Article contents
Towards a Chronology of the Publications of Francis Moore's Travels into the Inland Parts of Africa…*
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 13 May 2014
Extract
There are two book length, English language, descriptions of precolonial life on the Gambia. The earlier, Richard Jobson's The Golden Trade of the Moors of 1620, is widely available, having been reprinted three times in this century. The other, Francis Moore's Travels into the Inland Parts of Africa of 1738 is equally valuable, but much rarer. Although Moore's book appeared in several editions in the eighteenth century, it has not been published in anything close to its entirety in almost two centuries. Moore stayed much longer on the Gambia than did Jobson and his more circumstantial account deserves greater accessibility for its contemporary influence as well as its source value. I am beginning the process of preparing a new edition of Moore and present this short bibliographical note as a first product of my research.
Francis Moore was hired as a writer, or clerk, by the Royal African Company in 1730 and spent almost four and a half years (November 1730 to May 1735), on the river Gambia, first as a writer and subsequently as Factor, at several of the Company's establishments. During his stay he apparently wrote a general journal for his own uses, as well as the “true and particular Journal of all his Proceedings relating to the Affairs of the…Company” (Moore 1738, Appendix 1:2-3) which his contract obliged him to keep. Subsequently, Moore added several other texts as well as amending and extending his journals to produce the book first published in 1738. I will discuss these additions, amendments, and extensions below.
- Type
- Research Article
- Information
- Copyright
- Copyright © African Studies Association 1992
Footnotes
This project developed from archeological research supported by the Royal Ontario Museum West African Research Fund and the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada. The research was supported in part by grants from the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council and the University of Waterloo Small Grants Committee. I would like to express my thanks for this support. Cooperation and assistance without which I would never have reached the present stage has been received from the following libraries and their staff: The British Library; Dana Porter Library, University of Waterloo; School of Oriental and African Studies Library, University of London; Robarts Library, University of Toronto; Bancroft Library, University of California at Berkeley; Sutro Library of the State Library of California; Leslie Frost Library, York University. Professor J.D. Fage's helpful comments on an earlier version have saved me from some errors. Those which remain are my own. Evie Hill's patience with editing and life contribute greatly to all my work.
References
- 3
- Cited by