The Trade
The Transportation of Enslaved People
Life on the Plantations
The Impact on Africa
The Impact on the Caribbean
100

This name describes the three-stage trading route used by British merchants between Europe, Africa, and the West Indies

What is the Triangular Trade?

100

The arrangement of captive people on board a ship where they had very little room to move

What was tight packing?

100

In this specific area of the sugar factory, the heat was so unbearable and the smell so foul that even the strongest slaves were limited to four-hour shifts.

What was the boiling house?

100

The deadly fighting that broke out between different tribes

What was 'civil war'?

100

The most deadly disease brought by the Europeans to the Caribbean natives.

What was smallpox?

200

On the "Outward Passage," ships left Britain carrying these items to exchange for people

What are manufactured goods (such as guns, cloth, and iron)?

200

These fortified coastal buildings were used to hold and "process" enslaved people before they were loaded onto ships

What were slave factories (or baracoons)?

200

This was the title given to the white official responsible for supervising work in the fields and using a whip to maintain constant labour.

Who was an overseer?

200

The slave trade caused a massive decrease in this, which experts estimate would have been double its size by 1850 without the trade.

What is population?

200

This mixed religion emerged on the island of Haiti as a blend of African traditions and French Catholicism

What is Voodoo?

300

These specific tropical products were loaded during the "Home Passage" to be sold for large profits in Britain

What are sugar, tobacco, and cotton? (Also coffee/rum)

300

Scramble

What was the name of the process at the end of an auction where unsold slaves were claimed?

300

Most enslaved people, including women and children, were forced to work a minimum of this many hours per day.

What was 12 hours?

300

Along with criminals, this group were often traded with Europeans for guns and other goods.

What were prisoners of war?

300

These indigenous people were the first to be enslaved in the Caribbean and were eventually driven to extinction by disease and overwork

Who were the Arawak (or Taino)?

400

A crop that was used in the manufacture of dyes

What was indigo?

400

This arch in Benin stands as a memorial to the site where millions of Africans were forced onto ships, never to see their home again.

What is the Door of No Return?

400

To act as a permanent deterrent and allow for easy identification of runaways, captives were often marked on their chests or shoulders using this tool.

What was a branding iron?

400

The name for area of the Gulf of Guinea that includes modern day Nigeria, Benin and Togo?

What was the 'Slave Coast'?

400

Runaway slaves who set up commumities in the mountains or swamps of the Caribbean.

Who were the maroons?

500

The organisation set up in 1672 to manage the British slave trade.

What was the Royal African Company?

500

Speculum oris

What was the name of the device used to force open the mouths of slaves who refused to eat?

500

These were the harsh legal frameworks introduced by fearful plantation owners that permitted the brutal punishment or execution of slaves for minor offenses.

What were the Slave Codes (or Black Codes)?

500

This two-word term means the long-term psychological and social result of the slave trade that still affects many African societies today

What is multi-generational trauma?

500

This was the name of the leader who headed the successful slave rebellion in Haiti, which terrified British plantation owners

Who was Toussaint L'Ouverture?