Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-jn8rn Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-22T19:37:25.324Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Royal Monopoly and Private Enterprise in the Atlantic Trade: The Case of Dahomey1

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  22 January 2009

Extract

The kingdom of Dahomey is often presented as the classic instance of the operation of a royal monopoly of the Atlantic trade in West Africa. Detailed study establishes, however, that there was never any such royal commercial monopoly in Dahomey, although there were attempts to establish such a monopoly in the 1780s and in the 1850s. The kings of Dahomey enjoyed a number of commercial privileges, and controlled the distribution of the war captives taken by the Dahomian army, but they were never the sole sellers of slaves. There was always an important group of private merchants in Dahomey, who were mainly concerned with marketing the slaves imported into the kingdom from the interior. The replacement of the slave trade by the palm oil trade in the nineteenth century strengthened the position of the private merchants, since they were able to move into the production of oil as well as marketing it. The kings of Dahomey also engaged in the production of oil for export, but were not able to establish as complete control of the production of oil as they had exercised over the ‘production’ of slaves.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1977

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

2 See e.g. Goody, Jack, Technology, Tradition and the State in Africa, (London, 1971), 51–2Google Scholar; Levtzion, Nehemia, Ancient Ghana and Mali, (London, 1973), 22–3Google Scholar; Oliver, R. and Fage, J. D., A Short History of Africa, 3rd ed. (Harmondsworth, 1970), 109.Google Scholar

3 Polanyi, Karl, Dahomey and the Slave Trade: an analysis of an archaic economy, (Seattle, 1966), 94.Google Scholar

4 Coquery-Vidrovitch, Catherine, ‘Recherches sur un mode de production africain’, La Pensée, cxliv (1969), 74–5Google Scholar. In a more recent publication (which is discussed later in this article) Coquery-Vidrovitch has substantially modified this picture of Dahomian commercial organization: id., ‘De la traite des esclaves à l'exportation de l'huile de palme et des palmistes au Dahomey’, in Meillassoux, Claude (ed.), The Development of Indigenous Trade and Markets in West Africa, (London, 1971), esp. 109–12.Google Scholar

5 Elwert, Georg, Wirtschaft und Herrschaft von ‘Daxome’ (Dahomey) im 18. Jahrhundert: Ökonomie des Sklavenraubs und Gesellschaftsstruktur 1724 bis 1818, (München, 1973), 28–9.Google Scholar

6 See esp. Akinjogbin, I. A., Dahomey audits Neighbours 1708–1818, (Cambridge, 1967).Google Scholar

7 For criticism of certain aspects of Akinjogbin's interpretation of Dahomey as a ‘revolutionary’ polity, cf. Law, R. C. C., ‘The Fall of Allada, 1724-An Ideological Revolution?’, J. Hist. Soc. Nigeria, v, 1 (1969), 157–63.sGoogle Scholar

8 In the mid-seventeenth century Allada was reported to be importing slaves from ‘Ulkami’, i.e. Olukumi, or Yorubaland: Dapper, Olfert, Naukeurige Beschrijvinge der Afrikaensche Gewesten (Amsterdam, 1668), 494Google Scholar. Dahomey's role as a supplier is implied by a report that in 1687/8 disputes with Dahomey interrupted the flow of slaves to Hueda: ‘Relation du Sieur du Casse sur son Voyage de Guynée’, in Roussier, P. (ed.), L'Établissemeat d'Issiny 1687–1702 (Paris, 1935), 15.Google Scholar

9 Dapper, , Naukeurige Beschrijvinge der Afrikaensche Gewesten, 492–3Google Scholar. Dapper's information on the kingdom of Warri, to the east of Aliada, relates to the year 1644: ibid. 507.

10 ‘Journal du Voyage du Sjeur d'Elbée’, in de Clodoré, J., Relation de ce qui s'est passé dans les Isles et Terre Ferme de l'Amérique, (Paris, 1671), II, 438–40.Google Scholar

11 Public Record Office, London (hereafter, PRO): T.70/1475, Baillie, W. to Company, 30 Apr. 1718.Google Scholar

12 Atkins, John, A Voyage to Guinea, Brassi, and the West Indies, (London, 1735), iii.Google Scholar

13 Contemporary accounts of Allada refer to a ‘Kapitein van de blanken’ or ‘Captain Blanco’: Dapper, , Naukeurige Beschrijvinge der Afrikaensche Gewesten, 492Google Scholar; Bulfinch Lamb to Tinker, 27 Nov. 1724, in Smith, William, A New Voyage to Guinea (London, 1744), 186Google Scholar. The indigenous title was doubtless that of Yevogan, later used in Dahomey.

14 Barbot, Jean, ‘Description des Cotes d'Affnique’, unpublished manuscript of 1688 (Ministry of Defence Navy Library, London, MS. 63), IIIe partie, 135.Google Scholar

15 Phillips, Thomas, ‘A Journal of the Voyage made in the Hannibal’, in Doasian, Elizabeth (ed.), Documents Illustrative of the History of the Slave Trade (Washington, 19301935), ii, 400–4.Google Scholar

16 Bosman, William, A New and Accurate Description of the Coast of Guinea, (London, 1705), 360–3.Google Scholar

17 In 1698 a chief called ‘Carter’ was ‘Captain Blank, or the Captain to whom the European Affairs were all entrusted’: ibid. 359. A later source confirms that the title of Yevogan, later used in Dahomey, was ‘an old Whydah title': Burton, R. F., A Mission to Gelele, King of Dahome, edited by Newbury, C. W. (London, 1966), 76, n. 37.Google Scholar

18 Archivo Publico, Bahia: 20, doc. 61, Francisco Pereyra Mendes to Viceroy of Brazil, 22 May 1726, quoted in Verger, Pierre, Flux et Reflux de la Traite des Nègres entre le Golfe de Bénin et Bahia, (Paris, 1968), 144.Google Scholar

19 PRO: T.70/54, Baillie, W. to Governor of Cape Coast Castle, 10 May 1720.Google Scholar

20 A certain ‘Zunglar’ is recorded to have served as the King of Dahomey's agent at Grehue in the early eighteenth century: Snelgrave, William, A New Account of Some Parts of Guinea, (London, 1734), 61.Google Scholar

21 PRO: T.70/1475, Baillie, W. to Company, n.d. (between 30 Apr. and 6 Aug. 1718)Google Scholar; Akinjogbin, , Dahomey and its Neighbours, 51–2.Google Scholar

22 PRO: T.70/1475, Baillie, W. to Company, 30 Apr. 1718Google Scholar; Akinjogbin, , Dahomey and its Neighbours, 56, 59.Google Scholar

23 It was observed in 1717 that ‘nobody dares b[u]y’ firearms at Jakin. PRO: T.70/1475, Baillie, W. to Dawson, , 9 Nov. 1717Google Scholar; cf. Akinjogbin, , Dahomey and its Neighbours, 59.Google Scholar

24 Agaja told the governor of the Portuguese fort at Grehue that he had attacked Hueda in 1727 because the king of Hueda was preventing him from trading with the Europeans: Archivo Publico, Bahia: 21, doc. 58, Francisco Pereyra Mendes to Viceroy of Brazil, 4 Apr. 1727, quoted in Verger, , Flux et Reflux de la Traite des Nègres, 145Google Scholar. A more detailed account to the same effect (possibly obtained from the same Portuguese governor) is given by Snelgrave, , New Account of Some Parts of Guinea, 56Google Scholar. Snelgrave also suggests that Agaja's attack on Allada in 1724 was similarly motivated: ibid. 20–1. Later eighteenth-century writers who support (or repeat) Snelgrave's explanation are de Pommegorge, Pruneau, Description de la Nigritie (Paris, 1789), 154Google Scholar; Norris, Robert, Memoirs of the Reign of Bossa Ahadee, King ofDahomy (London, 1789), x–xiGoogle Scholar; and Dalzel, Archibald, A History of Dahomy (London, 1793), 78Google Scholar. However, Atkins, , Voyage to Guinea, 119–22Google Scholar, argued that Agaja must have intended not to participate in but to suppress the slave trade; and his interpretation has been adopted and elaborated by Akinjogbin, , Dahomey and its Neighbours, 7381Google Scholar. The question has recently been re-examined by Henige, David and Johnson, Marion, ‘Agaja and the Slave Trade: another look at the evidence’, History in Africa, iii (1976), 5767CrossRefGoogle Scholar, who conclude in favour of Snelgrave against Atkins. Akinjogbin accuses Snelgrave of inconsistency in suggesting that Agaja was cut off from access to the European trade while also alluding to a certain ‘Zunglar’ who had earlier been his commercial agent at Grehue (cf. above, n. 20). But this ignores the new restrictions on trade imposed by the king of Hueda in 1718: Zunglar may have operated at Grehue prior to these.

25 Cf. Snelgrave, , New Account of Some Parts of Guinea, 21Google Scholar; de Pommegorge, Pruneau, Description de la Nigritie, 154Google Scholar; Dalzel, , History of Dahomy, 78Google Scholar. Note also the later tradition that Hueda was attacked ‘for selling muskets to the Dahomans, without locks': Forbes, F. E., Dahomey and the Dahomans (London, 1851), ii, 21.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

26 Cf. his reported remarks in 1724, that ‘he wants Ships to come to some Place only for his Slaves, and bring such Things as are only fit for such a King as he': Bulfinch Lamb to Tinker, 27 Nov. 1724, in Smith, , New Voyage to Guinea, 174.Google Scholar

27 Akinjogbin, , Dahomey and its Neighbours, 103.Google Scholar

28 Lombard, Jacques, “The Kingdom of Dahomey’, in Forde, D. and Kaberry, P. M. (eds.), West African Kingdoms in the Nineteenth Century, (London, 1967), 90.Google Scholar

29 Polanyi, , Dahomey and the Slave Trade, esp. 94.Google Scholar

30 vitch, Coquery-Vidro. ‘De la traite desesclaves à l'exportation de l'huile de palmc’, 109–12.Google Scholar

31 Argyle, W. J., The Fon of Dahomey: a history and ethnography of the old kingdom (Oxford, 1966), 103–4.Google Scholar

32 Pruneau de Pommegorge, who left the West African coast in 1764, states that the payments ranged in value from 8 to 10 slaves per ship: Description de la Nigritie, 206Google Scholar. In 1784, the rate was 7 slaves for a ship of two masts and 12 slaves for one of three masts: Isert, Paul Erdman, Voyages en Guinée et dans Iles lies Caraībes (Paris, 1793), 134–5Google Scholar. In 1788, it was 3½ slaves for a sloop, 7 for a brig, and 14½ for a ship: Testimony of Archibald Dalzel, from the Report of the Committee of the Privy Council, on the state of trade to Africa (1789), in Donnan, , Documents Illustrative of the History of the Slave Trade, II, 596Google Scholar. In 1803, it was 7 slaves per mast, i.e. 21 slaves for a ship of three masts: M'Leod, John, A Voyage to Africa (London, 1820), 1011.Google Scholar

33 Robertson, G. A., Notes on Africa, (London, 1819), 264.Google Scholar

34 PRO: FO. 84/1465, Governor Geo. Strahan, C. to Earl of Carnarvon, 22 Nov. 1875.Google Scholar

35 In 1848, the duty was said to be 5 dollars per slave: Parliamentary Papers (hereafter, PP), 1849 (399), vol. xxxivGoogle Scholar, Missions to the King of Ashantee and Dohomey [sic], item 2, inclosure: Report by B. Cruickshank Esq. of his Mission to the King of Dahomey, 9 Nov. 1848. In 1862/3, a duty of 4 dollars per slave is reported: PP, 1863 (3160), vol. lxxi, Correspondence relative to the Slave Trade, 1863, item 21: Freeman, Consul to Russell, Earl, 1 July 1862Google Scholar; PP, 1863 (3179), vol. lxxiii, Despatches from Commodore Wilmot respecting his visit to the King of Dahomey, item 1: Commodore Wilmot to Rear Admiral Sir B. Walker, 29 Jan. 1863. A report of 1849, however, gives an aberrant figure of 20 dollars: PP, 1850 (1291), vol. LV, Correspondence relative to the Slave Trade, 1840–50, item 9, inclosure 10: Forbes, Lieutenant to Fanshawe, Commodore, 5 Nov. 1849.Google Scholar

36 The earliest reference seems to be from 1845: Duncan, John, Travels in Western Africa, (London, 1847), i, 122–3.Google Scholar

37 Forbes, , Dahomey and the Dahomans, I, iii.Google Scholar

38 Le Herissé, A., L'Ancien Royaume de Dahomey, (Paris, 1911), 89Google Scholar; cf. Forbes, , Dahomey and the Dahomans, i, iii.Google Scholar

39 Dalzel, , History of Dahomy, 208, n.Google Scholar; Isert, , Voyages en Guinée, 137Google Scholar. Cf. also PRO: T.70/1545, Abson, L. to Miles, R., 14 Dec. 1782Google Scholar; Herissé, Le, L'Ancien Royaume de Dahomey, 89.Google Scholar

40 Herissé, Le, L'Ancien Royaume de Dahomey, 52–3.Google Scholar

41 See e.g. Dalzel, , History of Dahomy, xiGoogle Scholar; PP, 1849 (399), vol. xxxiv, Missions to the King of Ashantee and Dohomey, item 2, inclosure: Report by B. Cruickshank Esq. of his Mission to the King of Dahomey, 9 Nov. 1848; PP, 1863 (3160), vol. LXXI, Correspondence relative to the Slave Trade, 1863, item 21: Freeman, Consul to Russell, Earl, 1 July 1862.Google Scholar

42 Snelgrave, , New Account of Some Parts of Guinea, 37–9.Google Scholar

43 Burton, , Mission to Gelele, 317–18.Google Scholar

44 Coquery-Vidrovitch, , ‘De la traite des esclaves à l'exportation de l'huile de palme’, iii.Google Scholar

45 Duncan, , Travels in Western Africa, ii, 263–4.Google Scholar

46 See e.g. PP, 1849 (399), vol. xxxiv, Missions to the King of Ashantee and Dohomey, item 2, inclosure: Report by B. Cruickshank Esq. of his Mission to the King of Dahomey, 9 Nov. 1848.

47 Duncan, , Travels in Western Africa, ii, 264.Google Scholar

48 Forbes, , Dahomey and the Dahomans, ii, 90–1.Google Scholar

49 Akinjogbin, , Dahomey and its Neighbours, 101–2.Google Scholar

50 Archives Nationales, Paris (hereafter, AN): C. 6/25, Levet to Compagnie des Indes, 26 Aug. 1733 (lettre de nouvelles); Akinjogbin, , Dahomey and its Neighbours, 102–3.Google Scholar

51 For this title, see e.g. Norris, , Memoirs of the Reign of Bossa Ahadee, 86.Google Scholar

52 AN: C. 6/25, Levet to Compagnie des Indes, 1 Feb. 1746; Akinjogbin, , Dahomey and its Neighbours, 127.Google Scholar

53 de Pommegorge, Pruneau, Description de la Nigritie, 208–9.Google Scholar

54 Forbes, , Dahomey and the Dahomans i, iii.Google Scholar

55 Burton, , Mission to Gelele, 287, n.Google Scholar

56 The first Coki seems to have been sent to Whydah in late 1746, and the first Bonyon in 1747: Akinjogbin, , Dahomey and its Neighbours, 119.Google Scholar

57 AN: C. 6/27 bis, Bullet, Abbé, ‘Reflexions sur Juda’, 1 June 1776, ch. 5Google Scholar. The office of Coki does not appear to have survived into the nineteenth century, but the Bonyon is listed among the ‘six traders or superintendents of trade appointed by the king’ in 1850: Forbes, , Dahomey and the Dahomans, I, iiiGoogle Scholar. The Bonyon in the nineteenth century also served as governor of the Portuguese quarter of Whydah: ibid. I, 105; Burton, , Mission to Gelele, 60.Google Scholar

58 Akinjogbin, , Dahomey and its Neighbours, 127.Google Scholar

59 AN: C. 6/25, Levet to Compagnie des Indes, 1 Feb. 1746, ‘pour faire luy seul tout le commerce'.

60 For instances of royal officials at Whydah trading illegally on their own account, see e.g. AN: C. 6/25, Levet to Compagnie des Indes, 26 Aug. 1733 (lettre de nouvelles); id. to id., 26 Aug. 1733 (lettre de commerce).

61 It is noteworthy that a separate military commander for Whydah, the Kawo, was also appointed in 1747: Akinjogbin, , Dahomey and its Neighbours, 121Google Scholar. There was evidently a systematic move at this time to reduce the powers of the Yevogan, by transferring some of his functions to new officials: probably this was inspired by an abortive rebellion by the Yevogan in 1745, recorded by Norris, , Memoirs of the Reign of Bossa Ahadee, 40–8.Google Scholar

62 See e.g. Duncan, , Travels in Western Africa, I, 123–4Google Scholar; Forbes, , Dahomey and the Dahomans, I, iiiGoogle Scholar; Skertchly, J. A., Dahomey As It Is, (London, 1874), 17, 22.Google Scholar

63 The Yevogan did continue to participate in trade after 1746, being recorded as selling slaves in the accounts of the ship Le Dahomet in 1772: Berbain, Simone, Le Comptoir François de Juda (Ouidah) au XVIIIe Siécle (Paris, 1942), 102ffGoogle Scholar. But this trade was probably done on his own account rather than for the king.

64 Norris, , Memoirs of the Reign of Bossa Ahadee, 138.Google Scholar

65 Snelgrave, , New Account of Some Parts of Guinea, 130, 136.Google Scholar

66 PRO: T. 70/1523, Devaynes, W. to Melvil, T., 22 Oct. 1754 (extract)Google Scholar, quoted in Melvil, T. to Committee of African Company, 30 Nov. 1754.Google Scholar

67 In the 1780s, it was noted that the Oyo preferred to deal with the ports to the east of Dahomey, such as Porto Novo, because there ‘they are permitted to come to trade at the sea-shore’: Labarthe, Pierre, Voyage à la Côte de Guinée, (Paris, 1803), 104.Google Scholar

68 Snelgrave, , New Account of Some Parts of Guinea, 125.Google Scholar

69 Dalzel, , History of Dahomy, 213.Google Scholar

70 Duncan, , Travels in Western Africa, I, 282–3.Google Scholar

71 Ibid. II, 206.

72 Herissé, Le, L'Ancien Royaume de Dahomey, 53.Google Scholar

73 de Pommegorge, Pruneau, Description de la Nigritie, 209.Google Scholar

74 Norris, , Memoirs of the Reign of Bossa Ahadee, 87.Google Scholar

75 Dalzel, , History of Dahomy, 170.Google Scholar

76 Forbes, , Dahomey and the Dahomans, I, 112Google Scholar; II, 213.

77 Burton, , Mission to Gelele, 140Google Scholar; Quénum, Maximilien, ‘Au Pays des Fons’, Bulletin du Comité d'Études Historiques et Scientifiques de l'A.O.F., xviii (1935), 163, 296.Google Scholar

78 Isert, , Voyages en Guinée, 136–7.Google Scholar

79 Dalzel, , History of Dahomy, 208.Google Scholar

80 Forbes, , Dahomey and the Dahomans, I, 112Google Scholar; II, 175. This man is evidently identical with the ‘Niawi’, described as a native of the ‘English town’ in Whydah, who served as interpreter to the missionary Freeman in 1843: Freeman, Thomas Birch, Journal of Various Visits to the Kingdoms of Ashanti, Aku, and Dahomi (London, 1844), 250.Google Scholar

81 For ‘Quenung’, see Forbes, , Dahomey and the Dahomans, I, 112Google Scholar; for his family, cf. Quénum, , ‘Au Pays des Fons’, 296–7Google Scholar. The kingdom of Weme had been destroyed by Dahomey in the early eighteenth century.

82 Dalzel, , History of Dahomy, 184.Google Scholar

83 Ibid. 213–15.

84 Ibid. 214; Adams, John, Remarks on the Country extending from Cape Palmas to the River Congo, (London, 1823), 219.Google Scholar

85 Dalzel, , History of Dahomy, 223–4Google Scholar. Cf. PRO: ADM./1/1988, ‘State and Condition of the African Company's Fort at Whydah’, 28 Jan. 1790Google Scholar, encl. to Inglefield, J. N. to Stephens, Philip, 30 May 1790.Google Scholar

86 Forbes in 1850 listed the Mehu, the Migan, the Kangbode (a palace official), and the Yevogan as major slave-dealers: Dahomey and the Dahomans, II, 62.Google Scholar

87 For references to the ‘trading men’ of the Yevogan and the Mehu, see Dalzel, , History of Dahomy, 162Google Scholar; Duncan, , Travels in Western Africa, ii, 206.Google Scholar

88 PP, 1849 (399), vol. xxxiv, Missions to the King of Ashantee and Dohomey, item 2, inclosure: Report by B. Cruickshank Esq. of his Mission to the King of Dahomey, 9 Nov. 1848. Most of the sum calculated for the king's revenue derived from the sale of slaves, at $80 per head.

89 For the career of da Souza, see esp. Ross, David, ‘The First Chacha of Whydah: Francisco Felix da Souza’, Odu, new series, ii (1969), 1928.Google Scholar

90 Broquant, M., Esquisse Commerciale de la Côte Occidental d'Afrique (1839)Google Scholar, quoted in Verger, , Flux et Reflux de la Traite des Nègres, 461Google Scholar. Da Souza is also described as having ‘the monopoly of the trade’ in PP, 1852 (1455), vol. LIV, Papers relative to the reduction of Lagos, item 8, inclosure: Mr Thomas Hutton to Mr [W. M.] Hutton, , 7 Aug. 1850Google Scholar; and this is followed by Ross, , ‘The First Chacha’, 20–1.Google Scholar

91 Hazoumé, Paul, Le Pacte du Sang au Dahomey, (Paris, 1937), 31.Google Scholar

92 PP, 1852 (1455), vol. LIV, Papers relative to the reduction of Lagos, item 3, inclosure 13: Forbes, Lieutenant to Fanshawe, Commodore, 5 Nov. 1849Google Scholar; ibid., item 8, inclosure: MrHutton, Thomas to MrHutton, [W. M.], 7 Aug. 1850Google Scholar; Forbes, , Dahomey and the Dahomans, i, iii.Google Scholar

93 Forbes, , Dahomey and the Dahomans, I, iii.Google Scholar

95 PP, 1852 (1455) vol. liv, Papers relative to the reduction of Lagos, item 3, inclosure 18: Duncan, Vice Consul to Palmerston, Viscount, 22 Sept. 1849.Google Scholar

96 Ibid., item 3, inclosure 13: Forbes, Lieutenant to Fanshawe, Commodore, 5 Nov. 1849.Google Scholar

97 Burton, , Mission to Gelele, 79.Google Scholar

98 The French fort at Whydah had been abandoned in 1797, the Portuguese in 1807, and the British in 1812.

99 PP, 1852 (1455) vol. liv, Papers relative to the reduction of Lagos, item 8, inclosure: MrHutton, Thomas to MrHutton, [W. M.], 7 Aug. 1850.Google Scholar

100 Ross, , “The First Chacha’, 25.Google Scholar

101 Foà, Édouard, Le Dahomey, (Paris, 1895), 23Google Scholar. The commercial operations of Joaquim d'Almeida were, however, conducted primarily at Agoue, west of Whydah, where he died in 1857.

102 PRO: CO. 96/12, Hutton, T. to Hutton, W. B., 17 Mar. 1847Google Scholar. For the career of Martinez, see esp. Ross, David, ‘The Career of Domingo Martinez in the Bight of Benin 1833–64’, J. Afr. Hist., vi (1965), 7990.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

103 pp, 1850 (1291) vol. LV, Correspondence relative to the Slave Trade, 1849–50, item 9, inclosure 5: Forbes, Lieutenant to Harvey, Commodore, 6 Oct. 1849.Google Scholar

104 Forbes, , Dahomey and the Dahomans, I, 125Google Scholar; II, 3.

105 pp, 1852 (1455), vol. liv, Papers relative to the reduction of Lagos, item 9: Beecroft, Consul to Palmerston, Viscount, 22 July 1850Google Scholar; ibid., item 13, inclosure 3: Journal of Lieutenant Forbes on his Mission to Dahomey, , entry for 4 July 1850.Google Scholar

106 Foà, , Le Dahomey, 30–1.Google Scholar

107 Burton, , Mission to Gelele, 72.Google Scholar

108 PP, 1861 (1283-I), vol. lxv, Correspondence relative to the Slave Trade, 1860, item 8: Brand, Consul to Russell, Lord J., 8 Apr. 1860.Google Scholar

109 Burton, , Mission to Gelele, 79.Google Scholar

110 Foà, , Le Dahomey, 36Google Scholar. Another account gives the date as 1880: Herissé, Le, L'Ancien Royaume de Dahomey, 337, n. 1.Google Scholar

111 Foà, , Le Dahomey, 37, 42–4Google Scholar; Herissé, Le, L'Ancien Royaume de Dahomey, 336–8.Google Scholar

112 PRO: FO. 84/886, Fraser, L. to Gollmer, C. A., 15 Aug. 1851.Google Scholar

113 This is clear from the account in Quénum, , ‘Au Pays des Fons’, 296–7Google Scholar, which (despite inaccuracies of detail) distinguishes the father who was a contemporary of the first Chacha Francisco Felix da Souza (d. 1849) and the son who was active in the 1860s.

114 Forbes, , Dahomey and the Dahomans, I, 112.Google Scholar

115 Foà, , Le Dahomey, 23Google Scholar. A less credible account of the rivalry between the elder Kwenun and da Souza is given by Quénum, , ‘Au Pays des Fons’, 296–7.Google Scholar

116 Burton, , Mution to Gelele, 287, n.Google Scholar

117 Ibid. 60.

118 Skertchly, , Dahomey As It Is, 45.Google Scholar

119 Cf. Burton, , Mission to Gelele, 79.Google Scholar

120 Quénum, , ‘Au Pays des Fons’, 296–7Google Scholar, gives Kwenun the title ‘ministre de commerce'; for the Dahomian equivalent, cf. ibid. 158.

121 Foà, , Le Dahomey, 33–4Google Scholar. It was this incident which initiated the disputes which led to the British blockade of Whydah in 1876–7.

122 Skertchly, , Dahomey As It Is, 7, 13.Google Scholar

123 Norris, , Memoirs of the Reign of Bossa Ahadee, 146.Google Scholar

124 Quénum, , ‘Au Pays des Fons’, 296Google Scholar. The implausibility of this account was pointed out by Schnapper, Bernard, La Politique et le Commerce Français dans le Golfe de Guinée de 1838 à 1871, (Paris, 1961), 166, n. 2Google Scholar; but its essential accuracy has recently been championed by Coquery-Vidrovitch, , ‘De la traite des esclaves à 1'exportation de l'huile de palme’, 116Google Scholar. The historical basis of Quénum's account is probably the fact of rivalry between da Souza and the elder Kwenun, which appears in a more plausible form in the tradition recorded by Foá, , Le Dahomey, 23.Google Scholar

125 Herissé, Le, L'Ancien Royaume de Dahomey, 86, 327.Google Scholar

126 PP, 1842 (7) vol. xi, Report of the Select Committee on the West Coast of Africa, Minutes of Evidence of W. M. Hutton, sections 10260, 10329.

127 Brue, , ‘Voyage fait en 1843, dans le Royaume de Dahomey’, Revue Coloniale, vii (1845). 56.Google Scholar

128 PRO: CO. 96/12, Hutton, T. to Hutton, W. B., 7 Dec. 1846.Google Scholar

129 Duncan, , Travels in Western Africa, I, 205–6Google Scholar; cited by Coquery-Vidrovitch, , ‘De la traite des esclaves à l'exportation de l'huile de palme’, 116Google Scholar; and by Yoder, John C., ‘Fly and Elephant Parties: political polarization in Dahomey 1840–70’, J. Afr. Hist. xv (1974), 429Google Scholar. In the 1860s, the growth of ground-nuts for export was similarly banned: Burton, , Mission to Gelele, 117.Google Scholar

130 The analysis of political factions in Dahomey in the 1850s by Yoder, , ‘Fly and Elephant Parties’Google Scholar, falls down on this as on many other points of detail. A more serious weakness in Voder's analysis is his complete omission of the issue of human sacrifice. It was, in fact, over the issue of human sacrifice, rather than over the slave trade, that opposed factions most clearly emerged in the Dahomian court, at the time of the death of King Gezo in 1858: see esp. Bouche, Pierre, La Côte des Esclaves et le Dahomey, (Paris, 1885), 342Google Scholar; and cf. Burton, , Mission to Gelele, 235Google Scholar; Repin, , ‘Voyage au Dahomey’, first published in 1863Google Scholar, in Études Dahoméennes, iii (1950), 95.Google Scholar

131 Hopkins, A. G., An Economic History of West Africa, (London, 1973), 142–7.Google Scholar

132 Coquery-Vidrovitch, , ‘De la traite des esclaves à l'exportation de l'huile de palme’.Google Scholar

133 Forbes in 1850 saw traders bringing oil for sale at Whydah, , ‘some with only a gallon, others having slaves loaded with large calabashes’: Dahomey and the Dahomans, I, 114Google Scholar. Duncan in 1845 likewise found the wives of Sierra Leonean settlers at Whydah engaged in the collection and sale of palm oil: Travels in Western Africa, I, 187.Google Scholar

134 PP, 1856 (0.2) vol. LXII, Correspondence relative to the Slave Trade, 1855–6, item 10, inclosure 5: MrMcCoskry, to Campbell, Consul, 19 Aug. 1855.Google Scholar

135 Herissé, Le, L'Ancien Royaume de Dahomey, 90.Google Scholar

136 Ibid. 52, 90. As early as the 1720s, it is reported that the king of Dahomey ‘had great Numbers of captive Negroes, which tilled his Grounds': Snelgrave, , New Account of Some Parts of Guinea, 106.Google Scholar

137 Herissé, Le, L'Ancien Royaume de Dahomey, 87, 90.Google Scholar

138 Forbes, , Dahomey and the Dahomans, i, 114, 115, 123.Google Scholar

139 Ibid. I, 31.

140 Private merchants could, however, be marginally involved in slave ‘production’, since they might be required to supply forces to serve with the Dahomian army: cf. Ibid. I, 113. They could also finance slave-producing operations, by supplying guns and ammunition on credit to the military chiefs.

141 Dalzel, , History of Dahomy, 215.Google Scholar

142 Forbes, , Dahomey and the Dahomans, i, 113.Google Scholar

143 Herissé, Le, L'Ancien Royaume de Dahomey, 86–7.Google Scholar

144 Forbes, , Dahomey and the Dahomans, i, 35, 111.Google Scholar

145 Herissé, Le, L'Ancien Royaume de Dahomey, 87.Google Scholar

146 PRO: FO. 84/893, Forbes, T. G. to Bruce, H. W., 18 Jan. 1852Google Scholar; ibid., Forbes, T. G., ‘Journal of Proceedings on My Visit to Abomey’, entry for 13 Jan. 1852Google Scholar; FO. 84/886, Fraser, L., ‘Occurrences, Gossip &c. at Whydah’, entries for 20 Jan. and 16 Feb. 1852Google Scholar; Ross, David, ‘The Autonomous Kingdom of Dahomey, 1818–94’ (Ph.D. Thesis, University of London, 1967), 123–4.Google Scholar

147 PRO: FO. 84/886, Fraser, L., ‘Occurrences, Gossip &c. at Whydah’, entry for 16 Feb. 1852.Google Scholar

148 Skertchly, , Dahomey As It Is, 272Google Scholar. Other royal oil plantations were established on the Abomey plateau: Ross, , ‘The Autonomous Kingdom of Dahomey’, 83–4.Google Scholar

149 Skertchly, , Dahomey As It Is, 52, 89.Google Scholar

150 Gezo's successor Glele had the alternative identity of Addokpon. For the institution of the ‘Bush King’, see Burton, , Mission to Gelele, 268–9Google Scholar; Skertchly, , Dahomey As It Is, 271–2Google Scholar. Skertchly links the institution to the oil trade; Burton gives a similar commercial explanation of its origins, but refers not to trade in oil but to the manufacture of cloth, clay pipes, etc. The institution had been established by 1857, when Gezo is recorded to have employed the name Gankpe while trading oil to Prya Nova, west of Whydah: PRO: FO. 2/20, Consul Campbell to Earl of Clarendon, 7 Mar. 1857, with inclosures, esp. Commander George H. Day to Commodore John Adams, 24 Feb.

151 Skertchly, , Dahomey As It Is, 271.Google Scholar

152 PRO: FO. 84/1465, Anonymous letter to the Editor of the African Times, 23 June 1876Google Scholar, inclosure to Fitzgerald, E. to Wylde, W. H., 27 July 1876Google Scholar. The writer, however, refers to having been at Whydah in 1843–5, and it seems likely that his account reflects conditions in the 1840s rather than in the 1870s.

153 Ross, , ‘The Career of Domingo Martinez’, 83.Google Scholar

154 Skertchly, , Dahomey As It Is, 23, 32–4.Google Scholar

155 Ibid. 406.

156 Burton, , Mission to Gelele, 193.Google Scholar

157 It does appear, indeed, that there was some sort of struggle for control of trade between the state bureaucracy and private entrepreneurs in Asante during the nineteenth century: Wilks, Ivor, Asante in the Nineteenth Century (Cambridge, 1975), 194–6, 688–92, 700–5Google Scholar. In Benin also, royal control over the Atlantic trade appears to have partially broken down for a period in the late seventeenth and early eighteenth centuries: Ryder, A. F. C., Benin and the Europeans 1485–1897 (London, 1969), 130, 153.Google Scholar