fbpx
Wikipedia

Pate Island

Pate (Paté) Island (Swahili pronunciation: [ˈpate]) is located in the Indian Ocean close to the northern coast of Kenya, to which it belongs. It is the largest island in the Lamu Archipelago, which lie between the towns of Lamu and Kiunga in the former Coast Province. The island is almost completely surrounded by mangroves.

Pate Island
The narrow streets of Pate town are similar to those in other towns on the island
Map of Pate island
Pate Island
Location in Kenya
Geography
LocationIndian Ocean
Coordinates2°06′S 41°03′E / 2.100°S 41.050°E / -2.100; 41.050
ArchipelagoLamu Archipelago
Administration
Kenya

Like much of the Swahili Coast, Pate's history was marked by a steady transition from agricultural communities in the early first millennium into a specialized, urban trading society around the 10th century, likely earlier. Islam spread down the coast from African Muslims in the Horn of Africa, helping to develop what would be known as the Swahili culture. Despite myths to the contrary, Pate was neither an Arab nor Persian colony, but an African town frequented by trading Arabs, Persians, Indians, and others. It was the centre of the Pate sultanate from the 13th–19th centuries. The Swahili port of Pate long vied with Lamu and Takwa (on Manda Island) for economic dominance of the area, and came into prominence around the 14th century. It was subjugated by Lamu, however, in the late 19th century.[citation needed]

Public transportation is provided by a few mini buses (known as matatus). The main administrative centre on the island, with the police station, is in Faza.

Faza edit

Faza town, on the North coast, known by the name of Ampaza by the Portuguese[1] dates back at least to the 14th century. In 1587, Faza was destroyed by the Portuguese as the local Sheikh had supported Mir Ali Bey, a notorious privateer who had earlier played a key role in ousting the Portuguese from Muscat. The Portuguese arrived from Goa with some 650 men on their punitive expedition, and unleashed their fury on Faza. Everybody they could find was killed, including the local Sheikh. The Portuguese preserved his head in a barrel of salt for display in India. After 4 days of looting they invited Fazas' arch-rivals from Pate town to take away anything that they liked from Faza.[2]

Faza was later resettled. The Portuguese in Faza constructed a chapel there, however, nothing remains of it. In the 18th century Faza again fell into decline due to the rise of Pate. The English Consul Holmwood visited the place in 1873 and found it "dirty and infected with diseases".[3]

Pate Town edit

The Pate Sultanate was a sultanate from at least the beginning of the 13th century until 1895. From 1858 on it was the domain known as Wituland. Archeological evidence suggests Pate was a prominent location in local trade networks by the 10th century.[4]

Pate Town is situated on the south-west coast of the island. According to the Pate Chronicle, the town of Pate was founded by refugees from Oman in the 8th century and re-founded by members of the Nabhani family, also from Oman, in 1203. The Pate Chronicle also claims that in the 14th century Pate was so powerful that it had conquered most of the towns on the Swahili coast.[5] However, recent archaeological findings (by Neville Chittick and later, Mark Horton) suggest that the early references in the Chronicle to Pate are wrong and that the town is in fact younger.

The 18th century was known as the "Golden Age of Pate", when the town was at its height of powers and also prospered in fine arts. Builders constructed some of the finest houses on the Swahili coast, with extensive elaborate plaster works. Goldsmiths made intricate jewellery, fine cloths (including silks) were made by Pate's weavers and carpenters produced fine wooden furniture. The use and production of the musical instrument known as Siwa were most famous. Two examples of Siwas still remain in the museum in Lamu.

Both men and women wrote poetry in the Kiamu dialect of Swahili. The Utendi wa Tambuka, one of the earliest known documents in Swahili, was written in the royal Yunga palace in Pate Town. The downfall of Pate town came as a consequence of continuous quarrelling/warring with its neighbours from the end of the 18th century.[6]

In 1811, two British naval officers, Smee and Hardy, visited Pate, and witnessed the infighting.[7]

In 1813, the famous "Battle of Shela" took place at Shela. This was an attempt by Pate, allied with the Mazrui clan from Mombasa/Oman, to subject Lamu. The attempt failed totally, and many were killed. Only a handful of people managed to return to Pate, and their losses were felt for years.[6]

Thomas Boteler, who visited Pate in 1823, described the seeing the remains of a Portuguese fort, but that the place looked otherwise poor.[8] The poet Mwana Kupona (d. 1860) also lived at Pate Town. By 1892, the number of inhabitants had fallen to only 300, down from 7,000. Today, the town has recovered some. Agriculture is today the main economic activity.[6]

Siyu edit

 
Siyu Fort on Pate island

Siyu town is situated on the North coast of Pate island. As no major excavations have been done in Siyu, its age is not known, but it might date from the 13th century. Gaspar de Santo Bernadino visited the town in 1606, and stated that it was the largest town on the island.[9]

Siyu's main claim to historical fame is that it through several battles withstood the Sultans of Zanzibar. In 1843 the Sheikh of Siyu, Bwana Machaka wa Shee, and the new Sheikh of Pate, repudiated the sovereignty of Seyyid Said, Sultan of Oman and Zanzibar. In response, Seyyid Said assembled an army consisting of 2000 people from Muscat, Baluchistan and Lamu. Leading them was his cousin, General Seyyid Hemed bin Ahmed Al-Busaidy, known as "Amir Hemed". He had previously been Governor of Bandar Abbas (in 1824). He landed at Faza in early January 1844. On 6 January they moved towards Siyu, but were ambushed and forced back to Faza. After three weeks without a victory Amir Hemed sailed off.[citation needed]

In 1845 Siyu gave Seyyid Said one of his greatest military defeats, in this battle the famous Amir Hemed was killed and was buried in Rasini where his grave exists to date. Seyyid Said used to pay tribute to his grave at Rasini every year. It is believed Amir Hemed was very swift with his sword to the extent of stopping all arrows and spears shot at him in battlefield. The soldiers of Siu knew about this and during this battle two archers from the Siu army shot two arrows at him in one second targeting his armpit. When Amir Hemed swiftly lifted his sword to stop the first arrow the second shot his chest from the arm pit. It was a poisoned arrow and it killed him instantly. Seyyid Said planned a revenge to avenge the death of his cousin. After a while he cheated almost all the rulers, advisors and generals of Siu into a diplomatic mission with him in Zanzibar, but he turned this into a massacre mission for the rulers of Siu. They were advised by the sultan to leave behind all their weapons since it was a diplomatic one. Upon arrival in Zanzibar, Seyyid Said individually asked every individual in the Siu mission the whereabouts of Amir Hemed and everybody who answered that he is dead was killed instantly by the Sultan. Some of the diplomats who answered that Amir Hemed is still alive were spared but they were imprisoned for life at fort Jesus in Mombasa which was also under the Sultan then. After the Sultan of Zanzibar massacred almost all the rulers of Siu, he forcefully arrested the ones remained in Siu town and deported them to Mombasa for imprisonment at fort Jesus along with the others who survived the Zanzibar Massacre.[citation needed]

When Siyu finally succumbed to Zanzibar's dominance, under Sultan Majid in 1863, it was one of the last towns on the whole of the Swahili Coast to do so.[10]

Kizingitini edit

Kizingitini is situated on the North coast (east of Faza) and is the largest fishing port on the island. Lying slightly north of Rasini, the fishing port straddles 2° 4'11.90"S and 41° 8'29.92"E, and is the southern reach of the Kizingitini-Kiunga Spiny lobster fishery.

Shanga edit

Shanga is an important archaeological site, situated on the South-East coast of the island. It was excavated during an eight-year period, starting in 1980. The earliest settlement was dated to the 8th century, and the conclusion drawn from archaeological evidence (locally minted coins, burials) indicate that a small number of local inhabitants were Muslim, probably from the late 8th century onwards, and at least from the early ninth.[11] The excavations also revealed a major break in the development of Shanga in the mid or late 11th century, with the destruction and the rebuilding of the Friday Mosque[12] Horton relates this to the writing of the historian João de Barros, about members of an Arab tribe, generally believed to be Qarmatians, who arrived at the Swahili coast. De Barros connects these new arrivals with a republican style of government.[13][14]

Shanga was abandoned between 1400–1425; the event was recorded in both the History of Pate and in oral tradition. The Washanga ("the people of Shanga") consist of a clan who still live in the nearby Swahili town of Siyu.[15] Rezende's description of Siyu in 1634 states that "the kingdom of Sio has no king but is ruled by governors"[16]

Evidence of Chinese exploration edit

In 1999, Nicholas Kristof of the New York Times reported a surprising encounter on the island of Pate. He found a village of stone huts. He talked to an elderly man living in the village who said that he was a descendant of Chinese explorers who were shipwrecked there centuries before. The Chinese had supposedly traded with the locals, and had even loaded giraffes onto their ship to take back to China. However, the Chinese ran aground on a nearby reef. Kristof found evidence that confirmed the man's story. Such evidence included the Asian features of the people in the village, plus Asian-looking porcelain artefacts.[17][18]

National Geographic then published an article by Frank Viviano in July 2005. He had visited Pate island during the time he stayed on Lamu. Ceramic fragments had been found around Lamu, which the administrative officer of the local Swahili history museum claimed were of Chinese origin; specifically, from Zheng He's voyage to the Swahili Coast. The eyes of the Pate people resembled Chinese. Famao and Wei were some of the names among them which were speculated to be of Chinese origin. Their ancestors were said to be from indigenous women who intermarried with Chinese Ming sailors when they were shipwrecked. Two places on Pate were called "Old Shanga", and "New Shanga", which the Chinese sailors had named. A local guide who claimed descent from the Chinese showed Frank a graveyard made out of coral on the island, indicating that they were the graves of the Chinese sailors, which the author described as "virtually identical" to Chinese Ming dynasty tombs, complete with "half-moon domes" and "terraced entries".[19]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Svat Soucek, " The Portuguese and the Turks in the Persian gulf " in Studies in ottoman naval history and maritime geography., Analecta isisiana, n°102, The Isis press, Istanbul, 2008. ISBN 978-975-428-365-5, p. 101-106.
  2. ^ Martin, 1973, p.6
  3. ^ Martin, 1973, p.22
  4. ^ Tolmacheva, Marina; Introduction; "The Pate Chronicle"; East Lansing: Michigan State University Press; 1993; p. 5
  5. ^ KNAPPERT, J. (1992). A SHORT HISTORY OF ZANZIBAR. Annales Aequatoria, 13, 15-37. Retrieved April 21, 2021, Via JSTOR
  6. ^ a b c Martin, 1973, p.25-26
  7. ^ Burton, 1872, pp. 475 −480
  8. ^ Boteler, 1835, p. 373 ff
  9. ^ Martin, 1973, p.23
  10. ^ Martin, 1973, p.23-24
  11. ^ Horton, 1996, p. 421
  12. ^ Horton, 1996, p.425
  13. ^ Horton, 1996, p.426
  14. ^ de Barros, 1778, pp. 22, 29
  15. ^ Brown 1985, 67, 71, quoted in Horton, 1996, p.5
  16. ^ Freeman-Grenville 1962, 181, quoted in Horton, 1996, p.426
  17. ^ 1492: The Prequel, Nicholas D. Kristof, 6 June 1999, New York Times
  18. ^ Ancient Chinese Explorers, by Evan Hadingham
  19. ^ Frank Viviano (July 2005). . NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC. p. 6. Archived from the original on 17 November 2012. Retrieved 29 September 2011.

Bibliography edit

  • Boteler, Thomas (1835). Narrative of a Voyage of Discovery to Africa and Arabia: performed in His Majesty´s ship Leven and Barracouta from 1821 to 1826. Vol. 1. R. Bentley. Retrieved 10 December 2013.
  • Burton, Richard Francis (1872). Zanzibar: city, island, and coast. Vol. 2. London: Tinsley brothers.
  • Martin, Chryssee MacCasler Perry and Esmond Bradley Martin: Quest for the Past. An historical guide to the Lamu Archipelago. 1973.
  • Mark Horton; with contributions by Helen W. Brown and Nina Mudida: Shanga: the archaeology of a Muslim trading community on the coast of East Africa. Memoirs of the British Institute in Eastern Africa; No. 14 London: British Institute in Eastern Africa, 1996. ISBN 1-872566-09-X

See also edit

Further reading edit

  • Allen, J. de V. (1979) Siyu in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. Transafrican journal of History 8 (2), pp. 1–35,
  • Allen, James de Vere: Lamu, with an appendix on Archaeological finds from the region of Lamu by H. Neville Chittick. Nairobi: Kenya National Museums.
  • Stanley, Henry Edward John (1866). A Description of the Coasts of East Africa and Malabar: In the Beginning of Sixteenth century by Duarte Barbosa. Printed for the Hakluyt Society. (from about 1517: p. 15)
  • Barros, João de (1778): Da Asia de João de Barros e de Diogo de Couto v.2 pt.1 Chapter 2: p. 15 ff (referenced in Freeman-Grenville 1962, 83–84 181)
  • Brown, H. (1985) History of Siyu: the development and decline of a Swahili town on the northern Swahili coast. Unpublished PhD thesis, Indiana University.
  • Brown, H. (1988) Siyu: town of the craftsmen. Azania 26, pp 1–4.
  • Burton, Richard Francis (1872). Zanzibar: city, island, and coast. Vol. 2. London: Tinsley brothers. (start: p.458 Patta, resume: pp. 505, Notes: p. 517)
  • Freeman-Grenville (1962) The East-African coast: select documents from the first to the earlier nineteenth century. London: Oxford University Press.
  • Kirkman, James: Men and Monuments on the East African Coast .
  • King'ei Kitula: Mwana Kupona: Poetess from Lamu, ISBN 9966-951-05-9, Sasa Sema Publications, 2000.
  • Strandes, Justus: The Portuguese Period in East Africa.
  • Tolmacheva, Marina; Weiler, Dagmar (translator): The Pate Chronicle: Edited and Translated from Mss 177, 321, 344, and 358 of the Library of the University of Dar Es Salaam (African Historical Sources) ISBN 0-87013-336-5
  • Werner, A; Hichens, W: The Advice of Mwana Kupona upon The Wifely Duty, Azania Press, 1934.

pate, island, pate, paté, island, swahili, pronunciation, ˈpate, located, indian, ocean, close, northern, coast, kenya, which, belongs, largest, island, lamu, archipelago, which, between, towns, lamu, kiunga, former, coast, province, island, almost, completely. Pate Pate Island Swahili pronunciation ˈpate is located in the Indian Ocean close to the northern coast of Kenya to which it belongs It is the largest island in the Lamu Archipelago which lie between the towns of Lamu and Kiunga in the former Coast Province The island is almost completely surrounded by mangroves Pate IslandThe narrow streets of Pate town are similar to those in other towns on the islandMap of Pate islandPate IslandLocation in KenyaGeographyLocationIndian OceanCoordinates2 06 S 41 03 E 2 100 S 41 050 E 2 100 41 050ArchipelagoLamu ArchipelagoAdministrationKenyaLike much of the Swahili Coast Pate s history was marked by a steady transition from agricultural communities in the early first millennium into a specialized urban trading society around the 10th century likely earlier Islam spread down the coast from African Muslims in the Horn of Africa helping to develop what would be known as the Swahili culture Despite myths to the contrary Pate was neither an Arab nor Persian colony but an African town frequented by trading Arabs Persians Indians and others It was the centre of the Pate sultanate from the 13th 19th centuries The Swahili port of Pate long vied with Lamu and Takwa on Manda Island for economic dominance of the area and came into prominence around the 14th century It was subjugated by Lamu however in the late 19th century citation needed Public transportation is provided by a few mini buses known as matatus The main administrative centre on the island with the police station is in Faza Contents 1 Faza 2 Pate Town 3 Siyu 4 Kizingitini 5 Shanga 6 Evidence of Chinese exploration 7 See also 8 References 9 Bibliography 10 See also 11 Further readingFaza editMain article Faza Faza town on the North coast known by the name of Ampaza by the Portuguese 1 dates back at least to the 14th century In 1587 Faza was destroyed by the Portuguese as the local Sheikh had supported Mir Ali Bey a notorious privateer who had earlier played a key role in ousting the Portuguese from Muscat The Portuguese arrived from Goa with some 650 men on their punitive expedition and unleashed their fury on Faza Everybody they could find was killed including the local Sheikh The Portuguese preserved his head in a barrel of salt for display in India After 4 days of looting they invited Fazas arch rivals from Pate town to take away anything that they liked from Faza 2 Faza was later resettled The Portuguese in Faza constructed a chapel there however nothing remains of it In the 18th century Faza again fell into decline due to the rise of Pate The English Consul Holmwood visited the place in 1873 and found it dirty and infected with diseases 3 Pate Town editSee also Rulers of Pate The Pate Sultanate was a sultanate from at least the beginning of the 13th century until 1895 From 1858 on it was the domain known as Wituland Archeological evidence suggests Pate was a prominent location in local trade networks by the 10th century 4 Pate Town is situated on the south west coast of the island According to the Pate Chronicle the town of Pate was founded by refugees from Oman in the 8th century and re founded by members of the Nabhani family also from Oman in 1203 The Pate Chronicle also claims that in the 14th century Pate was so powerful that it had conquered most of the towns on the Swahili coast 5 However recent archaeological findings by Neville Chittick and later Mark Horton suggest that the early references in the Chronicle to Pate are wrong and that the town is in fact younger The 18th century was known as the Golden Age of Pate when the town was at its height of powers and also prospered in fine arts Builders constructed some of the finest houses on the Swahili coast with extensive elaborate plaster works Goldsmiths made intricate jewellery fine cloths including silks were made by Pate s weavers and carpenters produced fine wooden furniture The use and production of the musical instrument known as Siwa were most famous Two examples of Siwas still remain in the museum in Lamu Both men and women wrote poetry in the Kiamu dialect of Swahili The Utendi wa Tambuka one of the earliest known documents in Swahili was written in the royal Yunga palace in Pate Town The downfall of Pate town came as a consequence of continuous quarrelling warring with its neighbours from the end of the 18th century 6 In 1811 two British naval officers Smee and Hardy visited Pate and witnessed the infighting 7 In 1813 the famous Battle of Shela took place at Shela This was an attempt by Pate allied with the Mazrui clan from Mombasa Oman to subject Lamu The attempt failed totally and many were killed Only a handful of people managed to return to Pate and their losses were felt for years 6 Thomas Boteler who visited Pate in 1823 described the seeing the remains of a Portuguese fort but that the place looked otherwise poor 8 The poet Mwana Kupona d 1860 also lived at Pate Town By 1892 the number of inhabitants had fallen to only 300 down from 7 000 Today the town has recovered some Agriculture is today the main economic activity 6 Siyu editMain article Siyu nbsp Siyu Fort on Pate islandSiyu town is situated on the North coast of Pate island As no major excavations have been done in Siyu its age is not known but it might date from the 13th century Gaspar de Santo Bernadino visited the town in 1606 and stated that it was the largest town on the island 9 Siyu s main claim to historical fame is that it through several battles withstood the Sultans of Zanzibar In 1843 the Sheikh of Siyu Bwana Machaka wa Shee and the new Sheikh of Pate repudiated the sovereignty of Seyyid Said Sultan of Oman and Zanzibar In response Seyyid Said assembled an army consisting of 2000 people from Muscat Baluchistan and Lamu Leading them was his cousin General Seyyid Hemed bin Ahmed Al Busaidy known as Amir Hemed He had previously been Governor of Bandar Abbas in 1824 He landed at Faza in early January 1844 On 6 January they moved towards Siyu but were ambushed and forced back to Faza After three weeks without a victory Amir Hemed sailed off citation needed In 1845 Siyu gave Seyyid Said one of his greatest military defeats in this battle the famous Amir Hemed was killed and was buried in Rasini where his grave exists to date Seyyid Said used to pay tribute to his grave at Rasini every year It is believed Amir Hemed was very swift with his sword to the extent of stopping all arrows and spears shot at him in battlefield The soldiers of Siu knew about this and during this battle two archers from the Siu army shot two arrows at him in one second targeting his armpit When Amir Hemed swiftly lifted his sword to stop the first arrow the second shot his chest from the arm pit It was a poisoned arrow and it killed him instantly Seyyid Said planned a revenge to avenge the death of his cousin After a while he cheated almost all the rulers advisors and generals of Siu into a diplomatic mission with him in Zanzibar but he turned this into a massacre mission for the rulers of Siu They were advised by the sultan to leave behind all their weapons since it was a diplomatic one Upon arrival in Zanzibar Seyyid Said individually asked every individual in the Siu mission the whereabouts of Amir Hemed and everybody who answered that he is dead was killed instantly by the Sultan Some of the diplomats who answered that Amir Hemed is still alive were spared but they were imprisoned for life at fort Jesus in Mombasa which was also under the Sultan then After the Sultan of Zanzibar massacred almost all the rulers of Siu he forcefully arrested the ones remained in Siu town and deported them to Mombasa for imprisonment at fort Jesus along with the others who survived the Zanzibar Massacre citation needed When Siyu finally succumbed to Zanzibar s dominance under Sultan Majid in 1863 it was one of the last towns on the whole of the Swahili Coast to do so 10 Kizingitini editKizingitini is situated on the North coast east of Faza and is the largest fishing port on the island Lying slightly north of Rasini the fishing port straddles 2 4 11 90 S and 41 8 29 92 E and is the southern reach of the Kizingitini Kiunga Spiny lobster fishery Shanga editMain article Shanga Pate Island Shanga is an important archaeological site situated on the South East coast of the island It was excavated during an eight year period starting in 1980 The earliest settlement was dated to the 8th century and the conclusion drawn from archaeological evidence locally minted coins burials indicate that a small number of local inhabitants were Muslim probably from the late 8th century onwards and at least from the early ninth 11 The excavations also revealed a major break in the development of Shanga in the mid or late 11th century with the destruction and the rebuilding of the Friday Mosque 12 Horton relates this to the writing of the historian Joao de Barros about members of an Arab tribe generally believed to be Qarmatians who arrived at the Swahili coast De Barros connects these new arrivals with a republican style of government 13 14 Shanga was abandoned between 1400 1425 the event was recorded in both the History of Pate and in oral tradition The Washanga the people of Shanga consist of a clan who still live in the nearby Swahili town of Siyu 15 Rezende s description of Siyu in 1634 states that the kingdom of Sio has no king but is ruled by governors 16 Evidence of Chinese exploration editIn 1999 Nicholas Kristof of the New York Times reported a surprising encounter on the island of Pate He found a village of stone huts He talked to an elderly man living in the village who said that he was a descendant of Chinese explorers who were shipwrecked there centuries before The Chinese had supposedly traded with the locals and had even loaded giraffes onto their ship to take back to China However the Chinese ran aground on a nearby reef Kristof found evidence that confirmed the man s story Such evidence included the Asian features of the people in the village plus Asian looking porcelain artefacts 17 18 National Geographic then published an article by Frank Viviano in July 2005 He had visited Pate island during the time he stayed on Lamu Ceramic fragments had been found around Lamu which the administrative officer of the local Swahili history museum claimed were of Chinese origin specifically from Zheng He s voyage to the Swahili Coast The eyes of the Pate people resembled Chinese Famao and Wei were some of the names among them which were speculated to be of Chinese origin Their ancestors were said to be from indigenous women who intermarried with Chinese Ming sailors when they were shipwrecked Two places on Pate were called Old Shanga and New Shanga which the Chinese sailors had named A local guide who claimed descent from the Chinese showed Frank a graveyard made out of coral on the island indicating that they were the graves of the Chinese sailors which the author described as virtually identical to Chinese Ming dynasty tombs complete with half moon domes and terraced entries 19 See also editScientific Adam Witu SultanateReferences edit Svat Soucek The Portuguese and the Turks in the Persian gulf in Studies in ottoman naval history and maritime geography Analecta isisiana n 102 The Isis press Istanbul 2008 ISBN 978 975 428 365 5 p 101 106 Martin 1973 p 6 Martin 1973 p 22 Tolmacheva Marina Introduction The Pate Chronicle East Lansing Michigan State University Press 1993 p 5 KNAPPERT J 1992 A SHORT HISTORY OF ZANZIBAR Annales Aequatoria 13 15 37 Retrieved April 21 2021 Via JSTOR a b c Martin 1973 p 25 26 Burton 1872 pp 475 480 Boteler 1835 p 373 ff Martin 1973 p 23 Martin 1973 p 23 24 Horton 1996 p 421 Horton 1996 p 425 Horton 1996 p 426 de Barros 1778 pp 22 29 Brown 1985 67 71 quoted in Horton 1996 p 5 Freeman Grenville 1962 181 quoted in Horton 1996 p 426 1492 The Prequel Nicholas D Kristof 6 June 1999 New York Times Ancient Chinese Explorers by Evan Hadingham Frank Viviano July 2005 China s Great Armada Admiral Zheng He NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC p 6 Archived from the original on 17 November 2012 Retrieved 29 September 2011 Bibliography editBoteler Thomas 1835 Narrative of a Voyage of Discovery to Africa and Arabia performed in His Majesty s ship Leven and Barracouta from 1821 to 1826 Vol 1 R Bentley Retrieved 10 December 2013 Burton Richard Francis 1872 Zanzibar city island and coast Vol 2 London Tinsley brothers Martin Chryssee MacCasler Perry and Esmond Bradley Martin Quest for the Past An historical guide to the Lamu Archipelago 1973 Mark Horton with contributions by Helen W Brown and Nina Mudida Shanga the archaeology of a Muslim trading community on the coast of East Africa Memoirs of the British Institute in Eastern Africa No 14 London British Institute in Eastern Africa 1996 ISBN 1 872566 09 XSee also editHistoric Swahili Settlements Swahili architectureFurther reading editAllen J de V 1979 Siyu in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries Transafrican journal of History 8 2 pp 1 35 Allen James de Vere Lamu with an appendix on Archaeological finds from the region of Lamu by H Neville Chittick Nairobi Kenya National Museums Stanley Henry Edward John 1866 A Description of the Coasts of East Africa and Malabar In the Beginning of Sixteenth century by Duarte Barbosa Printed for the Hakluyt Society from about 1517 p 15 Barros Joao de 1778 Da Asia de Joao de Barros e de Diogo de Couto v 2 pt 1 Chapter 2 p 15 ff referenced in Freeman Grenville 1962 83 84 181 Brown H 1985 History of Siyu the development and decline of a Swahili town on the northern Swahili coast Unpublished PhD thesis Indiana University Brown H 1988 Siyu town of the craftsmen Azania 26 pp 1 4 Burton Richard Francis 1872 Zanzibar city island and coast Vol 2 London Tinsley brothers start p 458 Patta resume pp 505 Notes p 517 Freeman Grenville 1962 The East African coast select documents from the first to the earlier nineteenth century London Oxford University Press Kirkman James Men and Monuments on the East African Coast King ei Kitula Mwana Kupona Poetess from Lamu ISBN 9966 951 05 9 Sasa Sema Publications 2000 Strandes Justus The Portuguese Period in East Africa Tolmacheva Marina Weiler Dagmar translator The Pate Chronicle Edited and Translated from Mss 177 321 344 and 358 of the Library of the University of Dar Es Salaam African Historical Sources ISBN 0 87013 336 5 Werner A Hichens W The Advice of Mwana Kupona upon The Wifely Duty Azania Press 1934 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Pate Island amp oldid 1185939108, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.