Trans-Atlantic Slave Trade DatabaseThe data set contains thousands of names of ship owners and ship captains, but it contains no names of the millions of slaves carried to the Americas. On the other hand, this web site does provide the African names of and personal information about 67,004 captives who were found on board slave vessels detained by naval cruisers attempting to suppress the slave trade in the nineteenth century. These people can be searched and analyzed using the names interface.
Although of limited utility for persons seeking their own family histories, our data set does provide an extraordinary source for historical reconstruction of the history of the African peoples in America. The details of the 34,941 voyages presented here greatly facilitate the study of cultural, demographic, and economic change in the Atlantic world from the late sixteenth to the mid-nineteenth centuries. Trends and cycles in the flow of African captives from specific coastal outlets should provide scholars with new, basic information useful in examining the relationships among slaving, warfare—in both Africa and Europe—political instability, and climatic and ecological change, among other forces. The data set in its earlier manifestations has already provided new impetus to assessments of the volume and demographic structure of the trans-Atlantic slave trade, and, when the African Names Database is properly interpreted, it will contribute as well to our understanding of slaving routes from the African interior to the coast.
For European societies located on either side of the Atlantic, the data set contains new information on ship construction and registration and relatively extensive records of owners’ and captains’ names. It will now be easier to pursue connections between the slave trade and other sectors of European and American economies. Researchers should be able to unravel trends in long-distance shipping activities, particularly important because no comparable body of data exists for other transoceanic trades. Data on crew mortality are abundant. The implications for new assessments of the social as well as the economic role of the slave trade in the regions where the slave voyage originated are obvious. In short, the major aim of this Emory supported Voyages web resource is to facilitate and stimulate new research on the slave trade, the implications of which reach far beyond the slave trade itself.