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the nearly 300,000 africans brought to the mainland colonies during the eighteenth century were not a single people. what was the one thing that the africans who were shipped to the new world held in common?

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Final answer:

The one thing that the Africans who were shipped to the New World held in common was their status as enslaved people.

Step-by-step explanation:

The one thing that the Africans who were shipped to the New World held in common was their status as enslaved people. They were captured from different regions in Africa and brought to the mainland colonies as slaves. Their experiences and backgrounds varied, but they all shared the experience of being forcibly taken from their homeland and subjected to brutal slave societies in the New World.

answered
User Fergal Rooney
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Final answer:

The one thing that the Africans who were shipped to the New World held in common was their enslavement.

Step-by-step explanation:

The one thing that the Africans who were shipped to the New World held in common was their enslavement.

Once sold to traders, all captured people sent to America endured the hellish Middle Passage, the transatlantic crossing, which took one to two months. When they reached their destination in America, Africans found themselves trapped in shockingly brutal slave societies. They faced a lifetime of harvesting and processing cash crops like tobacco. The English crown's monopoly on the transport of enslaved African people to the English colonies further solidified the institution of slavery.

Despite their diverse ethnic backgrounds, cultures, and languages, the enslaved Africans shared the experience of being forcibly removed from their homeland, sold as property, and subjected to a life of servitude and oppression in the New World.

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User Lumumba
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