishEmpire #PhilipV #QueenAnne #DukeOfManchester #SlaveTradeMonopoly #1713 #WarOfSpanishSuccession #Veracruz #Cartagena #BuenosAires #AtlanticHistory #ColonialSlavery #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

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Eilen11 min
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In this episode of The Atlantic Slave Trade, Lucas and Luna descend into the hellish reality of the Middle Passage. Drawing on slave ship logs, surgeon's journals, and the testimony of Olaudah Equiano, they explore the brutal logistics of human cargo: how captains packed their holds, the arithmetic of profit and cruelty, the constant threat of disease and rebellion, and the psychological terror that defined the crossing. They examine the slave ship Brookes diagram that shocked Britain, the infamous roll of the slave ship Zong, and the little-known 1734 slave revolt aboard the Rhode Island sloop Little George. Lucas explains why the slave ship was a factory designed to break the will, and how enslaved people found ways to resist in the most constrained space imaginable. This episode offers a granular look at the central horror of the Atlantic slave trade — the Atlantic crossing itself. #MiddlePassage #SlaveShip #AtlanticSlaveTrade #OlaudahEquiano #BrookesDiagram #ZongMassacre #LittleGeorge #SlaveRevoltAtSea #ThomasClarkson #SlaveShipLogistics #18thCentury #History #FexingoHistory #Resistance #Disease #HumanCargo #Abolition #WorldHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

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jakson The 1781 Zong Massacre: Insurance Fraud and the Calculus of Cruelty kansikuva

The 1781 Zong Massacre: Insurance Fraud and the Calculus of Cruelty

In this episode of The Atlantic Slave Trade: Empire Built on Human Suffering, Lucas and Luna examine the 1781 Zong massacre — not as a random act of brutality but as a cold insurance calculation. The slave ship Zong, overcrowded and off-course, saw 133 enslaved Africans thrown alive into the sea so that the ship's owners could claim insurance for 'lost cargo.' When the case reached London courts, Lord Mansfield ruled on property law, not murder. Lucas unpacks the voyage's chronology: Captain Luke Collingwood's decision, the crew's testimony, the legal arguments over jettison and 'perils of the sea.' He connects the Zong to the growing British abolition movement, explaining how Granville Sharp used the case to galvanise public outrage. The episode explores the specific legal doctrine of 'general average' as applied to enslaved people, and how this atrocity, stripped of euphemism, became a rallying cry for abolitionists like Equiano and Clarkson. Listeners will learn about the Gregson v. Gilbert insurance case, the role of the Liverpool slave trade syndicates, and the grisly arithmetic that priced human life at thirty pounds per head. #ZongMassacre #SlaveShipZong #LukeCollingwood #GranvilleSharp #LordMansfield #GeneralAverage #InsuranceFraud #AtlanticSlaveTrade #AbolitionMovement #MiddlePassage #LiverpoolSlaveTrade #GregsonvGilbert #OlaudahEquiano #ThomasClarkson #1781 #History #FexingoHistory #PowerfulHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

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