Slaves, Spices and Ivory in Zanzibar. Abdul Sheriff
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СКАЧАТЬ 3.2 The value of Waters’s contracts with merchants at Zanzibar

       4.1 Value of cloves and coconuts in the total exports of Zanzibar, 1859–1864/5

       4.2 Value of ivory and copal in the total exports of Zanzibar, 1859–1864/5

       4.3 Import duties as a proportion of total revenue, 1859–1864/5

       4.4 Internal trade of Zanzibar by commodities, 1859–1864/5

       4.5 External trade of Zanzibar by commodities, 1859–1864/5

       4.6 External trade of Zanzibar by countries, 1859–1864/5

       4.7 The population of Zanzibar town, 1835–1910

       4.8 The Indian population of Zanzibar, 1819–74

       5.1 Imports into Zanzibar from the African coast, 1848–1873/4

       5.2 Exports of ivory from Mombasa, 1849–87

       5.3 Mombasa’s foreign trade, 1872

       6.1 Slave captures, 1868–70

       6.2 The East African slave trade, 1811–73

       6.3 Redistribution of slaves in East Africa, 1866/7–1872/3

       6.4 The East African slave trade in the 1860s: summary

       Abbreviations

Adm. Admiralty Records at Public Record Office, Kew
ANSOM Archives Nationales, Section Outre-Mer, Paris
BHS Beverley Historical Society,. Beverley, Massachusetts
BM, Add. Mss Additional Manuscripts, at British Museum, London
BR Selections from the Records of the Bombay Government, New Series
CCZ Correspondance Consulaire et Commerciale: Zanzibar, at Ministère des Affaires Etrangères Archives, Paris
Cust. Customs Records, at Public Record Office, Kew
EI Essex Institute, Salem, Massachusetts
FO Foreign Office Records, at Public Record Office, Kew
FOCP Foreign Office Confidential Print, at Public Record Office, Kew
HSBA Harvard School of Business Administration, Baker Library, Cambridge, Massachusetts
IOR India Office Records, London
LC Library of Congress, Washington, DC
MA Maharashtra State Archives, Bombay
MAE Ministère des Affaires Etrangères, Archives, Paris
NAI National Archives of India, New Delhi
NAW National Archives, Washington, DC
OI Océan Indien series, at Ministère des Affaires Etrangères Archives, Paris
PM Peabody Museum, Salem, Massachusetts
PP Parliamentary Papers, United Kingdom
PRO Public Record Office, Kew
PZ Correspondance Politique: Zanzibar, at Ministère des Affaires Etrangéres Archives, Paris
RIHS Rhode Island Historical Society, Providence
SCHR Salem Custom House Records, at Essex Institute, Salem, Massachusetts
T 100 American Consular Records, Group 59, on microfilm at National Archives, Washington, DC

      Note: For more details see Sources, pp. 259–65 below.

       Glossary

Imam Spiritual title of the Ibadhi ruler of Oman traditionally elected by the ulema and the tribal shaikhs. It declined in significance during the latter part of the eighteenth century with the secularisation of the Omani state, but was revived in the late 1860s.
Seyyid Lord, used in Oman and Zanzibar to refer to the more secular ruler, and to members of the ruling dynasty.
Shaikh Heads of tribal and clan groupings in Oman; also a term of respect used more generally.
Shamba A Swahili word for plantation or plot of land.
Sultan Secular title of the ruler of Oman and Zanzibar emphasising the temporal aspect of his position.
Ulema Religious experts in Islam; played an important role in the election of the Imam in Oman.

       Currency and Weights

      CURRENCY

      Cruzado (Cr) A Portuguese silver coin with a fluctuating value: 1777: 3.75 Cr = 1 Piastre (see below); 1813: 2.60 Cr = 1 Piastre.1

      Maria Theresa Dollar (MT$) A coin known as the Austrian Crown, the ‘Black dollar’, Kursh or Rial. Current on the East African coast until the 1860s when it began to be replaced by the American dollar. 1 MT$ = Rs 2.10–2.23 during the first half of the nineteenth century. £1 = MT$ 4.75. Spanish, Mexican Piastres or dollars and American dollars were exchanged at Zanzibar at 1 per cent to 6 per cent discount.2

      Rupee (Rs) The Indian unit of currency. Before 1836 different parts of India had their own coins. The universal rupee was established in that year, but the value fluctuated until 1899: 1803–1813: 1 Spanish Dollar = Rs2.38–2.14. 1841–1868: 1 Spanish dollar = Rs2.10–2.18.3

      WEIGHTS

      Arroba (Ar) A Portuguese unit equal to 14.688 kg.4

      Frasela (Fr) A unit widely used along the East African СКАЧАТЬ