"Will be welcomed by all interested in African history and
anthropology. A valuable contribution and a rich mine of
material."
"--Journal of African History"
In many parts of the African Muslim world, slavery still blights
the landscape. What are the origins of this terrible institution?
Why is it still practiced? How widespread is it and how does it
differ from Western chattel slavery?
This book tells the story of how the enslavement of Africans by
Berbers, Arabs, and other Africans became institutionalized and
legitimized throughout Muslim Africa. A classic, pioneering study,
first published in 1971 and extensively updated in this revised
edition, Slavery in the History of Black Muslim Africa provides an
expansive portrait of domestic slavery from the tenth to the
nineteenth century in the context of the religious, social, and
economic conditions of the African Islamic world.
Drawing on a host of accounts from contemporary observers such
as Leo Africanus and Ibn Battuta, Fisher and Fisher describe the
status and rights of slaves in Africa, and their various roles as
currency, goods, eunuchs, soldiers, and statesmen, as well as the
jarring historical interruption brought on by slave raiders and
traders in West and North Africa.
General
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