Sails and shadows
how the Portuguese opened the Atlantic and launched the slave trade
- ISBN: 9780520415874
- Editorial: University of California Press
- Fecha de la edición: 2026
- Lugar de la edición: Berkeley (CA). Estados Unidos de Norteamérica
- Encuadernación: Cartoné
- Medidas: 24 cm
- Nº Pág.: 256
- Idiomas: Inglés
How the early Portuguese Empire facilitated the modern slave trade.
The Portuguese conquered the challenges of sailing the unforgiving Atlantic Ocean, extending their colonial empire along Africa's western shores. With their dedication to developing new sailing techniques and groundbreaking new knowledge of weather patterns and ocean currents, Portuguese mariners set the tone for the Age of Exploration. But their navigational achievements had horrific consequences for the people of western Africa: subjection to the slave trade.
Patricia Seed examines the historical and climatic odds that Portuguese seafarers overcame to be the first Europeans to tame the Atlantic. Using insights from fields ranging from oceanography to ethnography, she recounts how the Portuguese rapidly innovated and achieved profound new understandings of the ocean and sailing. At the same time, she foregrounds the reality that these innovations enabled them to inflict unimaginable cruelty as, against sometimes violent resistance, they forged what became their spoils of empire: the lucrative trade in human cargo that enslaved millions across Africa and beyond. Sails and Shadows is a history of incredible ingenuity outweighed and overshadowed by the horrors it wrought.
Nature intervenes
Around the Bulge : Bojador, 1434
From mistaken expectations to conquest : the Sahara, 1434-1444
How trading replaced conquest, 1444-1460
Language : how slave interpreters established trade
A Painted ship upon a Painted Ocean, 1460-1470
Gold at Last : the Route to Mina, 1470-1480
A Star to steer her by
The deepest river and the oldest desert, 1480-1486
A first glimpse of the Indian Ocean, 1486-1488
Crisscrossing the Atlantic, 1497
Encounters along the African Coast and in India
A dreadful mistake : the return from India
The salty tears of the Atlantic

