|
Kilima.com - an international online store featuring Art, Film, History, Literature,
Music and Travel... |
|
|
|
|
The Golden Trade of the Moors: West African Kingdoms in the Fourteenth Century | 
enlarge
| Authors: E. W. Bovill, Robin Hallett Publisher: Marcus Wiener Category: Book
List Price: $24.95 Buy Used: $7.93 You Save: $17.02 (68%)
New (4) Used (12) from $7.93
Rating: 2 reviews Sales Rank: 445724
Media: Paperback Edition: 2 Pages: 312 Number Of Items: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.1 Dimensions (in): 8.9 x 6.1 x 0.9
ISBN: 1558760911 Dewey Decimal Number: 382.0966 EAN: 9781558760912 ASIN: 1558760911
Publication Date: January 1995 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Shipping: Expedited shipping available Condition: Markus Wiener Publishers, 1995. Paperback. Cover has mild wear from rubbing and bumping. Fore edge of the text block has some heavy scratches and dents. Binding is solid. Inside front cover has a large price sticker which you will not be able to remove. Text contains writing and highlighting. Expedited shipping available. Usually ships within 24 hours.
| |
| Similar Items:
|
| Editorial Reviews:
Book Description This book is the liveliest account of African history ever written covering over thousand years of trans-Saharan trade. Bovill achieved for African history what Huizinga accomplished for Europe in "The Waning of the Middle Ages."
|
| Customer Reviews:
An easy to read and in depth history of northern Africa August 28, 2004 events3 7 out of 7 found this review helpful
Bovill's THE GOLDEN TRADE OF THE MOORS provides a broad description of the history of North & West Africa from the Tell, the high plateau and the Sahara to the Sahel, and from the Sudan to the bottom of North Africa's hump. Bovill, relying on written history (and some archaeology), traces the history of northern Africa from pre-Carthaginian times to the beginning of the 20th Century. We are introduced to Carthaginian interests in black slaves and Roman trade (and warfare) with the Garamantes, Vandals, Byzantium's involvement in the region and the subsequent Arab conquest and spread of Islam, the rise of Ghana and Mali, the Sanhaja Berber's Islamic puritan dynasty (Almoravids) which spread its control across Northwest Africa and into Muslim Spain before being overthrown by the Almohads (another puritan sect), the Almoravid invasion of Ghana, the rise of Timbuktu, the rise of the Songhai Empire, the (Moroccan) Al-Mansur's rise to power and wealth and the invasion of the Sudan (especially of the Songhai Empire), the increasing independence of the the Berber governors of the Sudan and the growing independence of the Arma (mulattoes), the rise of the Kanem and Bornu and of the Hausa states, the Fulani religious and slave wars and their ultimate demise as the Europeans began to extend their control over the region. Northern Africa, as Bovill tells us, is occupied by both light-skinned and dark-skinned people. The former include the late-coming Arabs and the ancient residents - the Berbers. The Berbers can be sub-divided into the Western tribes of the Botr (including the Zenata who formed the important Marinid dynasty of Morocco), the Branes (including the very powerful Sanhaja peoples), the numerous and widely spread Tuaregs of the central Sahara and a few other tribes. Of these, the first two are westernmost and are generally called Moors (thereby distinguishing them from the more independent Tuaregs and the Moriscos who returned from Spain during and after the Spanish reconquest of al-Andalus). The Tebu, Fezzanese and Haratins and Zhagawas make up the majority of the people of the Sahara who were dark-skinned. Further South, various dark-skinned people from the Wolofs of Senegambia, the Soninke (of ancient Ghana) the Mandingo (of ancient Mali) to the Songhai populated the region. Bovill also introduce us to the famous historian and legalist, Ibn Khaldun and various European and Muslim travelers through the region: Ibn Battuta, Leo Africanus (al-Hassan ibn Muhammad al-Wazzani) and Mungo Park. The mutual importance of the Berbers and Europeans in trade matters is also discussed. The Europeans needed gold (to trade in the East) and slaves from Africa while the Berbers needed military and other goods for local and trans-Saharan warfare as well as silk, spices, sugar and the like. Although the book provides a substantial amount of information, it is sometimes a less than complete history. For example, the rise of the Banu Marin (Marnids) and their dynasty in Morocco and Ottoman influence and control east of Morocco are barely mentioned. On the other hand, the discussion of the arrival of the Bedouin tribes and their relation to the lack of habitability of much of the Tell (Africa's Mediterranean coastline) was especially interesting. Well written, easily read and highly informative, this book was well worth reading and should sit on the book shelf, next to Hugh Thomas' TRANSATLANTIC SLAVE TRADE and Thornton's AFRICA AND AFRICANS IN THE MAKING OF THE ATLANTIC WORLD, of any Africanist.
Reviews for the Golden Trade of the Moors June 28, 2006 history buff 1 out of 5 found this review helpful
"Bovill is a gifted teller of tales . . . it is a delightfully written and well-organized account of a vast and neglected field of history . . . a unique source book on Saharan trade routes, caravan organization and Sudanese history. . . . Mr. Bovill not only reveals a firm grasp of history but of anthropology and economic geography." -New York Times "An utterly enthralling, scholarly study . . . very blunt about all the hot little towns, sharp traders and the brutal rulers who figure in this book-but Bovill's truths turn out to be splendidly romantic." -The New Yorker "Bovill writes, as a historian, of the Sahara's golden age, threading his way clearly and with learning through a maze of Berber and Sudanese dynasties. . . ." -Spectator
|
|
|
|
| |
|