Slavery on the Frontiers of IslamThe African Diaspora was a consequence of the enslavement in the interior of West Africa. This work examines the conditions of slavery facing Muslims and converts to Islam both in the central Sudan and in the broader diaspora of Africans. It considers the consequences of European colonization. |
Contents
Chapter 3 Ann OHear Ilorin as a Slaving and Slave | 55 |
Femi J Kolapo The Southward Campaigns | 69 |
Sean Stilwell The Development of Mamluk | 87 |
Copyright | |
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Common terms and phrases
Abdullahi African Diaspora African History Aḥmad Bābā al-Timbuktāwī Alhaji Americas Arabic Atlantic Slave Trade Bagirmi Bahia Bello Benghazi Bight of Benin bori Borno British Cambridge University Press captured central Sudan Christian Colonial cult cultural Dār Dorayi Economic emancipation emir emir's enslaved Africans enslaved Muslims ethnic Fodio Frank Cass Frontier Fulani Gandun Gwandu Hatk al-Sitr Hausa Hausaland Hunwick Ibadan Ibid Ilorin important interview Islamic Jamaica jihad jinn Journal of African Kitāb Kolapo land Lovejoy Madden Malam male Mamluk Mandingo Masaba master merchants military Moravians Muslim community NAK SNP Negro Niger Nigeria nineteenth century Ningi non-Muslim North Africa Nupe Ottoman palace Paul plantations political population raids religious Robin Law route royal slaves Sahara Sarkin shamaki slavery Slavery and Abolition Society Sokoto Caliphate Spice Grove spirits Studies Sultan Takai Timbuktu tradition Trans-Saharan Trinidad Tripoli Tunis Tunisia Uthman Wadai Wahhābī West Africa West Indies western Sudan women Wurno Yoruba Zaria