North African and Western Sudan Trade in the Nineteenth Century: A Re-Evaluation

Contenu

Titre
North African and Western Sudan Trade in the Nineteenth Century: A Re-Evaluation
Créateur
Résumé
A revised estimate of the value of trans-Saharan trade in the nineteenth century suggests that, so far from declining, the caravan traffic between North Africa and the Western Sudan increased before the period of colonial partition. Evidence for this revision comes from French diplomatic and geographical missions in the 1850's and 1860's and from the Tripoli and Moroccan consulate records. In round figures the import of European goods across the desert routes and the export of ivory, ostrich plumes, gold dust and lesser items was probably not less than Pound 1,500,000 in 1875-a peak year, after which there was a slow decline, as various factors, including recession in the European markets and the political conquest of Western Sudan, interrupted trade. The prices for European goods and Sudan produce in the early 1860's illustrate the differentials which enabled African traders to make their profit.
Est une partie de
Couverture spatiale
Cambridge
Date
1966
volume
7
numéro
2
pages
233-246
issn
0021-8537
Titre abrégé
North African and Western Sudan Trade in the Nineteenth Century
Langue
eng
Source

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