Published online by Cambridge University Press: 22 January 2009
Published European first-hand accounts of the coastlands from Senegal to Angola for the period c. 1445-c. 1700 are examined to see what light they throw on the extent to which institutions of servitude in pre-colonial sub-Saharan Africa were autonomous developments or a response to external demands for African slaves. It seems clear that when, in the early years of this period, European traders first approached societies along the western African coasts, they were commonly offered what they called ‘slaves’ in exchange for the goods they had brought. But it would be wrong to conclude from this that a slave class was necessarily a feature of western African coastal societies when these were first contacted by Europeans. It is clear, for instance, that the Europeans preferred to deal with societies which had developed monarchical governments, whose leaders had control of sufficient surpluses to make trade worthwhile. The evidence suggests that in these societies most individuals were dependants of a ruling and entrepreneurial elite, but that there was also social mobility. A category of dependants that particularly attracted the notice of the European observers was women, whom men of power and wealth tended to accumulate as wives (and hence as the potential mothers of still more dependants). The necessarily limited supply of women may have been a factor encouraging such men to seek to increase their followings, and thus their status, power and wealth, by recruiting other dependants by forcible, judicial and economic means. While many such dependants, or their offspring, would be assimilated into the social groups commanded by their masters, the latter were certainly willing to contemplate using recently acquired or refractory recruits in other ways, such as exchanging them for alternative forms of wealth.
2 An early expression of this view may be found in the Hon. Wyndham, H. A., The Atlantic and Slavery (London, 1935), particularly at pp. 221–2Google Scholar. Wyndham's book was one of the few scholarly works available on the subject when I was writing An Introduction to the History of West Africa (Cambridge, 1955)Google Scholar, where I took the same line on pp. 77–9.Google Scholar
3 Rodney's, research, originally for a 1966 London Ph.D., was published as A History of the Upper Guinea coast, 1545–1800 (Oxford, 1970)Google Scholar. The clearest expression of his view on the slavery issue, however, is to be found in his article, ‘African slavery and other forms of social oppression on the Upper Guinea coast in the context of the Atlantic slave trade’, J. Afr. Hist, vii, iii (1966)Google Scholar. He subsequently enlarged on it in How Europe Underdeveloped Africa (London and Dar es Salaam, 1972)Google Scholar, especially ch. 4.
4 My views have been expressed in Fage, J. D., States and Subjects in sub-Saharan Africa, the tenth Raymond Dart Lecture (Johannesburg, 1974)Google Scholar, and in A History of Africa (London and New York, 1978)Google Scholar, especially chs. 3–5 and 11. On the question of the land/labour relationship, a recent reference is Patterson, Orlando, ‘The structural origins of slavery: a critique of the Nieboer-Domar hypothesis…’, Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences, ccxcii (1977), 12–34CrossRefGoogle Scholar, which should be read with the comments of Engerman, Stanley in the same volume at pp. 65–7.Google Scholar
5 This, of course, is essentially a geographical enlargement of the method of enquiry pioneered by Dr Rodney.
6 Published works explored which are not specifically mentioned in the text or notes of this paper include: Fernandes, Martin de Enciso, Suma de Geographia…(1519)Google Scholar, Fonteneau, Jean, La cosmographie…(c. 1545)Google Scholar, and Les voyages avanturaux du Capitaine Jean Alfonce (1559)Google Scholar - the relevant texts of which are most usefully compared, with considerable and valuable commentary, in Hair, P. E. H., ‘Some minor sources for Guinea, 1519–59’, History in Africa, iii (1976), 19–46CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Broecke, Pieter vander, Reizennaar West AfricaGoogle Scholar (1605; modern ed. by Ratelband, K., The Hague, 1950)Google Scholar; The Strange Adventures of Andrew Battellin AngolaGoogle Scholar (1610; modern ed. by Ravenstein, E. G., London, 1901)Google Scholar; Carvalho, Francisco Pirez de, Roteiro da Costa da GuinéGoogle Scholar (1635; ed. with parallel French translation by Thilmans, G. and de Moraes, N. I., Bull. IFAN, B xxxii (1970), 343–69)Google Scholar; Giovanni Francesco Romano (or da Roma), Breve Relatione…Regno del Congo…(1648; modern ed. in French translation by Bontinck, Francois, Louvain, 1965)Google Scholar; Müller, Wilhelm Johann, Die Afrikänische auf der Guineischen Gold-Cust Landschaft Fetu…Google Scholar (1675; facsimile ed. Graz, , 1968)Google Scholar; Maire, Jacques Joseph le, Les voyages du Sieur Le Maire… (Paris, 1695Google Scholar; English trans., London, 1696); Premier voyage du Sieur de la Courbe fait à la coste d'Afrique…Google Scholar (1685; ed. Cultru, P., Paris, 1913)Google Scholar; Ducasse, Jean-Baptiste (or du Casse), Relation…sur son voyage de Guynée (1687–1688)Google Scholar, Tibièrge, Le Sieur, Journal…en 1692Google Scholar, Damon, Le Chevalier (or d'Amon), Deux relations des voyages… (1698 and 1702)Google Scholar, and Loyer, Godefroy, Relation du voyage… (1702)Google Scholar -all of which may be found in Roussier, Paul, L'établissement d'Issigny, 1687–1702 (Paris, 1935)Google Scholar; Phillips, Thomas, Journal of a Voyage…to Africa (1693–1694Google Scholar; in Awnsham, and Churchill, John, A Collection of Voyages and Travels, vi, London, 1732)Google Scholar; and Relations sur le Congo du Père Laurent de Lucques (i.e. Lorenzo da Lucca, 1700–1717Google Scholar; ed. Brussels, Jean Cuvelier, 1953).Google Scholar
7 [Cadamosto, Alvise da], The Voyages of Cadamosto… trans, and ed. Crone, G. R. (London, 1937)Google Scholar; De la première decouverte de la Guinée, récit par Diogo Gomes, Latin text and French translation, ed. by Monod, Th., Mauny, R. and Duval, G. (Bissau, 1959).Google Scholar
8 Description de la C^te occidentale de l'Afrique…par Valentim Fernandes, Portuguese text and French translation, in two parts (1) de Ceuta au Sénégal, ed de Cenival, P. and Monod, Th. (Paris, 1938)Google Scholar, and (2) Sénégal au Cap de Monte, ed. Monod, Th., Teixeira da Mota, A., and Mauny, R. (Bissau, 1951)Google Scholar. The relevant part is the second (and is hereafter referred to simply as ‘Fernandes’), but see the Introduction to part 1 for information about Fernandes and his manuscripts. The ‘History of the Congo’ is largely published in French translation as document 18 in Cuvelier, Jean and Jadin, Louis, L'ancien Congo d'après les archives romaines, 1518–1640 (Brussels, 1954), 108–60Google Scholar; see the editors' Introduction for Confalonieri and the authorship of the ‘History’; also, for Confalonieri, Gray, Richard and Chambers, David, Materials for West African History in Italian Archives (London, 1965), at p. 37.Google Scholar
9 The best modern edition, in French translation, is by Bal, Willy, Description du Royaume de Congo…par Filippo Pigafetta et Duarte Lopes (Louvain and Paris, 2nd rev. ed. 1965).Google Scholar
10 Dapper, Olfert, Naukeurige Beschrijvinge der Afrikaensche Gewesten… (Amsterdam, 1668)Google Scholar; this is now rare, so that reference is now often to the second Dutch edition (Amsterdam, 1676) and, especially, the German translation (Amsterdam, 1670), which is available in modern facsimile. The French translation (Amsterdam, 1686) and the English version (Ogilby, John, Africa, being an Accurate Description… London, 1670)Google Scholar often depart considerably from the original. Barbot, Jean, A Description of the Coasts of North and South GuineaGoogle Scholar, was published as vol. v of the Churchills', A Collection of Voyages and Travels (London, 1732).Google Scholar
11 The major exception is the section on the Kquoja.
12 Many of the problems involved in using Dapper and Barbot are graphically demonstrated by Hair, P. E. H., ‘Barbot, Dapper, Davity: a critique of sources on Sierra Leone and Cape Mount’, Africa in History, 1 (1974), 25–54.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
13 Measured in terms of estimates for African slaves successfully imported by Europeans into the Americas or elsewhere, the volume of the Atlantic slave trade would seem roughly to have doubled each half century from 1451–1500 to 1601–1650. But in the latter half century the annual average was still only about 7,400. For the second half of the seventeenth century the annual average was about 19,400; for the eighteenth century, it was about 55,000. See Philip Curtin, D., The Atlantic Slave Trade; a Census (Madison, 1969), tables 33Google Scholar, 34 and 65.
14 However, in a later article, ‘Gold and slaves on the Gold Coast’, Trans. Hist. Soc. Ghana, x (1969), 13–28Google Scholar, Rodney considered some of the evidence for the Gold Coast.
15 Rodney, , ‘African slavery…’, 442.Google Scholar
16 My own views on this argument are given below, pp. 289–90.Google Scholar
17 Villault, Nicolas, Bellefond, Sieur de, Relation des Costes d'Afrique appellées Guinée (Paris, 1669)Google Scholar; Marees, Pieter de, Beschryvinghe ende historische Verhael van het Gout Koninckryck van Guinee…Google Scholar (first pub. Amsterdam, 1602; modem ed. by l'Honoré Naber, S. P., The Hague, 1912Google Scholar; incomplete and not always accurate English translation in Hakluytus Posthumus or Purchas his Pilgrimes (1625–1626), at pp. 247–366Google Scholar in Vol. 6 of the Maclehose, ed. of 1905–1906)Google Scholar. Villault, who sailed on a chartered Dutch vessel to prospect the opportunities for an expansion of French trade in Guinea, may be presumed to have done his homework. If he had not actually read de Marees's book (a French translation of which was published at Amsterdam, in 1605)Google Scholar, he must clearly have talked with Dutchmen with a comparable understanding of Guinea. However, he himself says that the part of his information on the Gold Coast which was not gained from personal observation came from his discussions with resident Danish officials and merchants. His book does not appear to be a plagiarization of de Marees's work as, for example, Smith's, WilliamA New Voyage to Guinea… (London, 1744)Google Scholar is largely a plagiarization of Bosman's, WilliamA New and Accurate Description of the Coast of Guinea (English trans, from the 1704 Dutch, London, 1705Google Scholar; facsimile, and annotated, ed., London, 1967).Google Scholar
18 André Donelha's work was one of the sources which Dr Rodney read in manuscript (and he read his name as ‘Dornelas’). It has since been published in a scholarly edition by A. Teixeira da Mota, with a parallel English translation and additional notes by Hair, P. E. H., Descriçào da Serra Leoa e dos Rios de Guiné do Cabo Verde (Lisbon, 1977).Google Scholar
19 Cf. below, p. 309.
20 A similar observation might equally apply to the early Arabic-speaking observers of the western Sudan, such as Ibn Battuta.
21 In the Bakongo kingdom, though they themselves may not always have fully appreciated it, the missionaries seem to have been accepted because they were useful to the king and/or to the various provincial ‘counts’, and they were therefore to a considerable degree incorporated into their systems of social control.
22 Jobson, Richard, The Golden Trade… (London, 1623Google Scholar; facsimile, reprints 1904 and 1968Google Scholar, the latter with an introduction by Rodney, Walter), has much to say about the bixirinGoogle Scholar (whom he calls ‘Marybuckes’, i.e. marabouts, ) and their role, in pp. 78–101.Google Scholar
23 As has often been quoted, when, as late as 1620, slaves were offered to Richard Jobson on the Gambia, he could say that the English ‘were a people who did not deal in any such commodities, neither did we buy and sell one another, or any that had our own shapes’ (The Golden Trade, 112)Google Scholar. See also above, n. 13.
24 Gomes, , 24–5.Google Scholar
25 Pereira, Duarte Pacheco, Esmeraldo de Situ OrbisGoogle Scholar, Portuguese text and parallel French translation, ed. Mauny, Raymond (Bissau, 1956), 52–3.Google Scholar
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27 Pacheco, , 72–3Google Scholar; Fernandes, , 74–7.Google Scholar
28 Pacheco, , 80–1Google Scholar, 130–1, 134–5, 138–9. Mauny's, edition of the EsmeraldoGoogle Scholar does not extend as far as the Congo; the Bakongo, reference may be found on p. 144Google Scholar of the English translation by Kimble, G. H. T. (London, 1937).Google Scholar
29 [Eustache de la Fosse], ‘Voyage à la côte occidentale d'Afrique’, ed. Foulché Delbosc, R., Rév. Hisp. iv (1897), 174–201, at p. 181Google Scholar. On women being offered for sale, see below p. 306 and n. 76.
30 Fosse, De la, 184.Google Scholar
31 See, for example, Marees, de (ed. Naber), 182Google Scholar, in the course of an important discussion on slavery on the Gold Coast.
32 Cf. below, pp. 302–3.
33 Villault, , 163–83.Google Scholar
34 ‘Geographers in Africk maps With savage pictures fill their gaps, And o'er unhabitable downs Place elephants for want of towns.’
35 Pacheco, , 128–9Google Scholar. Cf. his treatment of the Ivory Coast; although he says he has little knowledge of it, he twice says that it is thickly peopled (114–15, 116–17).
36 Marees, De (ed. Naber), 230–1.Google Scholar
37 See, for example, the account of James Welsh's voyage of 1590–1 printed by Richard Hakluyt. Hakluyt's, The Principall Navigations of the English Nation was first published in London in 1589Google Scholar; a second and enlarged edition in three volumes, with some editing of the original material, appeared in 1598–9. The first edition is most accessible in the facsimile edition (in two volumes) published at Cambridge for the Hakluyt Society in 1965; the second probably in the Everyman edition in eight volumes (1907). In the latter, Welsh's voyage is at pp. 302–30 of vol. IV. The best edition of Hakluyt's material up to 1560 that is relevant to this paper is to be found, together with other relevant matter, in Blake, John W. (ed.), Europeans in West Africa, 1450–1560 (2 vols London, 1942).Google Scholar
38 Cadamosto, , 29–30.Google Scholar
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42 Almada, André Alvares de, Tratado Breve dos Rios de Guiné (c. 1594)Google Scholar, as printed in Brasio, Antònio Duarte (ed.), Monumenta Missionaria Africana; Africa Ocidental, 2nd series, vol. iii (Lisbon, 1964), at p. 234Google Scholar. There are two texts of this work; that printed by Brasio is somewhat shorter than the other, which is being edited by A. Teixeira da Mota and P. E. H. Hair for publication at Lisbon with a parallel English translation. My references to Almada are always to Brasio's publication, which includes some variant readings.
43 Pacheco, , 134–5.Google Scholar
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45 For example Marees, de (ed. Naber), 232–42Google Scholar; Nyendael, David van, letter 21 (dated 1702)Google Scholar, in Bosman, (1705), 423–48.Google Scholar
46 Fernandes, , 70–1Google Scholar. My observations about the king ‘stemming from a nobility’ is based on the fact that Fernandes says the Banyun king was called ‘Jagara’ and his editors' statement (n. 133, p. 164)Google Scholar that ‘the word Jagra is used by various tribes [in modern No man has his own land that he may hoe and use for himself, for the king has all woods, fields and lands under him, so that they may not plant or sow without his consent. 33 Guinea-Bissau] to designate the superior social class from which kings and chiefs are normally drawn. Early Portuguese writers often refer to the Jagras as the “fidalgos” (nobles) of the region.'
47 Pacheco, , 72–3.Google Scholar
48 Fernandes, , 94–5Google Scholar. Fernandes's particularly detailed knowledge of the Sierra Leone region derives from the eight-year residence there of Velho, Alvaro (see his text, pp. 84–5Google Scholar and 102–3, and his editors' n. 197 on pp. 175–7).
49 The various kinds of cloth woven from raphia fibre in the Congo-Angola region were equally marks of social distinction. The best cloth, said to resemble velvet, was the prerogative of kings and nobles. See Pigafetta, and Lopes, , 36–7Google Scholar, 118–19.
50 Almada, Alvares de (ed. Brasio), 311–12.Google Scholar
51 Alvares, Manuel, Ethiopia Menor e Descriçào Geogr´frica da Provincia da Serra Leòa (c. 1616), ch. 8Google Scholar. This is another of the sources which Dr Rodney read in manuscript; a modern edition is now being prepared by Teixeira da Mota, A.. See also the graphic description of the arrival on the beach of the king of Cape Mount and his retinue in Villault, 101–3.Google Scholar
52 Fernandes, , 78–9Google Scholar; cf. Donelha's, description of the burial of a Mane king, 116–17Google Scholar; Marees's, de of a Gold Coast king, 190–1Google Scholar, as also Villault's, , 344–6Google Scholar; and the description by an anonymous Portuguese pilot of the burial of a Benin king, first published by Ramusio, G. B., Delia navigationi e viaggi (Venice, 1550)Google Scholar, and available in English translation in Blake, , ii, 150–1.Google Scholar
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54 Ruiters, Dierick, Toortse der Zee-vaert (1623), ed. l'Honoré Naber, S. P. (The Hague, 1913)Google Scholar. The relevant passage occurs when Ruiters is dealing with Sierra Leone, and so is available in English translation by Hair, P. E. H., Africana Research Bulletin (Sierra Leone), v, iii (1975). 63–5.Google Scholar
55 See n. 52 above. The Mane, of course, never conquered as far as the Biafada.
56 Alvares de Almada (ed. Brasio, , 234–5)Google Scholar savs that the territory of the Wolof king used to be large; he had tributary kings under him, and used to send his captains to govern the coastal trading places. But one of these turned against him and created the independent kingdom of Cayor.
57 Fosse, De la, 182.Google Scholar
58 Hakluyt, , in Blake, 11Google Scholar, 378–9, 383, 404–7.
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71 Brun, Samuel (or Braun, ), Schiffarten…in etliche newe Länder und Instden (Basel, 1624Google Scholar; facsimile, ed. Graz, 1969), 14Google Scholar. (There is also a modern ed. by l'Honoré Naber, S. P., The Hague, 1913.)Google Scholar Denis de Carli went so far as to say (A Curious and Exact Account of a Voyage to Congo in the Years 1666 and 1667, in the Churchills', Voyages, vol. 1, at p. 662)Google Scholar that women hoeing with a child on their backs might ‘very often carry another in their belly’. But this seems an exaggeration if, as is likely, the child on the back was not yet weaned. At the end of ch. 6 of the first book of Cavazzi da Montecuccolo, G. A., Istorica Descrizioni dè treè Regni Congo, Matamba e Angola… (first pub. Bologna, 1687), at vol. 1, p. 39Google Scholar, of the modern Portuguese ed. by de Leguzzano, G. M. (Lisbon, 1969)Google Scholar, there is a piquant little picture of a Mukongo woman hoeing with a child on her back.
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77 M.D., Thomas Masterman Winterbottom, An account of the native Africans in the neighbourhood of Sierra Leone (2 vols London, 1803), i, 148Google Scholar. In other respects, Winter-bottom's account of the place of women in society is on all fours with that of earlier observers.
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99 Dalzel, Archibald, The History of Dahomey (London, 1793Google Scholar; facsimile, ed. London, 1967), 124Google Scholar. Cf. Villault, , 334Google Scholar: the king's ‘authority is such that he can do as he likes’.
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103 Rev. Johnson, James to Church Missionary Society, 01 1880Google Scholar (C.M.S. Archives, CA2/056). I owe this reference to Oroge, E. A. Dr and his 1970Google Scholar University of Birmingham Ph.D. thesis, ‘The institution of slavery in Yorubaland, with particular reference to the nineteenth century’.