@lowvbddor3: #geschichte #LearnOnTikTok #deuschland

lowvbddor3
lowvbddor3
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Monday 27 October 2025 19:05:48 GMT
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andreasehret4
AndreasEhret83 :
Es gibt genug Menschen die so sind. Will nichz wissen wieviele Leute die Buchse nur wechseln. ich hab auch Tage wo ich kein bock zu diesen Dingen hat. das ist menschlich ✌
2025-10-29 04:00:16
3
deniz1223387
-luka- :
glaub keins davon
2025-10-30 09:56:49
5
fritz6318
Fritz :
😳😳😳
2025-10-29 09:56:21
1
karin.rler
Karin Rößler :
😝😝😝😝😝😝
2025-10-28 15:34:23
1
jonnyrubin
Jonny Rubin :
😳😳😳
2025-10-28 12:27:48
1
paulchen2300
paulchen :
🙏🌹👌
2025-10-28 12:09:37
1
fanibaer
Fani :
😳😳😳
2025-10-31 10:40:38
0
katjapusch1
Katja Pusch :
😂😂😂
2025-10-29 23:00:29
0
heikebielawski
Heike Bielawski :
😢😢😢
2025-10-29 19:36:51
0
heikebielawski
Heike Bielawski :
🥰🥰🥰
2025-10-29 19:36:48
0
friedhelmsteinweg
Friedhelm Steinweg :
😂😂😂
2025-10-29 16:37:08
0
007sterne
007 :
Klar die erzählen alles 😂
2025-10-30 15:13:35
0
jag_svr
JAG-SVR :
geschichten aus dem berühmten paulaner garten 😅
2025-10-29 13:31:03
6
ohioking3
Ohio King :
genau 😂😂 ihr glaubt das ey
2025-10-29 06:11:10
3
armesdeutschland0
#armesdeutschland :
einfach nur grausig, sollte das stimmen 😳
2025-10-28 08:04:39
3
hey81515
hey :
ist klar das sollen wir glauben und ich gehe einmal im Jahr duschen
2025-10-29 12:45:35
1
laila_shana
Laila :
Brad Pitt ist in mancher Hinsicht ungenießbar - und ein soooo schlechter Schauspieler 😜
2025-10-30 15:34:03
0
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A common talking point to minimise the evil involvement of Europe in the transatlantic slave trade is to blame the African leaders. Firstly, Europe was DEMANDING, theres no supply with no demand. African Leaders would capture enemies, it wasnt based on their skin colour. Europe PRESSURED many nations to get involved in it.  In the letter to the Portuguese monarch, King Afonso I expressed serious concern and outrage about the behavior of Portuguese merchants in his kingdom. He explains that: Portuguese traders and officials were kidnapping and enslaving free citizens of Kongo, including nobles and Christians. The trade was so out of control that it was destroying the social and political order of his kingdom. Afonso pleads with the Portuguese king to stop the illegal enslavement and to restrict trade to authorized merchants under proper regulation. He reminds the king of their shared Christian faith and asks him to act morally European powers created the transatlantic slave system, financed it, and turned it into a global economy. Africans didn’t build slave ships, insurance companies, or colonial empires off of it — Europeans did. So participation under pressure is not the same as control, design, or profit. African societies were not equals in this trade — they were dealing with empires armed with guns, money, and global reach. Europeans industrialized slavery — they built the ships, owned the plantations, ran the ports, insured the voyages, and wrote the laws. King Agaja of Dahomey (1720s–1730s) Early in his reign, Agaja reportedly attempted to stop slave raids and shift his kingdom’s economy toward agriculture and legitimate trade (like palm oil and cloth). However, European traders (especially the Portuguese and French) pressured and threatened him economically and militarily. After that, Dahomey’s involvement in the trade increased — showing how European demand dictated participation. #fyp #viral #blackhistory #xyzabc
A common talking point to minimise the evil involvement of Europe in the transatlantic slave trade is to blame the African leaders. Firstly, Europe was DEMANDING, theres no supply with no demand. African Leaders would capture enemies, it wasnt based on their skin colour. Europe PRESSURED many nations to get involved in it. In the letter to the Portuguese monarch, King Afonso I expressed serious concern and outrage about the behavior of Portuguese merchants in his kingdom. He explains that: Portuguese traders and officials were kidnapping and enslaving free citizens of Kongo, including nobles and Christians. The trade was so out of control that it was destroying the social and political order of his kingdom. Afonso pleads with the Portuguese king to stop the illegal enslavement and to restrict trade to authorized merchants under proper regulation. He reminds the king of their shared Christian faith and asks him to act morally European powers created the transatlantic slave system, financed it, and turned it into a global economy. Africans didn’t build slave ships, insurance companies, or colonial empires off of it — Europeans did. So participation under pressure is not the same as control, design, or profit. African societies were not equals in this trade — they were dealing with empires armed with guns, money, and global reach. Europeans industrialized slavery — they built the ships, owned the plantations, ran the ports, insured the voyages, and wrote the laws. King Agaja of Dahomey (1720s–1730s) Early in his reign, Agaja reportedly attempted to stop slave raids and shift his kingdom’s economy toward agriculture and legitimate trade (like palm oil and cloth). However, European traders (especially the Portuguese and French) pressured and threatened him economically and militarily. After that, Dahomey’s involvement in the trade increased — showing how European demand dictated participation. #fyp #viral #blackhistory #xyzabc

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