Great Britain because they had America part of Africa and India I believe
The rewards that the Portuguese got from their voyage to West Africa were:
- They got natural resources such as gold from West Africa.
- They got slaves.
<h3>What was the Portuguese exploration to West Africa?</h3>
In the age of exploration, the Portuguese were in West Africa because they were interested in enriching themselves with the resources that were present in the area.
West Africans were taken as slaves by the Portuguese also the gold in the area was also of great importance to the Portuguese.
Read more on exploration here:
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<u>Members of the Second State, together with members of the First State, were lords during the feudalist era</u>. Feudal systems were based on the system of rights and obligations known as manorialism, and governed economic relationships during the medieval era in Europe.
The privileged social groups, the clergy (First State) and the nobles (Second State), were landowners. They granted their fields to peasants (Third State), who could cultivate them for a living in exchange for becoming vassals to their lords, who had total rights over them. On the first hand, peasants had to pay "taxes" to their lords to be able to feed themselves from their fields, and had to obbey any of their orders. In turn, lords promised protection to their vassals, as they were powerful enough to have some military forces under their command.
I would say that President Thomas Jefferson would have desired the revolution to fail. On the one had, Saint Domingue independence from France was good news, for it debilitated the French. But on the other hand, the triumph of a slave revolution in the West Indies would set a dangerous precedent and could influence further slave revolts in the USA.
Jefferson - who was a slave owner himself - refused to recognize the negro government, rejecting diplomatic relations and even imposed an economic embargo on Saint Domingue in order to make the negro nation fail. Also, he had to face southern slave-holders reaction against the Saint Domingue in fear of similar outbreaks. Previous incidents like the Gabriel slave conspiracy in 1802 fueled this fear.