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The Cowrie Currencies of West Africa Part I

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  26 July 2012

Extract

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.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1970

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References

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63 Hiskett, M., op. cit. 345 ff., gives the early Arabic texts.Google Scholar

64 Julien, Ch.-A., Histoire de l'Afrique du nord (Paris, 1961), 234. The English were importing to Morocco in ca. 1700: ‘Guinea cowries, which are shells serving as money in that country.’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

68 E.g. Allen, W. and Thompson, T. R. H., op. cit. II, 85: ‘Gori pays an annual tribute of 360,000 to the Filatah king.’Google Scholar

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70 George, Dobson’, ‘The River Volta, Gold Coast, West Africa’, J. Manchester Geog. Soc., VIII (1892), 21:Google Scholar ‘a canoe 25ft. long by 3 ft. wide and 18 ins, deep requiring eight men to pole it up’ (for the identity of ‘George Dobson’ see note in my ‘M. Bonnat on the Volta’, Ghana Notes and Queries, no. 10 (1968), 6).Google Scholar

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73 Shabeeny, quoted in Jackson, J. G., An Account of Timbuctoo and Hausa (London, 1820), 2: 45 quintals;Google ScholarDenham, and Clapperton, , Narrative of Travels and Discovery in North and Central Africa. (18221824): 4 cwt.;Google ScholarCaillié, R., Journal d'un voyage à Temboutou et a Jenné (Paris, 1830), 67: 500 lb.;Google ScholarDickson, C. H., ‘Account of Ghadames’, J. Royal Geog. Soc. 1860: cwt.;Google ScholarRabbi, Mordekkai, ‘Reisen nach Timbuktu’, Petermanns Mitteilungen, 1870: not over 150 kg.;Google ScholarOllive, Dr, ‘Schilderung von Tendouf’, Petermanns Mitteilungen, 1880: 3 centner; Col. Mircher ca. 1865Google Scholar (in Newbury, C. W., ‘North Africa and Western Sudan trade in the nineteenth century, a re-evaluation’, J. Afr. Hist. VII (1966), 233): 3 kantar = 150 kg.;CrossRefGoogle ScholarMiège, J. L., Le Maroc et l'Europe, III, (Paris, 19611962); 85 ff.: 3 quintals = 154–162 kg.;Google Scholaribid. 258: 150kg.; Lugard, F., in Annual Report, Northern Nigeria 1902: 3–4½ cwt.Google Scholar

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75 Shabeeny, , op. cit. 2 ff.Google Scholar

76 Miner, H. M., Primitive City of Timbuctu (Princeton, 1953), 49 n.Google Scholar

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.

81 Barth, H., op. cit. V, 29.Google Scholar

82 Binger, L. C., Du Niger au golfe de Guinée (Paris, 1892), II, 103.Google Scholar

83 Barth, H., op. cit. V, 29.Google Scholar

84 Lugard, F., Diary, IV, 192.Google Scholar

85 Dupuis, J., op. cit. CXIV. These caravans were in fact mixed donkey and slave porter, in varying proportions; costs were probably similar for both.Google Scholar

86 Meredith, H., An Account of the Gold Coast of West Africa (London, 1812), 183.Google Scholar

87 Mungo, Park, Travels in the Interior Districts of Africa (London, 1799), 199 n.Google Scholar

88 Lugard, F., Diaries, passim. For the operation of this system, see below, p. 47.Google Scholar

89 Robinson, C. H., Hausaland (London, 1896), 46.Google Scholar

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91 Hiskett, M., loc. cit. 346 ff.Google Scholar

92 Beaufoy quoted in Hallett, Records of the African Association. Mattra, in 1793, also stated that there was no money in circulation but gold dust and shells (ibid. 118).

93 Denham, and Clapperton, , op. cit. 220.Google Scholar

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95 Passarge, S., Adamawa (Berlin, 18931895), 214, 475 ff.Google Scholar

96 G. Rohlfs, loc. cit.

97 Caillié, R., Travels through Central Africa to Timbuctu, II (London, 1830), 94.Google Scholar

98 Barth, H., op. cit., German ed. v, 22–3;Google Scholar see also Palmer, R., Bornu, Sahara, and Sudan (London, 1936), 67, for an eighteenth-century chronicle: ‘the chief gave a horse and a million cowries to him’.Google ScholarNewbury, , loc. cit. 233 ff., quoted Col. Mircher's information from a Ghadames merchant ca. 1862 who paid 10,000 cowries customs at Agades.Google Scholar

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101 Lenz, O., Timbouctou, French ed. (Paris, 1887), 225.Google Scholar

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

103 Caillié, R., op. cit. French ed., II, 38, 72,Google Scholar See also Binger, L. C., op. cit. I, 207.Google Scholar

104 Binger, L. C., op. cit. I, 498 ff.Google ScholarKlose, H., Togo unter deutschem Flagge (Berlin, 1899), 362 ff.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

105 Dupuis, J., op. cit. cxiv.Google Scholar

106 Klose, H., op. cit. 362 ff.Google Scholar See also David Asante's diary of 1884 edited by Christaller, , ‘Journey to Salaga and Obooso’, Mitteilungen Geog. Gesellschaft zu Bern, 1886.Google Scholar

107 Barth, H., op. cit. III, 202.Google Scholar

108 Monteil, P. L., op. cit. 123.Google Scholar

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114 Meredith, H., op. cit. 183.Google ScholarMonrad, H. C., op. cit. 262.Google Scholar

115 Cruikshank, B., op. cit. II, 58;Google Scholar see also Henty, G. A., March to Coomassie (London, 1874), 260.Google Scholar

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118 Laird, M. and Oldfield, R. A. K., op. cit. 341: ‘[Cowrie] will purchase any article from Eboe to Boosa, and passes current in every part of the interior.’Google Scholar

119 E.g. Miss, Tucker, Abeokuta, or Sunrise within the Tropics (London, 1853), 26,Google Scholar and Bouche, P. B., Sept ans en Afrique occidentale (Paris, 1885), 198 ff.Google Scholar

120 Petermanns Mitteilungen (1861), 77.Google Scholar

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138 Mungo, Park, 1815, op. cit. 145.Google ScholarMage, Cf. E., Voyage dans le Soudan occidental 1863–1866 (Paris, 1868), who says that kola was counted like cowries in Segu.Google ScholarBinger, , op. cit. I, 342, further south, reports: ‘In this part of the Soudan, when referring to kola, the first large unit is 100, whereas throughout Samori's state it is only 80.’Google Scholar

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150 Ibid. I, 309; Delafosse, M., op. cit. 48, gives a similar account of terms ‘in Mandingo and countries under Mandingo influence’ for packets of 10, 20, 100 and 200 cowries.Google Scholar

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165 Allen, W. and Thompson, T. R. H., op. cit. I, 350, 460.Google Scholar

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168 Dalzel, A., op. cit. 214.Google Scholar

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170 Peregaux, quoted Schneider, , op. cit. 144–5.Google ScholarBonnat, M.-J., ‘Diary’, 01 1876, L'Explorateur, 1876. While the 35-cowries string formed a convenient bridge towards the higher northern values, it may have originated in connexion with a series of gold weights which were seven-eighths of the weight of the standard troy weights.Google Scholar

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173 Forbes, F. E., Dahomey and the Dahoman (London, 1851), 110; this might suggest that the string of 50 in place of 40 was already in use at this date for large transactions, as we know it was in the 1870s.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

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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.