TY - CHAP
T1 - Hearing the sound of the Flute from Zanzibar: Migrating communities and slave trade routes in the Indian Ocean
AU - Nicolini, Beatrice
PY - 2017
Y1 - 2017
N2 - During the nineteenth century, the growth in the volume of trade managed by the Asian mercantile communities, with the consent of the Arabs and the military protection of the Asian soldiers, inevitably led to a gradual but progressive weakening of the African populations. These lost their trade monopolies and their most deeply-rooted social and cultural traditions underwent traumatic changes. Entire squadrons of Asian soldiers settled in the interior of the African continent at Tabora and at Kigoma, on Lake Tanganyika. In this same century Asian troops together with the soldiers called shihiri, from Hadhramaut, fought also against the Nyamwezi in the region of the Unyanyembe. Other Asians warriors joined the caravans which traded with the interior, travelling as far as the Congo. On Zanzibar, instead, a gradual process of osmosis occurred which often linked magical practices with the precepts of the Koran, resulting in a political-social mix and management of power that reflect a multiplicity of cultural roots. This intermingling also gave impetus to commercial activity, to the point that the British explorer and adventurer, Richard Francis Burton, defined the island of Zanzibar as: "the depot of the richest trade in Eastern Africa".
AB - During the nineteenth century, the growth in the volume of trade managed by the Asian mercantile communities, with the consent of the Arabs and the military protection of the Asian soldiers, inevitably led to a gradual but progressive weakening of the African populations. These lost their trade monopolies and their most deeply-rooted social and cultural traditions underwent traumatic changes. Entire squadrons of Asian soldiers settled in the interior of the African continent at Tabora and at Kigoma, on Lake Tanganyika. In this same century Asian troops together with the soldiers called shihiri, from Hadhramaut, fought also against the Nyamwezi in the region of the Unyanyembe. Other Asians warriors joined the caravans which traded with the interior, travelling as far as the Congo. On Zanzibar, instead, a gradual process of osmosis occurred which often linked magical practices with the precepts of the Koran, resulting in a political-social mix and management of power that reflect a multiplicity of cultural roots. This intermingling also gave impetus to commercial activity, to the point that the British explorer and adventurer, Richard Francis Burton, defined the island of Zanzibar as: "the depot of the richest trade in Eastern Africa".
KW - Slave Trade, Indian Ocean, Africa
KW - Slave Trade, Indian Ocean, Africa
UR - http://hdl.handle.net/10807/110014
UR - http://www.brill.com/products/book/slaving-zones
U2 - 10.13140/2.1.3108.7369
DO - 10.13140/2.1.3108.7369
M3 - Chapter
SN - 9789004351738
SP - 205
EP - 223
BT - Slaving Zones
ER -