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AP African American Studies: African Explorers and the Slave Trade: Origins (Drill 7)

Drill 7 ยท Multiple Choice ยท Unit 2: Freedom, Enslavement, and Resistance

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About This Drill

AP African American Studies: African Explorers and the Slave Trade: Origins (Drill 7) is a Multiple Choice practice drill covering Unit 2: Freedom, Enslavement, and Resistance. It contains 5 original questions created by Brian Stewart, a Barron's test prep author with over 20 years of tutoring experience.

AP African American Studies practice questions on the origins of the transatlantic slave trade, African explorers in the Americas, West African departure zones, and early resistance. AP exam prep aligned to Unit 2 of the College Board CED.

Passage

The following summarizes Juan Garrido's 1538 petition (probanza de méritos y servicios) to the Spanish Crown, in which he requested recognition and reward for his services in the Spanish conquest of the Americas.

Juan Garrido, identified in Spanish colonial records as a free Black man (negro libre), was one of a small number of free Africans who participated in the Spanish exploration and conquest of the Americas in the early sixteenth century. In his 1538 petition to the Spanish Crown, Garrido stated that he had served Spain for thirty years in the Caribbean and the Americas, participating in military expeditions under Hernán Cortés in the conquest of Mexico and in the colonization of Puerto Rico. He also claimed to have planted the first wheat in New Spain. Garrido sought recognition and compensation for his service, framing himself as a loyal conquistador who had earned the rewards typically granted to Spanish-born participants in the conquest.

Summary based on Juan Garrido, probanza de méritos y servicios, 1538 (Archivo General de Indias, Seville).

Questions & Explanations

Question 1. Which of the following best describes the primary purpose of Juan Garrido’s 1538 petition to the Spanish Crown?

  • A) To document the history of African explorers in the Americas for future generations as part of this colonial record
  • B) To convert Indigenous peoples to Christianity on behalf of the Catholic Church
  • C) To establish formal legal proof of his freedom from enslavement
  • D) To seek recognition and material reward for his decades of military and colonial service ✓

Explanation: The petition explicitly states that Garrido served for thirty years, participated in military expeditions, and sought recognition and compensation. The document’s purpose is therefore to secure a reward from the Spanish Crown, a common form of colonial petition called a relación de méritos. (A) is wrong because Garrido was not writing for posterity; his purpose was practical and immediate. (B) describes an activity mentioned in the petition but not the petition’s purpose. (C) is a plausible distractor, Garrido is described as a “free Black man,” but the petition does not argue for his freedom; his status was apparently already established. Choosing (C) confuses his legal status with his petition’s goal. [Skill 2A, Identifying claims and purpose in a source]

Question 2. The existence of Juan Garrido in the historical record is most significant to AP African American Studies because it demonstrates which of the following?

  • A) Spain consistently granted freedom and citizenship to Africans who served in military expeditions
  • B) Most Africans present in the Americas before the slave trade became a mass institution were there as free military explorers like Garrido
  • C) Most Africans who came to the Americas in the sixteenth century did so voluntarily as explorers
  • D) Africans participated in the colonization of the Americas in complex roles that defy simple categorization ✓

Explanation: The significance of Garrido’s story to the discipline lies in its complexity: he was African, free, a soldier for Spain, and a participant in Indigenous dispossession, all simultaneously. This resists any simple narrative. (A) is historically false; Spain had no consistent policy of freedom for military service. (B) is a plausible distractor but overstates the record: it turns Garrido’s exceptional case into a general pattern, claiming most early African arrivals were free military explorers, which the historical evidence does not support. (C) compounds the same error even more broadly. (D) is the best answer because it captures why Garrido matters to African American Studies: his case demands a more complex analytical frame. [Skill 1D, Connecting evidence to disciplinary frameworks]

Question 3. Which of the following most directly contributed to the concentration of transatlantic slave trade departure zones in West and West Central Africa?

  • A) West African coastal kingdoms uniformly lacked the military capacity to resist European slave traders
  • B) European demand for enslaved labor intersected with existing regional trade and conflict networks that facilitated capture and sale ✓
  • C) Portuguese explorers chose West Africa exclusively because it was geographically closest to South America
  • D) The majority of African people enslaved in the Americas came from a single ethnic group in the Niger Delta

Explanation: The transatlantic slave trade concentrated in West and West Central Africa because of the intersection of European demand with existing African trade networks, political rivalries, and warfare, captives were often war prisoners or people seized through state-sponsored raiding. (A) is historically inaccurate and relies on a stereotype; many West African kingdoms were militarily powerful, and some actively participated in or resisted the trade. (C) is true that proximity to Brazil played a role for some Portuguese traders, but it does not explain the broader pattern across all of West and West Central Africa. (D) is false; enslaved people came from hundreds of different ethnic communities across a vast region. [Skill 1A, Applying disciplinary knowledge: causation]

Question 4. Scholars studying the transatlantic slave trade have argued that it had transformative effects on West African societies over the course of the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. Which of the following best supports this claim?

  • A) West African oral traditions preserved detailed written-style records of the names, captains, and routes of individual European slave ships as the passage notes.
  • B) The scale of the trade depopulated some regions, destabilized political structures, and reoriented local economies toward the export of captives ✓
  • C) The Songhai Empire collapsed in 1591 due to a Moroccan invasion, removing a major power that had resisted the slave trade
  • D) Many African rulers protested the trade in letters to European monarchs, arguing that it violated traditional codes of warfare

Explanation: (C) is a true historical fact, the Songhai Empire did collapse after a Moroccan invasion in 1591, but it does not support the claim that the slave trade had transformative effects on West African societies; it describes a military-political event involving Morocco, not the transatlantic trade. Students who know this fact may reach for (C) and miss that it answers the wrong question. (D) is also a true claim, some African rulers did write such letters, most notably the King of Kongo, but it describes resistance, not transformation. (A) is not well supported by historical evidence. (B) is correct: the trade’s scale disrupted populations, destabilized states, and reoriented African economies, all transformative effects that directly support the argument. [Skill 3B, Supporting a claim with evidence]

Question 5. Compared to most enslaved Africans who arrived in the Americas during the height of the transatlantic slave trade, Juan Garrido’s experience in the early sixteenth century was unusual primarily because he

  • A) came from the West African interior rather than the coastal ports supplying most captives across these decades
  • B) converted to Christianity upon arriving in the Americas
  • C) arrived as a free person and participated in conquest expeditions rather than arriving in bondage ✓
  • D) received payment from the Spanish Crown for agricultural labor

Explanation: The vast majority of Africans who crossed the Atlantic during the slave trade were transported as enslaved people in chains, with no freedom, no agency in their movement, and no claim to compensation. Garrido’s documented freedom, his military role, and his petition for reward represent a striking exception. (A) is not directly supported by the source and concerns geography, not his distinctive experience. (B) is wrong because conversion to Christianity was not what distinguished Garrido from other Africans in Spanish colonial contexts; his freedom and military role are what made his situation exceptional. (D) is wrong; the petition concerns military service, not agricultural labor. [Skill 1A, Applying disciplinary knowledge: comparison]