1st Edition

The Trans-Saharan Slave Trade

By John Wright Copyright 2007
    242 Pages 1 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    242 Pages 1 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    This compelling text sheds light on the important but under studied trans-Saharan slave trade. The author uncovers and surveys this, the least-noticed of the slave trades out of Africa, which from the seventh to the twentieth centuries quielty delievered almost as many black Africans into foreign servitude as did the far busier, but much briefer Atlantic and East African trades.

    Illuminating for the first time a significant, but ignored subject, the book supports and widens current scholarly examination of Africans' essential role in the enslavement of fellow-Africans and their delivery to internal, Atlantic or trans-Saharan markets.

    1. Slaves, Slavery and the Sahara  2. The Sahara: Grazing, War and Trade  3. The Medieval Saharan Slave Trade  4. The Land Ways and the Sea Ways  5.  Faith in Abolition  6. The Slave Trade thriough Murzuk  7. The Slave Trade through Ghadames and Ghat  8. The Wadai Road  9. The Slave Trade between Sahara and Mediterranean  10. The Mediterranean Middle Passage  11. Morocco: The Lasat Great Slave Market  12. The Delusions of Abolition

    Biography

    Wright, John

    'Through an intelligent and judicious use of a wide variety of relevant sources, Wright has produced a fine work of scholarly synthesis that constitutes a solid contribution to the literature on the rise and demise of the slave trade in a part of Africa that has long been neglected by specialists in the field. Thus he has successfully—and literally—breached the world of the Sahara as an ecological and academic terra incognita'Hussein Ahmed, Addis Ababa University, Journal of Islamic Studies 2009