TRAFFICKING IN SOUTH ATLANTIC AND AN AFRICAN SLAVERY IN BRAZIL DUTCH (1630 - 1654)
History of Brazil. Brazil Dutch. Atlantic Traffic. African slavery
The research is characterized as a study on the trafficking of African slaves in colonial Brazil under Dutch judgment, from 1630 to 1654, establishing the historical period known as Brazil Dutch project consolidated by the strategic and systematic occupation of cities of the Northern Flagship. in line with the directives of the Dutch West India Company (WIC). Recife becomes host city, renamed Mauricia, the administrative capital of the new Dutch territory. It aims to discuss critically-analytically how the Dutch traffic in the South Atlantic occurred by the Dutch; study the dynamics of commercial, political-social relations and analyze the construction of connected urban networks (Brazil-Angola). It intends to develop a historiographical analysis of the Dutch spaces in the South Atlantic, tracing an outline of the known world scenario of the seventeenth century. It aims to problematize the advent of the Dutch company in the Northern Captains, its urban social complexities, institutional dealings (WIC) and the analysis of causes and direct consequences of the simultaneous occupation of regions of Africa and Brazil. The study will consist of bibliographicdocumentary research, plurifocal analysis and collection of statistical data of the slave trade of the seventeenth century in digital research sources.