Slaving in Bantu-Speaking Regions

Josephine C. Miller
{"title":"Slaving in Bantu-Speaking Regions","authors":"Josephine C. Miller","doi":"10.1093/acrefore/9780190277734.013.149","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Small communities of Bantu-language-speaking cultivators, and eventually also cattle herders, settled and thrived during the last three millennia throughout nearly the entire African continent east and south of Cameroon. They mobilized the people who did so in many ways, transferring many of them among the groups they formed. Mobility was assumed to be normative. Most they repositioned by mutual agreements protecting the daughters or others they moved as wives, some sought new places voluntarily as clients, and others found themselves involuntarily abandoned, captured, or otherwise isolated and vulnerable to the strangers who took them in. The last group most resembled the people who, in modern societies, we recognize as “enslaved.”\n However, those who acquired these vulnerable people used them for purposes very different from the plantations and backbreaking labor associated with African “slavery” in the Americas. And they faced futures more varied than the permanently and inheritably enslaved Africans in the New World. This essay sketches these varied purposes and outcomes of enslavement in the context of Bantu speakers’ worlds built around premises that often contrasted with the modern world we take for granted. It adds a historical argument that Bantu-speaking communities met the major challenges in their three-thousand-year history by mobilizing personnel through slaving.\n This essay follows three broadly defined eras in which Bantu speakers over more than a hundred generations used strategies of slaving to create historical changes. The earliest slaving moved people who were unwanted in their home communities, or destitute survivors of communities that had failed and dispersed, into vulnerable places among the communities of others. As early Bantu speakers gradually grew in number, they intensified collective local strategies to create diverse communities in which they ultimately valued obligating relationships with one another more than they accumulated personal material wealth. Prizing people more than property, they saw themselves as perpetually short of personnel, particularly of women as wives to bear succeeding generations. Politics more than production motivated their quests for males, often clients but also opportunistically supplemented with the destitute and their neighbors’ cast-offs.\n Dependency was the norm and not a violation of individual freedom, since everyone was beholden to others. Since residential groups and neighborhoods routinely circulated their members in several ways, the distinctions between those moved involuntarily as slaves and others who moved in protected conditions as wives or clients were much subtler than our familiar (though unrealistic) dichotomy of mutually exclusive “slavery” and “freedom.” Despite modern searches for Bantu speakers’ terms cognate with “slavery,” they created no discrete, permanent social condition similar to the institutionalized commercial slavery of the Atlantic. The acquiring groups treated slaves better than the abandoned, isolated, displaced outsiders whom we treated as little more than inanimate “property,” always vulnerable to further removals by sale. To the contrary, the early Bantu-speaking groups tended to find places for the people they acquired and treated them as human resources of significant value in the complex politics of their neighborhoods and communities.\n In the second phase, from roughly 500 to 1500 ce, trading opportunities tended to promote connections over greater distances, among strangers. These opportunities supplemented the small scales of the earlier personal networks of kinship, affinity, guilds of skilled hunters and healers, and clientage. Communities in propitious locations recruited isolated outsiders to sustain local production, while insiders moved out with their products. Some networks of more regular interactions among otherwise unfamiliar contacts at greater distances consolidated into political systems distinguishable from the balanced communities of familiarity composing them. They kept the peace among themselves by recognizing neutral central authorities among the components, and the central figures who gained significant independent power recruited kinless outsiders to build retinues of their own.\n Some of these central political authorities eventually obtained commercial resources from Indian and later also Atlantic Ocean merchant networks. They used these imported goods, bought or borrowed on terms of commercial credit, as working capital to consolidate their positions locally. At first, they paid for what they had borrowed with low-investment exports of extracted commodities (ivory, gold, and other natural resources). Increasing extraction depleted resources and provoked greater borrowing to seek resources farther afield. Growing commercial credit soon inflated local competition and accelerated the needs for additional personnel to protect the initial windfall gains they had made. By the end of the 17th century, Atlantic merchants attempting to serve vast markets for captive Africans in American mines and plantations introduced goods in quantities that exceeded the capacities of African domestic economies to pay for them without resorting to raiding for captives to sell abroad to pay their debts.\n So long as populations farther from the sea remained undisturbed and vulnerable to violent seizure and sale, Africans financed by growing Atlantic credit tended to retain more people than they had to sell off into the maritime trade. They were the profits from people kept in Africa and who increasingly populated expanding trading networks. As European investment grew, so did African indebtedness. For more than three centuries from the late 1500s until the second half of the 19th century, the resulting Atlantic “frontier of slaving violence” moved haltingly inland. The circumstances of the captives kept in regions closer to the coast grew correspondingly more contingent and abusive, vulnerable to being sold abroad, and the means of acquiring them became more violent. An Indian Ocean counterpart took shape in the later 1700s, and eastern and south-central Africa sank into violent displacements of whole populations. Commercial credit and slaving had enabled Bantu-speaking Africans to transform their world from communities dedicated to reproducing their members to warlords and bands of enslaved mercenaries that thrived by capturing people whom others had reproduced.\n Commercialized slaving in Bantu-speaking Africa produced more captives for the export trades of both the Atlantic and Indian Oceans than from any other region of the continent, but slaving within the continent was also the principal strategy that people used there, over more than two thousand years, to create the major historical changes in their lives. Each succeeding historical context on growing geographical scales—increasingly politicized, and eventually commercialized—had been an outcome accomplished by the slaving developed in its predecessor.","PeriodicalId":166397,"journal":{"name":"Oxford Research Encyclopedia of African History","volume":"545 ","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2020-04-27","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"1","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Oxford Research Encyclopedia of African History","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1093/acrefore/9780190277734.013.149","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 1

Abstract

Small communities of Bantu-language-speaking cultivators, and eventually also cattle herders, settled and thrived during the last three millennia throughout nearly the entire African continent east and south of Cameroon. They mobilized the people who did so in many ways, transferring many of them among the groups they formed. Mobility was assumed to be normative. Most they repositioned by mutual agreements protecting the daughters or others they moved as wives, some sought new places voluntarily as clients, and others found themselves involuntarily abandoned, captured, or otherwise isolated and vulnerable to the strangers who took them in. The last group most resembled the people who, in modern societies, we recognize as “enslaved.” However, those who acquired these vulnerable people used them for purposes very different from the plantations and backbreaking labor associated with African “slavery” in the Americas. And they faced futures more varied than the permanently and inheritably enslaved Africans in the New World. This essay sketches these varied purposes and outcomes of enslavement in the context of Bantu speakers’ worlds built around premises that often contrasted with the modern world we take for granted. It adds a historical argument that Bantu-speaking communities met the major challenges in their three-thousand-year history by mobilizing personnel through slaving. This essay follows three broadly defined eras in which Bantu speakers over more than a hundred generations used strategies of slaving to create historical changes. The earliest slaving moved people who were unwanted in their home communities, or destitute survivors of communities that had failed and dispersed, into vulnerable places among the communities of others. As early Bantu speakers gradually grew in number, they intensified collective local strategies to create diverse communities in which they ultimately valued obligating relationships with one another more than they accumulated personal material wealth. Prizing people more than property, they saw themselves as perpetually short of personnel, particularly of women as wives to bear succeeding generations. Politics more than production motivated their quests for males, often clients but also opportunistically supplemented with the destitute and their neighbors’ cast-offs. Dependency was the norm and not a violation of individual freedom, since everyone was beholden to others. Since residential groups and neighborhoods routinely circulated their members in several ways, the distinctions between those moved involuntarily as slaves and others who moved in protected conditions as wives or clients were much subtler than our familiar (though unrealistic) dichotomy of mutually exclusive “slavery” and “freedom.” Despite modern searches for Bantu speakers’ terms cognate with “slavery,” they created no discrete, permanent social condition similar to the institutionalized commercial slavery of the Atlantic. The acquiring groups treated slaves better than the abandoned, isolated, displaced outsiders whom we treated as little more than inanimate “property,” always vulnerable to further removals by sale. To the contrary, the early Bantu-speaking groups tended to find places for the people they acquired and treated them as human resources of significant value in the complex politics of their neighborhoods and communities. In the second phase, from roughly 500 to 1500 ce, trading opportunities tended to promote connections over greater distances, among strangers. These opportunities supplemented the small scales of the earlier personal networks of kinship, affinity, guilds of skilled hunters and healers, and clientage. Communities in propitious locations recruited isolated outsiders to sustain local production, while insiders moved out with their products. Some networks of more regular interactions among otherwise unfamiliar contacts at greater distances consolidated into political systems distinguishable from the balanced communities of familiarity composing them. They kept the peace among themselves by recognizing neutral central authorities among the components, and the central figures who gained significant independent power recruited kinless outsiders to build retinues of their own. Some of these central political authorities eventually obtained commercial resources from Indian and later also Atlantic Ocean merchant networks. They used these imported goods, bought or borrowed on terms of commercial credit, as working capital to consolidate their positions locally. At first, they paid for what they had borrowed with low-investment exports of extracted commodities (ivory, gold, and other natural resources). Increasing extraction depleted resources and provoked greater borrowing to seek resources farther afield. Growing commercial credit soon inflated local competition and accelerated the needs for additional personnel to protect the initial windfall gains they had made. By the end of the 17th century, Atlantic merchants attempting to serve vast markets for captive Africans in American mines and plantations introduced goods in quantities that exceeded the capacities of African domestic economies to pay for them without resorting to raiding for captives to sell abroad to pay their debts. So long as populations farther from the sea remained undisturbed and vulnerable to violent seizure and sale, Africans financed by growing Atlantic credit tended to retain more people than they had to sell off into the maritime trade. They were the profits from people kept in Africa and who increasingly populated expanding trading networks. As European investment grew, so did African indebtedness. For more than three centuries from the late 1500s until the second half of the 19th century, the resulting Atlantic “frontier of slaving violence” moved haltingly inland. The circumstances of the captives kept in regions closer to the coast grew correspondingly more contingent and abusive, vulnerable to being sold abroad, and the means of acquiring them became more violent. An Indian Ocean counterpart took shape in the later 1700s, and eastern and south-central Africa sank into violent displacements of whole populations. Commercial credit and slaving had enabled Bantu-speaking Africans to transform their world from communities dedicated to reproducing their members to warlords and bands of enslaved mercenaries that thrived by capturing people whom others had reproduced. Commercialized slaving in Bantu-speaking Africa produced more captives for the export trades of both the Atlantic and Indian Oceans than from any other region of the continent, but slaving within the continent was also the principal strategy that people used there, over more than two thousand years, to create the major historical changes in their lives. Each succeeding historical context on growing geographical scales—increasingly politicized, and eventually commercialized—had been an outcome accomplished by the slaving developed in its predecessor.
班图语地区的奴隶制
在过去的三千年里,讲班图语的耕种者和牧牛者组成的小社区在喀麦隆东部和南部几乎整个非洲大陆定居并繁荣起来。他们以多种方式动员了这样做的人,将他们中的许多人转移到他们所组成的团体中。流动性被认为是规范的。他们中的大多数人根据保护女儿或他们作为妻子搬来的其他人的共同协议重新定位,有些人自愿寻找新的地方作为客户,还有一些人发现自己被非自愿地抛弃,被捕,或以其他方式孤立,容易受到陌生人的伤害。最后一类人最像现代社会中被我们称为“奴隶”的人。然而,那些获得这些弱势群体的人将他们用于与种植园和与美洲非洲“奴隶制”相关的繁重劳动截然不同的目的。他们面对的未来比那些在新大陆被永久奴役的非洲人更加多变。这篇文章在班图语使用者的世界背景下概述了这些不同的奴役目的和结果,这些世界建立在与我们认为理所当然的现代世界形成鲜明对比的前提下。它增加了一个历史论点,即班图语社区在其三千年的历史中,通过奴隶制度动员人员来应对主要挑战。这篇文章遵循三个广泛定义的时代,在这三个时代中,班图人在一百多代人的时间里使用奴隶制的策略来创造历史变化。最早的奴隶制度将那些在自己的社区中不受欢迎的人,或者那些失败和分散的社区中贫困的幸存者,转移到其他社区中脆弱的地方。随着早期班图语使用者的数量逐渐增长,他们加强了集体的地方战略,以创建多样化的社区,在这个社区中,他们最终更重视彼此之间的义务关系,而不是个人物质财富的积累。他们把人看得比财产更重要,他们认为自己永远缺乏人才,尤其是缺少生育后代的妻子。政治比生产更能激发她们对男性的追求,通常是客户,但也有机会主义地补充了穷人和邻居的弃儿。依赖是一种常态,并不是对个人自由的侵犯,因为每个人都对他人有义务。由于居民团体和社区经常以几种方式传播其成员,那些作为奴隶而非自愿迁移的人与其他作为妻子或客户在受保护条件下迁移的人之间的区别,比我们熟悉的(尽管不现实的)相互排斥的“奴隶制”和“自由”的两分法要微妙得多。尽管现代人搜索说班图语的人使用的术语与“奴隶制”有关,但他们并没有创造出类似于大西洋制度化的商业奴隶制那样的离散的、永久的社会状况。收购集团对奴隶的待遇比那些被遗弃的、孤立的、流离失所的外来者要好,我们把他们看作是没有生命的“财产”,总是很容易被进一步出售。相反,早期说班图语的群体倾向于为他们获得的人寻找位置,并将他们视为在其社区和社区复杂政治中具有重要价值的人力资源。在第二阶段,大约从公元500年到1500年,贸易机会倾向于促进陌生人之间的远距离联系。这些机会补充了早期小规模的亲属关系、亲缘关系、熟练猎人和治疗师的行会以及客户关系。在有利地点的社区招募孤立的外来者来维持当地的生产,而内部人员则带着他们的产品搬走。一些更有规律的互动网络,在距离更远的陌生接触中巩固成政治系统,与组成它们的熟悉的平衡社区不同。他们通过在各组成部分中承认中立的中央当局来维持内部的和平,而获得重要独立权力的中央人物则招募无亲属的外部人士来建立自己的随从。其中一些中央政治当局最终从印度和后来的大西洋商人网络中获得了商业资源。他们用这些根据商业信贷条件购买或借入的进口货物作为营运资金,巩固他们在当地的地位。起初,他们用低投资的出口商品(象牙、黄金和其他自然资源)来偿还借款。不断增加的开采耗尽了资源,并引发了更多的借贷,以寻求更远的资源。不断增长的商业信贷很快加剧了当地的竞争,加速了对额外人员的需求,以保护他们最初获得的意外之财。 到17世纪末,大西洋商人试图为在美国矿山和种植园里被俘虏的非洲人提供巨大的市场,他们引进的货物数量超过了非洲国内经济的能力,而不需要通过掠夺俘虏来偿还债务。只要远离海洋的人口不受干扰,不容易受到暴力掠夺和出售,非洲人就会通过不断增长的大西洋信贷提供资金,往往会留住更多的人,而不是卖给海上贸易。这些利润来自被留在非洲的人,这些人不断扩大贸易网络。随着欧洲投资的增长,非洲的债务也在增加。从16世纪晚期到19世纪下半叶的三个多世纪里,由此产生的大西洋“奴隶制暴力的前沿”断断续续地向内陆移动。关押在靠近海岸地区的俘虏的情况相应地变得更加偶然和虐待,容易被卖到国外,获得他们的手段也变得更加暴力。18世纪后期,印度洋上也出现了类似的情况,非洲东部和中南部陷入了人口大规模迁移的暴力之中。商业信贷和奴隶制使讲班图语的非洲人能够把他们的世界从致力于再生产其成员的社区转变为军阀和被奴役的雇佣军团伙,他们通过捕获他人再生产的人而兴旺发达。在说班图语的非洲,商业化的奴隶制度为大西洋和印度洋的出口贸易创造了比非洲大陆其他任何地区都多的俘虏,但在非洲大陆内实行奴隶制也是人们在两千多年来使用的主要策略,给他们的生活带来了重大的历史变化。在不断扩大的地理规模上,每一个后续的历史背景——日益政治化,并最终商业化——都是其前身奴隶制发展的结果。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
求助全文
约1分钟内获得全文 求助全文
来源期刊
自引率
0.00%
发文量
0
×
引用
GB/T 7714-2015
复制
MLA
复制
APA
复制
导出至
BibTeX EndNote RefMan NoteFirst NoteExpress
×
提示
您的信息不完整,为了账户安全,请先补充。
现在去补充
×
提示
您因"违规操作"
具体请查看互助需知
我知道了
×
提示
确定
请完成安全验证×
copy
已复制链接
快去分享给好友吧!
我知道了
右上角分享
点击右上角分享
0
联系我们:info@booksci.cn Book学术提供免费学术资源搜索服务,方便国内外学者检索中英文文献。致力于提供最便捷和优质的服务体验。 Copyright © 2023 布克学术 All rights reserved.
京ICP备2023020795号-1
ghs 京公网安备 11010802042870号
Book学术文献互助
Book学术文献互助群
群 号:481959085
Book学术官方微信