Dark Bullion Podcast Por Calvin Walker arte de portada

Dark Bullion

Dark Bullion

De: Calvin Walker
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The Dark Bullion audio series is a historical project that explores the Atlantic slave trade, focusing on lesser-known themes and contradictions, and its lasting impact on the systems and institutions we live with today. It begins in mid-17th century West Africa and utilizes AI-generated voices.

The content is drawn from historical records, traveler accounts, and European enslavers’ reports, aiming for historical accuracy while acknowledging conflicting interpretations among historians. The project seeks to present the complexity and contradictions of the past with care, without simplification.

Download the study guide from the Dark Bullion website.

https://calvinwalker.cc/dark-bullion/

Calvin Walker 2026
Ciencia Ciencias Sociales Mundial
Episodios
  • Meanwhile in Europe
    Mar 2 2026

    This episode examines how the Atlantic slave trade became democratized across 17th- century Europe, focusing on the Dutch Republic, France, and Britain. It details the evolution from royal monopolies to common investment, revealing how ordinary citizens – clerks, shopkeepers, artisans, and widows – purchased shares in slave trading companies.

    The episode explores Amsterdam’s financial innovations, Nantes’ merchant dynasties, and Liverpool’s dominance through supporting industries in Birmingham and Manchester. It highlights the economic infrastructure, institutional wealth, and Age of Enlightenment contradictions that enabled mass participation in the trade across all levels of European society.

    Más Menos
    30 m
  • Inventory
    Mar 2 2026

    This episode examines the barracoons and other holding facilities where captives awaited transport across the Atlantic. It details the systematic assessment, categorization, and commodification of enslaved people through European traders’ documentation practices.

    The episode draws on historical accounts like Alexander Falconbridge’s testimony to reveal the clinical brutality of the sorting process, while exploring how the financial infrastructure developed for the slave trade (ledgers, insurance policies, and banking systems) would shape modern commerce.

    The episode also draws parallels between gold mining and human extraction, and contrasts European and African concepts of time.

    Más Menos
    24 m
  • Women of West Africa
    Mar 2 2026

    This episode examines the complex and multifaceted roles of women during the Atlantic slave trade period in West Africa. It profiles the Mino (Agojié), Dahomey’s all- female military regiment, and explores women’s positions as traders, political advisors, and warriors. It highlights three remarkable figures: Queen Agontimé, who rose from captivity to become a Candomblé priestess in Brazil; Queen Nzinga Mbande of Ndongo and Matamba, a diplomatic and military leader who resisted Portuguese colonization; and Dona Beatriz Kimpa Vita, a religious visionary whose Antonianism movement challenged both church authority and the slave trade.

    The episode also details the unique practice of woman-to-woman marriage in Dahomey, emphasizing how women navigated survival, power, and legacy in a society where they could be simultaneously victims, traders, and architects of their own destinies.

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    22 m
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