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The reference
to Enc. Brit should have been to vol. 1, not 15. I beg your pardon for the
error. Copied hereunder is information which a former colleague, Owain Blackwell,
has given me:-
First, a quotation from an article entitled 'Black Ivory'
by Charlotte and Denis Plimmer.
"To maintain a steady supply of slaves to the factories,
the African chieftains used every means possible, from all-out war on
neighbouring tribes to the kidnapping of isolated individuals. Francis
Moore, a factor on the Gambia River, recorded how the King of Barsally,
one of the 19 chiefs with whom he dealt, would from time to time send
to the English fort for brandy or rum."
To pay for it, he "attacks enemy Towns, seizing the People
and selling them .... In case he is not at War . . . he falls on one of
his own Towns .... He often goes out with some of his Troops by a Town
. . . and sets Fire to three parts of it, placing Guards at the fourth
to seize the People that run out of the Fire, and ties their arms behind
them . . . and sells them."
Initially, slaves were generally prisoners of war. But
since periods of peace brought scarcity, rulers began to sell their own
convicted felons, too.
Not surprisingly, felonies multiplied, both in number
and kind. One tribesman was sold for stealing a tobacco pipe. Another,
who accidentally killed a man while shooting at a leopard, was not only
himself sold, but so were his mother, three brothers and three sisters.
Royal wives could be sold if caught in adultery; so it became profitable
for monarchs to marry scores of girls, leave them unhusbanded and count
on their natural urges to turn them into adulteresses. Kings sometimes
discovered "treasonous" plots and rounded up enormous numbers of "plotters"
- invariable young, strong and, in slavers' terms, "prime meat."
A good illustration of the existence of the tribal slave
trade and the importance of Somerset v. Stewart can be found in the case
of Olaudah Equiano. I will not spoil the story, but rather ask you to
contact http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/
aia/part1/1p276.html
-----Original Message----- Was it just the white folks? According to
my fading memories both of "The Thousand and One Nights' Entertainment"
and of what I was taught of the history of the slave trade in the 18th
and 19th centuries, it was okay also with the black peoples and the
Arabs. Cf. 15 Enc. Brit. (15th edn, Chicago 1988) 132.3b. <== Previous message Back to index Next message ==> |
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