Slave Trade Profiteers in the Western Indian Ocean

Slave Trade Profiteers in the Western Indian Ocean
Author: Hideaki Suzuki
Publisher: Springer
Total Pages: 231
Release: 2017-10-12
Genre: History
ISBN: 3319598031

This book examines how slave traders interacted with and resisted the British suppression campaign in the nineteenth-century western Indian Ocean. By focusing on the transporters, buyers, sellers, and users of slaves in the region, the book traces the many links between slave trafficking and other types of trade. Drawing upon first-person slave accounts, travelogues, and archival sources, it documents the impact of abolition on Zanzibar politics, Indian merchants, East African coastal urban societies, and the entirety of maritime trade in the region. Ultimately, this ground-breaking work uncovers how western Indian Ocean societies experienced the slave trade suppression campaign as a political intervention, with important implications for Indian Ocean history and the history of the slave trade.

Imperial Powers and Humanitarian Interventions

Imperial Powers and Humanitarian Interventions
Author: Raphaƫl Cheriau
Publisher: Routledge
Total Pages: 271
Release: 2021-05-03
Genre: History
ISBN: 1000383016

In the second half of the nineteenth century, the Zanzibar Sultanate became the focal point of European imperial and humanitarian policies, most notably Britain, France, and Germany. In fact, the Sultanate was one of the few places in the world where humanitarianism and imperialism met in the most obvious fashion. This crucial encounter was perfectly embodied by the iconic meeting of Dr. Livingstone and Henry Morton Stanley in 1871. This book challenges the common presumption that those humanitarian concerns only served to conceal vile colonial interests. It brings the repression of the East African slave trade at sea and the expansion of empires into a new light in comparing French and British archives for the first time.