Indentured servants were laborers who signed contracts to work, usually 4-7 years, in exchange for passage to the Americas plus food and shelter. In AP World (Topic 4.6, 1450-1750), they matter as a coerced labor system whose rebellions alongside enslaved Africans pushed colonies toward racialized slavery.
An indentured servant signed a contract (the indenture) agreeing to work for a set period, typically four to seven years, in exchange for transport across the Atlantic, food, and housing. They weren't paid wages, and they couldn't quit, but the arrangement was temporary. When the contract ended, the servant was free, sometimes with "freedom dues" like land or tools. Most early indentured servants in the Americas were poor Europeans who couldn't afford the voyage themselves.
For AP World, indentured servitude is one of several coerced labor systems that fueled plantation economies between 1450 and 1750. It sits in a messy middle zone. Servants were legally persons with rights and an end date, unlike enslaved Africans, but conditions were brutal and many died before their terms expired. That brutality matters for Topic 4.6, because indentured servants didn't just suffer quietly. They resisted, sometimes side by side with enslaved Africans, and colonial governments responded by hardening the legal line between "white servant" and "Black slave."
This term lives in Unit 4: Transoceanic Interactions, 1450-1750, specifically Topic 4.6 (Resistance to European Expansion). Learning objective AP World 4.6.A asks you to explain the effects of growing state power from 1450 to 1750, and the essential knowledge is that expansion triggered resistance from social, political, and economic groups at the local level. Indentured servants are one of those groups. When they rebelled alongside enslaved Africans, as in Virginia's Gloucester County Rebellion of 1663, colonial authorities answered with stricter racial laws that gave poor whites small privileges and locked Black laborers into hereditary slavery. That cause-and-effect chain, resistance from below producing a harsher racial hierarchy from above, is exactly the kind of analysis the exam rewards. The term also feeds the economics theme, since servants supplied the labor that made plantation colonies profitable before African slavery dominated.
Keep studying AP World Unit 4
Transatlantic Slave Trade (Unit 4)
Indentured servitude and the slave trade are two answers to the same question, which is how to get cheap labor onto American plantations. As servant supply dropped and joint servant-slave rebellions scared colonial elites, colonies shifted decisively toward enslaved African labor, which was permanent and hereditary.
Plantation Economy (Unit 4)
Plantations growing sugar and tobacco needed huge amounts of labor, and indentured servants were the early workforce in places like Virginia and Barbados. Knowing this lets you explain change over time, since the labor force of the same plantation system shifted from European servants to enslaved Africans.
Bacon's Rebellion (Unit 4)
In 1676, Virginia's indentured servants and former servants joined a violent uprising against the colonial government. Like the Gloucester County Rebellion, it convinced elites that a multiracial class of angry laborers was dangerous, accelerating laws that divided poor whites from enslaved Africans.
Maroon Societies (Unit 4)
Both belong to Topic 4.6's pattern of resistance to expanding state power. Maroon communities in the Caribbean and Brazil show enslaved people resisting by escaping and building independent societies, while servant rebellions show resistance from inside the labor system itself.
Expect indentured servants in MCQ stimulus questions about resistance to state power and changes in labor systems. A common setup gives you a passage about the 1663 Gloucester County Rebellion, where enslaved Africans and white indentured servants rebelled together, then asks why colonial legislatures responded with stricter racial laws. The answer pattern to know is that elites granted poor whites privileges to break up cross-racial alliances. No released FRQ has used the term verbatim, but it's strong evidence for LEQs and DBQs about coerced labor (continuity and change, 1450-1750) or about responses to resistance. The move that earns points is not just defining the term but connecting it to a development, like the transition to racialized chattel slavery or the consolidation of state power over labor.
Indentured servitude was temporary and contractual. The servant agreed (at least on paper), served a fixed term, and walked away free. Chattel slavery was permanent, hereditary, and involuntary; enslaved people were legal property, and their children were born enslaved. On the exam, the key distinction is the trajectory: colonies started with both systems, but after rebellions like Gloucester County (1663) and Bacon's Rebellion (1676), laws hardened the racial line and chattel slavery became the dominant plantation labor system.
Indentured servants traded four to seven years of unpaid labor for passage to the Americas, plus food and shelter during their term.
Unlike enslaved Africans, indentured servants had contracts with an end date, but conditions were harsh enough that many died before gaining freedom.
Indentured servitude was the early labor backbone of plantation economies before the transatlantic slave trade supplied the dominant workforce.
Joint rebellions by servants and enslaved Africans, like Virginia's Gloucester County Rebellion in 1663, pushed colonial governments to pass racial laws separating poor whites from enslaved Black laborers.
For Topic 4.6, indentured servants are an example of local economic groups resisting expanding state power between 1450 and 1750, which is exactly what AP World 4.6.A asks you to explain.
Indentured servants were laborers, mostly poor Europeans, who signed contracts to work four to seven years in exchange for passage to the Americas and basic necessities. They supplied early plantation labor in Unit 4 (1450-1750) before enslaved African labor became dominant.
No. Indentured servitude was temporary and based on a contract, while chattel slavery was permanent, hereditary, and treated people as property. The systems overlapped in brutality, though, and colonial laws after rebellions in the 1660s-1670s sharpened the legal divide between the two.
Servants eventually went free and demanded land, and joint uprisings like the Gloucester County Rebellion (1663) and Bacon's Rebellion (1676) terrified colonial elites. Enslaved African labor was permanent and hereditary, and racial laws kept poor whites and enslaved Black laborers from allying again.
Topic 4.6 covers resistance to expanding state power from 1450 to 1750. Indentured servants fit because they rebelled against colonial authorities, sometimes alongside enslaved Africans, making them one of the local economic groups whose resistance you can use as evidence under learning objective AP World 4.6.A.
Mostly yes on paper, since they signed contracts, but the choice was often driven by poverty, debt, or coercion, and some were convicts or kidnapped. That's why AP World classifies indentured servitude as a coerced labor system even though it wasn't slavery.
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