Slavery - Summary on a Map

The history of slavery, from the Neolithic Revolution until today.
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Support the channel on Patreon: / geohistory
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English translation & voiceover: Matthew Bates www.epicvoiceover.com/
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Original French version: • L'histoire de l'esclav...
Russian version: • Рабство - история на к...
Arabic version: • العبودية
Spanish version: • Historia de la esclavi...
Portuguese version (Brazil): • História da Escravidão...
Japanese version: • 奴隷の歴史
Korean version: • 노예 제도 - 지도로 알아보는 노예 제도...
German version: • Sklaverei - Zusammenfa...
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Music: Warzone - Anno Domini Beats
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Software: Adobe After Effects
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Chapters
00:00 Origins
01:25 The slave trade
02:50 The Muslim conquests
04:17 The Abbasid Caliphate
05:53 The Arab slave trade
07:10 Portugal
09:06 The triangular trade
10:23 Consequences of the triangular trade
11:31 First abolitionist movements
13:00 Saint-Domingue
14:22 Abolitions
16:51 New forms of slavery
18:48 Modern slavery
#geohistory #slavery #history

Пікірлер: 8 400

  • @carcarjinks1430
    @carcarjinks1430 Жыл бұрын

    you'd be surprised at how many people believe that slavery didn't exist before america

  • @stefanschleps8758

    @stefanschleps8758

    Жыл бұрын

    Demonetizing is demonizing. Same thing, and you are, sadly, correct. I'm fed up with the mental midgets in the world who point to the US as the source of all the worlds evil. Slavery goes further back than recorded history does. And every culture is an experiment in flux. All the best to you.

  • @serserrano1

    @serserrano1

    Жыл бұрын

    You’d be surprised to know how many muslims deny the Arab slave trade Africans, Europeans and Asians and to the extent they did.

  • @emkay4960

    @emkay4960

    Жыл бұрын

    It's convenient to them to believe that.

  • @aenima1

    @aenima1

    Жыл бұрын

    Just saw some muppet the other day "teaching" how USA invented it

  • @miketyson9540

    @miketyson9540

    Жыл бұрын

    A professor at Penn state questioned his kids every year on their Knowledge of slavery for an american history course. He found that SEVENTY SIX percent of incoming 2018 students believed ONLY white people and america had slaves. Its done by design. You cant genocide a people without demonizing them first.

  • @lazy7566
    @lazy7566 Жыл бұрын

    It’s very rare to see someone talk about slavery like this. A totally unbiased perspective with facts rather than opinions makes this so enjoyable to watch. I just learned 10 times more about the horror of slave trade than I did throughout the entirety of the education system.

  • @ricolsport97

    @ricolsport97

    Жыл бұрын

    Agreed this video was so in depth I’m fascinated. I learn more here than a year in history class

  • @degustablegerbil

    @degustablegerbil

    Жыл бұрын

    There is no such thing as an unbiased perspective. The information included and/or left out undoubtedly affects the conclusions someone would walk away from this video with. Even if when you are talking about facts, those facts are rarely completely subjective in history and thus you cannot be entirely objective. Apart from that, the video also makes historical claims of its own. Not making any judgements on the video, but just because it gives a narrative of Atlantic slavery different from the brief overview presented in schools doesn’t make it unbiased! Be a good consumer of historical knowledge!

  • @degustablegerbil

    @degustablegerbil

    Жыл бұрын

    @@latenightcake1147 if you watched this whole video you probably care about history. Everything I said will make you a better consumer of history. Chill out dude!

  • @Diego-nb7ly

    @Diego-nb7ly

    Жыл бұрын

    @@degustablegerbil XD

  • @austintomlinson7863

    @austintomlinson7863

    Жыл бұрын

    Just to provide some examples of what @DegustableGerbil is getting at: Including 1:15 seemed pretty aggro against Abrahamic Religions there. Trying to disprove the book of Exodus is probably not something you leave as, effectively, a footnote on the end of a section. EDIT: I keep receiving replies about only this example I would like to attempt to settle some themes I'm seeing in them. Feel free to skip this edit if you don't have any problems with what I said. a. First off, I'm not in any way actually upset that they included this information. I was simply saying that potentially some Islamic, Christian, or Jewish viewers (of which I am none of the above) might find its inclusion unsavory. b. I was also not, at all, talking about the trueness of the section. I was only talking about the benefits and drawbacks of its inclusion. c. The point of this statement was to demonstrate bias. I think we can all agree that it would be understandable to infer that people with the power of deciding what does and doesn't go into this video likely doesn't belong to any of the religious mentioned in my earlier point. This example was to show bias in that the inclusion of this information is variable on their background. His numbers for modern slavery (20:15) seemed a *little* bloated (I mean, arranged marriages do suck --> a lot

  • @RobinDunbar-gj5ly
    @RobinDunbar-gj5ly Жыл бұрын

    This is probably the best informed summary of slavery I have ever read or listened to. A properly global perspective, and very succinctly done.

  • @mjones4083

    @mjones4083

    5 ай бұрын

    I agree .

  • @AdelaeR

    @AdelaeR

    2 ай бұрын

    Then again: this is only an account of a small portion of slavery. Humans could have had slaves hundreds of thousands of years ago. We don't know that. The video also leaves out many parts of the world, like slavery in ancient China.

  • @milo8425

    @milo8425

    Ай бұрын

    It misses a LOT and is still absurdly focused on Europe.

  • @SomeGuy-lw2po

    @SomeGuy-lw2po

    Ай бұрын

    ​@milo8425 credit deserved though. Just the slavery covered in this video is a huge subject and would have required a huge amount of historical research

  • @user-cr1bs4lm9j

    @user-cr1bs4lm9j

    Ай бұрын

    @@milo8425wish we could turn back time … to the good old days

  • @wherezdz9278
    @wherezdz927811 ай бұрын

    Not to downplay American slavery at all, or slavery in general, but this just goes to show that slavery occurred almost everywhere in the world, and is still going on today. Yet I see so many people acting as if the American slave trade was some type of uniquely vile thing. Just opens up your perspective a little, which is always a good thing.

  • @punklover99

    @punklover99

    11 ай бұрын

    Because idiots want an excuse

  • @petercross3984

    @petercross3984

    9 ай бұрын

    A certain group of people like to think they were the only slaves and the world owes them an apology

  • @sparks1792

    @sparks1792

    8 ай бұрын

    This is so weird. Nobody is downplaying anyone’s slavery.Just because a group is outspoken that doesn’t mean they disregard others.What is with this weird obsession of getting Black Americans to ignore slavery. If others don’t feel the need that’s ok but why should another group be silent. If the Irish wanted to talk about what Britain did them everyday I wouldn’t mind.Same for Haiti,Yemen, and anyone else. Imagine being upset because people stand for something. I love my country but I won’t ignore it’s history.

  • @JakeFromKushFarm

    @JakeFromKushFarm

    7 ай бұрын

    As a haitian american.. i wont forget what my ancestors went through.. and what my people still fo through… and how dare you gaslight both current slaves and descendants of slaves with this comment.. as if current slavery or black slaves are in compétition with each other. No, we just wont forget when ppl (very unique and vile) plotted to make blacks slaves because they saw we had abundant healthy population that didnt die off when coming into contact with white devils, and were strong and could endure hard labor .. then after abolition of this slavery from various places, confusing ppl of where they come from , enslaving natives and indegenous too and killing them off, classifying the rest as negro… then have the nerve to segregate these disenfranchised ppl from equality and legally being able to kidnap rape murder and jail these ppl well into the 21st century… but we trippin when we call it out… just hold the L.. cause you brought this up.. trying to continue this « just forget it happen « rhetoric and agenda… you need to watch this video again and take note what he says toward the end of his lecture on the end of slavery in haiti and the u.s. And the lasting effects of it on generations afterwards

  • @scottmad8563

    @scottmad8563

    7 ай бұрын

    ​​@@JakeFromKushFarmbet you believe all white people are to blame as well when many white people moved here long afterwards it was ended. Like my ancestors are polish and were slaves in Russia till they finally fled to the US

  • @robertellis8670
    @robertellis8670 Жыл бұрын

    Thank you for covering modern slavery. It’s an absolute tragedy people will deny it and demonize slavery as something just one country did, and refuse to acknowledge that it continues to this day.

  • @GabagoolEnjoyer863

    @GabagoolEnjoyer863

    Жыл бұрын

    No one does this.

  • @thatsaboat2882

    @thatsaboat2882

    Жыл бұрын

    @@GabagoolEnjoyer863 some people do although rarely

  • @vetabeta9890

    @vetabeta9890

    Жыл бұрын

    the difference is the atlantic slave trade was heavily commercialized, more brutal and that form of chattel slavery's brutality and dehumanization wasn't seen in anywhere else prior

  • @vvv5892

    @vvv5892

    Жыл бұрын

    @@GabagoolEnjoyer863 iv seen many do this, and when you mention africas slavery today they go silent

  • @silcodon

    @silcodon

    Жыл бұрын

    @@vetabeta9890 That's because there are almost no records of prior times of slavery because the enlightnment era did not come to that time, nor paper or printing machines, so you can't really be totally confident on that statement, unless you only trust the bible and see how slaves were as badly treated in egypt in BC times

  • @Klonduke
    @Klonduke Жыл бұрын

    I'm glad someone is pointing out modern slavery during one of these videos. The cold fact of there being more slaves than ever before is lost as we "abolished" slavery across the world. Even though something is illegal and frowned upon, doesn't mean it doesn't happen. Thank you for being brave enough to point this fact out, as we believe we are more civilized than we actually are as a species. Slavery will never end, we can only hope to limit it as much as possible.

  • @AK-hi7mg

    @AK-hi7mg

    Жыл бұрын

    Only white people abolished slavery. And see how the puplic opinion thanks us for that

  • @sandeegrey5977

    @sandeegrey5977

    Жыл бұрын

    Thank you! Some people think that because this is the modern world we are a bunch of saints...

  • @thefool1086

    @thefool1086

    Жыл бұрын

    @@sandeegrey5977 or that we aren't violent animals simply because we can buy food at the grocery store

  • @DimesAndNichols

    @DimesAndNichols

    Жыл бұрын

    While there are more slaves now as an absolute number (which is still terrible), it is also important to note that the global population is dramatically higher. The percentage of people in forced labor/bondage is still low relative to most of human history.

  • @DieFlabbergast

    @DieFlabbergast

    Жыл бұрын

    There are more slaves because there are FAR more people in the world. As a percentage of the world's population, the number of slaves is much lower than in past centuries.

  • @ibarny2588
    @ibarny25885 ай бұрын

    As a black American, this video helped me escape the matrix and stop being so touchy about this topic. Popular culture makes it seem like our people are the ones ones that had to go through it, when that's not true at all. I am now much less vulnerable to the antics of the left when it comes to things like this, thank you.

  • @drowningpooralice5505

    @drowningpooralice5505

    5 ай бұрын

    Good man, yourself.

  • @thisaintart

    @thisaintart

    4 ай бұрын

    Props!

  • @blazer9547

    @blazer9547

    2 ай бұрын

    Much respect

  • @Nekudza

    @Nekudza

    18 күн бұрын

    In fact english word "slave" actually comes from Slav - eastern european pagan people who were often enslaved by both christians from Europe and Muslims from Asia 1000+ years ago

  • @oluwafisayoadekoya1042

    @oluwafisayoadekoya1042

    15 күн бұрын

    You’re right we don’t have to remain victims. The key point I will make is there is that the color of your skin makes you identifiable. Whereas other ppl can easily assimilate and don’t have a stigma. Look up black ppl in India Iraq, and other Arab countries. They are still very much treated like slaves. Can you go to Norway and pick out a former Irish slave? How would Jim Crow be enforced without easy identification. Even Jewish ppl had to carry passes to be identified and many escaped the holocaust by just changing their names. If the holocaust was again black ppl, how many of your family members would escape? I agree we should be victims but there are some differences I could elaborate on that weren’t in this video. In other worlds the Irish, Italians, Jewish and Germans can somewhat assimilate literally unrecognizable in a general once their accents changed.

  • @diannegooding8733
    @diannegooding8733 Жыл бұрын

    Best synopsis of slavery and its prohibition that I have ever seen ! In such a short piece there were omissions and mistakes but it was still the best and should be made obligatory viewing for all. Thanks.

  • @darrylh547
    @darrylh547 Жыл бұрын

    This should be taught in grade school, too many people are not aware of the real history of slavery. Brief but accurate and to the point.

  • @r.o.c_3

    @r.o.c_3

    Жыл бұрын

    also, should be taught that Juws were involved every step of the way

  • @kentuckyfriededgar

    @kentuckyfriededgar

    Жыл бұрын

    @@r.o.c_3 juws?

  • @CestuiQueTrustBeneficiary-KING

    @CestuiQueTrustBeneficiary-KING

    Жыл бұрын

    Search Definition For These Words Pledge, Chattel, Allegiance, Flag, It Means Bond Servant, As A Slave, Under A Monarchy, With A Mark.

  • @jasoncarper4531

    @jasoncarper4531

    Жыл бұрын

    So you think in elementary school it should be taught?

  • @CestuiQueTrustBeneficiary-KING

    @CestuiQueTrustBeneficiary-KING

    Жыл бұрын

    @@jasoncarper4531 Webster's Dictionary Pledge, Chattel... Look Allegiance, Flag

  • @deonallen923
    @deonallen923 Жыл бұрын

    Thank you so much for this. I teach Middle School American History and this video is an absolute blessing for covering the background of slavery outside of our borders.

  • @Rob-iy2rt

    @Rob-iy2rt

    Жыл бұрын

    Hope you teach real history and not the revisionist history of the radical left.

  • @RhondaSanchez.

    @RhondaSanchez.

    Жыл бұрын

    Something You don't teach I'm sure

  • @Essamelafifi

    @Essamelafifi

    11 ай бұрын

    (Not accurate) It is well documented in the Quran 1400 years ago that Muslims are FORBIDDEN to buy ANY slave regardless of religion or ethnic background.

  • @GhostSal

    @GhostSal

    11 ай бұрын

    If you teach, teach that it happened all over the globe and throughout history. In other words, point out what this video left out. Let’s clear up some things about słavery, yes the post is long but for this subject it’s short. Słavery across the globe and throughout time wasn’t because someone had a certain skín color and if those people weren’t there słavery wouldn’t exist. Many people seemingly only want to díscuss North America or put more an emphasis on it saying it was far worse than anywhere else. So let’s clear up some things. we often hear people say 400 years but actually Błack people didn’t become the majority of słaves in Notth America till the mid 1700s. Which lasted until 1865, just over 100 years. Still horrific, still clearly an injustice and críme against humanity but certainly not an isolated event. Before that the majority of słaves in Ameríca were the índigenous tríbes/First Nations people. In fact 400 years really doesn’t even scratch the surface, słavery existed for tens of thousands of years, if not hundreds of thousands. Słaves and índentured servànts were used for labor and/or s3x. Here is the thing about mísconceptions regarding índentured servantš, índentured servànts weren’t always treated better, nor did they always agree to be índentured servànts (that’s right there were iídentured servànts that were forced into servítude, just like słaves). Sometimes they would sell the contract of the índentured servànt to someone else without their consent, thereby extending the contract (so 20 years could become 40). Another thing they would do is førce the wømen to get pregnant, which would also extend their contracts and keep them pregnant till old age (by then owing more years, than they had years of life left and I’ll let you figure out how they førced them to get pregnant). Also, not only were their wíves rap3d but at times their chíldren taken and sold. How about słavery, so many people make arguments it was only horrifíc in Ameríca and that it wasn’t that bad here or there but is that true? Słavery as already mentioned existed for thousands and thousands of years, all across the globe. Chattel słavery did in fact also exist in Afríca and it wasn’t a kinder gentler form of słavery; unless you consider mass human sacrifíce and canníbalísm kinder and gentler. Słavery existed in Afríca well before Eurøpeans showed up and Afrícan rulers fought the Eurøpeans in order to keep it going. In the Middle East the słave market was huge, the słaves brought in were often castràted (so no, that wasn’t a kinder gentler form either). Słavery existed in Asia and Asía is still infamous for having sweatshops. The Vikíngs often raided Eurøpe and took słaves back with them. The wømen they took served the Viking men, both work and s3x. When the słave øwner díed, the wøman he had as a słave would often be gàng ràpéd by the men in the village and kīlled to serve the owner in the afterlife. Ancient Romans brutałły ensłaved other Europeans and people around the Mediterranean. In the Amerícas the Natíves enslaved others Natíves and also had human sacrifíce. The point is słavery was and is horrifíc, all over the world it’s horrifíc and has been for a very very long time (that’s not minimizing it for one group to say that, in fact it’s minimizing everywhere else to not recognize it was horrific all over). How about chattel slavery? Here is the thing, you can’t ensłave descendànts if there aren’t any. The Barbary słaves often had a much shorter lífe span and had no hope of procreatíon. Many díed chaíned in the ínterior of the ship sitting in their own excrèment covered in open wøunds or díed chaíned to a sínking ship that lost a battle. There was no fèmale companíonship, no livíng to an old age, no sunshíne, no høpe … Just the incredibly harsh realitíes of the shíp for the rest of their short míserable líves. In the Middle East the vast majoríty of słaves were castratèd and agian never had the opportuníty to reprøduce. Many of which didn’t even survíve being castrated. Does anyone really think that’s any “better”? Also, this idea many people have that chíldren of słaves were born free across the globe or słaves weren’t sold as property (except in Ameríca) is absurd. When people say that in North Ameríca it was wørse or Eurøpeans have the most to be błamed for (which is said a lot lately), that isn’t intellectually honest and is blatantly ígnoring the atrocitíes commítted around the globe. When people blame only group over everyone else, it is in fact minimizing the atrocitíes everywhere else, and those people are doing precisely what they blame others for doing (i.e., “minimizíng” the atrocitíes of słavery around the world).

  • @mjh5437

    @mjh5437

    10 ай бұрын

    If you`re a History teacher I would have thought you would know all this already?...Shows how useless schools are nowadays.

  • @thinkingahead6750
    @thinkingahead6750 Жыл бұрын

    A good introduction, well done, I kept thinking you should have added this or that important element. It is such a complicated history and not at all as portrayed by many.

  • @mertceylan9099
    @mertceylan90992 ай бұрын

    incredible accuracy, details and visuals. thank you!

  • @commonomics
    @commonomics Жыл бұрын

    What this tells me is that almost every major civilization practiced slavery

  • @donalain69

    @donalain69

    Жыл бұрын

    what it tells me is that people in the US are trying to make themself look less guilty for their crimes by pointing at others. regarding slavery their past happens to be way worse then of all other modern nations combined, but that video just ignores that

  • @harrybaals2549

    @harrybaals2549

    Жыл бұрын

    @@donalain69 after everyone made themselves look less guilty by pointing at the US. hypocrites

  • @larsrademakers6070

    @larsrademakers6070

    Жыл бұрын

    @@donalain69 i think you would have a hard time proving the usa was that much worse then what then was the "status quo"

  • @larsrademakers6070

    @larsrademakers6070

    Жыл бұрын

    @@TobiasRieperGood that was the price of abolishing conventional slavery, cant have a society when the basic jobs arent fulfilled

  • @Wimpymind

    @Wimpymind

    Жыл бұрын

    @@donalain69 thats nonsense. If anything the video downplays the severity of the arab/north african trade, as well as the scale. They also leave out that it was mostly jewish traders organizing the atlantic trade, and africans doing the capturing of their own.

  • @ShubhamMishrabro
    @ShubhamMishrabro Жыл бұрын

    You briefly mentioned berber slave trade but a description of barbary wars would have been great too.

  • @faysalals1

    @faysalals1

    Жыл бұрын

    this is not about barbar slavery, its about history of slavery as a whole

  • @jakubpociecha8819

    @jakubpociecha8819

    Жыл бұрын

    Yeah, they even raided Iceland once

  • @TheLoki7281

    @TheLoki7281

    Жыл бұрын

    @@faysalals1 then india, china and russia are missing as well as most of the european slave trade. also, the slavery in (native) america is missing. they attempt to be quite neutral, i give them that. but the strong focus on europa, be it in the antike or in more modern times, does create the illusion that slavery mainly happened in european controlled areas when in reality, it was everywhere.

  • @xenotypos

    @xenotypos

    Жыл бұрын

    @@ShubhamMishrabro I agree that it should have been briefly mentioned, but remember that most of the trade stopped before the US intervened, so the impact is shared really. And even if after that the slave trade will be ridiculously small, it's only after France invaded Algeria that it was entirely stopped.

  • @faysalals1

    @faysalals1

    Жыл бұрын

    @@TheLoki7281 Not true, they did mention it in detail, watch the video again

  • @spinach4892
    @spinach4892Ай бұрын

    Focused way too much on the european slave trade neglecting other slave trades, though still a gem of a video

  • @FrVitoBe

    @FrVitoBe

    3 күн бұрын

    true feels like it was all eu for all those years an other places nothing happend which clearly didnt

  • @jboi6398

    @jboi6398

    Күн бұрын

    People love to blame whites for everything when in reality we advanced the world beyond mud huts and cannibalism.

  • @wonderwiseS2
    @wonderwiseS29 ай бұрын

    So rare to find a video that actually portraits reality without a political agenda, thank you Geo History. We still have letters conserved to this between the King of Kongo and Portugal, stating a good relationship between them and his son went to study in Portugal and became a Bishop. Yet some people, mostly Americans, say that the white European started slavery in Africa. We did not start it, we started business with African slavers.

  • @santigamerprogamer6493
    @santigamerprogamer6493 Жыл бұрын

    I love how you made the frontiers change while the years pass. Those frontier changes were so pleasant to see!

  • @seang3019

    @seang3019

    Жыл бұрын

    As an unapologetic map nerd, I concur.

  • @VIRGONOMICS

    @VIRGONOMICS

    Жыл бұрын

    I was paying attention to the ships making their ( feeding ) patterns, like Carnivorous Bugs devouring lives.

  • @Uahmedtahaalnady

    @Uahmedtahaalnady

    Жыл бұрын

    in gulf state .. there's a disguised law for slavery called the sponsorship (Kafala) laws ... they offer several legalized slaves to every rich man (Kafeel=sponsor) .. he could do whatever he want to them even making them work again for others & get what they gain ... with the least & worst living & working conditions (they literally buying glucose powder to survive rather than eating food)

  • @willemvanvliet3493

    @willemvanvliet3493

    Жыл бұрын

    When ''Suriname,, is done,..with the Netherlands,..with complaining,..about slavery and waiting for an apology,..speech ect ect,.. and BEGGING money.,..costs NL billions and,...150 years ago they ALSO GO ALONG..???????????????????? AT,.........these countries ????? or will they be kicked out England,..France,..Portugal,..and Spain and USA ???? lazy people that Aruba Bonaire .Curasou ISLANDS PROFITERS thieves mess there.........@@seang3019

  • @sch10tzsky

    @sch10tzsky

    Жыл бұрын

    I noticed that the Louisiana Purchase was omitted - this video says it was Spanish territory in the early 1800's.

  • @sherylannnarvasa6922
    @sherylannnarvasa6922 Жыл бұрын

    It would have been helpful if pre-Columbian slavery in the Americas was addressed, as well as sub-Saharan African slavery, which existed before the Arab slave traders arrived in that region of the world. Also, a look into slavery in East and Southeast Asia from the last few thousands years would also help to show the ubiquitous nature of slavery.

  • @AfricanMaverick

    @AfricanMaverick

    Жыл бұрын

    sub-Alp Europeans created 2 world wars causing the world destruction

  • @miketyson9540

    @miketyson9540

    Жыл бұрын

    That would mean implying that blacks and natives had slaves which is NOT allowed. They are two of the most protected classes of people in the world.

  • @GoodBoi1503

    @GoodBoi1503

    Жыл бұрын

    The video did mention that the trade routes already existed before the Arabs arrived.

  • @CHMichael

    @CHMichael

    Жыл бұрын

    It's not about slavery but the global trade of it. Took me a second to adjust my expectations too.

  • @NickMachado

    @NickMachado

    Жыл бұрын

    For some reason, they only include slaves that were used for work and not the ones used for ritualistic sacrifice.

  • @LibertarianGal
    @LibertarianGal9 ай бұрын

    Great video. I usually check out on videos like this, but it held my attention for the entire time.

  • @virginiamoss7045
    @virginiamoss7045 Жыл бұрын

    Incredibly interesting and good perspective. I'm passing this on to others.

  • @Willcaballero
    @Willcaballero Жыл бұрын

    Man... I was feeling so confident for humanity as major countries started to outlaw slavery one-by-one, only to have the video end with by mentioning that there are now more slaves on earth than at any previous moment. Really puts things in perspective. Humanity can be so incredibly cruel.

  • @PetroBeherha

    @PetroBeherha

    Жыл бұрын

    By absolute numbers, yes. Percentage-wise, it's less than 1% of the global population. Either way, it remains an abomination and a stain on the human spirit that needs to be wiped as soon as possible.

  • @j.p.vanbolhuis8678

    @j.p.vanbolhuis8678

    Жыл бұрын

    At the same time, do realise that without all these actions the number of slaves in the world would easily surpass 1 billion, possibly going so high as 3 billion. For example in Imperial rome, 30-50% of the inhabitants of italy were slaves.

  • @gengis737

    @gengis737

    Жыл бұрын

    The absolute number is at a peak, because the world population increased 8 times. But the proportion of slaves in the world population as dived, even if we still have progress to do.

  • @beastminer147

    @beastminer147

    Жыл бұрын

    You don't understand how empty the Earth used to be. Only reached 1 billion in 1804, 2 billion in 1927, and 3 billion in the 60's.

  • @yaelz6043

    @yaelz6043

    Жыл бұрын

    The western major nations you mentioned have been responsible for like 90% of all slavery in the past 500 years. Humanity is mostly fine, it's your ability to do something bad and blame the humans you do it to that's the problem.

  • @Horizon3165
    @Horizon3165 Жыл бұрын

    And you would think “slavery” only ends in the history books!!!!! Thank you for such an informative documentary.

  • @wolfgangkranek376

    @wolfgangkranek376

    Жыл бұрын

    Mauritania made slavery a criminal offense as late as 2007. Before that it was just prohibited by law without any consequence.

  • @aishasamsam

    @aishasamsam

    Жыл бұрын

    Horn of Africa as well they used to trade slaves from south east Africa

  • @singlechickprepping5013

    @singlechickprepping5013

    4 ай бұрын

    Doesnt end even today between arabs and china, they still keep slavery o going

  • @lonewolfe5960

    @lonewolfe5960

    2 ай бұрын

    I mean the sex slave trade exists in America... But since you can't talk about the southern border without being labeled racist... We don't bring any attention to it

  • @priztucker
    @priztucker6 ай бұрын

    Imagine watching this for 20+ minutes only to find that slavery is bigger than ever before.

  • @curtisthomas2670

    @curtisthomas2670

    6 ай бұрын

    It's false though

  • @Liam-2345

    @Liam-2345

    5 ай бұрын

    @@curtisthomas2670Explain? 🙄 it’s so easy to just say it’s false…..

  • @Yanxve

    @Yanxve

    2 ай бұрын

    @@Liam-2345 There are two ways to define the "size" of slavery. That would be "amount of people enslaved" and "institutional incentive and acceptance of slavery worldwide". The video uses the first definition, whilst @curtisthomas2670 uses the second definition.

  • @KToll5784

    @KToll5784

    2 ай бұрын

    @@Yanxvein other words, literal truth versus figurative interpretation. Nobody cares about fruitless navel-gazing. By the numbers, slavery is more widespread.

  • @Yanxve

    @Yanxve

    2 ай бұрын

    @@KToll5784 I'm factually explaining the interpretations given by other people here, not taking sides. Also, the measurement of the size of slavery can be done in different methodologies, and thus, there is no "literal truth versus figurative interpretation."

  • @Tom-pr3yh
    @Tom-pr3yh9 ай бұрын

    There is a dangerously fine line between imagined history and actual history. Unfortunately, the former is becoming so entrenched in the UK these days that it’s creating a highly politicised narrative of self hate - and slavery is at its core. Thank you for addressing the issue in an open, neutral and big picture context. Highly valuable.

  • @miguelnascimento2847

    @miguelnascimento2847

    9 ай бұрын

    If anything people should be proud of their ancestors that decided to end it. Unfortunately slavery was always the norm

  • @rixille

    @rixille

    9 ай бұрын

    "Hey you commoner a part of the middle or lower class.. Slavery! Yea.. Feel bad even though "your" empire was dominated by a clique of rich and powerful people who did all of that with or without your consent or that of your ancestors. Give me money!"

  • @jamesroseblad

    @jamesroseblad

    8 ай бұрын

    @@rixillelmao

  • @lks11

    @lks11

    8 ай бұрын

    @@maxtest they abolished it due to it competing with the proletariat that worked factories/artisans that provided goods/services that slaves undermined.

  • @eaglewarrior8707

    @eaglewarrior8707

    8 ай бұрын

    I argue that slavery used for profit or nefarious means is inhumane. While slavery can be a charitable. While slavery has it's ugly side. You cannot just give handouts to people in need. Or everyone in need. Owning a slave is not exactly cheap either. But humans are not the only ones that practice slavery. But we can have a more refined version of it.@@maxtest

  • @richrumble
    @richrumble Жыл бұрын

    Seriously, I appreciate the accuracy of the video. The attention to detail is very good. For instance, the map is updated to reflect Louis XIV's expansion into the Low Countries; Avignon is shown as a papal enclave in pre-Revolutionary France; the British Union of 1707 is shown; the Mosquito Coast settlements are represented, etc.

  • @Yataro79

    @Yataro79

    Жыл бұрын

    That impressed me very much, too.

  • @MrYort13

    @MrYort13

    Жыл бұрын

    It made way to many mistakes and falsehoods. Louisiana was bought by USA 15 million.

  • @MegaMaxiepad

    @MegaMaxiepad

    Жыл бұрын

    I noticed that too. Rarely does one see that degree of accuracy in a youtube video.

  • @ReachingHigher001

    @ReachingHigher001

    Жыл бұрын

    Excellent.

  • @joostprins3381

    @joostprins3381

    Жыл бұрын

    It totally misses the Asian and South American and African internal slavery.

  • @kjron1548
    @kjron1548 Жыл бұрын

    The slavs suffered worse slavery historic events then what was depicted in this break down but still A+. I learned more in 10 mins then I did in my entire life in school about this topic.

  • @agitatorjr

    @agitatorjr

    Жыл бұрын

    They were so often enslaved that the word Slav came to be synonymous with the practice. That's the origin of the modern word slave.

  • @alansharp307

    @alansharp307

    Жыл бұрын

    The term slave is derived from the Slavic people

  • @GhostSal

    @GhostSal

    11 ай бұрын

    Let’s clear up some things about słavery, yes the post is long but for this subject it’s short. Słavery across the globe and throughout time wasn’t because someone had a certain skín color and if those people weren’t there słavery wouldn’t exist. Many people seemingly only want to díscuss North America or put more an emphasis on it saying it was far worse than anywhere else. So let’s clear up some things. we often hear people say 400 years but actually Błack people didn’t become the majority of słaves in Notth America till the mid 1700s. Which lasted until 1865, just over 100 years. Still horrific, still clearly an injustice and críme against humanity but certainly not an isolated event. Before that the majority of słaves in Ameríca were the índigenous tríbes/First Nations people. In fact 400 years really doesn’t even scratch the surface, słavery existed for tens of thousands of years, if not hundreds of thousands. Słaves and índentured servànts were used for labor and/or s3x. Here is the thing about mísconceptions regarding índentured servantš, índentured servànts weren’t always treated better, nor did they always agree to be índentured servànts (that’s right there were iídentured servànts that were forced into servítude, just like słaves). Sometimes they would sell the contract of the índentured servànt to someone else without their consent, thereby extending the contract (so 20 years could become 40). Another thing they would do is førce the wømen to get pregnant, which would also extend their contracts and keep them pregnant till old age (by then owing more years, than they had years of life left and I’ll let you figure out how they førced them to get pregnant). Also, not only were their wíves rap3d but at times their chíldren taken and sold. How about słavery, so many people make arguments it was only horrifíc in Ameríca and that it wasn’t that bad here or there but is that true? Słavery as already mentioned existed for thousands and thousands of years, all across the globe. Chattel słavery did in fact also exist in Afríca and it wasn’t a kinder gentler form of słavery; unless you consider mass human sacrifíce and canníbalísm kinder and gentler. Słavery existed in Afríca well before Eurøpeans showed up and Afrícan rulers fought the Eurøpeans in order to keep it going. In the Middle East the słave market was huge, the słaves brought in were often castràted (so no, that wasn’t a kinder gentler form either). Słavery existed in Asia and Asía is still infamous for having sweatshops. The Vikíngs often raided Eurøpe and took słaves back with them. The wømen they took served the Viking men, both work and s3x. When the słave øwner díed, the wøman he had as a słave would often be gàng ràpéd by the men in the village and kīlled to serve the owner in the afterlife. Ancient Romans brutałły ensłaved other Europeans and people around the Mediterranean. In the Amerícas the Natíves enslaved others Natíves and also had human sacrifíce. The point is słavery was and is horrifíc, all over the world it’s horrifíc and has been for a very very long time (that’s not minimizing it for one group to say that, in fact it’s minimizing everywhere else to not recognize it was horrific all over). How about chattel slavery? Here is the thing, you can’t ensłave descendànts if there aren’t any. The Barbary słaves often had a much shorter lífe span and had no hope of procreatíon. Many díed chaíned in the ínterior of the ship sitting in their own excrèment covered in open wøunds or díed chaíned to a sínking ship that lost a battle. There was no fèmale companíonship, no livíng to an old age, no sunshíne, no høpe … Just the incredibly harsh realitíes of the shíp for the rest of their short míserable líves. In the Middle East the vast majoríty of słaves were castratèd and agian never had the opportuníty to reprøduce. Many of which didn’t even survíve being castrated. Does anyone really think that’s any “better”? Also, this idea many people have that chíldren of słaves were born free across the globe or słaves weren’t sold as property (except in Ameríca) is absurd. When people say that in North Ameríca it was wørse or Eurøpeans have the most to be błamed for (which is said a lot lately), that isn’t intellectually honest and is blatantly ígnoring the atrocitíes commítted around the globe. When people blame only group over everyone else, it is in fact minimizing the atrocitíes everywhere else, and those people are doing precisely what they blame others for doing (i.e., “minimizíng” the atrocitíes of słavery around the world).

  • @KasumiRINA

    @KasumiRINA

    9 ай бұрын

    Specifically, early on Christians didn't enslave other Christians so pagan Slavs and Balts were fair game.... Until they baptized. Later, kripatstvo was effectively a chattel slavery. You literally couldn't change the master and your kids would be enslaved for generations. They traded "souls" in russian empire. Hence Gogol's "Dead Souls" about money laundering on slaves existing only on paper. Most famous Ukrainian poet, Tara's Shevchenko, was born a slave and later became a freeman because he was literally bought by patrons who liked his paintings. Cossack meant a free person, a lot of them were runaway slaves. Soviet collectivisation and persecution effectively re-enslaved people into kolkhozes, even before Gulag system. You had no passport or rights, my grandma was property of the state... in 50s. She just died this year in Ukraine.

  • @stavrosk.2868

    @stavrosk.2868

    9 ай бұрын

    Read some books.

  • @MsTink2
    @MsTink211 ай бұрын

    This blew my mind. Thank you for sharing.

  • @harambe9461
    @harambe946110 ай бұрын

    This needs to be educated more in school. Such an important topic in human history.

  • @daviroza4700

    @daviroza4700

    10 ай бұрын

    Yes Hammurabi a Mesopotamian king started slavery

  • @estrafalario5612

    @estrafalario5612

    2 ай бұрын

    ​@@daviroza4700he didn't started it. His code is the first preserved to our knowledge and that's the reason it is the first to have laws on slavery, because we don't have previous written laws. But archeology shows that most probably there were slaves before, as soon as there was the possibility of using slaves to create "surplus". For the hunter gatherers it doesn't make sense to have another mouth to feed

  • @twotrucks5263
    @twotrucks5263 Жыл бұрын

    It should be mentioned that the Mamluks did also secure a lot of their mamluks from Central Asia. The ruling classes were either Turkic (Bahri) or Circassian (Burji) depending on the era

  • @Uahmedtahaalnady

    @Uahmedtahaalnady

    Жыл бұрын

    in gulf state .. there's a disguised law for slavery called the sponsorship (Kafala) laws ... they offer several legalized slaves to every rich man (Kafeel=sponsor) .. he could do whatever he want to them even making them work again for others & get what they gain ... with the least & worst living & working conditions (they literally buying glucose powder to survive rather than eating food)

  • @SoberOKMoments
    @SoberOKMoments Жыл бұрын

    A fascinating history. And well done on showing today's slave numbers which so many remain ignorant about.

  • @mr.takethingstooseriously

    @mr.takethingstooseriously

    9 ай бұрын

    Including a lot of conservatives. They want to justify their actions

  • @panzerofthelake506

    @panzerofthelake506

    6 ай бұрын

    ​@@mr.takethingstooseriously"if you're right about history, your just being racist" We do not regard politics and feelings when talking about facts. Facts are facts, and they don't care about politics.

  • @singlechickprepping5013

    @singlechickprepping5013

    4 ай бұрын

    They totally miss slavery within arabs lands and china even today

  • @theharshtruthoutthere

    @theharshtruthoutthere

    3 ай бұрын

    @@panzerofthelake506 Mankind is still in the slavery: you are a salve too, to this very day, why do you sound of not know? in childhood you attend to school, where you shall spend up to 8h of your life. Soon you`re adult, serving BAAL from 9 - 5. And you`re home in your tiny box, consuming all these items the prison for your mind produce. Now tell me dear soul, ain`t that also being a slave? cause to my eyes, still unnoticed, where`s the life worthy to be living? The signs and symbols rule the world, yet we complain about the laws. We reject all the opportunity to seek out the truth, to break free from being in the hated slavery. We cry about the past, not getting it that its the present in which we live in. Now, can`t you still not agree, we to be a perfectly obeying BAAL in our daily slavery. Mankind`s destiny is lake of fire if we don´t come to repentance and born again. Mankind wants freedom, then step out from BABYLON, repent form your sins and born again.

  • @KToll5784

    @KToll5784

    2 ай бұрын

    @@mr.takethingstooseriouslyjustify what actions?

  • @TheAzmountaineer
    @TheAzmountaineer Жыл бұрын

    Pretty good video. To cover the subject thoroughly, it would probably take hours of video or a whole series of thick books.

  • @ishrendon6435
    @ishrendon64357 ай бұрын

    Slavery is something much like war and rape We will never get rid of. But we have immensely decreased it. Its as old as humanity. People have been enslaving defeated opponents or innocent people for thousands and thousands of years. In my country in congo we have many work slaves sadly

  • @lowellfinn
    @lowellfinn Жыл бұрын

    Cant believe my eyes when this is a video not just shorts. Luv ur videos so much. Huge fan!

  • @asteroidfox3390
    @asteroidfox3390 Жыл бұрын

    As a Nubian from Northern Sudan, thanks for pointing out the baqt conditions, failure to meet the required number of slaves is what brought down Makuria.

  • @mugikuyu9403

    @mugikuyu9403

    Жыл бұрын

    Are you a Muslim? And how do you feel about the arabisation/Islamisation of your country?

  • @EyeSeeThruYou

    @EyeSeeThruYou

    Жыл бұрын

    I was curious about how the people who would be sent as slaves were obtained/selected?

  • @donnie27brasco

    @donnie27brasco

    Жыл бұрын

    ​@@mugikuyu9403 (Are you a Muslim? And how do you feel about the arabisation/Islamisation of your country?) Northern Sudan is a natural mix between Arab immigrants and the natives, for centuries, besides, with the "Arabisation", they learned the Lingua Franca of the old world, and with "Islamisation", they saved themselves from moral degradation, human sacrifices, tribal class categorizaton, and even from slavery by their own people, not to mention that they (unlike other Africans) always get easy profitable jobs in other Arab countries, because they know the language, the culture, and because Arabs see each one of them and treats them like one of their own. Look how NON Arabised, NON Islamised Southern Sudan are living now, despite their huge natural resources.. oh, by the way, how do you feel about the ENGLIZINATION and Christianization of Southern Sudan? Why English is THE Official country language there?, are there large English immigrants-settlements there?, and what happened to the original authentic African tribal religious believes there? And, how you feel about the Black slaves being enslaved by BLACK EMPERORS, KINGS, PRINCES, and then sold to Arabs, Berber, Europeans, and even the other Black empires for centuries?. Also, how you feel about the imperialistic Ethiopian invasion and colonization of the South Western Arabia, murdering countless number of people, and stealing recourse, for centuries?.

  • @user-cq7ec7zf3g

    @user-cq7ec7zf3g

    Жыл бұрын

    @@donnie27brasco Couldn't say it better

  • @Uahmedtahaalnady

    @Uahmedtahaalnady

    Жыл бұрын

    in gulf state .. there's a disguised law for slavery called the sponsorship (Kafala) laws ... they offer several legalized slaves to every rich man (Kafeel=sponsor) .. he could do whatever he want to them even making them work again for others & get what they gain ... with the least & worst living & working conditions (they literally buying glucose powder to survive rather than eating food)

  • @brndnwilks
    @brndnwilks Жыл бұрын

    Great video! Really well done. I would have liked to have seen a little more history in Asia before the 20th century but still a lot of ground covered!

  • @freethesheepn7400
    @freethesheepn74002 ай бұрын

    “No archeological evidence of an exodus of Hebrews from Egypt.” That is very much not the case. I recommend Inspiringphilosophys content on this topic.

  • @stevenshoemaker8326

    @stevenshoemaker8326

    2 ай бұрын

    Is he a Jewish creator? That small hat tribe lies too much to be believed

  • @ignacio1171
    @ignacio1171 Жыл бұрын

    Would have been nice to learn about the slave trade of the far east as well. Interesting and informative video!

  • @amitmeena2961

    @amitmeena2961

    Жыл бұрын

    If he had info on it I'm sure he would have added it

  • @mazachek

    @mazachek

    Жыл бұрын

    Second this

  • @yaelz6043

    @yaelz6043

    Жыл бұрын

    There isn't a lot to mention. The only slavery east of poland was in central Asia and Japan. Iran, Russia and China didn't have any and didn't allow their vassals any either.

  • @kastraskammer5710

    @kastraskammer5710

    Жыл бұрын

    @@amitmeena2961 I mean just spend 20 seconds to google and you can find a lot of info on it. It would have just doubled or tripled the videos length

  • @amitmeena2961

    @amitmeena2961

    Жыл бұрын

    @@kastraskammer5710 Really? Google? You think this guy spends months to prepare the script, narrate and animate it just to sweep it off the first page of the good ol reliable mighty corporation of Google? What do they teach you in school? Ever heard about professionals and experts spending their life to write and publish research papers on various topics? Ever heard about getting your info approved from multiple reliable sources? From reputable colleges and their expert teachers? This Google generation is going to get us all killed one day.

  • @chigeryelam4061
    @chigeryelam4061 Жыл бұрын

    This was well done. We don't need to be talked down to like little children the bare facts say so much more. Horrific that this not only still happens but is getting worse.

  • @wyz9815

    @wyz9815

    Жыл бұрын

    This KZreadr not only biased by downplaying the bloody slavery in US, but also mixed up different concepts of slavery, like forced slavery and debt or contracted bases "slavery". China ended its slavery around 220 BC, the periods of slavery after that were periods ruled by normades from the North, like Mongles in Yuan and Manchu in Qing dynesty, and Chinese, mostly Han were the slaves. The history should be based on facts not lies! So called Xinjiang forced labour, is not only the mass projection of US on to China, a shameless lie, basically a WMD and Nayirah incubator story 2.0, also a mentally retarded one that can be debunked by common logical sense. Western people are taught critical thinking in school, but sad is that they through these skills down the drain and become a reciting machine of the US/Western propapanda rethoric.

  • @datofficial6062

    @datofficial6062

    Жыл бұрын

    @@wyz9815 yeah this misses soooo much information that the video is almost a lie.... almost.

  • @GhostSal

    @GhostSal

    Жыл бұрын

    @@datofficial6062 American education on the subject of słavery is abysmal and leaves out way too much. Słavery throughout the globe wasn’t because someone has a certain skín color and if those people weren’t there słavery wouldn’t exist. Some people say North America was the worst and we always hear 400 years, so let’s talk about that. Błack people didn’t become the majority of słaves in Notth America till the mid 1700s. Which lasted until 1865, just over 100 years. That’s stíll horrifíc, still a críme against humaníty but słavery has been going on for a very very long time. Before that the majority of słaves were the índigenous tríbes/First Nations people. Let’s clear some things up about słavery, słavery existed for tens of thousands of years, if not hundreds of thousands. Słaves and índentured servànts were used for labor and/or s3x. Here is the thing, índentured servànts weren’t always treated better, nor did they always agree to be índentured servànts (that’s right there were iídentured servànts that were forced into servítude, just like słaves). Sometimes they would sell the contract of the índentured servànt to someone else without their consent, thereby extending the contract (so 20 years could become 40). Another thing they would do is førce the wømen to get pregnant, which would also extend their contracts and keep them pregnant till old age (by then owing more years, than they had years of life left and I’ll let you figure out how they førced them to get pregnant). How about słavery? Słavery as already mentioned existed for thousands and thousands of years, all across the globe. Chattel słavery did in fact also exist in Afríca and it wasn’t a kinder gentler form of słavery; unless you consider mass human sacrifíce and canníbalísm kinder and gentler. Słavery existed in Afríca well before Eurøpeans showed up and Afrícan rulers fought the Eurøpeans in order to keep it going. In the Middle East the słave market was huge, the słaves brought in were often castràted (so no, that wasn’t a kinder gentler form either). Słavery existed in Asia and is still infamous for having sweatshops. The Vikíngs often raided Eurøpe and took słaves back with them. The wømen they took served the Viking men, both work and s3x. When the słave øwner díed, the wøman he had as a słave would often be gàng ràpéd by the men in the village and kīlled to serve the owner in the afterlife. Ancient Romans ensłaved other Europeans and people around the Mediterranean. In the Amerícas the Natíves enslaved others Natíves. Słavery was and is horrifíc, all over the world it’s horrifíc. How about chattel slavery? Here is the thing, you can’t ensłave descendànts if there aren’t any. The Barbary słaves often had a much shorter lífe span and had no hope of procreatíon. They díed chaíned in the ínterior of the ship sitting in their own excrèment covered in open wøunds or díed chaíned to a sínking ship that lost a battle. There was no fèmale companíonship, no livíng to an old age, no sunshíne, no høpe … Just the incredibly harsh realitíes of the shíp for the rest of their short míserable líves. In the Middle East the vast majoríty of słaves were castratèd and agian never had the opportuníty to reprøduce. Many of which didn’t even survíve being castrated. Does anyone really think that’s any “better”? Also, this idea that chíldren of słaves were born free across the globe or słaves weren’t sold as property (except in Ameríca) is absurd. When people say that in North Ameríca it was wørse or Eurøpeans have the most to be błamed for (which is said a lot lately), that isn’t intellectually honest and is blatantly ígnoring the atrocitíes commítted around the globe. When people blame only group over everyone else, it is in fact minimizing the atrocitíes everywhere else, and they are doing precisely what they blame others for (i.e., minimizíng the atrocitíes of słavery).

  • @Yourebeautyfull

    @Yourebeautyfull

    Жыл бұрын

    @@wyz9815 Read some history.

  • @TheMugwump1

    @TheMugwump1

    Жыл бұрын

    @@wyz9815 is a bot. China enslaves/reeducates/eliminates entire populations that don't agree with the CCP agenda. The Mongols last decade. Now the Uighur. CCP Let it rot.

  • @alexrobbins4566
    @alexrobbins4566 Жыл бұрын

    This had me thinking about the different types of labor that slaver were subjected to and how it affects the populations today, and how we observe slavery different. For example most of America thinks of slavery as "picking cotton/farming", but it was very different all around the world.

  • @thecollierreport
    @thecollierreport2 ай бұрын

    Great presentation overall but I wish there was as much detail on slavery before 1600 as after. Slavery still continues in many forms.

  • @romancandlefight1144
    @romancandlefight1144 Жыл бұрын

    This is also missing the enslavement of native Americans by other native Americans, China having the largest slavery market in history, etc

  • @blackloki9

    @blackloki9

    3 ай бұрын

    It also ignore the transpacific trade of asians to the america which happen before the trans atlantic slave trade and how they reclassified many of those people as native. Indian was used to describe many groups.

  • @Bister_Mungle

    @Bister_Mungle

    3 ай бұрын

    ​​@@blackloki9Lemme guess, you think all Native Americans are Asian and everyone else is African.

  • @YukiPyro

    @YukiPyro

    2 ай бұрын

    ​@@blackloki9 Indian wasn't used to describe everyone. It was used to describe Native Americans. Now the term Indian in the US could mean Native American or those with family from India. Chinese people don't look like Native Americans. The world doesn't evolve around China...

  • @Saufs0ldat

    @Saufs0ldat

    21 күн бұрын

    @@blackloki9 Slaves were transported across the Atlantic to America before any human had even crossed the Pacific ocean (except possibly Polynesians).

  • @suntzu8499
    @suntzu8499 Жыл бұрын

    "an EMPTY BROWSER HISTORY TELLS a lot more than a full one" -Sun zu

  • @majaaaaya

    @majaaaaya

    Жыл бұрын

    Sun zu-ckerberg

  • @gebali

    @gebali

    Жыл бұрын

    "Many quotes on the internet are false" - Genghis Khan

  • @notfunny007

    @notfunny007

    Жыл бұрын

    "Wtf I didn't say that lol" - Sun Tzu

  • @lukaslee7380

    @lukaslee7380

    Жыл бұрын

    "Bro stop quoting me, I didn't say that shit" -Sun Zu

  • @pressftopayrespects6325

    @pressftopayrespects6325

    Жыл бұрын

    “Please don’t misquote my brother” - Moon Tzu, the Art of Peace

  • @richardmills6669
    @richardmills6669 Жыл бұрын

    Great video. Could have used more on the North American and South American native slave systems. They weren’t mentioned at all yet, specifically the Haida and Aztecs

  • @0giwan
    @0giwan2 ай бұрын

    The only omission I see is that there is no mention of the efforts of the American and Royal Navy squadrons to interdict the slave trade.

  • @sirpuss5887

    @sirpuss5887

    Ай бұрын

    They never will.

  • @ruckizucki3358
    @ruckizucki3358 Жыл бұрын

    Excellent video, it puts a lot of history in a different light.

  • @lesussie2237
    @lesussie2237 Жыл бұрын

    Amazed to see someone explain about slavery beyond the 1800s The term slave and slavery is now gone, but the practice still exists, just with different names

  • @kellydardeen6308

    @kellydardeen6308

    Жыл бұрын

    Sorry But NO Slavery is Not Gone !

  • @lesussie2237

    @lesussie2237

    Жыл бұрын

    @@kellydardeen6308 exactly

  • @Uahmedtahaalnady

    @Uahmedtahaalnady

    Жыл бұрын

    in gulf state .. there's a disguised law for slavery called the sponsorship (Kafala) laws ... they offer several legalized slaves to every rich man (Kafeel=sponsor) .. he could do whatever he want to them even making them work again for others & get what they gain ... with the least & worst living & working conditions (they literally buying glucose powder to survive rather than eating food)

  • @Liam-2345
    @Liam-23455 ай бұрын

    Many comments trying to add their piece as know it alls, whilst still congratulating you for the video..👍 I call that a win in todays internet.

  • @philipdawes2661
    @philipdawes2661 Жыл бұрын

    Nice presentation, thank you. A couple of pieces missing, in my view:- 1) Serfdom (and it's equivalents, 'untouchables' etc) which is a form of slavery 2) Internal slavery - espcially china and within africa. (Uigars excepted). Slave 'culturally external trade' is covered but not 'within cultures'.

  • @vadimshishev9304
    @vadimshishev9304 Жыл бұрын

    Thank you for an informative video on such a topic! Looked at a new angle at labor relations. Astonishing that slavery is thousands of years old, and is still present in modern world.

  • @31husnucoban
    @31husnucoban Жыл бұрын

    By the late 19th century, when much of Islamic Central Asia was conquered by the Russian Empire, the region was home to tens of thousands of slaves. Most of these slaves were Shiʿa Muslims from northern Iran, though the slave trade also ensnared many Russians, Armenians, Kalmyks, and others. Slave labor was especially commonplace in the Sunni Muslim domains of Khwarazm and Bukhara, where enslaved people constituted a substantial proportion of all agricultural workers, domestic servants, and soldiers. Slaves also labored in many other roles, and an individual slave could be tasked with a variety of jobs. Slaves served, for example, as concubines, craftsmen, miners, herdsmen, entertainers, blacksmiths, calligraphers, and even, in rare instances, as government officials. Before the 16th century, the majority of the slaves in Central Asia-defined here as the region extending from the eastern shores of the Caspian Sea through Xinjiang, China, and from southern Siberia to northern Iran-seem to have been trafficked to the region from India. This changed in the 16th and 17th centuries, as a significant number of Iranian war-captives were brought north and enslaved during the course of numerous armed conflicts between the Central Asian Uzbeks and Iranian Safavids. Many of these slaves evidently labored on the region’s rapidly expanding agricultural estates. In the 18th and 19th centuries, frequent Turkmen raids into northern Iran resulted in tens of thousands of Iranian Shiʿas being captured and funneled into a booming slave trade in Khwarazm and Bukhara. Further north, a much smaller number of Russians were seized and sold into slavery by Kazakh nomads along the steppe frontier. Eden, J. Slavery in Islamic Central Asia. Oxford Research Encyclopedia of Asian History.

  • @warrenkensington6091

    @warrenkensington6091

    Жыл бұрын

    Islam is evil

  • @ezrathegreatconqueror

    @ezrathegreatconqueror

    Жыл бұрын

    Sovietization of Central Asia was a great thing

  • @the3zoooz1

    @the3zoooz1

    Жыл бұрын

    @@ezrathegreatconqueror millions died because of that

  • @pressftopayrespects6325

    @pressftopayrespects6325

    Жыл бұрын

    Many Europeans who settled slave owner lands got enslaved? Who could’ve seen this coming?

  • @noaccount4

    @noaccount4

    Жыл бұрын

    @@pressftopayrespects6325 are you sure you read the same passage? Husnu Coban is talking about the great steppe raiders and their slaving expeditions, which didn't have anything to do with European settler-colonialism. The Russians are guilty of many things but being raided is hardly one of them; they had lived under the Tartar yoke since the Mongols struck west and formed just one source of slaves for the steppe nomads. Kalmyks, Armenians, Iranians, Indians and Chinese slaves were not even European ._.

  • @OneAngrehCat
    @OneAngrehCat2 ай бұрын

    Fails to mention that the islamic world has been not only the biggest user of slavery, its most brutal enforcer (castration, massacres) and is still using it today, both sexual and for work. That's the most important information about slavery.

  • @thecurious926
    @thecurious926Ай бұрын

    Love this format!

  • @propaganja7264
    @propaganja7264 Жыл бұрын

    Gotta respect a channel like this! More details the better

  • @Draco2199
    @Draco2199 Жыл бұрын

    Fascinating stuff. A lot of this I had no idea. Excellent work.

  • @richardlanahan8089

    @richardlanahan8089

    Жыл бұрын

    amazing to see that 300,000 Africans were brought to Brazil before one slave landed in what was to become the continental US. Of the 10,000,000 plus that made it to the Americas less than 400,000 were enslaved in the colonies or the states. Doing the 5th grade arithmetic that is less than 4%.

  • @nilsarivera420
    @nilsarivera420 Жыл бұрын

    Thank you for providing this information. It is possible to cite some of your sources for additional research? I bet it took a long time to research this comprehensive video so I think it would be valuable to show the amount of work it takes. In addition it would allow views to indulge in additional sources if they wish. Lastly, it would strengthen the validity of the video, which is always great thing to have. Again thank you.

  • @John-jj8zq
    @John-jj8zq14 күн бұрын

    Excellent short video documentary, hopefully it makes people think more about the problem even today.

  • @Yourebeautyfull
    @Yourebeautyfull Жыл бұрын

    I wonder why the fuck they can't teach stuff like this at school. Only took 10 minutes, objective and relevant information, very easy to follow and remember. Teachers should seriously take an example from these kind of videos. Thanks for this quality material!

  • @jarrettpeters6225

    @jarrettpeters6225

    Жыл бұрын

    Teachers don’t care about the kids education they are just looking for a paycheck

  • @HiThereFaceHere

    @HiThereFaceHere

    Жыл бұрын

    Because it doesn't go with their agenda. Which is dumbing down our kids to be able to have a world just like you are seeing in this video

  • @liamsohal-griffiths1094

    @liamsohal-griffiths1094

    Жыл бұрын

    It's because there's a certain orthodox political narrative to maintain in schools (which is not necessarily the teachers' fault). It's not due to lack of time.

  • @sceerane8662

    @sceerane8662

    Жыл бұрын

    @@HiThereFaceHere Schools don't have a worldwide agenda. They teach kids useless things, Because it's easier and looks better statistically. That's it. More kids graduate, Better scores, Better funding and more prestige to attract more funding and students.

  • @HiThereFaceHere

    @HiThereFaceHere

    Жыл бұрын

    @@sceerane8662 I would agree except way less kids are graduating in this country and in places like the state I live in only 26% of kids are reading at the level they should be and only 21% are are at the math level they should be. That is beyond awful. Our children are being dumbed down to a ridiculous level. A lot of kids in high school don't even know how many moons the earth has. I didn't just make that up either. That is dead serious. And yes there is a socialist agenda being pushed I literally have proof of it and pulled my son from school because of it and so did a bunch of other parents in the same district

  • @smsr1175
    @smsr1175 Жыл бұрын

    Good video, so sad how something like this can happen

  • @stevaughan3374

    @stevaughan3374

    Жыл бұрын

    Humans have and will always be evil

  • @twomp5613

    @twomp5613

    Жыл бұрын

    Sad but not surprising at all. Farming hard as shit and no one wants to do it

  • @jtgd

    @jtgd

    Жыл бұрын

    Greed and selfishness

  • @user-op8fg3ny3j

    @user-op8fg3ny3j

    Жыл бұрын

    What are you going to do with all those captured combatants then? Back then they didn't have the means for POW camps so it's either execution or let the civilian population keep them in line.

  • @me1sTerweeD

    @me1sTerweeD

    Жыл бұрын

    Well its our human nature. Even though many people call the white men as the enslavers, many facts show us that slavery was part from the very beginning of organized civilization.

  • @adam-k
    @adam-kАй бұрын

    Pretty good but you skipped over a lots of stuff that is not European. Slavery in the Turkey, Saudi Arabia ended in the 1960's. You skipped over slavery in India, hardly mentioned the slavery in Central Asia. Not even mentioned slavery in pre-Columbian Americas.

  • @atheistbushman

    @atheistbushman

    4 күн бұрын

    Yes, and among some African tribes themselves

  • @markharris8323
    @markharris83233 ай бұрын

    That was fascinating. Thank you.

  • @peytonpdx
    @peytonpdx Жыл бұрын

    Very informative. Only minus is the Far East (China, Japan, etc) being left out until the end of the video. Would have liked to know about the origin and development there as well.

  • @aaronTNGDS9

    @aaronTNGDS9

    Жыл бұрын

    In Medieval Japan, Korea, China, slavery was practiced where dominant members enslaved the less dominant. In Korea slavery was officially abolished in 1895, but persisted even up to 1930. Slavery was so beneficial financially and socially to the enslaver that it was hard to sever one's self from its personal benefits.

  • @joelcrow
    @joelcrow Жыл бұрын

    Its surprising how many of these events seemed disconnected before this video. Thank you for the education 🙏 🙌

  • @matimus100

    @matimus100

    Жыл бұрын

    Slave sign 👆👉🙏

  • @Bojan456
    @Bojan4569 ай бұрын

    I love the bangers in the background while learning about history

  • @umNur
    @umNur4 ай бұрын

    I hope you'll make a video that explains how the institution of kingship, monarchies, etc, happened. That is something that boggles my mind.

  • @cbody70
    @cbody70 Жыл бұрын

    A informative overview of the topic. Thanks for posting.

  • @PawsitiveEV
    @PawsitiveEV Жыл бұрын

    Awesome perspectives! It's such an emotionally charged topic... nice work!

  • @Uahmedtahaalnady

    @Uahmedtahaalnady

    Жыл бұрын

    in gulf state .. there's a disguised law for slavery called the sponsorship (Kafala) laws ... they offer several legalized slaves to every rich man (Kafeel=sponsor) .. he could do whatever he want to them even making them work again for others & get what they gain ... with the least & worst living & working conditions (they literally buying glucose powder to survive rather than eating food)

  • @Triqkyp-zz3vk
    @Triqkyp-zz3vk6 ай бұрын

    This helped me a lot with my test! Tysm!

  • @oblivion5390
    @oblivion53907 ай бұрын

    "in total, women represent about 70% of the world's slaves." me: dancing to the sick beats

  • @Admirel2
    @Admirel2 Жыл бұрын

    Wish you would’ve talked about slavery in the new world before the arrival of Europeans, the Aztecs were particularly brutal, and when the Spanish came these slaves changed hands from the Aztecs to Spain, forming the basis of the caste system in new spain

  • @chillphil967

    @chillphil967

    4 ай бұрын

    interesting. i’ll have to read into this

  • @flashback4588

    @flashback4588

    2 ай бұрын

    Calling it "brutal" is misleading Slavery in the aztec empire was more of a punishment or penalty because they did not have a prison system Only violent criminals were enslaved for life and could be sold in markets Once a slave payed off their debts they were usually freed especially if were hard workers and were on their best behavior

  • @Admirel2

    @Admirel2

    2 ай бұрын

    I think you're missing the part where they sacrificed people @@flashback4588

  • @hddragon

    @hddragon

    2 ай бұрын

    ​@@flashback4588I don't know... sacrificing millions of captured slaves by ripping out their heart while still alive seems brutal to me.

  • @YukiPyro

    @YukiPyro

    2 ай бұрын

    ​@@flashback4588Calling it brutal is exactly what it was. You know many Native tribes skinned the head of their victims. It wasn't all roses..

  • @MrKoalaAviation
    @MrKoalaAviation Жыл бұрын

    a lot of history here

  • @IloveMilfs2003

    @IloveMilfs2003

    Жыл бұрын

    Better than a boring teacher to explain it for ya

  • @Yass3938

    @Yass3938

    Жыл бұрын

    Yeah

  • @Anonymous--

    @Anonymous--

    Жыл бұрын

    Yea

  • @Caninocalveira
    @Caninocalveira10 ай бұрын

    What do you recommend for further reading?

  • @blackadder564
    @blackadder564Ай бұрын

    Haiti wasn't declared a republic. It was an Empire and Jean-Jacques Dessalines I was its Emperor.

  • @RG_Budy
    @RG_Budy Жыл бұрын

    Great video, very informative, please continue making such content, youtubers like you should have millions of subs! Keep up and never stop king

  • @cjay2

    @cjay2

    Жыл бұрын

    The voice-over is ARTIFICIAL. It's NOT a real human being. Just saying.

  • @GhostSal

    @GhostSal

    Жыл бұрын

    The video left out a lot, a real lot. Basically the whole world had słavery for tens of thousands of years, if not hundreds of thousands. Let’s clear up some misconceptions too many people believe: Słavery wasn’t because someone has a certain skín color and if those people weren’t there słavery wouldn’t exist. Błack people didn’t become the majority of słaves in Notth America till the mid 1700s. Which lasted until 1865, just over 100 years. Before that the majority of słaves were the índigenous tríbes/First Nations people. Let’s clear some things up about słavery, słavery existed for tens of thousands of years, if not hundreds of thousands. Słaves and índentured servànts were used for labor and/or s3x. Here is the thing, índentured servànts weren’t always treated better, nor did they always agree to be índentured servànts (that’s right there were iídentured servànts that were forced into servítude, just like słaves). Sometimes they would sell the contract of the índentured servànt to someone else without their consent, thereby extending the contract (so 20 years could become 40). Another thing they would do is førce the wømen to get pregnant, which would also extend their contracts and keep them pregnant till old age (by then owing more years, than they had years of life left and I’ll let you figure out how they førced them to get pregnant). How about słavery? Słavery as already mentioned existed for thousands and thousands of years, all across the globe. Chattel słavery did in fact also exist in Afríca and it wasn’t a kinder gentler form of słavery; unless you consider mass human sacrifíce and canníbalísm kinder and gentler. It existed in Afríca well before Eurøpeans showed up and Afrícan rulers fought the Eurøpeans in order to keep it going. In the Middle East the słave market was huge, the słaves brought in were often castràted (so no, that wasn’t a kinder gentler form either). It existed in Asia as well, where even today sweatshops still exist. The Vikíngs often raided Eurøpe and took słaves back with them. The wømen they took served the Viking men, both work and s3x. When the słave øwner díed, the wøman he had as a słave would often be gàng ràpéd by the men in the village and kīlled to serve the owner in the afterlife. Słavery was and is horrifíc, all over the world it’s horrifíc. How about chattel slavery? Here is the thing, you can’t ensłave descendànts if there aren’t any. The Barbary słaves often had a much shorter lífe span and had no hope of procreatíon. They díed chaíned in the ínterior of the ship sitting in their own excrèment covered in open wøunds or díed chaíned to a sínking ship that lost a battle. There was no fèmale companíonship, no livíng to an old age, no sunshíne, no høpe … Just the incredibly harsh realitíes of the shíp for the rest of their short míserable líves. In the Middle East the vast majoríty of słaves were castratèd and agian never had the opportuníty to reprøduce. Many of which didn’t even survíve being castrated. Does anyone really think that’s any “better”? Also, this idea that chíldren of słaves were born free across the globe or słaves weren’t sold as property (except in Ameríca) is absurd. To say in North Ameríca it was wørse or Eurøpeans have the most to be błamed for, isn’t intellectually honest and is blatantly ígnoring the atrocitíes commítted around the globe.

  • @sgb4798

    @sgb4798

    Жыл бұрын

    @@cjay2 i’m pretty sure it is a real person. He just has a somewhat monotone voice

  • @dominiorrr6510
    @dominiorrr6510 Жыл бұрын

    Great video, but I wish that some of the famous slave uprisings had more time given to them. Some of them weren't even mentioned, like the Spartacus uprising. I especially love this one because of the TV show and it's astonishing how many of its crazy parts that seem like fiction are said to be true.

  • @bogdanpopescu1401

    @bogdanpopescu1401

    5 ай бұрын

    most of them weren't mentioned, it's fair to say

  • @rogerwilcoshirley2270
    @rogerwilcoshirley22702 ай бұрын

    excellent high level historical review for better context. Case in point as to how a criminal evil can get established, worsen and spread, and become deeply economically, socially, and politically ingrained. An yet it was stopped because of the courage of those who were repelled by the cruelties and similarly for those who spoke up and put a stop to animal cruelties that were part of the fabric of those hideous days dominated by ignorance, vulgarity, and disregard.

  • @yanngente8981
    @yanngente89816 күн бұрын

    Best non-political video on slavery I've ever seen should be shown in classes, to the point and only facts, thanks.

  • @DailyTrashy
    @DailyTrashy Жыл бұрын

    Wake up guys, Geohistory uploaded.

  • @TheDanMcBending
    @TheDanMcBending Жыл бұрын

    Great video, I do think there was a missed opportunity to discuss how the slave trade actually shaped African kingdoms though. Kongo for example became incredibly rich off of the trade and their entire society warped to support it. When the abolitions happened they basically collapsed as a result. There are really interesting youtube videos on it! A recent one by Kraut: "Why Saudi Arabia is doomed" (ignore the name) was really good.

  • @stuart6478

    @stuart6478

    Жыл бұрын

    you mean africans love slaves? shocking.

  • @willemvanvliet3493

    @willemvanvliet3493

    Жыл бұрын

    When ''Suriname,, is done,..with the Netherlands,..with complaining,..about slavery and waiting for an apology,..speech ect ect,.. and BEGGING money.,..costs NL billions and,...150 years ago they ALSO GO ALONG..???????????????????? AT,.........these countries ????? or will they be kicked out England,..France,..Portugal,..and Spain and USA ???? lazy people that Aruba Bonaire .Curasou ISLANDS PROFITERS thieves mess there.........

  • @lamartinezola8507

    @lamartinezola8507

    Жыл бұрын

    Caucasians trying to change the course of their animalistic and psychopatic behaviour.. too late.. the world just waitng for u to collapse, and u dont wanna to see outcome.. forget about Africa, u know what you did to Indians in America, Indians of India, Jews, Japanese, Chinese, Aboriginals in Australia, Palestinians? it will come out soon. U destroy anything u see on your way to hell. Trust me Jewish did not forget!

  • @barta9342

    @barta9342

    Жыл бұрын

    The focus on the trans Atlantic slavery is strange knowing that slavery is much bigger story in human history , for example the cast system and the Paria etc etc etc

  • @lucasw501

    @lucasw501

    Жыл бұрын

    kraut is such a chad

  • @marinhoizaias
    @marinhoizaias5 ай бұрын

    We normally tend to link slavery and africa, but this video is very educational. Awesome!

  • @CrusaderBooga
    @CrusaderBooga7 ай бұрын

    slavery wasn't built on racism, but free labor.

  • @annalieff-saxby568
    @annalieff-saxby568 Жыл бұрын

    I was very surprised that no mention at all was made of Russian serfdom, which only ended in 1861. However, despite that omission, a fascinating video and very informative.

  • @discoboy8169

    @discoboy8169

    Жыл бұрын

    Well, they were different type, not real slaves taken by force from other contries in majority, "Крепостные" were peasants, but I do agree still like slaves even were sold to other rich bastards in the country. One african slave were taken in war from Turkish who left the town, by Peter I and this slave Hannibal become a general and famous novelty man in Russia, he was grandfather of Pushkin, the Russian famous writer and called some times the first rapper for a joke ) So technically, even black man was able to be freed and become a part of elite in Russia. I could miss some bits, Historians knew better about other nations in Russia who were enslaved due to wars and invasions, never heard about it.

  • @bno6156

    @bno6156

    Жыл бұрын

    @@discoboy8169 “not real slaves” them being taken from another country isn’t what makes them a slave. It’s being owned and not having autonomy.

  • @annalieff-saxby568

    @annalieff-saxby568

    Жыл бұрын

    @@bno6156 Precisely.

  • @mc.girlsthatlgirls

    @mc.girlsthatlgirls

    Жыл бұрын

    U can do a vid

  • @EyeSeeThruYou

    @EyeSeeThruYou

    Жыл бұрын

    There also needs to be a Part 2 where slavery, serfdom, and caste systems in Asia are examined. Part 3 should focus on captivity and slavery in the Americas by cultures prior to contact with non-Americas cultures. That would be quite enlightening to educate people about the real nature of forced, captive labor the world over, and the fact that it has existed for at least 7K years, sadly.

  • @GregplayinRoblox
    @GregplayinRoblox Жыл бұрын

    Amazing video! Keep it up!

  • @LieuweJongsma
    @LieuweJongsma Жыл бұрын

    Great video! You missed Dutch Brasil though. Pretty important as it’s the start of serious Dutch involvement in slave trade.

  • @pwill3958
    @pwill39589 ай бұрын

    From how it was taught to me, yes there was slavery in the old days, maybe even since the beginning of mankind. Although there have been examples of tribes found with no weapons like the Indus Valley civilization, which indicate a peaceful community. The concept of linking slavery to a skin colour is a modern European concept. Backed by the Catholic church. Before that slavery was a form of punishment given to all that broke the law of that time.

  • @michaelriddick7116
    @michaelriddick7116 Жыл бұрын

    The trial over the Zong's lost "cargo" and pursuit of the insurance claim against Lloyd's of London is dramatized in the movie "Belle" :) It's a fantastic movie imo :)

  • @cocoaorange1

    @cocoaorange1

    2 ай бұрын

    I saw it years ago, it was a good movie.

  • @bobmoses4017

    @bobmoses4017

    Ай бұрын

    love belle

  • @schuringleon3207
    @schuringleon3207 Жыл бұрын

    Good to finally have a video on the slavery done by nations throughout the ENTIRE history, not just the Atlantic one. However, you did forget the large amounts of Europeans being enslaved by Arabs

  • @johnschuh8616

    @johnschuh8616

    Жыл бұрын

    Arab slave traders had much to do with cutting off western Europe from the east and producing the Dark Ages. The loss of cheap writing materials from Egypt had much to do with the limitation of literacy in Gaul. Thousands and thousands of old books literally crumbled to dust because they could not be reproduced.

  • @barta9342

    @barta9342

    Жыл бұрын

    Not to mention 6000 years of cast system in Asia . Paria seen as non-humans . Abolished in 1950.

  • @lawtraf8008

    @lawtraf8008

    Жыл бұрын

    I knew from the title of this video that some whites would jump on this with the narrative " you see, slavery happened before our ancestors bla bla" to try to justify the evilness of their ancestors. Nobody believe that slavery didn't exist before America. The thing that wasn't before the transatlantic slave trade of Europeans/white Americans was slavery based on race. Slavery was all over the world, people in debt would be slaves to pay what they owe, war prisoners would be slaves, enemies would made each others slaves etc.... This slavery concept of an entire group of people generation after generation just because of their skin colour was an European/American thing that went on from the 15th to the 19th century (officially), even tho it was still happening at smaller margine after. So all you morons who thought this video was your "gotcha" moment are embarrassing. Also, Slavery that happened 1000, 2000, 5000 wears ago all around the world doesn't matter because it did not have an impact to our recent generation, this recent European/American slavery did. American slavery is very recent, it didn't happen 2000 years ago. You literally have people alive today in our timeline that knew and live with people that were slaves and slave owners so you can try to spin this thing as much as you can, facts will not change. My own father who was born in 1965 lived with his great grandmother that was a slave. My great great grandmother was a slave in her earlier life. She was born in 1883 and died in 1985. And yes, slavery was abolished officially in 1965 but doesn't mean that all slave owners just let their slaves go free at that time. Many didn't. My father lived 20 years with her. 1985 is basically like yesterday. I'm still horrified at the stories he told me about her, all the stories about her life as a slave that she shared with him. White Americans were so evil, I don't even know how to qualify what they used to do to her. So please do not dare to try to downplay American slavery and all the impact it has on millions of American today, do not dare.

  • @porcupineinapettingzoo

    @porcupineinapettingzoo

    Жыл бұрын

    Yeah, large amounts, hundreds per year rather than hundreds per ship he really dropped the ball there!

  • @dvd2030
    @dvd2030 Жыл бұрын

    I really love the fact that you included white slaves too. Youngsters often think all slaves were black, not knowing that it's originally Slavic people, where the word slave comes from. I would maybe add the serfs in Russia, since it's also a form of slavery, where serfs could only be bought if you buy a land. Also love the fact that you included political and economical slaves. Wouldn't it be marvelous if the woke culture would fight to free today slaves instead of fighting for pronounces.

  • @warrenbridges1891

    @warrenbridges1891

    Жыл бұрын

    Denis Domikulic Don't know about Russia, but in Britain, you had the choice to reject serfdom at the risk of being evicted from the owner's land. Not much of a choice I'll admit.

  • @DeWellstein
    @DeWellstein9 ай бұрын

    nice video, but leaves out a huuuuuge amount of history about slavery in Africa before Europeans got there and Asia in general. kind of eurocentric tbf. also keep in mind, some of the first slaves in the americas were actually not from africa but european. Quite often prisoners were taken from the home country to colonies as work force in the new world.

  • @matthewgregg3979
    @matthewgregg3979 Жыл бұрын

    I'm glad he mentioned WW2. A lot of people have never heard of the Gulags in the Soviet Union.

  • @scottanos9981

    @scottanos9981

    Жыл бұрын

    The gulag archipelago is a depressing read

  • @sebastianjoseph9628

    @sebastianjoseph9628

    Жыл бұрын

    The gulags were simply the prison system of the USSR that were inherited from the Russian Empire. Conditions within the Gulags of the USSR have been compared to modern US prisons. Within them, the prisoners were given an 8 hour workday and a 5 day workweek, free healthcare, were paid for the labor, had a 5-10 year max on their sentencing that was shortened by a day every time you went over your quota, given an education, and since the gulags weren’t camps (more of a town with the main prison in the center), the average prisoner could leave whenever they wanted as long as they remained within the town’s boundary. The gulags, of course, were shut down in the 50s as reformative measures were more effective than the punitive ones used in the gulags. Deaths within the gulags were also very limited (with the vast majority taking place during WW2 due to shortages of supplies). Also the prison population was also smaller per capita and less numerous than the modern American one. In case you want to know more, here are my sources: On US Prison statistics & Deaths: www.prisonpolicy.org/blog/2020/02/13/prisondeaths/ Archive Materials on the Number of Prisoners at the End of the 1930s: www.visions.az/en/news/308/05a9e687/ Prisoner Mortality Rate Within Gulags: i.redd.it/84avfq2911w21.jpg Further Reading on the Prisoner Mortality Rate Within Gulags: www.jstor.org/stable/2166597?read-now=1&refreqid=excelsior%3Ac7df89fb86f7cdb22472254937584567&seq=33#page_scan_tab_contents Mortality in State and Federal Prisons, 2001-2016 - Statistical Tables: bjs.ojp.gov/library/publications/mortality-state-and-federal-prisons-2001-2016-statistical-tables I. Deutscher, The Prophet Outcast, pg. 418: books.google.com/books?id=6JfWUSEacRgC&pg=PA4&source=kp_read_button&hl=en&newbks=1&newbks_redir=0&gboemv=1&ovdme=1 Compensation Versus Coercion in the Soviet GULAG: warwick.ac.uk/fac/soc/economics/staff/mharrison/archive/noticeboard/bergson/borodkin-ertz.pdf Medicine in Soviet Gulags: pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/11769741/#:~:text=Gulag%20hospitals%20included%20camp%2C%20regional,among%20former%20and%20current%20prisoners.

  • @yobama8424

    @yobama8424

    Жыл бұрын

    @@sebastianjoseph9628 18 million people went through the gulags and 1.6 million people died in them. That's 9% of all the people that went through them died. That my friend is not a prison but a slave camp. US prisons on the other hand have a mortality rate around 2-3%. So stop talking out of your ass and linking to reddit posts, the gulags were concentration camps and to compare them to US prisons is laughable and delusional.

  • @Imaxxd22

    @Imaxxd22

    Жыл бұрын

    @@sebastianjoseph9628 Oh, finally someone who knows actual history. Only one mark. People were not send to gulag, couse GULAG means General Camp Administration, which was part of justice ministry of USSR, which was administrating prison system.

  • @sebastianjoseph9628

    @sebastianjoseph9628

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Imaxxd22 yeah, I’m still learning about a lot of this stuff. I really like learning about history and the USSR is so full of complexities and I love it

  • @dreamsinthree
    @dreamsinthree Жыл бұрын

    Wow. What a video. I learned so much. And the very end was like a punch to the gut.

  • @eliashe1797
    @eliashe17972 ай бұрын

    Pretty good video, tho its eurocentric, which is sus for a the title and implied 'global' nature given the 'Geo' name. Gives the impression that slavery was a thing in European/western history, not a global phenomenon. Could use a name change to 'history of slavery in western societies' or something like that. Providing some briefs on slavery in pre-Columbian America's, aftrica's internal slaving history, the slave history in South East Asia, and the slavery practices in the oceana regions are all glaring omissions of the history. Tho again, insofar as it goes, eurocentric western history of slavery, good video.

  • @hydorah
    @hydorah2 ай бұрын

    Hello, I intend to make a video about the history of the British Empire can refer to this video and maybe use tiny excerpts of it, please?

  • @tomasmonkey5432
    @tomasmonkey5432 Жыл бұрын

    I’ll use this in my coming exam about the Neolithic era and the classical era. Super nice video, good presentation and topics being on points. Love to see it 💪

  • @johnschuh8616

    @johnschuh8616

    Жыл бұрын

    Except that aside about the Israelites in Egypt. That really is just the opinion of Egyptologists and secular Jews who have stopped “digging” for an answer to the question.

  • @TheGundeck
    @TheGundeck Жыл бұрын

    Very informative. It's rare to see a historical account of slavery that isn't pushing a political agenda. Very well put together and presented. Everyone should watch this.

  • @Bonhh

    @Bonhh

    Жыл бұрын

    sadly i think he is, at the beginning he says theres no evidence for the hebrew slaves or the exodus, however we found the chariots and horses right there at the bottom of the sea, where we expected them to be. Christian or not, you cant just ignore 1000's of pieces of evidence all in one place.

  • @skurinski

    @skurinski

    Жыл бұрын

    but it is cause it doesnt talk about slavery in Africa before the arabs arrive, and doesnt mention slavery in Asia until the modern times

  • @barta9342

    @barta9342

    Жыл бұрын

    Durban pact 2001 UN , excuses and repair/payments demanded for trans-Atlantic slavery.

  • @highroller-jq3ix

    @highroller-jq3ix

    Жыл бұрын

    The political agenda of human rights? What's wrong with that political agenda?

  • @highroller-jq3ix

    @highroller-jq3ix

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Bonhh Yes, the bottom-of-the-sea horses. Staggeringly convincing. Your silly reference to non-archaelogy doesn't actually prove biblical fiction.

  • @nigralurker
    @nigralurker9 ай бұрын

    In America, we're only taught about the Atlantic-African Slave Trade as if it was the first and only time slavery existed.

  • @rehawi2001

    @rehawi2001

    9 ай бұрын

    No it was the worst in all history, in other nations slaves are considered as a family member

  • @epinoke4168

    @epinoke4168

    9 ай бұрын

    @@rehawi2001 The castration of African slaves by the Arabs The Castration was performed without anesthesia, more than 60% do not survive the procedure and were left for dead, bleeding to death.

  • @nigralurker

    @nigralurker

    9 ай бұрын

    @@rehawi2001 They were not considered family. Not sure what you were smoking.

  • @Marinealver
    @Marinealver Жыл бұрын

    You forgot the Americas which many tribes had slaves before Columbus. Also China and India had eunuchs. So an incomplete picture focusing only on Africa.

  • @jimdoherty4108
    @jimdoherty4108 Жыл бұрын

    Extremely informative and very, very depressing. Thank you for making this.

  • @johnv5827

    @johnv5827

    Жыл бұрын

    Especially when you realize that theirs more slaves alive now than ever in history and that's not even including most of the prison labor systems in the western nations because they don't fit certain criteria.

  • @Uahmedtahaalnady

    @Uahmedtahaalnady

    Жыл бұрын

    in gulf state .. there's a disguised law for slavery called the sponsorship (Kafala) laws ... they offer several legalized slaves to every rich man (Kafeel=sponsor) .. he could do whatever he want to them even making them work again for others & get what they gain ... with the least & worst living & working conditions (they literally buying glucose powder to survive rather than eating food)

  • @OsamasStory
    @OsamasStory Жыл бұрын

    18:50 I’m really happy because the kafala system was mentioned as well. 😢

  • @ljsong1
    @ljsong111 ай бұрын

    This is fantastic. It is exactly what I've been looking for for stats and descriptions of past and modern slavery. So awesome. Well done! Much thanks!

  • @sanna8593
    @sanna85933 ай бұрын

    As a woman I'm reminded about how happy I am to live a free life, so sad for the countless others who couldn't and can't. Seriously, this video put things into perspective for me. Thank you!