The Bight of Biafra accounted for an estimated 10.7% of all enslaved people that were transported to the Americas between 1519-1700. Between 1701-1800, it accounted for an estimated 14.97%. Slaves purchased from the markets on the Bight of Biafra included
Bamileke,
Efik/
Ibibio,
Igbo,
Tikar,
Bakossi,
Fang,
Massa,
Bubi and many more. Normally, enslaved people were cheaper when bought in
Cameroon because they preferred to die rather than accept slavery. By the middle of the eighteenth century,
Bonny had emerged as the major slave trading port on the Bight of Biafra outpacing the earlier dominant slave ports at
Elem Kalabari (also known then as New Calabar) and
Old Calabar. These 3 ports together accounted for over 90% of the slave trade emanating from the Bight of Biafra.
Timeline Between 1525 and 1859, the British accounted for over two-thirds of slaves exported from the Bight of Biafra to the
New World. In 1777,
Portugal transferred control of
Fernando Po and
Annobón to Spanish suzerainty thus introducing
Spain into the early colonial history of the Bight of Biafra. In 1807, the
United Kingdom made illegal the international trade in slaves, and the
Royal Navy was deployed to forcibly prevent slavers from the
United States,
France,
Spain,
Portugal,
Holland,
West Africa and
Arabia from plying their trade. On 30 June 1849, Britain established its military influence over the Bight of Biafra by building a naval base and consulate on the island of
Fernando Po, under the authority of the British
Consuls of the Bight of Benin: On 6 August 1861, the Bight of Biafra and the neighboring
Bight of Benin (under its own British consuls) became a united British consulate, again under British consuls: • May 1852–1853:
Louis Fraser • 1853-April 1859:
Benjamin Campbell • April 1859–1860: George Brand • 1860-January 1861: Henry Hand • January-May 1861: Henry Grant Foote • May-6 August 1861:
William McCoskry (acting) • 1861-December 1864:
Richard Francis Burton • December 1864–1873: Charles Livingstone • 1873-1878: George Hartley • 1878-13 September 1879: David Hopkins • 13 September 1879-5 June 1885: Edward Hyde Hewett. In 1967, the
Eastern Region of Nigeria seceded from the Nigerian State and adopted the name of its coastline, the adjoining Bight of Biafra, becoming the newly independent
Republic of Biafra. This independence was short-lived as the new state lost the ensuing
Nigerian Civil War. In 1975, by decree, the Nigerian government changed the name of the Bight of Biafra to the Bight of Bonny. ==Slave traders==