Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

Slavery in Africa

View through CrossRef
Slavery is viewed as an ancient and universal institution and thus it can be found in a diversity of forms throughout Africa. During the period of the Atlantic world, slavery served multiple roles within Africa and provided a foundation for the transatlantic slave trade in that Europeans found slaves for sale within Africa. In many parts of Africa, land was held in common and therefore people’s ability to work the land, and their position within their society, related to the number of people whom they controlled. This patron-client system meant that patrons were always looking for more clients, both free and unfree, as a way to increase their power. The nature of this agricultural and political system made slavery and pawnship (debt peonage) a common system in Africa, yet it was a system that is hard to generalize about and one that possessed great differences from the African slavery that developed in the Americas. While the role of African slavery in the Americas has been more thoroughly studied, and is better known, than slavery in Africa, the rise of the transatlantic slave trade, and then its gradual abolition in the 19th century, had important consequences for slavery within Africa.
Oxford University Press
Title: Slavery in Africa
Description:
Slavery is viewed as an ancient and universal institution and thus it can be found in a diversity of forms throughout Africa.
During the period of the Atlantic world, slavery served multiple roles within Africa and provided a foundation for the transatlantic slave trade in that Europeans found slaves for sale within Africa.
In many parts of Africa, land was held in common and therefore people’s ability to work the land, and their position within their society, related to the number of people whom they controlled.
This patron-client system meant that patrons were always looking for more clients, both free and unfree, as a way to increase their power.
The nature of this agricultural and political system made slavery and pawnship (debt peonage) a common system in Africa, yet it was a system that is hard to generalize about and one that possessed great differences from the African slavery that developed in the Americas.
While the role of African slavery in the Americas has been more thoroughly studied, and is better known, than slavery in Africa, the rise of the transatlantic slave trade, and then its gradual abolition in the 19th century, had important consequences for slavery within Africa.

Related Results

Teaching & Learning Guide for: Slavery and Romanticism
Teaching & Learning Guide for: Slavery and Romanticism
Author's Introduction Although it was long neglected on history courses, and almost entirely forgotten on literature courses, slavery and its abolition is now r...
Slaveri hos Tuaregerne i Sahara
Slaveri hos Tuaregerne i Sahara
Slavery among the Tuareg in the SaharaA preliminary analysis of its structure.Slavery is an institution of very considerable age. In Europe and the Orient it has been common for as...
Afrikanske smede
Afrikanske smede
African Smiths Cultural-historical and sociological problems illuminated by studies among the Tuareg and by comparative analysisIn KUML 1957 in connection with a description of sla...
Towards an Understanding of Local African Abolitionism: George Ekem Ferguson, an Unexplored Abolitionist in 19th Century Ghana
Towards an Understanding of Local African Abolitionism: George Ekem Ferguson, an Unexplored Abolitionist in 19th Century Ghana
The research problem discussed in this article centers on the historical role of George Ekem Ferguson, a 19th-century Gold Coast (modern-day Ghana) figure, in the abolition of slav...
Slavery in British America
Slavery in British America
Slavery was the most important institution in colonial British America. Every area of colonial British America before the American Revolution allowed slavery, and in southern and i...
Urban Slavery along the West African Coast
Urban Slavery along the West African Coast
Abstract Slavery in cities created unique communities of coercion, and the study of urban slavery in coastal West Africa in the 18th and 19th centuries combines t...
Slavery in Medieval Europe
Slavery in Medieval Europe
Common knowledge would have it that slavery did not exist in medieval Europe. However, there is a thriving body of scholarship which demonstrates that slavery was practiced widely ...

Back to Top