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Oral Historiography and the Shirazi of the East African Coast*
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 13 May 2014
Extract
“Settlements of foreign, predominantly Semitic, peoples”
Strandes' gambit concerning ‘Muslim Civilization’ of the east coast of Africa is a familiar one to many Africanists. Persians and Arabs, so the stories go, settled coastal sites as part of the Islamic diaspora; they vanquished less virile African societies; they built cities which were reflections of Middle Eastern prototypes; they imposed their religion; and, they ‘founded’ coastal civilization, a civilization, therefore, which was characteristically Middle Eastern. Nineteenth- and early twentieth-century historians cannot be entirely blamed for holding such simplistic views. After all, the traditions themselves at least imply some of these things. And, given the literalist and diffusionist nature of past anthropological and historical theory, simple and biased interpretations of these traditions are not surprising.
What is perhaps remarkable, given the developments in anthropological theory since the 1940s, is the persistence of such views in some quarters. Examples include portions of two recently published papers by Saad and Wilkinson. Both deal wholly or in part with the most intriguing of the coastal origin traditions, the stories which tell how many coastal towns were originally settled by immigrants who came from Shiraz or Persia (see appendix). Their interpretations are so literal as to link the Shirazi name not merely with a particular dynasty, but with a specific family or kin group which ruled in pre-fourteenth-century Kilwa.
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Footnotes
I wish to thank the following people for comments they generously offered on earlier drafts of this paper: Neville Chittick, John Graham, James Kirkman, Nigel Oram, Michele Stephen, and Jan Vansina. None of these scholars, of course, is responsible for the contents and the ideas expressed herein.
References
Notes
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26. This term is used since it is recognized, of course, that a culture evolves, and therefore it is difficult to pin down precisely just when people now called Swahili ‘became’ recognizable as such. I would suggest that the peoples presently called Swahili exhibit a bundle of characteristics, including living on or near the East African littoral and islands; being primarily urban in origin and outlook; being Muslims; living in the characteristic rectangular house which is constructed out of coral, mangrove, and makuti; having multiple social allegiances; having Kiswahili as their first language; and being cultivators of the distinctive coastal crops, as well as fisherfolk and coastal traders. The so-called proto-Swahili, as such, would have been peoples who included at least some of these traits in their culture and who demonstrably were in the early stages of cultural and linguistic divergence from related African (principally Sabaki-speaking) groups, such as the Pokomo and the Mijikenda.
27. This name has not been settled. Some have called it Wenje ware, after the Tana river site where it was identified by Phillipson, D.W., “Some Iron Age Sites on the Lower Tana River,” Azania, 14 (1979), 155–60.CrossRefGoogle Scholar However, this is the same pottery originally found in Period la levels at Kilwa and was labelled “Kilwa Early Kitchen Ware” by its discoverer, H.N. Chittick. In deference to the site where it originally was identified and to Chittick's achievement(s), I suggest that ‘Kilwa ware’ should be an appropriate name for it.
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35. Joao de Barros, quoted in Kirkman, James, Ungwana on the Tana (Hague, 1966), 10.Google Scholar The towns referred to specifically as walled were Ozi, Mombasa, Malindi, Mudio/ldio, and Kilifi. Other major towns to have been walled were Gedi, Lamu, Kilwa, and Pate. See various Portuguese accounts in SD, 66, 108, 134.
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47. It must be remembered that present evidence suggests that the Swahili/Shirazi first appeared north of the Tana river.
48. This process was not always unidirectional. So-called Arabs sometimes reverted to being Shirazi in other circumstances. Lately, again, with independence, “Arabs” and “Shirazi” are calling themselves Africans in Kenya.
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66. As the author of the Kitab az-Zanuj says: “Persians for a certain while were powerful and authoritative in the cities and towns from Mogadishu to Kilwa.” Extensive fieldwork in the Lamu area traditions was carred out in 1974/75. Discussion of these traditions and their relationship to the material presented in this paper is to be found in Chapter 3 of Horn and Crescent.
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70. Ibid., 297.
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