No Image Available

West African Kingdoms in the Nineteenth Century by Daryll Forde, P. M. Kaberry (z-lib.org)

 Author: Edited by: Daryll Forde and P. M. Kberry  Category: Biography, History, Nonfiction
 Description:

This collection of studies brings together in a single volume
some of the results of the considerable body of recent research on
the later development and organization of the larger states which
played so great a p art in the earlier economic, political, and
cultural life of West Africa. We hope it will be useful to a wide
range of readers.
Powerful kingdoms with complex political organization and
elaborate state ritual had early developed in the w ide region that
lay between the Western Sahara and the Guinea Coast. Some were
among the earliest societies of Tropical Africa to become know n
to the Mediterranean and Western World. They w ere also the first
with which enduring external relations w ere established. F rom the
tenth century onwards, Arabic-speaking merchants and Islamic
proselytizers regularly crossed the Sahara in caravans to the courts
and cities of Ghana, Mali, Songhai, and Kanem, and celebrated
journeys w ere also made to North Africa and Mecca by some of
the rulers of these states. Accounts of them in the writings of
Arab travellers and geographers filtered through to Mediterranean
Europe.
From the late fifteenth century, when the Portuguese established
their first trading stations on the Gold Coast and in the Bight of
Benin, fragmentary knowledge of other kingdom s lying in the
forest and savannah hinterlands of the Guinea Coast began to
flow directly to Christian Europe. Over the next centuries, as the
slave trade built up to considerable dimensions, some accounts
were published not only of the trade b u t of some of the kingdoms
involved in it. W e have such classics as the works of Pereira
(1505-20), Dapper (1668), John Barbot (1732), Clapperton
(1829), and R. and J. Lander (1832) relating to w hat was later to
be Nigeria; of Bosman (1704), Snelgrave (1734), W . Smith (1744),
N orris (1790), Dalzel (1793), and M ’Leod (1820) for w hat is now
Dahomey; of Bowdich (1819), Hutto n (1821), Dupuis (1824), and
Freeman (1843) for the Gold Coast; of Ogilby (1696), Astley
(1745-47), and J. Matthew (1788) for Sierra Leone; and of
Mollien (1820) for Senegal and the Gambia.

West African Kingdoms in the Nineteenth Century by Daryll Forde, P. M. Kaberry (z-lib.org).pdf

 Back