Slavery in Africa : Archaeology and Memory

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کتاب برده داری در آفریقا: باستان شناسی و حافظه نسخه زبان اصلی

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توضیحاتی در مورد کتاب Slavery in Africa : Archaeology and Memory

نام کتاب : Slavery in Africa : Archaeology and Memory
ویرایش : Illustrated
عنوان ترجمه شده به فارسی : برده داری در آفریقا: باستان شناسی و حافظه
سری :
نویسندگان : ,
ناشر : British Academy
سال نشر : 2012
تعداد صفحات : 401
ISBN (شابک) : 9780197264782 , 0197264786
زبان کتاب : English
فرمت کتاب : pdf
حجم کتاب : 11 مگابایت



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upso-9780197264782-miscMatter-1\n Title Pages\n Paul Lane and Kevin C. MacDonald\n Title Pages\n (p.i) Slavery In Africa: Archaeology and Memory (p.ii) (p.iii) Slavery in Africa: Archaeology and Memory\n Title Pages\nupso-9780197264782-miscMatter-5\n (p.vii) Figures and Tables\n Paul Lane and Kevin C. MacDonald\n (p.vii) Figures and Tables\n Figures\n (p.vii) Figures and Tables\n (p.vii) Figures and Tables\n Tables\n (p.vii) Figures and Tables\nupso-9780197264782-miscMatter-6\n (p.xi) Notes on Contributors\n Paul Lane and Kevin C. MacDonald\n (p.xi) Notes on Contributors\n (p.xi) Notes on Contributors\n (p.xi) Notes on Contributors\n (p.xi) Notes on Contributors\nupso-9780197264782-chapter-1\n Introduction: Slavery, Social Revolutions and Enduring Memories\n Paul Lane and Kevin C. MacDonald\n Introduction: Slavery, Social Revolutions and Enduring Memories\n Paul J. Lane\n Kevin C. Macdonald\n Abstract and Keywords\n Introduction\n Introduction: Slavery, Social Revolutions and Enduring Memories\n Introduction: Slavery, Social Revolutions and Enduring Memories\n Who is a Slave?\n Introduction: Slavery, Social Revolutions and Enduring Memories\n Introduction: Slavery, Social Revolutions and Enduring Memories\n Introduction: Slavery, Social Revolutions and Enduring Memories\n Archaeologies of Slavery in West Africa\n Introduction: Slavery, Social Revolutions and Enduring Memories\n Identities, History and the Landscapes of Slavery in East Africa\n Introduction: Slavery, Social Revolutions and Enduring Memories\n Introduction: Slavery, Social Revolutions and Enduring Memories\n Remembering Slavery\n Introduction: Slavery, Social Revolutions and Enduring Memories\n Introduction: Slavery, Social Revolutions and Enduring Memories\n Introduction: Slavery, Social Revolutions and Enduring Memories\n (p.16) Conclusion\n Introduction: Slavery, Social Revolutions and Enduring Memories\n Introduction: Slavery, Social Revolutions and Enduring Memories\n Introduction: Slavery, Social Revolutions and Enduring Memories\n Introduction: Slavery, Social Revolutions and Enduring Memories\n Introduction: Slavery, Social Revolutions and Enduring Memories\n Introduction: Slavery, Social Revolutions and Enduring Memories\n Introduction: Slavery, Social Revolutions and Enduring Memories\n Notes:\n Introduction: Slavery, Social Revolutions and Enduring Memories\nupso-9780197264782-chapter-2\n Segou: Warfare and the Origins of a State of Slavery\n Paul Lane and Kevin C. MacDonald\n Segou: Warfare and the Origins of a State of Slavery\n Kevin C. Macdonald\n Seydou Camara\n Abstract and Keywords\n Prelude\n Segou: Warfare and the Origins of a State of Slavery\n Introduction\n Segou: Warfare and the Origins of a State of Slavery\n Segou’s System of Enslavement\n Segou: Warfare and the Origins of a State of Slavery\n Segou: Warfare and the Origins of a State of Slavery\n The Case of the Bouaré and the Downfall of Doua\n Segou: Warfare and the Origins of a State of Slavery\n Segou: Warfare and the Origins of a State of Slavery\n Segou: Warfare and the Origins of a State of Slavery\n Segou: Warfare and the Origins of a State of Slavery\n Segou: Warfare and the Origins of a State of Slavery\n Segou: Warfare and the Origins of a State of Slavery\n Segou: Warfare and the Origins of a State of Slavery\n Segou: Warfare and the Origins of a State of Slavery\n The Definition of ‘Sifinso’\n Segou: Warfare and the Origins of a State of Slavery\n Segou: Warfare and the Origins of a State of Slavery\n Conclusion\n Segou: Warfare and the Origins of a State of Slavery\n Segou: Warfare and the Origins of a State of Slavery\n Segou: Warfare and the Origins of a State of Slavery\n Notes:\nupso-9780197264782-chapter-3\n The Daily Life of Slaves in the Last Years of the Bamana States of Kaarta and Segou\n Paul Lane and Kevin C. MacDonald\n The Daily Life of Slaves in the Last Years of the Bamana States of Kaarta and Segou\n Moussa Sow\n Abstract and Keywords\n Introduction\n The Daily Life of Slaves in the Last Years of the Bamana States of Kaarta and Segou\n The Daily Life of Slaves in the Last Years of the Bamana States of Kaarta and Segou\n The Daily Life of Slaves in the Last Years of the Bamana States of Kaarta and Segou\n Means and Types of Enslavement\n The Daily Life of Slaves in the Last Years of the Bamana States of Kaarta and Segou\n The Daily Life of Slaves in the Last Years of the Bamana States of Kaarta and Segou\n The Daily Life of Slaves in the Last Years of the Bamana States of Kaarta and Segou\n The Daily Life of Slaves in the Last Years of the Bamana States of Kaarta and Segou\n The Work of Slaves\n Warfare\n The Daily Life of Slaves in the Last Years of the Bamana States of Kaarta and Segou\n Agricultural Work\n Domestic Tasks\n More Autonomous Roles\n Sexuality\n The Daily Life of Slaves in the Last Years of the Bamana States of Kaarta and Segou\n Conclusion\n The Daily Life of Slaves in the Last Years of the Bamana States of Kaarta and Segou\n Notes:\nupso-9780197264782-chapter-4\n The Early Medieval Slave Trade of the Central Sahel: Archaeological and Historical Considerations\n Paul Lane and Kevin C. MacDonald\n The Early Medieval Slave Trade of the Central Sahel: Archaeological and Historical Considerations\n Anne Haour\n Abstract and Keywords\n Introduction\n The Early Medieval Slave Trade of the Central Sahel: Archaeological and Historical Considerations\n The Early Medieval Slave Trade of the Central Sahel: Archaeological and Historical Considerations\n The Early Medieval Slave Trade of the Central Sahel: Archaeological and Historical Considerations\n The Early Medieval Slave Trade of the Central Sahel: Archaeological and Historical Considerations\n The Early Medieval Slave Trade of the Central Sahel: Archaeological and Historical Considerations\n The Early Medieval Slave Trade of the Central Sahel: Archaeological and Historical Considerations\n The Central Saharan Route and the Chad Basin: Historical and Archaeological Evidence\n The Early Medieval Slave Trade of the Central Sahel: Archaeological and Historical Considerations\n The Early Medieval Slave Trade of the Central Sahel: Archaeological and Historical Considerations\n The Early Medieval Slave Trade of the Central Sahel: Archaeological and Historical Considerations\n (p.72) Slave Raiding: The Political Framework\n The Early Medieval Slave Trade of the Central Sahel: Archaeological and Historical Considerations\n (p.74) Towards a Comparative Approach\n The Early Medieval Slave Trade of the Central Sahel: Archaeological and Historical Considerations\n The Early Medieval Slave Trade of the Central Sahel: Archaeological and Historical Considerations\n The Early Medieval Slave Trade of the Central Sahel: Archaeological and Historical Considerations\n The Early Medieval Slave Trade of the Central Sahel: Archaeological and Historical Considerations\n Notes:\n The Early Medieval Slave Trade of the Central Sahel: Archaeological and Historical Considerations\nupso-9780197264782-chapter-5\n Slavery and Slaving in the Medieval and Post-Medieval Kingdoms of the Middle Nile\n Paul Lane and Kevin C. MacDonald\n Slavery and Slaving in the Medieval and Post-Medieval Kingdoms of the Middle Nile\n David N. Edwards\n Abstract and Keywords\n Introduction\n Slavery and Slaving in the Medieval and Post-Medieval Kingdoms of the Middle Nile\n Slavery and Slaving in the Medieval and Post-Medieval Kingdoms of the Middle Nile\n (p.82) External Trade and a Trade in Slaves\n Slavery and Slaving in the Medieval and Post-Medieval Kingdoms of the Middle Nile\n Ancient Origins?\n Slavery and Slaving in the Medieval and Post-Medieval Kingdoms of the Middle Nile\n Slavery and Slaving in the Medieval and Post-Medieval Kingdoms of the Middle Nile\n Slavery and Slaving in the Medieval and Post-Medieval Kingdoms of the Middle Nile\n Medieval Slavery and Slave Trading\n Slavery and Slaving in the Medieval and Post-Medieval Kingdoms of the Middle Nile\n Slavery and Slaving in the Medieval and Post-Medieval Kingdoms of the Middle Nile\n Slavery and Slaving in the Medieval and Post-Medieval Kingdoms of the Middle Nile\n Slavery within ‘Nubia’\n Slavery and Slaving in the Medieval and Post-Medieval Kingdoms of the Middle Nile\n Slavery and Slaving in the Medieval and Post-Medieval Kingdoms of the Middle Nile\n Slaves and Slavery in the Post-Medieval Middle Nile\n Slavery and Slaving in the Medieval and Post-Medieval Kingdoms of the Middle Nile\n Slavery and Slaving in the Medieval and Post-Medieval Kingdoms of the Middle Nile\n Slavery and Slaving in the Medieval and Post-Medieval Kingdoms of the Middle Nile\n Slavery and Slaving in the Medieval and Post-Medieval Kingdoms of the Middle Nile\n Slavery and Slaving in the Medieval and Post-Medieval Kingdoms of the Middle Nile\n Conclusion\n Slavery and Slaving in the Medieval and Post-Medieval Kingdoms of the Middle Nile\n Slavery and Slaving in the Medieval and Post-Medieval Kingdoms of the Middle Nile\n Slavery and Slaving in the Medieval and Post-Medieval Kingdoms of the Middle Nile\n Slavery and Slaving in the Medieval and Post-Medieval Kingdoms of the Middle Nile\n Slavery and Slaving in the Medieval and Post-Medieval Kingdoms of the Middle Nile\n Slavery and Slaving in the Medieval and Post-Medieval Kingdoms of the Middle Nile\n Slavery and Slaving in the Medieval and Post-Medieval Kingdoms of the Middle Nile\n Notes:\nupso-9780197264782-chapter-6\n Enslavement and Everyday Life: Living with Slave Raiding in the North-Eastern Mandara Mountains of Cameroon\n Paul Lane and Kevin C. MacDonald\n Enslavement and Everyday Life: Living with Slave Raiding in the North-Eastern Mandara Mountains of Cameroon\n Scott MacEachern\n Abstract and Keywords\n Introduction\n Enslavement and Everyday Life: Living with Slave Raiding in the North-Eastern Mandara Mountains of Cameroon\n The Sources of the Data\n Enslavement and Everyday Life: Living with Slave Raiding in the North-Eastern Mandara Mountains of Cameroon\n The Landscape of Slave Raids\n Enslavement and Everyday Life: Living with Slave Raiding in the North-Eastern Mandara Mountains of Cameroon\n Enslavement and Everyday Life: Living with Slave Raiding in the North-Eastern Mandara Mountains of Cameroon\n The Proximity of Neighbours and the Distance of Enemies\n Enslavement and Everyday Life: Living with Slave Raiding in the North-Eastern Mandara Mountains of Cameroon\n Enslavement and Everyday Life: Living with Slave Raiding in the North-Eastern Mandara Mountains of Cameroon\n Enslavement and Everyday Life: Living with Slave Raiding in the North-Eastern Mandara Mountains of Cameroon\n The Persistence of Enslavement\n Enslavement and Everyday Life: Living with Slave Raiding in the North-Eastern Mandara Mountains of Cameroon\n Enslavement and Everyday Life: Living with Slave Raiding in the North-Eastern Mandara Mountains of Cameroon\n Conclusion\n Enslavement and Everyday Life: Living with Slave Raiding in the North-Eastern Mandara Mountains of Cameroon\n Enslavement and Everyday Life: Living with Slave Raiding in the North-Eastern Mandara Mountains of Cameroon\n Enslavement and Everyday Life: Living with Slave Raiding in the North-Eastern Mandara Mountains of Cameroon\n Notes:\nupso-9780197264782-chapter-7\n Archaeological Perspectives on the Atlantic Slave Trade: Contrasts in Time and Space in Benin and Guinea\n Paul Lane and Kevin C. MacDonald\n Archaeological Perspectives on the Atlantic Slave Trade: Contrasts in Time and Space in Benin and Guinea\n Kenneth G. Kelly\n Abstract and Keywords\n Introduction\n Archaeological Perspectives on the Atlantic Slave Trade: Contrasts in Time and Space in Benin and Guinea\n The Settings: Similar yet Different\n Archaeological Perspectives on the Atlantic Slave Trade: Contrasts in Time and Space in Benin and Guinea\n Archaeological Perspectives on the Atlantic Slave Trade: Contrasts in Time and Space in Benin and Guinea\n Archaeological and Historical Research\n Archaeological Perspectives on the Atlantic Slave Trade: Contrasts in Time and Space in Benin and Guinea\n Working the Trade in the Bight of Benin\n Archaeological Perspectives on the Atlantic Slave Trade: Contrasts in Time and Space in Benin and Guinea\n Archaeological Perspectives on the Atlantic Slave Trade: Contrasts in Time and Space in Benin and Guinea\n Archaeological Perspectives on the Atlantic Slave Trade: Contrasts in Time and Space in Benin and Guinea\n The Rio Pongo\n Archaeological Perspectives on the Atlantic Slave Trade: Contrasts in Time and Space in Benin and Guinea\n Archaeological Perspectives on the Atlantic Slave Trade: Contrasts in Time and Space in Benin and Guinea\n Archaeological Perspectives on the Atlantic Slave Trade: Contrasts in Time and Space in Benin and Guinea\n Conclusion\n Archaeological Perspectives on the Atlantic Slave Trade: Contrasts in Time and Space in Benin and Guinea\n Archaeological Perspectives on the Atlantic Slave Trade: Contrasts in Time and Space in Benin and Guinea\n Archaeological Perspectives on the Atlantic Slave Trade: Contrasts in Time and Space in Benin and Guinea\n Archaeological Perspectives on the Atlantic Slave Trade: Contrasts in Time and Space in Benin and Guinea\n Archaeological Perspectives on the Atlantic Slave Trade: Contrasts in Time and Space in Benin and Guinea\n Notes:\nupso-9780197264782-chapter-8\n Slaves without Shackles: An Archaeology of Everyday Life on Gorée Island, Senegal\n Paul Lane and Kevin C. MacDonald\n Slaves without Shackles: An Archaeology of Everyday Life on Gorée Island, Senegal\n Ibrahima Thiaw\n Abstract and Keywords\n Introduction\n Slaves without Shackles: An Archaeology of Everyday Life on Gorée Island, Senegal\n A Cake, a Mirror and a Cross on a Piece of Paper\n Slaves without Shackles: An Archaeology of Everyday Life on Gorée Island, Senegal\n Slaves without Shackles: An Archaeology of Everyday Life on Gorée Island, Senegal\n Slaves without Shackles: An Archaeology of Everyday Life on Gorée Island, Senegal\n Slavery and Settlement\n Slaves without Shackles: An Archaeology of Everyday Life on Gorée Island, Senegal\n Slaves without Shackles: An Archaeology of Everyday Life on Gorée Island, Senegal\n Slaves without Shackles: An Archaeology of Everyday Life on Gorée Island, Senegal\n Slaves without Shackles: An Archaeology of Everyday Life on Gorée Island, Senegal\n Archaeology of Quotidian Life on Gorée\n Slaves without Shackles: An Archaeology of Everyday Life on Gorée Island, Senegal\n Slaves without Shackles: An Archaeology of Everyday Life on Gorée Island, Senegal\n Conclusion\n Slaves without Shackles: An Archaeology of Everyday Life on Gorée Island, Senegal\n Slaves without Shackles: An Archaeology of Everyday Life on Gorée Island, Senegal\n Slaves without Shackles: An Archaeology of Everyday Life on Gorée Island, Senegal\n Notes:\nupso-9780197264782-chapter-9\n Different Conversations about the Same Thing? Source Materials in the Recreation of a Nineteenth-Century Slave-Raiding Landscape, Northern Ghana\n Paul Lane and Kevin C. MacDonald\n Different Conversations about the Same Thing? Source Materials in the Recreation of a Nineteenth-Century Slave-Raiding Landscape, Northern Ghana\n Natalie Swanepoel\n Abstract and Keywords\n Introduction\n Different Conversations about the Same Thing? Source Materials in the Recreation of a Nineteenth-Century Slave-Raiding Landscape, Northern Ghana\n Different Conversations about the Same Thing? Source Materials in the Recreation of a Nineteenth-Century Slave-Raiding Landscape, Northern Ghana\n Different Conversations about the Same Thing? Source Materials in the Recreation of a Nineteenth-Century Slave-Raiding Landscape, Northern Ghana\n Different Conversations about the Same Thing? Source Materials in the Recreation of a Nineteenth-Century Slave-Raiding Landscape, Northern Ghana\n The Nineteenth-Century Slave Trade in Northern Ghana\n Different Conversations about the Same Thing? Source Materials in the Recreation of a Nineteenth-Century Slave-Raiding Landscape, Northern Ghana\n Different Conversations about the Same Thing? Source Materials in the Recreation of a Nineteenth-Century Slave-Raiding Landscape, Northern Ghana\n Sources and Source Materials\n The Event: The Origins of the War\n Different Conversations about the Same Thing? Source Materials in the Recreation of a Nineteenth-Century Slave-Raiding Landscape, Northern Ghana\n Different Conversations about the Same Thing? Source Materials in the Recreation of a Nineteenth-Century Slave-Raiding Landscape, Northern Ghana\n Different Conversations about the Same Thing? Source Materials in the Recreation of a Nineteenth-Century Slave-Raiding Landscape, Northern Ghana\n Different Conversations about the Same Thing? Source Materials in the Recreation of a Nineteenth-Century Slave-Raiding Landscape, Northern Ghana\n Different Conversations about the Same Thing? Source Materials in the Recreation of a Nineteenth-Century Slave-Raiding Landscape, Northern Ghana\n (p.184) The Context: A Conflict Landscape\n Different Conversations about the Same Thing? Source Materials in the Recreation of a Nineteenth-Century Slave-Raiding Landscape, Northern Ghana\n Different Conversations about the Same Thing? Source Materials in the Recreation of a Nineteenth-Century Slave-Raiding Landscape, Northern Ghana\n Different Conversations about the Same Thing? Source Materials in the Recreation of a Nineteenth-Century Slave-Raiding Landscape, Northern Ghana\n Conclusion\n Different Conversations about the Same Thing? Source Materials in the Recreation of a Nineteenth-Century Slave-Raiding Landscape, Northern Ghana\n Different Conversations about the Same Thing? Source Materials in the Recreation of a Nineteenth-Century Slave-Raiding Landscape, Northern Ghana\n Different Conversations about the Same Thing? Source Materials in the Recreation of a Nineteenth-Century Slave-Raiding Landscape, Northern Ghana\n Different Conversations about the Same Thing? Source Materials in the Recreation of a Nineteenth-Century Slave-Raiding Landscape, Northern Ghana\n Different Conversations about the Same Thing? Source Materials in the Recreation of a Nineteenth-Century Slave-Raiding Landscape, Northern Ghana\n Different Conversations about the Same Thing? Source Materials in the Recreation of a Nineteenth-Century Slave-Raiding Landscape, Northern Ghana\n Different Conversations about the Same Thing? Source Materials in the Recreation of a Nineteenth-Century Slave-Raiding Landscape, Northern Ghana\n Different Conversations about the Same Thing? Source Materials in the Recreation of a Nineteenth-Century Slave-Raiding Landscape, Northern Ghana\n Different Conversations about the Same Thing? Source Materials in the Recreation of a Nineteenth-Century Slave-Raiding Landscape, Northern Ghana\n Different Conversations about the Same Thing? Source Materials in the Recreation of a Nineteenth-Century Slave-Raiding Landscape, Northern Ghana\n Different Conversations about the Same Thing? Source Materials in the Recreation of a Nineteenth-Century Slave-Raiding Landscape, Northern Ghana\n Different Conversations about the Same Thing? Source Materials in the Recreation of a Nineteenth-Century Slave-Raiding Landscape, Northern Ghana\n Different Conversations about the Same Thing? Source Materials in the Recreation of a Nineteenth-Century Slave-Raiding Landscape, Northern Ghana\n Different Conversations about the Same Thing? Source Materials in the Recreation of a Nineteenth-Century Slave-Raiding Landscape, Northern Ghana\n Notes:\nupso-9780197264782-chapter-10\n Archaeological Perspectives on Colonial Slavery: Placing Africa in African Diaspora Studies in the Caribbean\n Paul Lane and Kevin C. MacDonald\n Archaeological Perspectives on Colonial Slavery: Placing Africa in African Diaspora Studies in the Caribbean\n E. Kofi Agorsah\n Abstract and Keywords\n Introduction: Definitions of African and Caribbean Slavery\n Archaeological Perspectives on Colonial Slavery: Placing Africa in African Diaspora Studies in the Caribbean\n A Review of Caribbean Diaspora Archaeology\n Archaeological Perspectives on Colonial Slavery: Placing Africa in African Diaspora Studies in the Caribbean\n Archaeological Perspectives on Colonial Slavery: Placing Africa in African Diaspora Studies in the Caribbean\n Archaeology of Slaves and Slavery in the Caribbean\n Archaeological Perspectives on Colonial Slavery: Placing Africa in African Diaspora Studies in the Caribbean\n Africa in the Caribbean: A Case Study and Critical Evaluation of the ‘Kormantse’\n Archaeological Perspectives on Colonial Slavery: Placing Africa in African Diaspora Studies in the Caribbean\n Archaeological Perspectives on Colonial Slavery: Placing Africa in African Diaspora Studies in the Caribbean\n The Spiritual Legacy of Kormantse\n Archaeological Perspectives on Colonial Slavery: Placing Africa in African Diaspora Studies in the Caribbean\n Preliminary Archaeological Investigation of Historic Kormantse\n Archaeological Perspectives on Colonial Slavery: Placing Africa in African Diaspora Studies in the Caribbean\n Archaeological Perspectives on Colonial Slavery: Placing Africa in African Diaspora Studies in the Caribbean\n Archaeological Perspectives on Colonial Slavery: Placing Africa in African Diaspora Studies in the Caribbean\n Conclusion\n Archaeological Perspectives on Colonial Slavery: Placing Africa in African Diaspora Studies in the Caribbean\n Archaeological Perspectives on Colonial Slavery: Placing Africa in African Diaspora Studies in the Caribbean\n Archaeological Perspectives on Colonial Slavery: Placing Africa in African Diaspora Studies in the Caribbean\n Archaeological Perspectives on Colonial Slavery: Placing Africa in African Diaspora Studies in the Caribbean\n Archaeological Perspectives on Colonial Slavery: Placing Africa in African Diaspora Studies in the Caribbean\n Archaeological Perspectives on Colonial Slavery: Placing Africa in African Diaspora Studies in the Caribbean\n Archaeological Perspectives on Colonial Slavery: Placing Africa in African Diaspora Studies in the Caribbean\n Archaeological Perspectives on Colonial Slavery: Placing Africa in African Diaspora Studies in the Caribbean\n Archaeological Perspectives on Colonial Slavery: Placing Africa in African Diaspora Studies in the Caribbean\n Notes:\nupso-9780197264782-chapter-11\n The Invisible Archaeology of Slavery in the Horn of Africa?\n Paul Lane and Kevin C. MacDonald\n The Invisible Archaeology of Slavery in the Horn of Africa?\n Niall Finneran\n Abstract and Keywords\n The Historical and Social Context of Slavery in the Horn of Africa\n The Invisible Archaeology of Slavery in the Horn of Africa?\n The Invisible Archaeology of Slavery in the Horn of Africa?\n The Invisible Archaeology of Slavery in the Horn of Africa?\n The Invisible Archaeology of Slavery in the Horn of Africa?\n The Invisible Archaeology of Slavery in the Horn of Africa?\n Slavery in the Aksumite System\n The Invisible Archaeology of Slavery in the Horn of Africa?\n The Invisible Archaeology of Slavery in the Horn of Africa?\n Landscapes of Medieval Slavery\n The Invisible Archaeology of Slavery in the Horn of Africa?\n The Invisible Archaeology of Slavery in the Horn of Africa?\n The Invisible Archaeology of Slavery in the Horn of Africa?\n Towards an Archaeology of the Ethiopian Diaspora?\n The Invisible Archaeology of Slavery in the Horn of Africa?\n Slaves, Serfs and Serfdom in Medieval and Post-Medieval Ethiopia\n The Invisible Archaeology of Slavery in the Horn of Africa?\n The Invisible Archaeology of Slavery in the Horn of Africa?\n Discussion: Slavery and Social Memory in Ethiopia and the Horn\n The Invisible Archaeology of Slavery in the Horn of Africa?\n The Invisible Archaeology of Slavery in the Horn of Africa?\n The Invisible Archaeology of Slavery in the Horn of Africa?\n The Invisible Archaeology of Slavery in the Horn of Africa?\n The Invisible Archaeology of Slavery in the Horn of Africa?\n The Invisible Archaeology of Slavery in the Horn of Africa?\n The Invisible Archaeology of Slavery in the Horn of Africa?\n The Invisible Archaeology of Slavery in the Horn of Africa?\n Notes:\nupso-9780197264782-chapter-12\n Monuments of Predation: Turco-Egyptian Forts in Western Ethiopia\n Paul Lane and Kevin C. MacDonald\n Monuments of Predation: Turco-Egyptian Forts in Western Ethiopia\n Alfredo González-Ruibal\n Abstract and Keywords\n Introduction\n Monuments of Predation: Turco-Egyptian Forts in Western Ethiopia\n Turco-Egyptian Forts in Benishangul\n Monuments of Predation: Turco-Egyptian Forts in Western Ethiopia\n Monuments of Predation: Turco-Egyptian Forts in Western Ethiopia\n Monuments of Predation: Turco-Egyptian Forts in Western Ethiopia\n Monuments of Predation: Turco-Egyptian Forts in Western Ethiopia\n Monuments of Predation: Turco-Egyptian Forts in Western Ethiopia\n Monuments of Predation: Turco-Egyptian Forts in Western Ethiopia\n Monuments of Predation: Turco-Egyptian Forts in Western Ethiopia\n Interpreting the Forts\n Monuments of Predation: Turco-Egyptian Forts in Western Ethiopia\n Monuments of Predation: Turco-Egyptian Forts in Western Ethiopia\n Monuments of Predation: Turco-Egyptian Forts in Western Ethiopia\n Monuments of Predation: Turco-Egyptian Forts in Western Ethiopia\n Monuments of Predation: Turco-Egyptian Forts in Western Ethiopia\n After the State: Vernacular Monuments of Slavery\n Monuments of Predation: Turco-Egyptian Forts in Western Ethiopia\n Monuments of Predation: Turco-Egyptian Forts in Western Ethiopia\n Monuments of Predation: Turco-Egyptian Forts in Western Ethiopia\n (p.275) Conclusion: The Materiality of Predation\n Monuments of Predation: Turco-Egyptian Forts in Western Ethiopia\n Monuments of Predation: Turco-Egyptian Forts in Western Ethiopia\n Monuments of Predation: Turco-Egyptian Forts in Western Ethiopia\n Notes:\nupso-9780197264782-chapter-13\n Slavery and Slave Trading in Eastern Africa: Exploring the Intersections of Historical Sources and Archaeological Evidence\n Paul Lane and Kevin C. MacDonald\n Slavery and Slave Trading in Eastern Africa: Exploring the Intersections of Historical Sources and Archaeological Evidence\n Paul J. Lane\n Abstract and Keywords\n Introduction\n Slavery and Slave Trading in Eastern Africa: Exploring the Intersections of Historical Sources and Archaeological Evidence\n Slavery and Slave Trading in Eastern Africa: Exploring the Intersections of Historical Sources and Archaeological Evidence\n Slavery and Slave Trading in Eastern Africa: Exploring the Intersections of Historical Sources and Archaeological Evidence\n Early History of Slave Trading in the Pangani Basin, Tanzania\n Slavery and Slave Trading in Eastern Africa: Exploring the Intersections of Historical Sources and Archaeological Evidence\n Slavery and Slave Trading in Eastern Africa: Exploring the Intersections of Historical Sources and Archaeological Evidence\n Slavery and Slave Trading in Eastern Africa: Exploring the Intersections of Historical Sources and Archaeological Evidence\n Nineteenth-Century Landscapes of Slavery in the Pangani Basin\n Slavery and Slave Trading in Eastern Africa: Exploring the Intersections of Historical Sources and Archaeological Evidence\n Slavery and Slave Trading in Eastern Africa: Exploring the Intersections of Historical Sources and Archaeological Evidence\n Slavery and Slave Trading in Eastern Africa: Exploring the Intersections of Historical Sources and Archaeological Evidence\n Slavery and Slave Trading in Eastern Africa: Exploring the Intersections of Historical Sources and Archaeological Evidence\n (p.298) Slave Trading and the Emergence of Petty Chieftaincies among the Zigua\n Slavery and Slave Trading in Eastern Africa: Exploring the Intersections of Historical Sources and Archaeological Evidence\n Slavery and Slave Trading in Eastern Africa: Exploring the Intersections of Historical Sources and Archaeological Evidence\n Development of Plantation Slavery on the East African Coast\n Slavery and Slave Trading in Eastern Africa: Exploring the Intersections of Historical Sources and Archaeological Evidence\n Slavery and Slave Trading in Eastern Africa: Exploring the Intersections of Historical Sources and Archaeological Evidence\n Fugitive Slaves, Maroon Settlements and Abolition\n Slavery and Slave Trading in Eastern Africa: Exploring the Intersections of Historical Sources and Archaeological Evidence\n Slavery and Slave Trading in Eastern Africa: Exploring the Intersections of Historical Sources and Archaeological Evidence\n Conclusion\n Slavery and Slave Trading in Eastern Africa: Exploring the Intersections of Historical Sources and Archaeological Evidence\n Slavery and Slave Trading in Eastern Africa: Exploring the Intersections of Historical Sources and Archaeological Evidence\n Slavery and Slave Trading in Eastern Africa: Exploring the Intersections of Historical Sources and Archaeological Evidence\n Slavery and Slave Trading in Eastern Africa: Exploring the Intersections of Historical Sources and Archaeological Evidence\n Slavery and Slave Trading in Eastern Africa: Exploring the Intersections of Historical Sources and Archaeological Evidence\n Slavery and Slave Trading in Eastern Africa: Exploring the Intersections of Historical Sources and Archaeological Evidence\n Slavery and Slave Trading in Eastern Africa: Exploring the Intersections of Historical Sources and Archaeological Evidence\n Slavery and Slave Trading in Eastern Africa: Exploring the Intersections of Historical Sources and Archaeological Evidence\n Slavery and Slave Trading in Eastern Africa: Exploring the Intersections of Historical Sources and Archaeological Evidence\n Notes:\n Slavery and Slave Trading in Eastern Africa: Exploring the Intersections of Historical Sources and Archaeological Evidence\n Slavery and Slave Trading in Eastern Africa: Exploring the Intersections of Historical Sources and Archaeological Evidence\nupso-9780197264782-chapter-14\n Recovering and Remembering a Slave Route in Central Tanzania\n Paul Lane and Kevin C. MacDonald\n Recovering and Remembering a Slave Route in Central Tanzania\n Stephanie Wynne-Jones\n Abstract and Keywords\n Introduction\n Recovering and Remembering a Slave Route in Central Tanzania\n The UNESCO Programme in East and West Africa\n Recovering and Remembering a Slave Route in Central Tanzania\n Existing Structures of Memorialisation\n Recovering and Remembering a Slave Route in Central Tanzania\n David Livingstone\n Recovering and Remembering a Slave Route in Central Tanzania\n Recovering and Remembering a Slave Route in Central Tanzania\n (p.327) Missionary activity\n Recovering and Remembering a Slave Route in Central Tanzania\n Spaces of captivity\n Recovering and Remembering a Slave Route in Central Tanzania\n Recovering and Remembering a Slave Route in Central Tanzania\n Archaeologies of Slavery in Tanzania\n Recovering and Remembering a Slave Route in Central Tanzania\n Recovering and Remembering a Slave Route in Central Tanzania\n Building a Solution\n Recovering and Remembering a Slave Route in Central Tanzania\n Recovering and Remembering a Slave Route in Central Tanzania\n Recovering and Remembering a Slave Route in Central Tanzania\n Recovering and Remembering a Slave Route in Central Tanzania\n Recovering and Remembering a Slave Route in Central Tanzania\n Recovering and Remembering a Slave Route in Central Tanzania\n Notes:\nupso-9780197264782-chapter-15\n Memory, Oral History and the End of Slavery in Tanzania: Some Methodological Considerations\n Paul Lane and Kevin C. MacDonald\n Memory, Oral History and the End of Slavery in Tanzania: Some Methodological Considerations\n Jan-Georg Deutsch\n Abstract and Keywords\n Introduction\n Memory, Oral History and the End of Slavery in Tanzania: Some Methodological Considerations\n The End of Slavery in Tanzania\n Memory, Oral History and the End of Slavery in Tanzania: Some Methodological Considerations\n Oral Research\n Memory, Oral History and the End of Slavery in Tanzania: Some Methodological Considerations\n Memory, Oral History and the End of Slavery in Tanzania: Some Methodological Considerations\n Social Memories\n Memories of the End of Slavery\n Memory, Oral History and the End of Slavery in Tanzania: Some Methodological Considerations\n (p.350) Songea\n Memory, Oral History and the End of Slavery in Tanzania: Some Methodological Considerations\n Memory, Oral History and the End of Slavery in Tanzania: Some Methodological Considerations\n Mikindani\n Memory, Oral History and the End of Slavery in Tanzania: Some Methodological Considerations\n Conclusion\n Memory, Oral History and the End of Slavery in Tanzania: Some Methodological Considerations\n Memory, Oral History and the End of Slavery in Tanzania: Some Methodological Considerations\n Memory, Oral History and the End of Slavery in Tanzania: Some Methodological Considerations\n Memory, Oral History and the End of Slavery in Tanzania: Some Methodological Considerations\n Memory, Oral History and the End of Slavery in Tanzania: Some Methodological Considerations\n Notes:\n Memory, Oral History and the End of Slavery in Tanzania: Some Methodological Considerations\n Memory, Oral History and the End of Slavery in Tanzania: Some Methodological Considerations\nupso-9780197264782-chapter-16\n The Present in the Past: How Narratives of the Slave-Raiding Era Inform Current Politics in Northern and Central Nigeria\n Paul Lane and Kevin C. MacDonald\n The Present in the Past: How Narratives of the Slave-Raiding Era Inform Current Politics in Northern and Central Nigeria\n Roger Blench\n Abstract and Keywords\n Introduction\n The Present in the Past: How Narratives of the Slave-Raiding Era Inform Current Politics in Northern and Central Nigeria\n (p.363) Slaving in the Middle Belt: Origins and Development\n Slaving and the Sahelian polities\n The Present in the Past: How Narratives of the Slave-Raiding Era Inform Current Politics in Northern and Central Nigeria\n The Present in the Past: How Narratives of the Slave-Raiding Era Inform Current Politics in Northern and Central Nigeria\n The Present in the Past: How Narratives of the Slave-Raiding Era Inform Current Politics in Northern and Central Nigeria\n The Present in the Past: How Narratives of the Slave-Raiding Era Inform Current Politics in Northern and Central Nigeria\n The Present in the Past: How Narratives of the Slave-Raiding Era Inform Current Politics in Northern and Central Nigeria\n The Present in the Past: How Narratives of the Slave-Raiding Era Inform Current Politics in Northern and Central Nigeria\n Consequences for distribution of population\n The Present in the Past: How Narratives of the Slave-Raiding Era Inform Current Politics in Northern and Central Nigeria\n The Present in the Past: How Narratives of the Slave-Raiding Era Inform Current Politics in Northern and Central Nigeria\n The End of Slaving and the Colonial Readjustment\n The Present in the Past: How Narratives of the Slave-Raiding Era Inform Current Politics in Northern and Central Nigeria\n (p.378) Restructured Relations in the Post-Independence Era\n The Present in the Past: How Narratives of the Slave-Raiding Era Inform Current Politics in Northern and Central Nigeria\n Reframing Oral Traditions\n The Present in the Past: How Narratives of the Slave-Raiding Era Inform Current Politics in Northern and Central Nigeria\n The Present in the Past: How Narratives of the Slave-Raiding Era Inform Current Politics in Northern and Central Nigeria\n The Realignment of Historical Scholarship\n The Present in the Past: How Narratives of the Slave-Raiding Era Inform Current Politics in Northern and Central Nigeria\n Conclusion\n The Present in the Past: How Narratives of the Slave-Raiding Era Inform Current Politics in Northern and Central Nigeria\n The Present in the Past: How Narratives of the Slave-Raiding Era Inform Current Politics in Northern and Central Nigeria\n The Present in the Past: How Narratives of the Slave-Raiding Era Inform Current Politics in Northern and Central Nigeria\n The Present in the Past: How Narratives of the Slave-Raiding Era Inform Current Politics in Northern and Central Nigeria\n The Present in the Past: How Narratives of the Slave-Raiding Era Inform Current Politics in Northern and Central Nigeria\n The Present in the Past: How Narratives of the Slave-Raiding Era Inform Current Politics in Northern and Central Nigeria\n The Present in the Past: How Narratives of the Slave-Raiding Era Inform Current Politics in Northern and Central Nigeria\n The Present in the Past: How Narratives of the Slave-Raiding Era Inform Current Politics in Northern and Central Nigeria\n The Present in the Past: How Narratives of the Slave-Raiding Era Inform Current Politics in Northern and Central Nigeria\n Notes:\n The Present in the Past: How Narratives of the Slave-Raiding Era Inform Current Politics in Northern and Central Nigeria\nupso-9780197264782-chapter-17\n Constructing and Contesting Histories of Slavery at the Cape, South Africa\n Paul Lane and Kevin C. MacDonald\n Constructing and Contesting Histories of Slavery at the Cape, South Africa\n Antonia Malan\n Nigel Worden\n Abstract and Keywords\n Introduction\n Constructing and Contesting Histories of Slavery at the Cape, South Africa\n The Archaeology of Slavery\n Constructing and Contesting Histories of Slavery at the Cape, South Africa\n Constructing and Contesting Histories of Slavery at the Cape, South Africa\n The Politics of Slave Heritage\n Constructing and Contesting Histories of Slavery at the Cape, South Africa\n Constructing and Contesting Histories of Slavery at the Cape, South Africa\n Constructing and Contesting Histories of Slavery at the Cape, South Africa\n Constructing and Contesting Histories of Slavery at the Cape, South Africa\n Constructing and Contesting Histories of Slavery at the Cape, South Africa\n Remembering Slavery\n Constructing and Contesting Histories of Slavery at the Cape, South Africa\n Constructing and Contesting Histories of Slavery at the Cape, South Africa\n Disputes over Slave Burial Sites\n Constructing and Contesting Histories of Slavery at the Cape, South Africa\n Constructing and Contesting Histories of Slavery at the Cape, South Africa\n Constructing and Contesting Histories of Slavery at the Cape, South Africa\n Conclusion\n Constructing and Contesting Histories of Slavery at the Cape, South Africa\n Constructing and Contesting Histories of Slavery at the Cape, South Africa\n Constructing and Contesting Histories of Slavery at the Cape, South Africa\n Constructing and Contesting Histories of Slavery at the Cape, South Africa\n Constructing and Contesting Histories of Slavery at the Cape, South Africa\n Constructing and Contesting Histories of Slavery at the Cape, South Africa\n Notes:\n Constructing and Contesting Histories of Slavery at the Cape, South Africa\n Constructing and Contesting Histories of Slavery at the Cape, South Africa\n Constructing and Contesting Histories of Slavery at the Cape, South Africa\nupso-9780197264782-chapter-18\n A Place of History: Archaeology and Heritage at Cidade Velha, Cape Verde\n Paul Lane and Kevin C. MacDonald\n A Place of History: Archaeology and Heritage at Cidade Velha, Cape Verde\n Marie Louise Stig Sørensen\n Christopher Evans\n Konstantin Richter\n Abstract and Keywords\n Introduction\n A Place of History: Archaeology and Heritage at Cidade Velha, Cape Verde\n History of Slavery — A Perspective from Cape Verde\n A Place of History: Archaeology and Heritage at Cidade Velha, Cape Verde\n A Place of History: Archaeology and Heritage at Cidade Velha, Cape Verde\n A Place of History: Archaeology and Heritage at Cidade Velha, Cape Verde\n A Place of History: Archaeology and Heritage at Cidade Velha, Cape Verde\n A Place of History: Archaeology and Heritage at Cidade Velha, Cape Verde\n Cidade Velha — The Contemporary Meaning of Place\n A Place of History: Archaeology and Heritage at Cidade Velha, Cape Verde\n A Place of History: Archaeology and Heritage at Cidade Velha, Cape Verde\n A Place of History: Archaeology and Heritage at Cidade Velha, Cape Verde\n The Importance of History\n (p.435) Cidade Velha as the Beginning and the Origin\n A Place of History: Archaeology and Heritage at Cidade Velha, Cape Verde\n Slavery\n (p.436) The Archaeological Project — Giving Form and Making Visible\n A Place of History: Archaeology and Heritage at Cidade Velha, Cape Verde\n A Place of History: Archaeology and Heritage at Cidade Velha, Cape Verde\n A Place of History: Archaeology and Heritage at Cidade Velha, Cape Verde\n A Place of History: Archaeology and Heritage at Cidade Velha, Cape Verde\n A Place of History: Archaeology and Heritage at Cidade Velha, Cape Verde\n Notes:\n A Place of History: Archaeology and Heritage at Cidade Velha, Cape Verde\nupso-9780197264782-miscMatter-7\n (p.443) Abstracts\n Paul Lane and Kevin C. MacDonald\n (p.443) Abstracts\n 1. Introduction: Slavery, Social Revolutions and Enduring Memories\n (p.443) Abstracts\n 2. Segou: Warfare and the Origins of a State of Slavery\n 3. The Daily Life of Slaves in the Last Years of the Bamana States of Kaarta and Segou\n (p.445) 4. The Early Medieval Slave Trade of the Central Sahel: Archaeological and Historical Considerations\n (p.443) Abstracts\n 5. Slavery and Slaving in the Medieval and Post-Medieval Kingdoms of the Middle Nile\n 6. Enslavement and Everyday Life: Living with Slave Raiding in the North-Eastern Mandara Mountains of Cameroon\n 7. Archaeological Perspectives on the Atlantic Slave Trade: Contrasts in Time and Space in Benin and Guinea\n (p.443) Abstracts\n 8. Slaves without Shackles: An Archaeology of Everyday Life on Gorée Island, Senegal\n 9. Different Conversations about the Same Thing? Source Materials in the Recreation of a Nineteenth-Century Slave-Raiding Landscape, Northern Ghana\n 10. Archaeological Perspectives on Colonial Slavery: Placing Africa in African Diaspora Studies in the Caribbean\n (p.443) Abstracts\n 11. The Invisible Archaeology of Slavery in the Horn of Africa?\n 12. Monuments of Predation: Turco-Egyptian Forts in Western Ethiopia\n (p.449) 13. Slavery and Slave Trading in Eastern Africa: Exploring the Intersections of Historical Sources and Archaeological Evidence\n (p.443) Abstracts\n 14. Recovering and Remembering a Slave Route in Central Tanzania\n 15. Memory, Oral History and the End of Slavery in Tanzania: Some Methodological Considerations\n 16. The Present in the Past: How Narratives of the Slave-Raiding Era Inform Current Politics in Northern and Central Nigeria\n (p.443) Abstracts\n 17. Constructing and Contesting Histories of Slavery at the Cape, South Africa\n 18. A Place of History: Archaeology and Heritage at Cidade Velha, Cape Verde\nupso-9780197264782-indexList-1\n (p.453) Index\n Paul Lane and Kevin C. MacDonald\n (p.453) Index\n (p.453) Index\n (p.453) Index\n (p.453) Index\n (p.453) Index\n (p.453) Index\n (p.453) Index\n (p.453) Index\n (p.453) Index\n (p.453) Index\n (p.453) Index\n (p.453) Index\n (p.453) Index\n (p.453) Index\n (p.453) Index\n (p.453) Index\n (p.453) Index\n (p.453) Index\n (p.453) Index\n (p.453) Index\n (p.453) Index\n (p.453) Index\n (p.453) Index\n (p.453) Index\n (p.453) Index\n (p.453) Index\n (p.453) Index\n (p.453) Index\n (p.453) Index\n (p.453) Index\n (p.453) Index\n (p.453) Index\n (p.453) Index\n (p.453) Index\n (p.453) Index




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