Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-t7czq Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-24T14:59:40.776Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Wangara, Akan and Portuguese in the Fifteenth and Sixteenth Centuries. II. The Struggle for Trade

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  22 January 2009

Ivor Wilks
Affiliation:
Northwestern University

Extract

Until 1471 the Wangara had enjoyed a monopolistic position in the Akan gold trade, consigning bullion to the markets of the Western Sudan (see the first part of this paper). The Portuguese entered the trade in the late fifteenth century, but experienced difficulty in deflecting gold to the coast. The strong demand for labour in the Akan country obliged them to import slaves from other parts of West Africa in order to achieve competitiveness. In 1477 Jenne – the principal northern outlet for Akan gold – fell to the Songhay, and for a time the Wangara were induced to do at least some of their business with the Portuguese. Subsequently the Wangara found markets for their gold as far west as the Gambia river. In the mid-sixteenth century the ruler of Mali, his frontiers crumbling on all sides, made a bid to take control of the Wangara gold trade. His troops occupied Bitu or Bighu, the Wangara entrepot on the edges of the Akan forest country, and he may (just possibly) have ordered an attack on Elmina, the principal Portuguese post on the coast to the south. If there was such a move against Elmina, it certainly failed, and at least some of the troops in Bitu did not return to Mali but set up their own state locally: Gonja. The developing Atlantic economy, built around new supplies of gold and new demands for slaves, eclipsed the older Mediterranean economy of which West Africa had been a geographically peripheral but commercially central part. The decline of Mali, and with it Bitu, was irreversible.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1982

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

1 Mauny, R., Esmeraldo de Situ Orbis (Bissau, 1956), 53.Google Scholar

2 Vogt, J., Portuguese Rule on the Gold Coast 1469–1682 (Athens, Georgia, 1979), 67–8.Google Scholar In northern Ghana today a jalabiya is often among the most prized possessions of a village chief. In some instances the garment is owned communally by the village, and is made available to a man on his wedding day for example. For gifts of jalabiya to Akan chiefs, see Pacheco Pereira to Factor João de Figueiredo, 8 Aug. 1520, in Blake, J. W., Europeans in West Africa, 1450–1560 (London, 1942), I, 130–1.Google Scholar

3 Garrard, T. F., Akan Weights and the Gold Trade (London, 1980), 294.Google Scholar

4 For a recent discussion of some of these topics see Posnansky, M., ‘Archaeology, Technology and Akan Civilization’, Journal of African Studies, II, i (spring, 1975).Google Scholar

5 Wiltgen, R. M., Gold Coast Mission History 1470–1880 (Techny, 1956), 4.Google Scholar It appears that Pope Alexander VI reversed the decision by a Bull of 1496, which gave Dom Manuel permission to import firearms at Elmina.

6 Barros, De, in Crone, G. R., The Voyage of Cadamosto, (London, 1937), 115.Google Scholar

7 Vogt, , Portuguese Rule, 67–9.Google ScholarRicard, R., Études sur l'histoire des portugais au Maroc, (Coimbra, 1955), 194–6.Google Scholar For a brief review of the literature on the topic, see da Mota, Teixeira, ‘The Mande Trade in Costa da Mina according to Portuguese documents until the mid-sixteenth century’, paper presented to the Conference on Manding Studies, School of Oriental and African Studies, London, 1972, pp. 911.Google Scholar

8 Vogt, , Portuguese Rule, p. 76.Google Scholar

9 Wilks, I., ‘Land, Labour, Capital, and the Forest Kingdom of Asante’, in Friedman, J. and Rowlands, M. J. (eds.), The Evolution of Social Systems (London, 1977), 487534.Google Scholar‘The State of the Akan and the Akan States: a Discussion’, Cahiers d'Études Africaines, forthcoming.Google Scholar

10 Blake, , Europeans in West Africa, 1, 910.Google Scholar For the evidence of local coastal traffic in pre-Portuguese times see Fage, J. D., ‘Some remarks on beads and trade in Lower Guinea in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries’, J. Afr. Hist. iii, ii (1962), 343–7.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

11 Crone, ,Voyage of Cadamosto, 125.Google Scholar

12 Vogt, J. L., ‘The Early Sao Thomé-Principe Slave Trade with Mina, 1500–40’, Int. J. Afr. Hist. Stud. vi, iii (1973), 464–5.Google Scholar

13 Vogt, , Portuguese Rule, 71–2, 90.Google Scholar

14 Braudel, F., ‘Monnaies et civilisation: de l'or du Soudan à l'argent d'Amérique’, Annates. Économies, Sociétés, Civilisations, I, i (1946), 1213Google Scholar, and see the comments of Malowist, M., ‘Le commerce d’or et d'esclaves au Soudan Occidental’, Africana Bulletin, iv (1966), 56–9.Google Scholar

15 Mota, Teixeira da, ‘The Mande Trade’, 1113.Google Scholar

16 de Magalhães Godinho, V., L'Économie de l'Empire Portugais aux XVe et XVIe siècles (Paris, 1969), 228–43.Google ScholarVogt, , Portuguese Rule, 217–20.Google Scholar

17 Vogt, , Portuguese Rule, 88–9Google Scholar, cites the case of Governor Estevão da Gama, who held shipments back until the final year of his tour of duty.

18 See Mauny, , Esmeraldo, 52–3.Google Scholar

19 Épaulard, A. et al. (eds.), Description de l'Afrique (Paris, 1956), 11, 466.Google Scholar

20 Crone, , Voyage of Cadamosto, 125.Google Scholar

21 Vogt, , Portuguese Rule, 230, note 35.Google Scholar

22 Ibid. 98. The source is Arquivo Nacional da Tôrre do Tombo, Lisbon, Corpo Cronológico, part i, maço 80, doc. 74.

23 Mota, Teixeira da, ‘The Mande Trade’, 1314 and 22–4Google Scholar. Compare Blake, , Europeans in West Africa, i, 173.Google Scholar

24 Mauny, , Esmeraldo, 52–3.Google Scholar

25 For these towns see Wilks, I., ‘The Transmission of Islamic Learning in the Western Sudan’, in Goody, J. (ed.), Literacy in Traditional Societies (Cambridge, 1968), 173–6.Google Scholar

26 ‘Abd al-Raḥman al-Sa';di: see Houdas, O., Tarikh es-Soudan (Paris, 1911)Google Scholar, Arabic text 96, French translation 159.

27 Ibid. Arabic 98, French 161.

28 Wilks, I., ‘The Mossi and Akan States 1500–1800’, in Ajayi, J. F. A. and Crowder, M., History of West Africa (London, 1971), 1, 354.Google Scholar

29 Silveira, L., Edição Nova do Tratado Breve dos Rios de Guinéfeito pelo Capitāo André Alvares D'Almada (Lisbon, 1946), 32.Google Scholar Almada's informants spoke of obtaining gold from ‘Sofala’; in Malinke sofara or sofala means‘a ward (of a town)’ and could be used quite appropriately to refer to the Juula qabīlas of Bighu for example.

30 Goody, J., Ethnography of the Northern Territories of the Gold Coast West of the White Volta (Colonial Office, London, 1954), 54–5.Google Scholar

31 Arabic Collection, Institute of African Studies, University of Ghana, IASAR/263.

32 I. Wilks, ‘Muslim Office in Dagomba’, Interdisciplinary Seminar in Field Methods, Summer 1968, Report No. 11, Institute of African Studies, University of Ghana, and Program of African Studies, Northwestern University: interview with al-Ḥājj Muhammad b. Limam Khalidu of Yendi, 14 Aug. 1968.

33 See Levtzion, N., ‘The Spread and Development of Islam in the Middle Volta Basin in the Pre-colonial Period’ (Ph.D. Thesis, University of London, 1965), 375.Google Scholar

34 The emendation is suggested by the translation made by Duncan-Johnstone, see Goody, Ethnography of the Northern Territories, 54: Yagbum…‘is a big thing like a fort’.

35 Royal Library, Copenhagen, Cod. Arab CCCII, iii, fos. 236–7.Google Scholar

36 An edition of the Kitāb Ghanjā is in course of preparation by N. Levtzion and the writer. Copies of manuscripts are accessioned IASAR/10, n, 12, 13, 14, 62, 248(i), 272, Arabic Collection, Institute of African Studies, University of Ghana.

37 Levtzion, N., Muslims and Chiefs in West Africa (Oxford, 1968), 5177.Google Scholar

38 Ibid. 195–6. Levtzion's computations of reigns supersede those in Wilks, I., ‘A Note on the Chronology, and Origins, of the Gonja Kings’, Ghana Notes and Queries, viii (01 1966), 26–8.Google Scholar

39 Vogt, , Portuguese Rule, 214.Google Scholar

40 Blake, , Europeans in West Africa, I, 178.Google ScholarFord, J. D. M., Letters of John III, King of Portugal, 1521–57 (Cambridge, Mass., 1931), 376.CrossRefGoogle Scholar A careful reading of Joao De Barros shows that these are not the new mines to which he made allusion.

41 Blake, , Europeans in West Africa, 1, 179Google Scholar: João III to Count of Castanheira, dated 27 Feb. 1551. Ford, , Letters of John III, 382–3.Google Scholar

42 Vogt, , Portuguese Rule, 98.Google Scholar

43 Rodney, W., ‘A reconsideration of the Mane invasions of Sierra Leone’, J. Afr. Hist. viii, ii (1967), 224–5, 235.Google ScholarA History of the Upper Guinea Coast 1545–1800 (Oxford, 1970), 3970.Google Scholar

44 See, e.g., L. Teixeira's map of 1602, in Cortesão, A. and da Mota, A. Teixeira, Portugaliae Monumenta Cartographica (6 volumes, Lisbon, 19601962), iii, 6770.Google Scholar For the history of the map see Cordeiro, L. (ed.), Viagens, Exploracões e Conquistas dos Portuguezes (Lisbon, 1881), vi, 1920.Google Scholar For the identification of the king of Mali with the ‘Great Elephant’, see Silveira, , Ediçao Nova do Tratado Breve, 33.Google Scholar

45 Vogt, , Portuguese Rule, 219.Google Scholar

46 Ibid. 98.

47 In the early nineteenth century a large region of western and central Gonja, scene of the sixteenth-century campaigns, was known as the ‘Desert’, Ṣaḥrā: see Dupuis, J., Journal of a Residence in Ashantee (London, 1824), part ii, pp. xxxvi, cxxxi.CrossRefGoogle Scholar The region remains almost uninhabited to this day.

48 Schiffarten (Basel, 1624), 58Google Scholar, reprinted in Naber, S. P. L'Honoré (ed.), Werken Uitgegevan door de Linschoten- Vereeniging, vi ('s-Gravenhage, 1913).Google Scholar ‘Ngbanya’ has been customarily rendered into Arabic as ‘Ghanjā’, into Hausa as ‘Gwanja’, and hence into English as ‘Gonja’.

49 General State Archives, The Hague, Leupen Collection, Map 743, dated 25 Dec. 1629.

50 Garrard, , Akan Weights, 42–6.Google ScholarKea, R. A., Settlements, Polities, and Trade in the Seventeenth Century Gold Coast, (Johns Hopkins University Press, forthcoming).Google Scholar

51 Ta'rīkh al-Sūdān, ed. Houdas, Arabic 11, French 22.

52 Ibid. Arabic 182–3, French 278–9.

53 Levtzion, , Ancient Ghana and Mali (London, 1973), 98–9.Google Scholar

54 Wallerstein, I., The Modern World-System. Capitalist Agriculture and the Origins of the European World-Economy in the Sixteenth Century, (New York and London, 1974).Google Scholar