. Included are the Portuguese, English, French and Dutch factories. The Dutch factory is at the bottom right. According to various sources, the
Dutch West India Company began sending servants regularly to the
Ajaland capital of
Allada from 1640 onward. The Dutch had in the decades before begun to take an interest in the
Atlantic slave trade due to their
capture of northern Brazil from the Portuguese.
Willem Bosman writes in his
Nauwkeurige beschrijving van de Guinese Goud- Tand- en Slavekust (1703) that Allada was also called Grand Ardra, being the larger cousin of Little Ardra, also known as
Offra. From 1660 onward, Dutch presence in Allada and especially Offra became more permanent. A report from this year asserts Dutch trading posts, apart from Allada and Offra, in
Benin City,
Grand-Popo, and
Savi. The Offra trading post soon became the most important Dutch office on the Slave Coast. According to a 1670 report, annually 2,500 to 3,000 slaves were transported from Offra to the Americas and writing of the 1690s, Bosman commented of the trade at Fida, "markets of men are here kept in the same manner as those of beasts are with us." Numbers of slaves declined in times of conflict. From 1688 onward, the struggle between the
Aja king of Allada and the peoples on the coastal regions, impeded the supply of slaves. The Dutch West India Company chose the side of the Aja king, causing the Offra office to be destroyed by opposing forces in 1692. After this debacle, Dutch involvement on the Slave Coast came more or less to a halt. During his second voyage to
Benin,
David van Nyendael visited the king of Benin in Benin City. His detailed description of this journey was included as an appendix to
Willem Bosman's
Nauwkeurige beschrijving van de Guinese Goud- Tand- en Slavekust (1703). His description of the kingdom remains valuable as one of the earliest detailed descriptions of Benin. On the instigation of Governor-General of the
Dutch Gold Coast Willem de la Palma,
Jacob van den Broucke was sent in 1703 as "opperkommies" (head merchant) to the Dutch trading post at
Ouidah, which according to sources was established around 1670. Ouidah was also a slave-trading center for other European slave traders, making this place the likely candidate for the new main trading post on the Slave Coast. Political unrest was also the reason for the Ouidah office to close in 1725. The company this time moved their headquarters to
Jaquim, situated more easterly. ==Human toll==