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Between Eastern Africa and Western India, 1500–1650: Slavery, Commerce, and Elite Formation

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  03 October 2019

Sanjay Subrahmanyam*
Affiliation:
Department of History, UCLA

Abstract

This essay examines relations between eastern Africa and western India in the sixteenth and early seventeenth centuries in respect to two related sets of problems: the changing regimes of commercial circulation, and more particularly the evolution of patterns of human movement, notably via the slave trade from Ethiopia and the Swahili coast to Gujarat and the Deccan. It argues that over the course of the sixteenth century, commercial relations between Deccan ports such as Goa and Chaul, and the Swahili coast, came to be strengthened through the intervention of the Portuguese and their military-commercial system. At the same time, large numbers of African slaves reached the Muslim states in India, especially in the period after 1530, where they played a significant role as military specialists, and eventually as elite political and cultural actors. The shifting geographical dimensions of the African presence in India are emphasized, beginning in western Gujarat and winding up in the Deccan Sultanates. This contrasts markedly with the African experience elsewhere, where the meaning and institutional context of slavery were quite different.

Type
Mobility and Sedentarization
Copyright
Copyright © Society for the Comparative Study of Society and History 2019 

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37 An important literary source on his career remains to be adequately explored: this is Anna Centenary Library, Chennai, Government Oriental Manuscripts Collection, Persian Ms. D. 92, fls. 108–37, Ni‘matullah ‘Iyani, Fath Nama-i Mahmud Shahi.

38 ‘Abdullah Hajji-ud-Dabir Ulughkhani, Zafar al-Walih bi-Muzaffar wa Alihi: An Arabic History of Gujarat, Ross, E. Denison, ed., 3 vols. (London: John Murray, 1910–29), vol. 2, xiixviii, xxxiii–xxxivGoogle Scholar.

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43 We may note that the absence of notarial archives of the type used by historians of the Spanish Atlantic empire thus hinders the construction of a more nuanced and gendered history of the African presence in early modern India. See, by way of comparison, Williams, Danielle Terrazas, “‘My Conscience Is Free and Clear’: African-Descended Women, Status, and Slave Owning in Mid-Colonial Mexico,” The Americas 75, 3 (2018): 525–54CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

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57 Pereira, António Pinto, História da Índia no tempo em que a governou o visorei Dom Luís de Ataíde, Duarte, Manuel Marques, ed. (Lisbon: Imprensa Nacional-Casa da Moeda, 1987), 368–69Google Scholar, passim.

58 do Couto, Diogo, Da Ásia, Década XI (Lisbon: Régia Officina Typográfica, 1788), 171–72Google Scholar; also Vignato, Antonella, ed., “Vida e Acções de Mathias de Albuquerque, Capitão e Viso-Rei do Estado da Índia,” pt. 2, Mare Liberum 17 (1999): 267360Google Scholar. It is of interest to read Farhad Khan's career together with the case of another Ethiopian (apparently of “falaxa” or Beta Israel origin) named Gabriel or Sidi Rahim (“Side Reme”), who was tried by the Inquisition at Chaul and Goa in 1595, after spending a part of his career in Ahmadnagar service; for a careful analysis of his Inquisition file, see Marcocci, “Tra cristianesimo e Islam,” 807–22.

59 King to viceroy Rui Lourenço de Távora, 29 Oct. 1609, in de Bulhão Pato, R. A., ed., Documentos Remettidos da Índia, ou Livros das Monções, vol. 1 (Lisbon: Academia Real das Ciências, 1880), 253Google Scholar. For Portuguese dealings with Malik ‘Ambar more generally, see Flores, Jorge, Nas Margens do Hindustão: O Estado da Índia e a expansão mogol, ca. 1570–1640 (Coimbra: Imprensa da Universidade de Coimbra, 2015), 235–42CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

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70 For an account of his career, see Sharif, Muhammad Jamal, Dakan mein Urdu sha‘iri Wali se pehle, Asar, Muhammad ‘Ali, ed. (Hyderabad: Idara-i Adabiyat-i Urdu, 2004), 416–32Google Scholar. For an edition of his most important work, see Khushnud, Malik, Jannat Singar (1056 H./1645), Ja‘far, Sayyida, ed. (New Delhi: Qaumi Council bara'i Urdu Zaban, 1997)Google Scholar.

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72 For details, see Sarkar, Jadunath, Shivaji and His Times, 3d ed. (Calcutta: M. C. Sarkar and Sons, 1929), 254–78Google Scholar. On Janjira, also see the recent essay by Jasdanwalla, Faeeza, “The Invincible Fort of the Nawabs of Janjira,” Journal of African Diaspora Archaeology & Heritage 4, 1 (2015): 7291CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

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