Published online by Cambridge University Press: 22 January 2009
At a time when coastal West Africa was responding to the growth of ‘legitimate’ trade, the Sokoto Caliphate was experiencing dramatic expansion in the plantation sector. Plantations (gandu, rinji, tungazi), which used slaves captured by the Caliphate armies, were established near all the major towns and were particularly important around Sokoto, Kano, Zaria and other capitals. Plantation development originated with the policies of Muhammad Bello, first Caliph and successor to Uthman dan Fodio, who was concerned with the consolidation and defence of the empire. Besides promoting the economic growth of the capital districts of Sokoto and Gwandu, Bello's policy encouraged the expansion of the textile belt in southern Kano and northern Zaria. Similarly, the desert-side market in grain also benefited from the emphasis on plantations. The result was the greater integration of the Central Sudan region into a single economic zone. The role of plantations in the economy differed from that of plantations elsewhere in the world. Market forces tended to be weaker, and no single export crop dominated production. Rather, the orientation towards the desert-side sector indicates that opportunities for expansion were limited, while the importance of textile manufacturing reflects the relatively weak links with European and other textile production. Other differences included a system of Islamic slavery which encouraged emancipation, a close connexion with slave raiding and distribution, and a system of land tenure which often resulted in fragmented holdings. Stronger links with the world economy did develop in parts of the Caliphate towards the end of the nineteenth century. Nupe and Yola were drawn more closely into the world market through the greater use of the Niger and Benue rivers, but these changes only marginally affected the wider Caliphate economy.
1 The research for this paper was supported by the Canadian Social Science Research Council, a grant from the Ahmadu Bello University Research Board and the History Dept. A.B.U. The paper benefited from the comments of Isaacman, Allen, Wright, Marcia, Klein, Martin, Hogendorn, J. S., Egnal, Marc, Hopkins, A. G., Tambo, David, Duffill, M. B. and Law, R. C. C.. The maps were drawn by the cartography section of the Department of Geography, York University. Earlier versions of this paper were given at the American Historical Association Annual Meeting, Washington, D.C., 1976Google Scholar, and at the Conference on ‘The Cultivator and the State in Pre-Colonial Africa’, University of Illinois, Urbana, 1977Google Scholar. This preliminary discussion is being expanded into a book-length study of plantation economy and society in the Sokoto Caliphate.
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