Hostname: page-component-5c6d5d7d68-txr5j Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-08-16T19:42:37.749Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

The Caravan Trade in the Nineteenth Century

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  22 January 2009

Extract

The caravan trade, a strong chain binding Barbary, the Sahara, and the Negro territories together, was of very remote antiquity. Mauny and Lhote have convincingly shown that as early 1000 B.C. chariots were being drawn across the Sahara along two main routes: a western route from Morocco through Zemmour and Adrar to the banks of the Senegal and the Niger, and a central route from Tripoli through Cydamus (Ghadames), Ghat, and Hoggar to Gao on the Niger. By the fifth century B.C., the desert traffic—mainly in animals such as monkeys, lions, panthers, and elephants, in precious stones like carbuncles, emeralds and chalcedony, and in slaves— had become so important that ‘the Carthaginians began their great Sahara expeditions in an effort to cut out all intermediaries and to get into direct contact with the source of the riches in which they traded’. Three centuries later the Saharan trade was centred on the Tripoli-Fezzan-Bornu route (the Garamantian route) and constituted one of the main sources of the riches of Carthage. The phenomenal development of this desert traffic did not take place, however, until the introduction of the camel into Tripolitania by the Romans probably in the first century A.D. The rapid spread of the camel throughout Barbary and into the Sahara and beyond was begun by the Arabs and the Berbers. The process seemed to have gathered momentum and reached its climax during the Hilalian invasions in the middle of the eleventh century.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1962

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

1 Mauny, R., ‘Notes on the Protohistoric period in West Africa’, Journal of tile West African Science Association (1st 08., 1952), ii, No. 2.Google ScholarMauny, R., ‘“Une route préhistorique” á travers le Sahara occidental’, Bull. de I'Ifan. (1950), 341–60;Google ScholarLhote, H., The search for the Tassili Frescoes (English Translation, London, 1959), 124–8.Google Scholar

2 Charles-Picard, Gilbert and Colette, , Daily Life in Carthage at the time of Hannibal (English translation, London, 1961), 219.Google Scholar

3 For the fascinating literary battle on the subject of the introduction of the camel into Barbary, see Monteil, V., Essai sur le chameau au Sahara occidental (1952);Google ScholarSir Mortimer, Wheeler, Rome beyond tile Imperial frontiers (Penguin Edition, London, 1954), 121;Google ScholarBrogan, O., ‘The Camel in Roman Tripolitania’, Papers of the British School at Rome, XX (1954);Google ScholarBovill, E. W., The Golden Trade of the Moors (London, 1958), 41–2.Google Scholar

4 Bovill, op. cit. 235.Google Scholar

5 Ibid. 165–90.

6 Caillié, R., Travels through central Africa to Timbuctoo (London, 1830), II, 50–1;Google ScholarBarth, H., Travels and Discoveries in North and Central Africa (London, 1858), v, 216.Google Scholar

7 Urvoy, , Histoire de I'Empire du Bornou (Paris, 1949), 7584.Google ScholarBarth, H., op. cit. II, 650–8.Google Scholar

8 C.O. 2/30, Laing to Warrington, 13 Sept. 1825; F.O. 8/8, Ritchie to Bathurst, 28 Oct. 1818; F.O. 76/15, Warrington to Bathurst, 22 Oct. 1821.Google Scholar

9 F.O. 76/29, Warrington to Hay, 30 Sept. 1931 F.O. 76/32, Warrington to Goderick, 1 Aug. 1832; F.O. 76/32, Warrington to Hay, 23 Aug. 1832, II Aug. 1834; F.O. 76/38, Proclamation of Mustafa Najib, I Jan. 1835 encl, in Warrington to Aberdeen, 6 June 1835.Google Scholar

10 F.O. 101/4, Warrington to Palmerston, 10 April 1840; F.O. 101/14, Warrington to Bidwell, 31 Dec. 1840; F.O. 84/427, Warrington to Aberdeen, 1 June 1842;Google ScholarRichardson, J., Travels in the Sahara (London, 1848), II, 353.Google Scholar

11 F.O. 101/34, Crewe to Palmerston, 9 March 1852; F.O. 101/34, Herman to Malmesbury, 2 July 1852; and encl. Gagliufli to Herman, 3 July 1852; F.O. 101 /34, Barth to Herman, 25 Feb. 1852 encl. in Herman to Malmesbury, 2 Nov. 1952.Google Scholar

12 Vischer, H., Across the Sahara (London, 1910), 65–6; 257, 265.Google Scholar

13 F.O. 1144, Fremaux to Herman, 21 June 1861 encl, in Herman to Russell, 26 July 1861; Barth, op. cit. III, 7–8, 37–40, 67–100.Google Scholar

14 Rodd, F. R., People of the Veil (London 1926), 388–93.Google Scholar

15 Richardson, op. cit. ii, 141; F.O. 84/598, Richardson to Warrington, 24 Sept. 1845; encl, in Warrington to Aberdeen, 15 Oct. 1845;Google ScholarDuveyrier, H., Les Touareg Du Nord (Paris, 1864), 259–60.Google Scholar

16 Richardson, J., A Mission to Central Africa (London, 1853), II, 225.Google Scholar

17 Pritchard, E. E., The Sanusi of Cyrenaica (Oxford, 1949), 24–5;Google ScholarEncyclopaedia of Islam, IV, 154–5;Google ScholarDuveyrier, H., La Confrérie musulmane de Sidi Mohammed ban Ali as Senoussie (Paris, 1884), 72.Google Scholar

18 Hassanain, Bey A. M., The Lost Oases (Cairo, 1926), 67.Google Scholar

19 Duveyrier, op. cit. 15–16.Google Scholar

20 Vischer, op. cit. 148;Google ScholarGautier, E. F., et Chudeau, R., Missions au Sahara (Paris 19081909), II, 294–5.Google Scholar

21 Bernard, A., et Lacroix, N., La Pénétration Saharienne 1830–1906 (Alger, 1906), 23.Google Scholar

22 Harris, W. B., Tafilet (London, 1895), 305;Google ScholarLentz, O., Timbuctoo (Paris, 1886), II, 37;Google ScholarMackenzie, D., The flooding of the Sahara (London, 1837), 154–5.Google Scholar

23 F.O. 101/16, Richardson to Warrington, 13 Nov. 1845; Barth, op. cit. I, 169, 397.Google Scholar

24 F. O. 84/1412, Henderson to Derby, 24 Dec. 1875.Google Scholar

25 Caillié, op. cit. II, 97–103;Google ScholarBarth, op. cit. v, 22, 26, 460–1.Google Scholar

26 F.O. 101/16, ‘The Souk of Ghat in Winter 1845’ in Richardson to Warrington, 1 May 1846;Google ScholarRichardson, J., Travels in the Sahara (London, 1848), II, 115–17, 195;Google ScholarBarth, op. cit. I, 238.Google Scholar

27 Richardson, op. cit. II, 346;Google ScholarDuveyrier, H., Les Touareg Du Nord (Paris, 1864), 284;Google ScholarHassanain, Bey, op. cit. 64.Google Scholar

28 Dubois, F., Timbuctoo the mysterious (English translation, London, 1897), 259–65;Google ScholarWilks, Ivor, ‘A medieval trade-route from the Niger to the Gulf of Guinea’, see above, pp. 337–41.Google Scholar

29 Park, M., Travels in Africa 1795–1797 (London, 1799), 305–6;Google ScholarCaillié, op. cit. I, 453;Google ScholarDubois, op. cit. 163–9, 176;Google ScholarBarth, op. cit. v, 26–7, 36.Google Scholar

30 Clapperton, H., Clapperton's Journal (in Denham, D. and Clapperton, H., A narrative of Travels and Discoveries in Northern and Central Africa (London, 1826)), 53;Google ScholarBarth, op. cit. 11, 42–3, 102–11, 124–45Google Scholar

31 There were two main types of Caravans, the large annual ones which could Consist of between 500 and 2000 camels and the small irregular caravans consisting of from 5 to 100. As a rule, the smaller the number of camels, the greater the speed of the caravan. The average rate was 15–16 miles a day of 8 hours for a heavily laden Caravan, 17–18 for a moderately laden and 20–22 a day of 10 hours for a lightly laden Caravan. For a further discussion of the question, see Lyon, G., A narrative of the travels in Northern Africa, 1818– 1820 (London, 1821) 131;Google ScholarMcQueen, J., A Geographical and Commercial View of Northern Central Africa (Edinburgh, 1821), 77–8;Google ScholarRennell, James, Philosophical Transactions, LXXXI, 41.Google Scholar

32 Br. Emp. MSS. S22/922 Church to Chamorouzou (undated). See also Denham, op. cit. 7, 9–30, 11–13; Vischer, op. cit. 171, 138.Google Scholar

33 Caillié, op. cit. II, 55, 114–18;Google ScholarDenham, op. cit. 13, 15, 28, 205, 280;Google ScholarLyon, op. cit. 256–7, 331–2;Google ScholarBarth, op. cit. I, 573–4, II, 296, v, 417, 436; C.O. 2/13, Oudney to Horton, 28 March, 1823; F.O. 84/774, Gagliufl to Reade, 4 Aug. 1849 encl, in Reade to Palmerston, 24 Aug. 1849; F.O. 101/29, Herman to Palmerston, 12 Oct. 1957 and enclosures.Google Scholar

34 Proceedings of the African Association (1790), 181–91; F.O. 76/12, Warrington to Bathurst, 17 April. 1818; F.O. 101/3, Wood to Warrington, 1 Aug. 1839 encl, in Warrington to Bidwell, 21 Aug. 1839; F.O. 101/18, Commercial Report of Tripoli, Crowe to Palmerston, 26 May 1847; F.O. 101/16, Richardson to Warrington, An account of the Oasis and city of Ghadmes, 13 Nov. 1845;Google ScholarBarth, op. cit. II, 126–40, v, 34–6;Google ScholarLyon, op. cit. 152–9;Google ScholarClapperton, op. cit. 42, 53; 121–22;Google ScholarGautieret Chudeau, op. cit. II, 292–4;Google ScholarDubois, op. cit. 178–9; 252–60.Google Scholar

35 Gautier, et Chudeau, op. cit. II, 294.Google Scholar

36 Denham, op. cit. 325;Google ScholarClapperton, op. cit. 17;Google ScholarRichardson, op. cit. I, 133; II, 118;Google ScholarBarth, op. cit. V, 22.Google Scholar

37 F.O. 97/430, Report on the Slave Trade of the Great desert, Richardson to the Anti-Slavery Society, 12 June 1846; F.O. 84/1062, Herman to Clarendon, 10 March 1858.Google Scholar

38 F.O. 84/857, Saunders to Palmerston, Prevesa, 3 Feb. 1851; F.O. 84/1000, Ongley to Canning, Candia, 10 April. 1856; F.O. 84/857, Crowe to Palmerston, Tripoli, 17 Jan. 1851; F.O. 84/885, Crowe to Palmerston, 31 17 Jan. 1852; F.O. 84/974, Herman to Clarend, 22 Jan. 1855.Google Scholar

39 Barth, op. cit. III, 381; v, 26;Google ScholarDenham, op. it. 70; C.O. 2/13 Denham to Horton, 1 June 1825.Google Scholar

40 Barth, op. cit. II, 142; Richardson, op. cit. II, 118;Google ScholarRobinson, C. H., Hausaland (London, 1896), 62.Google Scholar

41 Clapperton, op. cit. 51; Caillié, op. cit. 373; Barth, op. cit. 11, 28–9, 142–3.Google Scholar

42 Barth, op. cit. III, 75, 381–2, 558–9;Google ScholarDenham, op. cit. 70; C.O. 2/13, Denham to Horton, I June 1825.Google Scholar