Published online by Cambridge University Press: 26 July 2012
This part of the paper deals with the cowrie shells and their import into West Africa, and the cost of their transport in West Africa; with the cowrie currency area and its changes; with the oddities of cowrie arithmetic; and with the final decline of the cowrie currency. A second part will deal with the value of cowries at various times and places, and with cowrie economics.
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62 Hiskett, M., op. cit.Google Scholar This theory seems to have originated with Jackson, W., Shells as Evidence of the Migration of Early Culture (Manchester, 1916), and is based on a carefully constructed distribution map—a warning to archaeologists and others who draw conclusions from distribution maps.Google Scholar
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67 Hiskett, , op. cit. 355. Lucas, from North Africa, at the end of the eighteenth century, believed that merchants at Katsina obtained cowries from the countries nearer the sea (Association for Promoting the Discovery of the Interior Parts of Africa, Proceedings, I, 105ff;Google ScholarHallett, R., Records of the African Association 167, 186).Google Scholar See also Daumas, E., Le Grand Désert: Itinéraire d'une caravane du Sahara au pays des nègres (Paris, 1848), 241: ‘Cowries, they tell me, come from the Bahar el Nil (Niger), which runs ten days’ journey west of Katsina. The sultan has organized a system of customs posts which prevent individuals from bringing them from the interior without paying enormous duties. He has the monopoly.’Google Scholar
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71 Dupuis, J., Journal of a Residence in Ashantee (London, 1924), CXIV.Google Scholar
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77 Monteil, P. L., De Saint Louis à Tripoli (Paris, 1895), 282. This value agrees approximately with Barth's estimate that a donkey carried 5,000–6,000 kola nutsGoogle Scholar (Barth, , op. cit. v, 29).Google Scholar
78 Lugard, F., Diaries, ed. Perham, M. and Bull, M., IV (London, 1963), 120. See also page 117: ‘It is these donkeys that throw everything out. Four more were dying this morning, and had to be left, and one yesterday = 10 loads.’Google Scholar
79 Mischlich to German Government, Akte 3832, of 20 Mar. 1903, p. 44, in German Colonial Archives at Potsdam (I am indebted to Dr I. Sellnow for this reference). Mischlich describes 3,000 kola as a ‘fairly heavy donkey load’. This is 1½ times the standard headload of 2,000 kola weighing about 65 lb.
80 Polly Hill pointed out to me that merchants could also be farmers, in which case the donkeys were bred on the farm. If the Mossi donkeys used in the Mossi–Salaga–Hausa caravan trade were larger and stronger than the southern donkeys, or the farm-bred donkeys of Hausland, this would account for the higher prices, and the Hausa merchants’ preference for Mossi donkeys.
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190 I should like to acknowledge the facilities made available to me at the Institute of African Studies, Legon, by courtesy of Mr Thomas Hodgkin; Professor Ivor Wilks has given me most generous help and encouragement with this study; and I must also thank the large number of people who have taken the trouble to give me information and references about cowries.