Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-m6dg7 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-02T17:00:17.323Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

The Cowrie Currencies of West Africa Part II

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  22 January 2009

Marion Johnson
Affiliation:
Cowries and Gold

Extract

This second part of a study of cowrie currencies in West Africa deals with the value of cowries from the fourteenth century in various parts of West Africa, in terms of gold and silver, and currencies based on these, and also in terms of commodities. An attempt has been made to use this information to throw light on such problems as the effects of the slave-trade on the economy of West Africa, and also on the extent of the internal exchange economy before the beginning of the colonial period.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1970

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

1 Ibn, Battuta (Muhammad ibn abd, Allah), Voyages d'Ibn Batoutah, IV (Paris, 1922), 122, 435.Google Scholar

2 Leo, Africanus, Description d'Afrique (Paris, 1956), 469. It is possible that Leo's ‘ducat’ may be a smaller coin than the gold mithqal. Caillié in the nineteenth century found a silver ‘mithqal’ at El Arouan one-third of the value of the gold mithqal. If Leo's coin was of a similar value, not only would his exchange rate be the same as Ibn Battuta's; his salt prices would also be similar.Google Scholar

3 Mahmud, Kati, Tarikh el-Fettach (Paris, 1913), 319.Google Scholar

4 Monteil, Ch., Djenné (Paris, 1932), 280;Google ScholarPark, M., Journal of a Mission to the Interior of Africa in the year 1805 (London, 1815), 161;Google ScholarCaillié, R., Journal d'un voyage à Tombouctou et à Jenné, II (Paris, 1965), 220, 426.Google Scholar

5 Lucas, S. in Proceedings of the Association for Promoting the Discovery of the Interior Parts of Africa, I (London, 1810), 186.Google Scholar

6 Polanyi, K., Dahomey and the Slave Trade (Seattle, 1966), 168.Google Scholar

7 Atkins, J., Voyage to Guinea (London, 1735), 112.Google Scholar Atkins's figures are confirmed by Houston (1825), quoted in Donnan, E., Documents Relating to the Slave Trade of America, II (Washington 19301931), 290: ‘…cowries which were always formerly current money at five ackies of gold for a grand cabess of bougies…’.Google Scholar

8 Smith, W., A Voyage to Guinea (London, 1744), 178.Google Scholar

9 Rask, J., Rejsebeskrivlse til og fra Guinea (Trondjen, 1754), 257.Google Scholar

10 Rømer, L. F., Nachrichten von der Küste von Guinea (Kø;benhaven und Leipzig, 1767), 277.Google Scholar

11 Rask, , Rejsebeskrivlse, 84.Google Scholar

12 Bowdich, T. E., Mission from Cape Coast Castle to Ashantee (London, 1819), 330.Google Scholar

13 Wilks, I., ‘A note on the chronology, and origins, of the Gonja Kings’, Ghana Notes and Queries, 8 01. 1966, 28. If there had been an interruption in the flow of gold from the southern goldfields, both the Songhai bid to control the source of their salt supplies (normally obtained in return for gold) and the Moroccan invasion of 159 I would be understandable.Google Scholar

14 Johnson, M., ‘The ounce in eighteenth-century West African trade’, J. Afr. Hist. VII, part 2 (1966), 202–3. The decline in real value of cowries parallels the small decline in the real value (as distinct from the gold value) of the trade ounce.Google Scholar

15 Nørregard, G., in Vore Gamle Tropenkolonier, ed. Brønsted, J., II (Køpenhaven, 1954), 563.Google Scholar

16 Bowdich, , Mission, 330;Google ScholarMonrad, H. C., Gemälde der Küste von Guinea (Københaven, 1822; Weimar, 1824), 263;Google ScholarMeredith, H., An Account of the Gold Coast of West Africa (London, 1812), 183.Google Scholar

17 Robertson, G. A., Notes on Africa (London, 1819), 235, 266, 274.Google Scholar

18 Carstensen, E., Journal (Copenhagen, 1965), 124.Google ScholarDaniell, W. F., ‘Ethnography of Accrah and Adampe’, J. Eth. Soc. IV (London, 1856), 23–4; this paper was read in 1852.Google Scholar

19 Barth, H., Travels and Discoveries in North and Central Africa, V (London and Gotha, 18571858), 17.Google Scholar

20 Kano ChronicleGoogle Scholar (amended translation of this passage in Hiskett, M., ‘Materials relating to the cowry currency of the Western Sudan: II’, Bull S.O.A.S., XXIX, part 2 (1966), 355.)Google Scholar

21 El Haj Shabeeny in Jackson, J. G., An Account of Timbuctoo and Houssa (London, 1820), 2.Google Scholar Recent work by Ivor Wilks suggests that Shabeeny's journey must be dated to the late 1750S and 1760s, and that his ‘Houssa’ is to be found in the interior delta of the Niger; see African Perspectives, ed. Allen, and Johnson, (Cambridge), forthcoming.Google Scholar

22 Winterbottom, T., An Account of the Native Africans in… Sierra Leone, I (London, 1803), 175.Google Scholar

23 Monrad, , Gemälde der Küste, 263.Google Scholar

24 Neville, G. V., ‘West African currency’, J. Afr. Soc. XVII (19171918), 223: ‘some years ago I had passed through my hands £1,000 of old Mexican and Portuguese dollars, sent by the king of Dahomey, many dating back to the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries’.Google Scholar

25 Park, , Journal, 161.Google Scholar

26 Bowdich, , Mission, 330.Google Scholar

27 Lyon, G. F., Narratives of Travels in Northern Africa (London 1819), 138.Google Scholar

28 Denham, D. and Clapperton, H., Narrative of Discoveries in North and Central Africa in 1822, 1823 and 1824 (London, 1826), 51 of Clapperton's narrative.Google Scholar

29 Clapperton, H. and Lander, R. L., Records of Captain Clapperton's Last Expedition to Africa (London, 1830), 59.Google Scholar

30 Hutton, W., A Voyage to Africa (London, 1821), 32.Google Scholar

31 Tartar, Wargee, Royal Gazette and Sierra Leone Advertiser, 15 03. 1823;Google ScholarClapperton, and Lander, , Records, 173. Clapperton quotes 1,00 to the dollar as ‘just one half’, presumably of the rate he should have had; he also explains 250,000 cowries as less than 300 dollars. Lander, on the return journey, twice refers to 4,000 cowries as ‘little more than a dollar’, perhaps working from the same value. I am grateful to Mr Robin Law for drawing my attention to these values.Google Scholar

32 Dupuis, J., Journal of a Residence in Ashantee (London, 1824), CXIV.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

33 Cruikshank, B., Eighteen Years on the Gold Coast, II (London, 1853), 42.Google Scholar

34 Forbes, F. E., Dahomey and the Dahomans, I (London, 1857), 36.Google Scholar

35 Barth, , Travels, II, 161; II, 395; V, 25.Google Scholar

36 Gold Coast Blue Book, 1850: ‘The current value of British coins is 10% above the sterling value, in consequence of gold dust which is the principal currency of the country being £4 per oz. currency, which on being transmitted to England and all expenses being deducted averages about £3. 12. o per oz. sterling’.Google Scholar

37 Gold Coast Blue Book, 1855.Google Scholar

38 Daniell, , ‘Ethnography of Accrah’, 24.Google Scholar

39 Hopkins, A. G., ‘The currency revolution in South West Nigeria in the late nineteenth century’, J. Hist. Soc. Nigeria, III, no. 3 (12. 1966), 479–80.Google Scholar

40 Cruikshank, , Eighteen years, II, 42.Google Scholar

41 Governor Hill, dispatch dated Cape Coast 24 Apr. 1852, quoted in Metcalfe, G. E., Great Britain and Ghana (London, 1964), 237.Google Scholar

42 Kimble, D., Rise of Nationalism in the Gold Coast (London, 1960), 176.Google Scholar

43 Annual Statement of the Trade and Navigation of the United Kingdom, 1853, under ‘British Possessions on the Gold Coast’.Google Scholar

44 Adumakoh, A., quoting Governor's report, 1859, Economic Bulletin (Ghana), vol. VII, no 4; Ag. Governor Bird, despatch, 13 Jan. 1860, Admin. 1/456, 12 (Ghana National Archives); Executive Council Minutes, 16 July 1861 (ram indebted to Mlle F. Cournaert for this reference); Gold Coast Blue Books, 1868 and 1869.Google Scholar

45 Opoku, E.g. Th., ‘Eines Neger-Pastors Predigtreise durch die Länder am Voltastrom’ (1877), Evangelische Missionsmagazin (Basel, 1885), 270–1;Google ScholarDobson, G., ‘The River Volta, Gold Coast, West Africa’, J. Manchester Geog. Soc. VIII (1892), 21.Google Scholar

46 Dos Santos letters, in Verger, P., ‘Influence du Brésil au Golfe de Benin’, in Les Afro-Américains, IFAN Mémoire, no. 27 (Dakar, 1953), 74. The values deduced by Newbury from the Dos Santos papers appear to be incorrect; these papers are very hard to interpret—it seems possible that the printed version may include misreadings or misprints.Google Scholar

47 Forbes, , Dahomey, I, 36.Google Scholar

48 Newbury, C. W., Tile Western Slave Coast and its Rulers (Oxford, 1961), 42.Google Scholar

49 Burton, R. F., Mission to Gelele, I (London, 1864), 143. Burton also quotes fourfold rises in the price of kenke balls (and in the remuneration of state prostitutes), 316.Google Scholar

50 Skertchly, J. A., Dahomey as It Is (London, 1874), 28.Google Scholar

51 Albeica, A. L., ‘L'avenir du Dahomey’, Annales de Géographie (1895), 185;Google Scholaribid, établissements français au Golfe de Benin (Paris, 1889), 149; Foa, E., Le Daho mey (Paris, 1895), 148;Google ScholarSchneider, O. (ed. Ribbe, C.), Muschelgeldstudien (1905), quoting d'Albeica.Google Scholar

52 Skertchly, , Dahomey as It is, 28;Google ScholarFoa, E., Le Dahomey, 148.Google Scholar

53 Schneider, , Muschelgeldstudien, 148–9.Google Scholar

54 Newbury, , Western Slave Coast (1961), 58;Google ScholarHutchinson, T. J., Impressions of Western Africa (London, 1858), 7: ‘cowries are the chief currency (at Lagos), varying in value as Government con/s or Railway Shares do at home, but generally averaging 2,000—which is called a head—for a dollar’.Google Scholar

55 Newbury, , Western Slave Coast (1961), 58.Google Scholar

56 Burton, R. F., Wanderings in West Africa (London, 1863), 234 n.Google Scholar

57 Burton, R. F., Mission to Gelele, I (London, 1864), 143: ‘Cowries, it must be remembered, are merchandise, and the price varies accordingly. At the present they are abundant, and therefore cheap. The dollar (4/6d) now buys 2½ heads at Whydah and Agbome, heads and 20 strings at Lagos and Abeokuta’.Google Scholar

58 Hopkins, , ‘The currency revolution’, 476–8, 479;Google ScholarBouche, P., Côte des esclaves et Dahomey (Paris, 1885), 198 ff.Google Scholar

59 Hopkins, , ‘The currency revolution’, 480–3.Google Scholar

60 Laird, M. and Oldfield, R. A. K., Expedition into the Interior of Africa (London, 1837), 166;Google ScholarAllen, W. and Thompson, T. R., Expedition to the River Niger in 1841, I (London, 1848), 350.Google Scholar

61 Hastings, A. G. G., Voyage of the Dayspring (1857–9) (London, 1926), 188.Google Scholar

62 Opoku, , ‘Eines Neger-Pastors’;Google ScholarRamseyer, F., ‘Eine Reise im Norden von Asante und im Osten von Volta’, Geog. Gesellschaft zu Jena, Mitteilungen, IV (1886);Google ScholarFerguson, G. E., ‘Report of a Mission to the Interior’, 9 12. 1892, enclosure in dispatch of Governor Griffith, 10 Jan. 1893, Secret, C.O. 96.230, no. 2199, P.R.O.;Google ScholarButtner, R., ‘Journey to Togo’, Mitteilungen aus den deutschen Schutzgebieten (1891), 416 ff.;Google ScholarViard, M., Au bas Niger, 3rd ed. (Paris, 1886), 231;Google ScholarBurdo, A., Niger et Benue (Paris, 1880), 137 n.Google ScholarBonnat, M.-J., Diary, printed in L'Explorateur, IV (Paris, 1877), 36–7, claimed to have ‘given’ the value of is. for 1,000 cowries in Salaga in 1876.Google Scholar

63 Robinson, C. H., Hausaland (London, 1896), 43, 85;Google ScholarDr Wolf, , ‘Journey to Borgu’, Mitteilungen aus den deutschen Schütgebieten, IV (Berlin, 1891), I ff.;Google ScholarMocklerFcrryman, A. F., Up the Niger (London, 1892), 306.Google Scholar

64 Report on Northern Nigeria (1902), Cd. 1768, 14;Google ScholarBasden, G. T., Among the Ibos of Nigeria (London, 1921), 198.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

65 Baikie, W. B., ‘Journey from Bida to Kano’, Journal of the Royal Geog. Soc. 1867, 92ff.Google Scholar

66 Passarge, S., Adamawa (Berlin, 1893), 551;Google ScholarRobinson, , Hausaland, 85;Google ScholarMonteil, P. L., De St Louis à Tripoli par le lac Chad (Paris, 1895), 297.Google Scholar

67 Mircher, Col. in Newbury, C. W., ‘North African and Sudan trade in the nineteenth century, a re-evaluation’, J. Afr. Hist. VII, no. 2, 233 ff.;Google ScholarMonteil, , De St Louis, 297.Google Scholar

68 Report on Northern Nigeria (1902), Cd. 1768, 14;Google ScholarLugard, F., Political Memoranda (Nigeria, 1905), 224.Google Scholar

69 Lenz, O., Timbuctu, II (French, ed., Paris, 1887), 162.Google Scholar

70 Jaime, G., De Koulikoro à Timbuctu (Paris, 1894), 223 n. I;Google ScholarCaron, E., De St Louis au port de Timbuctu, 3rd ed. (Paris, 1893), 278.Google Scholar

71 Binger, L. G., Du Niger au Golfe de Guinée, 1887–9, I (Paris, 1892), 375.Google Scholar

72 Dubois, F., Timbouctou la mysterieuse (Paris, 1897), 179;CrossRefGoogle ScholarBluzet, R., ‘La region de Timbouctou’, Bull. Soc. Geog. de Paris (1895), 322 ff.Google Scholar

73 Monteil, , De St Louis, 268, 280.Google Scholar

74 Raffanel, A., Nouveau voyage au pays des nègres, I (Paris, 1856), 233.Google Scholar

75 Mage, E., Voyage dans le Soudan occidental, 18631965 (Paris, 1868), 191.Google Scholar

76 /eillet, P., Voyage à Ségou en 1878–9, ed. Gravier, G. (Paris, 1887), 235.Google Scholar

77 Gallieni, J. S., Voyage au Soudan français, 18791881 (Paris, 1884), 380.Google Scholar

78 Jaime, , De Koulikoro, 223 n. I;Google ScholarCaron, , Au port de Timbuctu, 287.Google Scholar

79 Caron, , Au port de Timbuctu, 278.Google Scholar

80 Monteil, , De St Louis, 280. (Values in 1895 were anomalous, owing to the glut of French silver coin.)Google Scholar

81 Baillaud, E., Sur les routes du Soudan (Toulouse, 1902), 70–5.Google Scholar

82 Binger, , Du Niger, 1, 27; 1, 54; 1, 191; 1, 206; 1, 162. The apparently ‘round’ numbers of the exchange rate of Tenetou, Tiong-i, Fourou and Benkhobougoula are for the actual number of shells; these were locally expressed in ‘Bambara’ hundreds of 80 shells each, and in the case of the last, in ‘Mandingo’ hundreds of 60 each.Google Scholar

83 Binger, , Du Niger, 1, 308: ‘it is impossible to make comparison with silver, as there is none in circulation…when, in the course of my narrative, r speak of an object which costs 3, 4, francs, that means that, with the number of cowries asked, I could have procured 3, 4, francs in gold dust at the rate of francs per gram’.Google Scholar

84 Binger, , Du Niger, I, 375; II, 103. For the weight of the barifiri,Google Scholar see also Menzel, B., Goldgewichte aus Ghana (Berlin, 1968), which gives the actual weights of specimens collected at Salaga within a few years of Binger's visit.Google Scholar

85 Binger, , Du Niger, 1, 308, 375; II, 103, 142, 166.Google Scholar

88 Wolf, , Journey to Borgu, I ff.Google Scholar

87 Lugard, F., Diaries, ed. Perham, M. and Bull, M., IV (London, 1965), 192.Google Scholar

88 Compiled from sources quoted in The Salaga Papers,Google Scholar compiled Johnson, M., Institute of African Studies, Legon, Ghana (1966).Google Scholar

89 Binger, , Du Niger, II, 104.Google Scholar

90 Tarikh el Fattash (1913), 319;Google Scholar Shabeeny, in Jackson, , Account of Timbuctoo, 2;Google ScholarPark, , Mission, 161;Google ScholarCaillié, , Journal, I, 457;Google ScholarBarth, , Travels, V, 23;Google ScholarLenz, , Timbuctu, II, 98;Google ScholarGallieni, , Voyage, 424;Google ScholarBinger, , Du Niger, I, 374;Google ScholarJaime, , De Koulikoro, 219,Google ScholarDubois, , Timbouctou, 179;Google Scholar Capt. Lenfant, , Le Niger (Paris, 1903);Google ScholarMonteil, , De St Louis, 280.Google Scholar

91 Ryder, A. F. C., ‘An early Portuguese trading voyage to the Forcados River’, J. Hist. Soc. Nigeria 1, no 4 (12 1949), 301;Google ScholarDapper, O., L'Afrique (French, edition, Amsterdam, 1686), 306;Google ScholarBarbot, J., ‘Description of the coasts of North and South Guinea’, in A., and Churchill, J., Collection of Voyages, V (London, 1737), 339;Google ScholarRask, , Reksebeskrivese, 257;Google ScholarBerbain, S., Le Comptoir francais de Juda au XVIII siècle, IFAN Mémoire (Dakar, 1942)Google ScholarForbes, , I, 110. Barbot's references to the prices of fowls on the Gold Coast and at Wydah are at 217 and 330 of his Description.Google Scholar

92 Labat, J. B., Voyage du Chevalier des Marchais, II (Paris, 1730) 281.Google Scholar

93 Johnson, M., ‘The ounce in eighteenth-century West African trade’, J. Afr. Hist. VII, no. 2 (1966), 203.Google Scholar

94 Gold Coast Blue Book, 1850.Google Scholar

95 Johnson, M., ‘Migrants’ progress’, Bulletin of the Ghana Geographical Association, IX, no.2 (07, 1964), 21.Google Scholar

96 Allen, E.g. and Thompson, , Expedition, II, 85.Google Scholar

97 Barth, , Travels, II, 161, 395.Google Scholar

98 The rapid expansion of West African external trade in the thirty years before 1850, followed by a period of stagnation, has been noted by Dr. Newbury in a paper on prices and profitability in West African trade in the early nineteenth century, read at the Tenth International African Seminar of the International African Institute, Sierra Leone, 1969. There is no obvious explanation of this change, which extends far beyond the cowrie zone, and cannot be due to monetary causes connected with cowries, though these may vell have been of importance in the Niger Delta and on the Gold and Slave Coasts.

99 Calculated from figures in the Annual Statement of the Trade and Navigation of the United Kingdom, 1852–66, under ‘British Possessions on the Gold Coast’.Google Scholar

100 Calculated from data in Newbury (1961), The Western Slave Coast,Google Scholar and Burton, (1862), Mission to Gelele.Google Scholar

101 Calculated from table in Hieke, E., Zur Geschichte des deutschen Handels mit Ostafrika, I. Oswald und Sohn (Hamburg, 1939), 283.Google Scholar

102 Calculated from Annual Statement of the Trade and Navigation of the United Kingdom, 1852–66, ‘West Coast of Africa’.Google Scholar

103 Calculated from table in Hopkins, , ‘The currency revolution’, 405.Google Scholar

104 Hera, J. E., ‘Ueber Verwendung und Verbreitung der Kaurimuschel’, Mitteilungen der Geog. Gesellschaft zu Hamburg (1881), 14 ff.Google Scholar

105 See part I of this paper, Johnson, M., ‘The Cowrie currencies of West Africa’, J. Afr. Hist. XI, no. 1 (1970), ‘The Cowrie as a unit of account’.Google Scholar

106 Myint, H., The Economics of Developing Countries (London, 1964), 75.Google Scholar Myint's model is as follows: ‘In the first stage, the peasants produced the export crop only on a part-time basis while continuing to produce their subsistence requirements. Since they were self- sufficient in respect to locally-produced foodstuffs and other goods, they had no need to hold cash for local transactions. Since their /e reason for producing the export crop was to obtain purchasing power over imports, we may assume that they spent the whole of their cash earnings on imported goods. At this stage, the money which flowed into the country to pay for the peasants' exports would flow out again immediately to pay for their imports. No “localized” currency would be retained for long within the country. The function of money was merely to facilitate the barter between the exports and imports at agreed rates, and a separate local currency was hardly needed. As a matter of fact, in the earlier phases of trade in West Africa, British silver coins were extensively used for this purpose’. The circulation of cowries in the Lagos hinterland and elsewhere before the 1880s, and of other local currencies such as manilas, is the measure of how far Myint's model (which he evidently regarded as applicable to West Africa) fails to fit the West African facts. For the increasing use of British silver coin, see Hopkins, A. G., ‘Creating a colonial monetary system: the origins of the Vest African currency Board’, African Historical Studies, III (1970), 101–32.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

107 Delafosse, M., Haut-Sénégal-Niger (Paris, 1912), III, 48.Google Scholar

108 Skinner, E. P. in Markets in Africa, ed. Bohannan, P. and Dalton, G. (Evanston, 1962), 260.Google Scholar

109 Kirk-Greene, A. H. M., ‘The major currencies in Nigerian history’, J. Hist. Soc. Nigeria, II, no. I (12, 1960), 732–50.Google Scholar

110 Monteil, , De St Louis, 269, 280.Google Scholar

111 Seabrook, W. B., White Monk of Timbuctu (London, 1934), 238.Google Scholar

112 Basden, , Among the Ibos, 198;Google ScholarGreen, M. M., Igbo Village Affairs (London, 1964), 41 n. 2.Google Scholar

113 Herskovits, M. J., Economic Anthropology (New York, 1952), 247–50.Google Scholar

114 Dougah, J. L., Wa and Its People (Institute of African Studies, Legon, 1966): 20 to Id.; other Ghanaian informants said: 1950, 140–150 to Is.; 1965, 120 to Is. at Wa; at Lawra, 5–10 to Id.; at Wechau, Mrs M. E. Humphreys found cowries at 120 to Is. in 1965. I must thank these informants, and many others who have taken the trouble to bring or send me information about cowries during the past five years.Google Scholar