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  1. La Royal African Company (en español: Real Compañía Africana) fue una compañía privilegiada inglesa dedicada al comercio cuyo objetivo era el transporte y comercio de esclavos negros secuestrados en África hacia las colonias británicas.

  2. Key people. James II, Charles II. Products. Gold, silver, ivory, humans. The Royal African Company ( RAC) was an English trading company established in 1660 by the House of Stuart and City of London merchants to trade along the West African coast. [1] It was overseen by the Duke of York, the brother of Charles II of England; the RAC ...

    • 1752
    • Mercantile trading
  3. 27 de abr. de 2016 · What Was the Royal African Company? By: Sarah Pruitt. Updated: May 18, 2023 | Original: April 27, 2016. copy page link. Print Page. In 1619, some 20 Africans arrived at Jamestown, Virginia,...

    • Sarah Pruitt
  4. The Royal African Company was formed in 1672 with a monopoly of the British slave trade, and from that time Jamaica became one of the world’s busiest slave markets, with a thriving smuggling trade to Spanish America. African slaves soon outnumbered Europeans 5 to 1. Jamaica… Read More

  5. 26 de feb. de 2015 · The Royal African Company - Supplying Slaves to Jamestown. The Start of English Slave Trade. As early as 1618, King James I had granted a patent to a company that wanted to trade for gold and precious woods in Africa. Other groups also received rights to trade in Africa, but never dealt with slaves in any major way.

  6. La Royal African Company (en español: Real Compañía Africana) fue una compañía privilegiada inglesa dedicada al comercio cuyo objetivo era el transporte y comercio de esclavos negros secuestrados en África hacia las colonias británicas.

  7. 26 de feb. de 2009 · Chartered in 1672, the Royal African Company was a royally chartered company which had a legally based monopoly on English trade to West Africa until 1698. The monopoly specifically extended through five thousand miles of the western coast from Cape Sallee (in contemporary Morocco) to the Cape of Good Hope (in what is now South Africa).