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Trans-Saharan slave trade

The Trans-Saharan slave trade, also known as the Arab slave trade,[1][2][3] was a slave trade in which slaves were mainly transported across the Sahara. Most were moved from sub-Saharan Africa to North Africa to be sold to Mediterranean and Middle Eastern civilizations; a small percentage went the other direction.[4] Estimates of the total number of black slaves moved from sub-Saharan Africa to the Arab world range from 6-10 million, and the trans-Saharan trade routes conveyed a significant number of this total, with one estimate tallying around 7.2 million slaves crossing the Sahara from the mid-7th century until the 20th century when it was abolished.[5][6] The Arabs managed and operated the trans-Saharan slave trade,[7] although Berbers were also actively involved.[8] Alongside Black Africans, Turks, Iranians, Europeans and Berbers were among the people traded by the Arabs, with the trade being practised throughout the Arab world, primarily in Western Asia, North Africa, East Africa, and Europe.[9]

19th-century engraving depicting an Arab slave trading caravan transporting black African slaves across the Sahara to North Africa.

Early trans-Saharan slave trade edit

Records of slave trading and transportation in the Sahara date back as far as the 3rd millennium BC during the reign of the Egyptian king Sneferu who crossed the fourth cataract of the Nile into what is today modern Sudan to capture slaves and send them north.[10] These raids for prisoners of war, who subsequently became slaves, were a regular occurrence in the ancient Nile Valley and Africa. During times of conquest and after winning battles, the ancient Nubians were taken as slaves by the ancient Egyptians.[11]

The Garamantes relied heavily on slave labor from sub-Saharan Africa.[12] They used slaves in their own communities to construct and maintain underground irrigation systems known to Berbers as foggara.[13] Ancient Greek historian Herodotus recorded in the 5th century BC that the Garamantes enslaved cave-dwelling Ethiopians, known as Troglodytae, chasing them with chariots.[14]

In the early Roman Empire, the city of Lepcis established a slave market to buy and sell slaves from the Bantu African interior.[4] In the 5th century AD, Roman Carthage was trading in black slaves brought across the Sahara.[15] The empire imposed customs tax on the trade of slaves.[4][15] Black slaves seem to have been valued as household slaves for their exotic appearance.[15] Some historians argue that the scale of slave trade in this period may have been higher than medieval times due to the high demand for slaves in the Roman Empire.[15] However the slave trade through the Sahara in antiquity may have been small and rare as Saharan trade didn't reach large dimensions until the Arabs and Berbers introduced large numbers of camels into the desert.[16][17]

Trans-Saharan slave trade in the Middle Ages edit

 
The main slave routes in medieval Africa

Paul Lovejoy estimates that around 6 million black slaves were transported across the Sahara between the years 650 AD and 1500 AD.[6] The trans-Saharan slave trade, established in Antiquity,[15] continued during the Middle Ages. Following the early 8th-century conquest of North Africa, Arabs, Berbers, and other ethnic groups ventured into Sub-Saharan Africa first along the Nile Valley towards Nubia, and also across the Sahara towards West Africa. They were interested in the trans-Saharan trade, especially in slaves, as there was a constant demand for slaves in the eastern Arab nations and Constantinople.[18] The Muslim slave traders distinguished themselves from the peoples on the other side of the Sahara, referring to these African populations as Zanj or Sudan meaning "black".[19] Arabs would routinely acquire slaves through violent raiding, followed by capturing them and sending them on dangerous forced marches across the Sahara to slave markets where they would be treated as chattel i.e. as personal property that can be bought and sold.[20] In North Africa, the main slave markets were in Morocco, Algiers, Tripoli and Cairo. Sales were held in public places such as souks. During the era of the Fatimid Caliphate (909–1171), the majority of slaves were Europeans taken along European beaches during conflicts.[9]

Aside from raiding, slaves could also be obtained by purchasing them from local black rulers. The 9th century Arab historian Ya'qubi states:

They [the Arabs] export black slaves...belonging to the Mira, Zaghawa, Maruwa, and other black races who are near to them and whom they capture. I hear that the black kings sell blacks, without pretext and without war.[21]

Indeed few African rulers would resist the slave trade, while many chiefs would become middlemen in the trafficking, rounding up members of nearby villages to be sold to visiting merchants.[22] The 12th century Arab geographer al-Idrisi noted that black Africans would also participate in slave raiding stating that:

The people of Lemlem are perpetually being invaded by their neighbors, who take them as slaves... and carry them off to their own lands to sell them by the dozens to the merchants. Every year great numbers of them are sent off to the Western Maghreb.[21]

The Tuaregs were also on the hot desert, they can speak most of the leading languages, plurally, they were called "Tague". The Tuaregs were the interpreters on the desert and they often cover their faces with veils. The traders dug wells on the dessert as source of water, called the oasis. The Tuaregs finally started to mug and harass traders during the time that the trade began to decline. The beast of burden known as the camel was also used since they have long eye lashes to prevent them from the dusty storms on the desert. and they can also walk for long distances without food nor water and can carry heavy loads. Due to this, the trans Saharan trade was also known as trans Saharan caravan trade because the camel was involved in carting the goods.[23]

Al-Idrisi would also describe the different methods Muslim merchants would use to enslave blacks, recording that some would "steal the children of the Zanj using dates...lure them with dates and lead them from place to place, until they seize them, take them out of the country and transport them to their own countries".[19] In 1353, the Berber explorer Ibn Battuta would record accompanying a trade caravan to Morocco which carried 600 black female slaves who were to be used as domestic servants and concubines.[24][18] When Battuta visited the ancient African kingdom of Mali he recounted that the local inhabitants vied with each other in the number of slaves and servants they had, and was himself given a slave boy as a "hospitality gift."[25]

The routes taken by slave caravans transporting slaves depended on their destination. Slaves headed to Egypt would be carried by boat down the Nile and slaves headed to Arabia would be sent to ports on the Red Sea such as Suakin and Assab.[17] Slaves headed to North Africa would have to take the Saharan trade routes which had been in use since around 1000 BC. These include routes such as the ones from Tripoli-Ghadames-Ghat-Hoggar-Gao connecting modern day Libya to Nigeria, the Tripoli-Fezzan-Bornu route, connecting Libya to areas of what are today Chad, Niger, and Cameroon, and the east-west route connecting Egypt to Ghana, Mali, and Songhai.[17] Kanem-Bornu-Zawila was another route to North Africa as the Kanem–Bornu Empire in the eastern part of Niger was an active part of the trans-Saharan slave trade for centuries, and the trade formed the basis of the empire's prosperity.[17]

Passage through the Sahara required the expertise of ethnic groups whose lifestyles were uniquely adapted for survival in scorching, arid environments, namely the local Berber tribes and the foreign Bedouins from Arabia.[16] For example, the Tuareg and others who are indigenous to Libya facilitated, taxed and partly organized the trade from the south along the trans-Saharan trade routes. Various nomadic peoples played critical roles as guards, guides, and camel drivers. As a result, they were granted autonomy and treated as allies by governments of North Africa.[16] Oases were vital waystations for caravans and those such as Awjila, Ghadames, and Kufra in Libya allowed both north-south and east-west travel.[26] Even with expert help the passage could still prove deadly to merchants and slaves. [27] Sometimes whole caravans of thousands of people could disappear without a trace.[27]

The goods exchanged in the Trans-Saharan slave trade varied. In the 10th century, the Muslim scholar Mutahhar ibn Tahir al-Maqdisi described the trade between the Islamic world and Africa as consisting of food and clothing being imported into Africa while slaves, gold, and coconuts were exported out of Africa.[19] Later, the 16th century Andalusian writer Leo Africanus wrote that traders from Morocco would bring horses, European cloth, clothing, sugar, books, and brass vessels to Sudan in order to exchange them for slaves, civets and gold.[28] According to Africanus, the sultan of Bornu would accept payment for slaves only in horses, with an exchange rate of up to one slave per twenty horses.[28]

The range of tasks given to slaves was varied and included servile labor utilized for "irrigation, pastoralism, mining, transport, public works, proto-industry, and construction."[29][30] In general black slaves were used as laborers, servants and eunuchs.[31] Some female slaves could be used for labor, but most would be used for domestic chores and concubinage.[32] Eunuchs, who were around seven times more expensive than non-castrated males could be used as harem guards, administrators, tutor, secretaries, commercial agents, and even concubines.[33] Due to strictures within Islamic law, slaves would not usually be castrated within Muslim territory and therefore would be castrated before being sent across the Sahara. Sometimes slaves were castrated after purchase in North African slave markets.[30] Conditions within the mining industry were notoriously harsh especially the salt mines of Basra where tens of thousands of black slaves toiled in extremely miserable conditions living on insufficient amounts of food.[31] This poor treatment led to the bloody Zanj Rebellion or "black revolution".[31] Ya'qubi records that both male and female slaves were employed in the copper mines of Upper Egypt.[31] The Carmarthian Republic of eastern Arabia is said to have employed 30,000 blacks slaves to perform all difficult labor.[31] Some black slaves served in the military forces of North Africa.[32][34] For example the Zirid Dynasty used black slaves imported from Sudan via Zawila.[28]

In some instances, Christians in Africa would acquiesce to Muslims demands that they be provided with slaves. In 641 AD during the treaty known as the Baqt was signed establishing an agreement between the Nubian Christian state of Makuria and the new Muslim rulers of Egypt, in which the Nubians agreed to give Muslim traders more privileges of trade in addition to sending 442 slaves every year to Cairo as tribute.[17][35] This treaty remained intact for 600 years all while the slave trade within Nubia continued unimpeded.[17]

In the Muslim culture of the Middle Ages, blackness became increasingly identified with slavery.[36] This was justified by appeals to a specific interpretation of the biblical story of Curse of Ham that posited Ham had been cursed by Noah in two ways, the first, the turning of his skin black, and the second, that his descendants would be doomed to slavery.[36] Muslim slave traders would use this as a pretext to enslave blacks, including black Muslims.[36] In the late 14th century, a black king of Bornu wrote a letter to the sultan of Egypt complaining of the continual slave raids perpetrated by Arab tribesmen, which were devastating his lands and resulting in the mass enslavement of the black Muslim population of the region.[37] In Al-Andalus, the area of medieval Iberia under Islamic control, black Muslims could be legally held as slaves.[38] This all occurred despite the orthodox Muslim jurist position that no Muslim, regardless of race, could be enslaved.[31] Even as late as the 19th century, many of the common people in Islamic society still believed that enslavement based on skin color, rather than based on religion, was approved by the religious laws of Islam.[36]

In 1416, al-Maqrizi told how pilgrims coming from Takrur (near the Senegal River) brought 1,700 slaves with them to Mecca. In the late 16th century, access to slaves in the areas of the former Songhai Empire in West Africa were cut off due to the anarchy in the area caused by the Moroccan armies' invasion of Songhai headed by al-Mansur.[18] This necessitated the substitution of the former Songhai route with the Benghazi-Wadai route and others through Sudan.[18] After Europeans had settled in the Gulf of Guinea, the trans-Saharan slave trade became less important.[citation needed]

Arabs were sometimes made into slaves in the trans-Saharan slave trade.[39][40] In Mecca, Arab women were sold as slaves according to Ibn Butlan, and certain rulers in West Africa had slave girls of Arab origin.[41][42] According to al-Maqrizi, slave girls with lighter skin were sold to West Africans on hajj.[43][44][45] Ibn Battuta met an Arab slave girl near Timbuktu in Mali in 1353. Battuta wrote that the slave girl was fluent in Arabic, from Damascus, and her master's name was Farbá Sulaymán.[46][47][48] Besides his Damascus slave girl and a secretary fluent in Arabic, Arabic was also understood by Farbá himself.[49] The West African states also imported highly trained slave soldiers.[50]

Under the Saadi dynasty, Morocco's sugar industry was dependent on black African slave labor.[51] According to Paul Berthier, the need for slave labor on Moroccan sugar plantations was a major reason for the 16th century Saadian invasion of the Songhai Empire.[51]

 
French-language map of major historic trans-Saharan trade routes (1889)
 
A slave market in Cairo. Drawing by David Roberts, circa 1848.

Late trans-Saharan slave trade edit

 
Englishman William George Browne rode with the Darb Al Arbain caravan in the 1790s; it delivered "Slaves, male and female" to Egypt.[52]

In Central Africa during the 16th and 17th centuries, slave traders continued to raid the region as part of the expansion of the Saharan and Nile River slave routes. It is estimated that, in the 17th and 18th centuries, 1.4 million slaves were forced to make the trek through the Sahara [5] Captives were enslaved and shipped to the Mediterranean coast, Europe, Arabia, the Western Hemisphere, or to the slave ports and factories along the West and North Africa coasts or South along the Ubanqui and Congo rivers.[53][54]

1.2 million slaves are estimated to have been sent through the Sahara in the 19th century.[5] In the 1830s, a period when slave trade flourished, Ghadames was handling 2,500 slaves a year.[55] Even though the slave trade was officially abolished in Tripoli in 1853, in practice it continued until the 1890s.[56] One witness to the behavior of the slave dealers, G.F. Lyon, described their behavior in Libya:

None of the owners were ever without their whips which were in constant use...no slave dares to be ill or unable to walk, but when the poor sufferer dies the master suspects there must have been "something wrong inside" and regrets not having liberally applied the usual remedy of burning the belly with a red hot iron" thus reconciling to themselves their cruel treatment of these unfortunate creatures.[57]

In Tripoli, Lyon recorded that from 4,000 to 5,000 slaves were processed annually with raids to areas like Kanem-Bornu providing sources of captives.[26]

Other 19th-century European explorers recorded their perilous experiences traveling through the Saharan Desert alongside slave caravans. The explorer Gustav Nachtigal reported finding numerous bones at desert springs that had run dry.[27] Nachtigal estimated that for every one slave that successfully arrived at the market three or four had either died or escaped.[27] Cold could also kill in the desert as the explorer Heinrich Barth relayed a story that the vizier of Bornu had lost forty slaves in a single night in Libya.[27] A British account described one hundred skeletons.[27]

By 1858, the British consul in Tripoli had recorded that more than 66% of the value shipped across the Sahara was made up by slaves.[18] The British Consul in Benghazi wrote in 1875 that the slave trade had reached an enormous scale and that the slaves who were sold in Alexandria and Constantinople had quadrupled in price. This trade, he wrote, was encouraged by the local government.[56] By the mid 19th century, it's possible that nearly 10,000 slaves were being transported to North Africa yearly.[18] The Muslim historian Ahmad ibn Khalid an-Nasiri bemoaned the "unlimited enslavement of blacks" in 19th century North Africa "where men traffic them like beasts or worse" and where the majority of slaves were Muslims who should have been exempt from slavery because of their religious status.[36]

Adolf Vischer wrote in an article published in 1911 that: "...it has been said that slave traffic is still going on on the Benghazi-Wadai route, but it is difficult to test the truth of such an assertion as, in any case, the traffic is carried on secretly".[58] At Kufra, the Egyptian traveller Ahmed Hassanein Bey found out in 1916 that he could buy a girl slave for five pounds sterling while in 1923 he found that the price had risen to 30 to 40 pounds sterling.[59] Another traveler, the Danish convert to Islam Knud Holmboe, crossed the Italian Libyan desert in 1930, and was told that slavery is still practiced in Kufra and that he could buy a slave girl for 30 pounds sterling at the Thursday slave market.[59] According to James Richardson's testimony, when he visited Ghadames, most slaves were from Bornu.[60] According to Raëd Bader, based on estimates of the Trans-Saharan trade, between 1700 and 1880 Tunisia received 100,000 black slaves, compared to only 65,000 entering Algeria, 400,000 in Libya, 515,000 in Morocco and 800,000 in Egypt.[61]

 
The Slave Market of Marrakesh as depicted on the cover of Le Petit Parisien of June 2, 1907.[62]

Abolition edit

After the establishment of the British and Foreign Anti-Slavery Society in 1839 to fight slave trading in the Mediterranean, Ahmad I ibn Mustafa, Bey of Tunis, agreed to outlaw exporting, importing, and selling slaves in 1842, and he made slavery illegal in 1846.[63] In 1848, France outlawed slavery in Algeria.[63] Slavery was not abolished in Mauritania until 1981.[63]

Slavery in the post-Gaddafi Libya edit

Since the beginning of the Libyan Civil War of 2011, that saw the overthrow of Muammar Gaddafi's regime by NATO-backed Anti-Gaddafi forces, Libya has been plagued by instability and migrants with little cash and no papers have become vulnerable. Libya is a major exit point for African migrants heading to Europe. The International Organization for Migration (IOM) published a report in April 2017 showing that many of the migrants from West Africa heading to Europe are sold as slaves after being detained by people smugglers or militia groups. African countries south of Libya were targeted for slave trading and transferred to Libyan slave markets instead. According to the victims, the price is higher for migrants with skills like painting and tiling.[64][65] Slaves are often ransomed to their families and in the meantime until ransom can be tortured, forced to work, sometimes to death and eventually executed or left to starve if they can't pay for too long. Women are often raped and used as sex slaves and sold to brothels and private Libyan clients.[64][65][66][67] Many child migrants also suffer from abuse and child rape in Libya.[68][69]

After receiving unverified CNN video of a November 2017 slave auction in Libya, a human trafficker told Al-Jazeera (a Qatari TV station with interests in Libya) that hundreds of migrants are bought and sold across the country every week.[70] Migrants who have gone through Libyan detention centres have shown signs of many human rights abuses such as severe abuse, including electric shocks, burns, lashes and even skinning, stated the director of health services on the Italian island of Lampedusa to Euronews.[71]

A Libyan group known as the Asma Boys have antagonized migrants from other parts of Africa from at least as early as 2000, destroying their property.[72] Nigerian migrants in January 2018 gave accounts of abuses in detention centres, including being leased or sold as slaves.[73] Videos of Sudanese migrants being burnt and whipped for ransom, were released later on by their families on social media.[74] In June 2018, the United Nations applied sanctions against four Libyans (including a Coast Guard commander) and two Eritreans for their criminal leadership of slave trade networks.[75]

Routes edit

According to professor Ibrahima Baba Kaké, there were four main slavery routes to North Africa, from east to west of Africa, from the Maghreb to the Sudan, from Tripolitania to central Sudan and from Egypt to the Middle East.[76] Caravan trails, set up in the 9th century, went past the oasis of the Sahara; travel was difficult and uncomfortable. Since Roman times, long convoys had transported slaves.

See also edit

References edit

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  2. ^ Iddrisu, Abdulai (6 January 2023). "A Study in Evil: The Slave Trade in Africa". Religions. 14 (1): 122. doi:10.3390/rel14010122. Africans experienced three distinct types of slave trades: (1) The European Slave Trade that took Africans across the Atlantic from the mid-fifteenth century until the end of the nineteenth century; (2) the Arab Slave Trade across the Sahara and the Indian Ocean that predated European contact with Africa; and (3) domestic slavery.
  3. ^ Gakunzi, David (2018). "The Arab-Muslim Slave Trade: Lifting the Taboo". Jewish Political Studies Review. 29 (3/4): 40–42. ISSN 0792-335X. JSTOR 26500685. In West Africa, the Arab slave trade encompassed a vast region from the Niger valley to the Gulf of Guinea. This traffic followed the trans-Saharan roads.
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Further reading edit

  • The Garamantes and Trans-Saharan Enterprise in Classical Times

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The Trans Saharan slave trade also known as the Arab slave trade 1 2 3 was a slave trade in which slaves were mainly transported across the Sahara Most were moved from sub Saharan Africa to North Africa to be sold to Mediterranean and Middle Eastern civilizations a small percentage went the other direction 4 Estimates of the total number of black slaves moved from sub Saharan Africa to the Arab world range from 6 10 million and the trans Saharan trade routes conveyed a significant number of this total with one estimate tallying around 7 2 million slaves crossing the Sahara from the mid 7th century until the 20th century when it was abolished 5 6 The Arabs managed and operated the trans Saharan slave trade 7 although Berbers were also actively involved 8 Alongside Black Africans Turks Iranians Europeans and Berbers were among the people traded by the Arabs with the trade being practised throughout the Arab world primarily in Western Asia North Africa East Africa and Europe 9 19th century engraving depicting an Arab slave trading caravan transporting black African slaves across the Sahara to North Africa Contents 1 Early trans Saharan slave trade 2 Trans Saharan slave trade in the Middle Ages 3 Late trans Saharan slave trade 3 1 Abolition 3 2 Slavery in the post Gaddafi Libya 4 Routes 5 See also 6 References 7 Further readingEarly trans Saharan slave trade editRecords of slave trading and transportation in the Sahara date back as far as the 3rd millennium BC during the reign of the Egyptian king Sneferu who crossed the fourth cataract of the Nile into what is today modern Sudan to capture slaves and send them north 10 These raids for prisoners of war who subsequently became slaves were a regular occurrence in the ancient Nile Valley and Africa During times of conquest and after winning battles the ancient Nubians were taken as slaves by the ancient Egyptians 11 The Garamantes relied heavily on slave labor from sub Saharan Africa 12 They used slaves in their own communities to construct and maintain underground irrigation systems known to Berbers as foggara 13 Ancient Greek historian Herodotus recorded in the 5th century BC that the Garamantes enslaved cave dwelling Ethiopians known as Troglodytae chasing them with chariots 14 In the early Roman Empire the city of Lepcis established a slave market to buy and sell slaves from the Bantu African interior 4 In the 5th century AD Roman Carthage was trading in black slaves brought across the Sahara 15 The empire imposed customs tax on the trade of slaves 4 15 Black slaves seem to have been valued as household slaves for their exotic appearance 15 Some historians argue that the scale of slave trade in this period may have been higher than medieval times due to the high demand for slaves in the Roman Empire 15 However the slave trade through the Sahara in antiquity may have been small and rare as Saharan trade didn t reach large dimensions until the Arabs and Berbers introduced large numbers of camels into the desert 16 17 Trans Saharan slave trade in the Middle Ages edit nbsp The main slave routes in medieval AfricaPaul Lovejoy estimates that around 6 million black slaves were transported across the Sahara between the years 650 AD and 1500 AD 6 The trans Saharan slave trade established in Antiquity 15 continued during the Middle Ages Following the early 8th century conquest of North Africa Arabs Berbers and other ethnic groups ventured into Sub Saharan Africa first along the Nile Valley towards Nubia and also across the Sahara towards West Africa They were interested in the trans Saharan trade especially in slaves as there was a constant demand for slaves in the eastern Arab nations and Constantinople 18 The Muslim slave traders distinguished themselves from the peoples on the other side of the Sahara referring to these African populations as Zanj or Sudan meaning black 19 Arabs would routinely acquire slaves through violent raiding followed by capturing them and sending them on dangerous forced marches across the Sahara to slave markets where they would be treated as chattel i e as personal property that can be bought and sold 20 In North Africa the main slave markets were in Morocco Algiers Tripoli and Cairo Sales were held in public places such as souks During the era of the Fatimid Caliphate 909 1171 the majority of slaves were Europeans taken along European beaches during conflicts 9 Aside from raiding slaves could also be obtained by purchasing them from local black rulers The 9th century Arab historian Ya qubi states They the Arabs export black slaves belonging to the Mira Zaghawa Maruwa and other black races who are near to them and whom they capture I hear that the black kings sell blacks without pretext and without war 21 Indeed few African rulers would resist the slave trade while many chiefs would become middlemen in the trafficking rounding up members of nearby villages to be sold to visiting merchants 22 The 12th century Arab geographer al Idrisi noted that black Africans would also participate in slave raiding stating that The people of Lemlem are perpetually being invaded by their neighbors who take them as slaves and carry them off to their own lands to sell them by the dozens to the merchants Every year great numbers of them are sent off to the Western Maghreb 21 The Tuaregs were also on the hot desert they can speak most of the leading languages plurally they were called Tague The Tuaregs were the interpreters on the desert and they often cover their faces with veils The traders dug wells on the dessert as source of water called the oasis The Tuaregs finally started to mug and harass traders during the time that the trade began to decline The beast of burden known as the camel was also used since they have long eye lashes to prevent them from the dusty storms on the desert and they can also walk for long distances without food nor water and can carry heavy loads Due to this the trans Saharan trade was also known as trans Saharan caravan trade because the camel was involved in carting the goods 23 Al Idrisi would also describe the different methods Muslim merchants would use to enslave blacks recording that some would steal the children of the Zanj using dates lure them with dates and lead them from place to place until they seize them take them out of the country and transport them to their own countries 19 In 1353 the Berber explorer Ibn Battuta would record accompanying a trade caravan to Morocco which carried 600 black female slaves who were to be used as domestic servants and concubines 24 18 When Battuta visited the ancient African kingdom of Mali he recounted that the local inhabitants vied with each other in the number of slaves and servants they had and was himself given a slave boy as a hospitality gift 25 The routes taken by slave caravans transporting slaves depended on their destination Slaves headed to Egypt would be carried by boat down the Nile and slaves headed to Arabia would be sent to ports on the Red Sea such as Suakin and Assab 17 Slaves headed to North Africa would have to take the Saharan trade routes which had been in use since around 1000 BC These include routes such as the ones from Tripoli Ghadames Ghat Hoggar Gao connecting modern day Libya to Nigeria the Tripoli Fezzan Bornu route connecting Libya to areas of what are today Chad Niger and Cameroon and the east west route connecting Egypt to Ghana Mali and Songhai 17 Kanem Bornu Zawila was another route to North Africa as the Kanem Bornu Empire in the eastern part of Niger was an active part of the trans Saharan slave trade for centuries and the trade formed the basis of the empire s prosperity 17 Passage through the Sahara required the expertise of ethnic groups whose lifestyles were uniquely adapted for survival in scorching arid environments namely the local Berber tribes and the foreign Bedouins from Arabia 16 For example the Tuareg and others who are indigenous to Libya facilitated taxed and partly organized the trade from the south along the trans Saharan trade routes Various nomadic peoples played critical roles as guards guides and camel drivers As a result they were granted autonomy and treated as allies by governments of North Africa 16 Oases were vital waystations for caravans and those such as Awjila Ghadames and Kufra in Libya allowed both north south and east west travel 26 Even with expert help the passage could still prove deadly to merchants and slaves 27 Sometimes whole caravans of thousands of people could disappear without a trace 27 The goods exchanged in the Trans Saharan slave trade varied In the 10th century the Muslim scholar Mutahhar ibn Tahir al Maqdisi described the trade between the Islamic world and Africa as consisting of food and clothing being imported into Africa while slaves gold and coconuts were exported out of Africa 19 Later the 16th century Andalusian writer Leo Africanus wrote that traders from Morocco would bring horses European cloth clothing sugar books and brass vessels to Sudan in order to exchange them for slaves civets and gold 28 According to Africanus the sultan of Bornu would accept payment for slaves only in horses with an exchange rate of up to one slave per twenty horses 28 The range of tasks given to slaves was varied and included servile labor utilized for irrigation pastoralism mining transport public works proto industry and construction 29 30 In general black slaves were used as laborers servants and eunuchs 31 Some female slaves could be used for labor but most would be used for domestic chores and concubinage 32 Eunuchs who were around seven times more expensive than non castrated males could be used as harem guards administrators tutor secretaries commercial agents and even concubines 33 Due to strictures within Islamic law slaves would not usually be castrated within Muslim territory and therefore would be castrated before being sent across the Sahara Sometimes slaves were castrated after purchase in North African slave markets 30 Conditions within the mining industry were notoriously harsh especially the salt mines of Basra where tens of thousands of black slaves toiled in extremely miserable conditions living on insufficient amounts of food 31 This poor treatment led to the bloody Zanj Rebellion or black revolution 31 Ya qubi records that both male and female slaves were employed in the copper mines of Upper Egypt 31 The Carmarthian Republic of eastern Arabia is said to have employed 30 000 blacks slaves to perform all difficult labor 31 Some black slaves served in the military forces of North Africa 32 34 For example the Zirid Dynasty used black slaves imported from Sudan via Zawila 28 In some instances Christians in Africa would acquiesce to Muslims demands that they be provided with slaves In 641 AD during the treaty known as the Baqt was signed establishing an agreement between the Nubian Christian state of Makuria and the new Muslim rulers of Egypt in which the Nubians agreed to give Muslim traders more privileges of trade in addition to sending 442 slaves every year to Cairo as tribute 17 35 This treaty remained intact for 600 years all while the slave trade within Nubia continued unimpeded 17 In the Muslim culture of the Middle Ages blackness became increasingly identified with slavery 36 This was justified by appeals to a specific interpretation of the biblical story of Curse of Ham that posited Ham had been cursed by Noah in two ways the first the turning of his skin black and the second that his descendants would be doomed to slavery 36 Muslim slave traders would use this as a pretext to enslave blacks including black Muslims 36 In the late 14th century a black king of Bornu wrote a letter to the sultan of Egypt complaining of the continual slave raids perpetrated by Arab tribesmen which were devastating his lands and resulting in the mass enslavement of the black Muslim population of the region 37 In Al Andalus the area of medieval Iberia under Islamic control black Muslims could be legally held as slaves 38 This all occurred despite the orthodox Muslim jurist position that no Muslim regardless of race could be enslaved 31 Even as late as the 19th century many of the common people in Islamic society still believed that enslavement based on skin color rather than based on religion was approved by the religious laws of Islam 36 In 1416 al Maqrizi told how pilgrims coming from Takrur near the Senegal River brought 1 700 slaves with them to Mecca In the late 16th century access to slaves in the areas of the former Songhai Empire in West Africa were cut off due to the anarchy in the area caused by the Moroccan armies invasion of Songhai headed by al Mansur 18 This necessitated the substitution of the former Songhai route with the Benghazi Wadai route and others through Sudan 18 After Europeans had settled in the Gulf of Guinea the trans Saharan slave trade became less important citation needed Arabs were sometimes made into slaves in the trans Saharan slave trade 39 40 In Mecca Arab women were sold as slaves according to Ibn Butlan and certain rulers in West Africa had slave girls of Arab origin 41 42 According to al Maqrizi slave girls with lighter skin were sold to West Africans on hajj 43 44 45 Ibn Battuta met an Arab slave girl near Timbuktu in Mali in 1353 Battuta wrote that the slave girl was fluent in Arabic from Damascus and her master s name was Farba Sulayman 46 47 48 Besides his Damascus slave girl and a secretary fluent in Arabic Arabic was also understood by Farba himself 49 The West African states also imported highly trained slave soldiers 50 Under the Saadi dynasty Morocco s sugar industry was dependent on black African slave labor 51 According to Paul Berthier the need for slave labor on Moroccan sugar plantations was a major reason for the 16th century Saadian invasion of the Songhai Empire 51 nbsp French language map of major historic trans Saharan trade routes 1889 nbsp A slave market in Cairo Drawing by David Roberts circa 1848 Late trans Saharan slave trade edit nbsp Englishman William George Browne rode with the Darb Al Arbain caravan in the 1790s it delivered Slaves male and female to Egypt 52 In Central Africa during the 16th and 17th centuries slave traders continued to raid the region as part of the expansion of the Saharan and Nile River slave routes It is estimated that in the 17th and 18th centuries 1 4 million slaves were forced to make the trek through the Sahara 5 Captives were enslaved and shipped to the Mediterranean coast Europe Arabia the Western Hemisphere or to the slave ports and factories along the West and North Africa coasts or South along the Ubanqui and Congo rivers 53 54 1 2 million slaves are estimated to have been sent through the Sahara in the 19th century 5 In the 1830s a period when slave trade flourished Ghadames was handling 2 500 slaves a year 55 Even though the slave trade was officially abolished in Tripoli in 1853 in practice it continued until the 1890s 56 One witness to the behavior of the slave dealers G F Lyon described their behavior in Libya None of the owners were ever without their whips which were in constant use no slave dares to be ill or unable to walk but when the poor sufferer dies the master suspects there must have been something wrong inside and regrets not having liberally applied the usual remedy of burning the belly with a red hot iron thus reconciling to themselves their cruel treatment of these unfortunate creatures 57 In Tripoli Lyon recorded that from 4 000 to 5 000 slaves were processed annually with raids to areas like Kanem Bornu providing sources of captives 26 Other 19th century European explorers recorded their perilous experiences traveling through the Saharan Desert alongside slave caravans The explorer Gustav Nachtigal reported finding numerous bones at desert springs that had run dry 27 Nachtigal estimated that for every one slave that successfully arrived at the market three or four had either died or escaped 27 Cold could also kill in the desert as the explorer Heinrich Barth relayed a story that the vizier of Bornu had lost forty slaves in a single night in Libya 27 A British account described one hundred skeletons 27 By 1858 the British consul in Tripoli had recorded that more than 66 of the value shipped across the Sahara was made up by slaves 18 The British Consul in Benghazi wrote in 1875 that the slave trade had reached an enormous scale and that the slaves who were sold in Alexandria and Constantinople had quadrupled in price This trade he wrote was encouraged by the local government 56 By the mid 19th century it s possible that nearly 10 000 slaves were being transported to North Africa yearly 18 The Muslim historian Ahmad ibn Khalid an Nasiri bemoaned the unlimited enslavement of blacks in 19th century North Africa where men traffic them like beasts or worse and where the majority of slaves were Muslims who should have been exempt from slavery because of their religious status 36 Adolf Vischer wrote in an article published in 1911 that it has been said that slave traffic is still going on on the Benghazi Wadai route but it is difficult to test the truth of such an assertion as in any case the traffic is carried on secretly 58 At Kufra the Egyptian traveller Ahmed Hassanein Bey found out in 1916 that he could buy a girl slave for five pounds sterling while in 1923 he found that the price had risen to 30 to 40 pounds sterling 59 Another traveler the Danish convert to Islam Knud Holmboe crossed the Italian Libyan desert in 1930 and was told that slavery is still practiced in Kufra and that he could buy a slave girl for 30 pounds sterling at the Thursday slave market 59 According to James Richardson s testimony when he visited Ghadames most slaves were from Bornu 60 According to Raed Bader based on estimates of the Trans Saharan trade between 1700 and 1880 Tunisia received 100 000 black slaves compared to only 65 000 entering Algeria 400 000 in Libya 515 000 in Morocco and 800 000 in Egypt 61 nbsp The Slave Market of Marrakesh as depicted on the cover of Le Petit Parisien of June 2 1907 62 Abolition edit After the establishment of the British and Foreign Anti Slavery Society in 1839 to fight slave trading in the Mediterranean Ahmad I ibn Mustafa Bey of Tunis agreed to outlaw exporting importing and selling slaves in 1842 and he made slavery illegal in 1846 63 In 1848 France outlawed slavery in Algeria 63 Slavery was not abolished in Mauritania until 1981 63 Slavery in the post Gaddafi Libya edit Main article Slavery in Libya Since the beginning of the Libyan Civil War of 2011 that saw the overthrow of Muammar Gaddafi s regime by NATO backed Anti Gaddafi forces Libya has been plagued by instability and migrants with little cash and no papers have become vulnerable Libya is a major exit point for African migrants heading to Europe The International Organization for Migration IOM published a report in April 2017 showing that many of the migrants from West Africa heading to Europe are sold as slaves after being detained by people smugglers or militia groups African countries south of Libya were targeted for slave trading and transferred to Libyan slave markets instead According to the victims the price is higher for migrants with skills like painting and tiling 64 65 Slaves are often ransomed to their families and in the meantime until ransom can be tortured forced to work sometimes to death and eventually executed or left to starve if they can t pay for too long Women are often raped and used as sex slaves and sold to brothels and private Libyan clients 64 65 66 67 Many child migrants also suffer from abuse and child rape in Libya 68 69 After receiving unverified CNN video of a November 2017 slave auction in Libya a human trafficker told Al Jazeera a Qatari TV station with interests in Libya that hundreds of migrants are bought and sold across the country every week 70 Migrants who have gone through Libyan detention centres have shown signs of many human rights abuses such as severe abuse including electric shocks burns lashes and even skinning stated the director of health services on the Italian island of Lampedusa to Euronews 71 A Libyan group known as the Asma Boys have antagonized migrants from other parts of Africa from at least as early as 2000 destroying their property 72 Nigerian migrants in January 2018 gave accounts of abuses in detention centres including being leased or sold as slaves 73 Videos of Sudanese migrants being burnt and whipped for ransom were released later on by their families on social media 74 In June 2018 the United Nations applied sanctions against four Libyans including a Coast Guard commander and two Eritreans for their criminal leadership of slave trade networks 75 Routes editAccording to professor Ibrahima Baba Kake there were four main slavery routes to North Africa from east to west of Africa from the Maghreb to the Sudan from Tripolitania to central Sudan and from Egypt to the Middle East 76 Caravan trails set up in the 9th century went past the oasis of the Sahara travel was difficult and uncomfortable Since Roman times long convoys had transported slaves See also editRed Sea slave trade Indian Ocean slave trade Comoros slave trade Zanzibar slave trade Trans Sahara Highway Trans Saharan trade Slavery in ancient Egypt Slavery in ancient Rome Slavery in Africa Slavery in Libya Human trafficking in Chad Slavery in Mali Slavery in Mauritania Slavery in Niger Slavery in NigeriaReferences edit Bean Frank D Brown Susan K 1 March 2023 Selected Topics in Migration Studies Springer Nature p 27 ISBN 978 3 031 19631 7 Trans Saharan slave trade was conducted within the ambits of the trans Saharan trade otherwise referred to as the Arab trade Trans Saharan trade conducted across the Sahara Desert was a web of commerical interactions between the Arab world North Africa and the Persian Gulf and sub Saharan Africa Iddrisu Abdulai 6 January 2023 A Study in Evil The Slave Trade in Africa Religions 14 1 122 doi 10 3390 rel14010122 Africans experienced three distinct types of slave trades 1 The European Slave Trade that took Africans across the Atlantic from the mid fifteenth century until the end of the nineteenth century 2 the Arab Slave Trade across the Sahara and the Indian Ocean that predated European contact with Africa and 3 domestic slavery Gakunzi David 2018 The Arab Muslim Slave Trade Lifting the Taboo Jewish Political Studies Review 29 3 4 40 42 ISSN 0792 335X JSTOR 26500685 In West Africa the Arab slave trade encompassed a vast region from the Niger valley to the Gulf of Guinea This traffic followed the trans Saharan roads a b c Bradley Keith R Apuleius and the sub Saharan slave trade Apuleius and Antonine Rome Historical Essays p 177 a b c Segal 2001 p 55 57 a b Clarence Smith William Gervase 2006 Islam and the Abolition of Slavery Oxford University Press pp 11 12 ISBN 978 0 19 522151 0 OCLC 1045855145 Ayittey George 1 September 2006 Indigenous African Institutions 2nd Edition BRILL p 450 ISBN 978 90 474 4003 1 While the Europeans organized the West African slave trade the Arabs managed the East African and trans Saharan counterparts Badru Pade Sackey Brigid M 23 May 2013 Islam in Africa South of the Sahara Essays in Gender Relations and Political Reform Scarecrow Press p 54 ISBN 978 0 8108 8470 0 a b Akinbode Ayomide 20 December 2021 The Forgotten Arab Slave Trade of East Africa The History Ville Gordon Murray 1989 Slavery in the Arab World Rowman amp Littlefield p 108 ISBN 978 0 941533 30 0 OCLC 1120917849 Redford D B From Slave to Pharaoh The Black Experience of Ancient Egypt Baltimore The Johns Hopkins University Press 2004 Project MUSE Fall of Gaddafi opens a new era for the Sahara s lost civilisation the Guardian 5 November 2011 Retrieved 9 December 2020 David Mattingly The Garamantes and the Origins of Saharan Trade Trade in the Ancient Sahara and Beyond Cambridge University Press pp 27 28 Austen R 2015 Regional study Trans Saharan trade In C Benjamin Ed The Cambridge World History The Cambridge World History pp 662 686 Cambridge Cambridge University Press doi 10 1017 CBO9781139059251 026 a b c d e Wilson Andrew Saharan Exports to the Roman World Trade in the Ancient Sahara and Beyond Cambridge University Press pp 192 3 a b c Segal Ronald 2001 Islam s Black Slaves The Other Black Diaspora Macmillan pp 129 130 ISBN 978 0 374 52797 6 OCLC 1014163824 a b c d e f Gordon 1989 p 108 110 a b c d e f Gordon 1989 p 114 115 a b c Lewis Bernard 1992 Race and Slavery in the Middle East An Historical Enquiry Oxford University Press pp 50 51 ISBN 978 0 19 505326 5 OCLC 1022745387 Clarence Smith 2006 p 2 5 a b Gordon 1989 p 122 Gordon 1989 p 107 kuffour George 31 August 2023 k4 series history textbook a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a Missing or empty url help Ibn Battuta s Trip Part Twelve Journey to West Africa 1351 1353 Archived from the original on 9 June 2010 Noel King ed Ibn Battuta in Black Africa Princeton 2005 p 54 a b Segal 2001 p 131 132 a b c d e f Segal 2001 p 63 65 a b c Gordon 1989 p 111 113 Clarence Smith 2006 p 3 5 a b Segal 2001 p 40 43 a b c d e f Lewis 1992 p 56 57 a b Ralph A Austen 2010 Trans Saharan Africa in World History Oxford University Press p 31 ISBN 978 0 19 533788 4 OCLC 1025724912 Segal 2001 p 141 143 The impact of the slave trade on Africa April 1998 Jay Spaulding Medieval Christian Nubia and the Islamic World A Reconsideration of the Baqt Treaty International Journal of African Historical Studies XXVIII 3 1995 a b c d e Lewis 1992 p 58 Lewis 1992 p 53 Jack D Forbes 1993 Africans and Native Americans The Language of Race and the Evolution of Red Black Peoples University of Illinois Press pp 26 27 ISBN 978 0 252 06321 3 OCLC 1013305190 Muhammad A J Beg The serfs of Islamic society under the Abbasid regime Islamic Culture 49 2 1975 p 108 Owen Rutter 1986 The pirate wind tales of the sea robbers of Malaya Oxford University Press p 140 ISBN 9780195826913 Clarence Smith 2006 p 70 Humphrey J Fisher 1 August 2001 Slavery in the History of Muslim Black Africa NYU Press pp 182 ISBN 978 0 8147 2716 4 Chouki El Hamel 27 February 2014 Black Morocco A History of Slavery Race and Islam Cambridge University Press pp 129 ISBN 978 1 139 62004 8 Shirley Guthrie 1 August 2013 Arab Women in the Middle Ages Private Lives and Public Roles Saqi ISBN 978 0 86356 764 3 William D Phillips 1985 Slavery from Roman Times to the Early Transatlantic Trade Manchester University Press pp 126 ISBN 978 0 7190 1825 1 Ibn Batuta Said Hamdun Noel Quinton King March 2005 Ibn Battuta in Black Africa Markus Wiener Publishers p 65 ISBN 978 1 55876 336 4 Ibn Battuta 1 September 2004 Travels in Asia and Africa 1325 1354 Psychology Press pp 334 ISBN 978 0 415 34473 9 Raymond Aaron Silverman 1983 History art and assimilation the impact of Islam on Akan material culture University of Washington p 51 Noel Quinton King 1971 Christian and Muslim in Africa Harper amp Row p 22 ISBN 9780060647094 Ralph A Austen Trans Saharan Africa in World History Oxford University Press p 31 a b Cornwell Graham Hough 2018 Sweetening the Pot A History of Tea and Sugar in Morocco 1850 1960 thesis thesis Georgetown University DARB EL ARBA IN THE FORTY DAYS ROAD W B K Shaw download ur booksc me Retrieved 28 September 2022 International Business Publications USA 7 February 2007 Central African Republic Foreign Policy and Government Guide World Strategic and Business Information Library Vol 1 Int l Business Publications p 47 ISBN 978 1433006210 Retrieved 25 May 2015 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a author1 has generic name help Alistair Boddy Evans Central Africa Republic Timeline Part 1 From Prehistory to Independence 13 August 1960 A Chronology of Key Events in Central Africa Republic About com K S McLachlan Tripoli and Tripolitania Conflict and Cohesion during the Period of the Barbary Corsairs 1551 1850 Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers New Series Vol 3 No 3 Settlement and Conflict in the Mediterranean World 1978 pp 285 294 a b Lisa Anderson Nineteenth Century Reform in Ottoman Libya International Journal of Middle East Studies Vol 16 No 3 Aug 1984 pp 325 348 Segal 2001 p 136 Adolf Vischer Tripoli The Geographical Journal Vol 38 No 5 Nov 1911 pp 487 494 a b Wright John 2007 The trans Saharan slave trade New York Routledge ISBN 978 0 415 38046 1 Wright John 1989 Libya Chad and the Central Sahara C Hurst amp Co Publishers Ltd ISBN 1 85065 050 0 in French Raed Bader Noirs en Algerie XIXe XXe siecles ed Ecole normale superieure de Lyon 20 June 2006 Le Petit Parisien Supplement litteraire illustre Gallica 2 June 1907 Retrieved 25 July 2021 a b c El Hamel Chouki 2012 Black Morocco a History of Slavery Race and Islam Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 1 139 61632 4 OCLC 823724244 a b African migrants sold in Libya slave markets IOM says 11 April 2017 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a work ignored help a b Migrants from west Africa being sold in Libyan slave markets The Guardian African migrants sold as slaves in Libya 3 July 2020 West African migrants are kidnapped and sold in Libyan slave markets Boing Boing boingboing net 11 April 2017 Adams Paul 28 February 2017 Libya exposed as child migrant abuse hub BBC News Immigrant Women Children Raped killed and Starved in Libya s Hellholes Unicef 28 February 2017 Archived from the original on 30 March 2019 Retrieved 21 December 2020 African refugees bought sold and murdered in Libya Al Jazeera Exclusive Italian doctor laments Libya s concentration camps for migrants Euronews 16 November 2017 Retrieved 24 June 2019 Africa Research Bulletin Economic financial and technical series Volume 37 Blackwell 2000 p 14496 Retrieved 28 February 2018 Used as a slave in a Libyan detention centre BBC News 2 January 2018 Retrieved 24 June 2019 Elbagir Nima Razek Raja Sirgany Sarah Tawfeeq Mohammed 25 January 2018 Migrants beaten and burned for ransom CNN Retrieved 24 June 2019 Elbagir Nima Said Moorhouse Laura 7 June 2018 Unprecedented UN sanctions slapped on millionaire migrant traffickers CNN Retrieved 8 June 2018 Doudou Diene 2001 From Chains to Bonds The Slave Trade Revisited Berghahn Books p 16 ISBN 978 1571812650 Retrieved 26 May 2015 Further reading editThe Garamantes and Trans Saharan Enterprise in Classical Times Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Trans Saharan slave trade amp oldid 1207133234, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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