Published online by Cambridge University Press: 22 January 2009
Court records from 1905–6 offer a rare view of the status of women slaves in early colonial Northern Nigeria. It is shown that British officials found it easy to accommodate the aristocracy of the Sokoto Caliphate on the status of these women, despite British efforts to reform slavery. Those members of the aristocracy and merchant class who could afford to do so were able to acquire concubines through the courts, which allowed the transfer of women under the guise that they were being emancipated. British views of slave women attempted to blur the distinction between concubinage and marriage, thereby reaffirming patriarchal Islamic attitudes. The court records not only confirm this interpretation but also provide extensive information on the ethnic origins of slave women, the price of transfer, age at time of transfer, and other data. It is shown that the slave women of the 1905–6 sample came from over 100 different ethnic groups and the price of transfer, which ranged between 200,000 and 300,000 cowries, was roughly comparable to the price of females slaves in the years immediately preceding the conquest. Most of the slaves were in their teens or early twenties. The use of the courts to transfer women for purposes of concubinage continued until at least the early 1920s.
1 This article arises from a joint research project into the impact of early colonial rule on slavery in which I am involved with J. S. Hogendorn. An earlier version was presented at the annual meeting of the Canadian Association of African Studies, Edmonton, June 1987. I wish to thank Elspeth Cameron, Martin Klein, Thomas Lewin, Beverly Mack, Catherine Coles and Richard Roberts for their comments.Google Scholar
2 For a discussion of British policy toward slavery, see Hogendorn, J. S. and Lovejoy, Paul E., ‘The development and execution of Frederick Lugard's policies toward slavery in northern Nigeria’, paper presented at the annual meeting of the African Studies Association, Denver, November 1987,Google Scholar and Hogendorn, and Lovejoy, , ‘The reform of slavery in early colonial northern Nigeria’, in Miers, S. and Roberts, R. (eds), The End of Slavery in Africa (Madison, 1988).Google Scholar
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5 For a fuller discussion of concubines and their place in Caliphate society, see Lovejoy, Paul E., ‘Concubinage in the Sokoto Caliphate’, in Coles and Mack, Hausa Women.Google Scholar Also see Ferguson, Douglas Edwin, ‘Nineteenth-century Hausaland, being a description by Imam Imoru of the land, economy, and society of his people’ (Ph.D. thesis, unpublished, UCLA, 1973), 231–33;Google Scholar and Smith, M. G., ‘Introduction’, in Smith, Mary (ed.), Baba of Karo. A Woman of the Moslem Hausa (New York, 1954).Google Scholar It should be noted that Alan Christelow is wrong in stating that a concubine became free ‘once she had born her master children’; see ‘Slavery in Kano, 1913‐1914: evidence from the judicial records’, African Economic History, XIV (1985), 69.Google Scholar
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9 Hogendorn and Lovejoy, ‘Lugard's policies toward slavery’; and Hogendorn and Lovejoy, ‘Reform of slavery’.Google Scholar
10 Ibid.
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12 Webster, G. W., Report on Nassarawa Province, December 1904, SNP 7/5 346/1904. Unless otherwise noted, all archival references are to the Nigerian National Archive, Kaduna.Google Scholar
13 Marginal note to Webster's report of December 1904.Google Scholar
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28 Lugard, Frederick, Instructions to Political and Other Officers, on Subjects Chiefly Political and Administrative (London, 1906), 144.Google Scholar
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33 Smith (ed.), Baba of Karo.Google Scholar
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42 See, for example, the case of Yaganah, aged sixteen, Kanuri: ‘Enslaved by some unknown man at Kukawa in 1903; exchanged in Bauchi shortly afterwards. Claimed by her brother. Freed to return with her brother to Bornu’ (Register of Freed Slaves, Bauchi Province, August 1906, SNP 15/1 Acc 121). Also see the case of Pattoo, aged twenty-six from Bebeji in Kano Emirate: ‘Freeborn Hausa woman, enslaved at Ningi, fled on the occasion of the 1904 Expedition [against Ningi]. Left to follow her own inclinations. A grown up woman well able to look after herself. She has been informed as the Regulations remarriage with govt servants’ (Register of Freed Slaves, Kano Province, January 1905, SNP 15/1 Acc 90).Google Scholar
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48 Cowrie-sterling exchange rates varied, but in 1906 a shilling was worth 1,200 cowries (Annual Report, Northern Nigeria, 1906–07, 522).Google Scholar At this rate, £4 was worth 96,000 cowries but probably was meant to be the equivalent of 100,000 cowries. If this rate is correct, then sterling values were extremely low. Because of the problem of converting these values, the analysis here ignores these cases.
49 Summary of interviews with Alhaji Mahmadu K'ok'i of Kano by A. N. Skinner. Besides his career as a judge and scholar, Ahaji Mahmudu was also Bargery's principal collaborator in the compilation of the 1934 Hausa-English dictionary. I wish to thank Professor Skinner for a copy of these summaries. For a biography of Mahmadu K'ok'i, see Skinner, (ed), Aihaji Mahmudu K'ok'i (Zaria, 1977).Google Scholar
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