Economic Change and Islamic Statecraft: Karamoko Alfa and the Foundation of Futa Jallon Imamate 1726-1751
Abstract:
This paper examines the formation and consolidation of the Muslim theocracy initially established on the ideal of Islamic law and an economic system based on the internal production of non-slave commodities. It highlights the rapidly changing condition marked by the shift of European demand from trade in non-slave commodities to the trade in slaves as a result of increasing demand for slave labour in the New World. It demonstrates the significant structural transformation instituted by the new regime of the Futa Imamate to optimize its participation through Muslim militancy, thereby extending influence and control over strategic coastal markets during the development of the Atlantic slave trade in the mid-eighteenth century. It also discusses how the commercial shift accelerated by the rapid development of peanut production and new export-import trade attracted the territorial and commercial interest of the French in the River Pongo and Nunez, the southern Rivers situated in the northern Futa. This further demonstrates the French territorial and commercial ambition to monopolize legitimate trade in these strategic rivers.
KeyWords:
Futa Jallon Imamate, Islamic statecraft, Atlantic slave trade, economic transformation, Muslim theocracy, French colonial expansion
References:
- Austin, Gareth. Cash Crops and Freedom: “Export Agriculture and the Decline of Slavery in Colonial West Africa” International Review of Social History, 54, April 2009.
- Beardsley, Kyle C. David M. Quinn, Bidisha Biswas, and Jonathan Wilkenfeld, Mediation of International Crises, The Journal of Conflict Resolution, 50, Feb, 2006.
- Braudel, Fernand. Center for the Study of Economies, Historical Systems and Civilizations.
- Bredwa-Mensah, Yaw. Archaeology of Slavery in West Africa. Transactions of the Historical Society of Ghana, 3, 1999.
- Brooks, George E. Peanuts and Colonialism: Consequences of the Commercialization of Peanuts in West Africa, 1830-1870, The Journal of African History, 16, 1975.
- Caporaso, James A. “Dependence, Dependency, and Power in the Global System: A Structural and Behavioral Analysis”. International Organization, 32, 1978.
- Caulker, Patrick S. Legitimate Commerce and Statecraft: A Study of the Hinterland Adjacent to Nineteenth Century Sierra Leone, Journal of Black Studies,11, Jun. 1981.
- Chamberlin, Christopher. Bulk Exports, Trade Tiers, Regulation, and Development: An Economic Approach to the Study of West Africa's "Legitimate Trade", The Journal of Economic History, 39, Jun. 1979.
- Clark, Andrew F. The Fulbe of Bundu (Senegambia): From Theocracy to Secularization. The International Journal of African Historical Studies, 29, 1996.
- Clayton, Thomas. “Conceptions of Globalisation’ Revisited: Relocating the Tension Between World-System Analysis and Globalisation Analysis. University of Chicago Press. 48, August 2004.
- Curtin, Philip D. “Jihad in West Africa: early phases and Inter-relationship with Mauritania and Senegal,” Journal of African History, 12 1971.
- Eltis, David. Was the Abolition of the U.S. and British Slave Trade Significant in the Broader Atlantic Context? The William and Mary Quarterly, 66, Oct., 2009.
- Goldfrank, Walter L. "Paradigm Regained? The Rules of Wallerstein's World-System Method.” Journal of World-Systems Research. 6. 2000.
- Hanson, John H. Islam and Imperialism: Martin Klein's Contributions to an Understanding of the History of the Senegambian Muslim Communities, Canadian Journal of African Studies, 34, 2000.
- Hargreaves, J D. Towards a History of the Partition of Africa, The Journal of African History. 1,1960.
- Hawthorne, Walter. States and Stateless: The Oxford Handbook of Modern African History, Edited by John Parker and Richard Reid.London: Oxford University Press, 2013.
- Ijagbemi, E. A. The Freetown Colony and the Development of “Legitimate” Commerce in Adjoining Territories: Journal of the Historical Society of Nigeria, 5, June 1970
- Johnson, Turner James. The Tradition on Jihad of the Sword, Counter-Narratives, and Policy: Soundings: An Interdisciplinary Journal, 98, 2015.
- Klein, Martin A. “Social and Economic Factors in the Muslim Revolution in the Senegambia,” Journal of Africa, 13, 1972.
- Lovejoy, Paul E. Islam, Slavery, and Political Transformation in West Africa: constraints on the trans-Atlantic Slave trade: Outre-mers, tome 89 2002.
- Mark, Peter. Reviewed works: The World and a Very Small Place in Africa by Donald R. Wright. African Studies Review, 2 September 1998.
- McGowan, Winston. The Establishment of Long-Distance Trade between Sierra Leone and Its Hinterland, 1787-1821, The Journal of African History, 31, 1990.
- Mouser, Bruce L. Continuing British Interest in Coastal Guinea-Conakry and Fuuta Jaloo Highlands (1750 to 1850) Cahiers D'Études Africaines 172, 2003.
- Mouser, Bruce L. Guinea-Conakry During the Sierra Leone Phase, 1800-1821. Washington: Washington University Press of America, January 2009
- Robinson, David. “Abdul Qadir and Shaykh Umar: A Continuing Tradition of Islamic Leadership in Futa Toro”, International Journal of African Historical Studies, 2. 1973
- Rodney, Walter. Jihad and Social Revolution in Futa Djalon in the Eighteenth Century, Journal of Historical Society of Nigeria, IV.1968.
- Salvaing, Bernard. "Colonial Rule and Fulfulde Literature in Futa Jallon (Guinea)." Sudanic Africa, 15, (2004)
- Sanneh, Lamin. The Origins of Clericalism in West African Islam, the Journal of African History, 17, 1
- Smith, H. F. C. Neglected theme of West African History: the Islamic Revolution of the 19th Century: Journal of the Historical Society of Nigeria, 2, December 1961.
- Azumah, John A. The Legacy of Arab-Islam in Africa: A Quest for Inter-religious Dialogue, (London, One World, 2018)
- Bakary Sidibe, A Brief History of Kabu and Fulladu, 1300-1900: A Narrative Based on Some Oral Tradition of the Senegambia, (Banjul: Oral History and Antiquities Division, OHAD, 1974)
- Barry, Boubacar. Senegambia and the Atlantic Slave Trade. (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1998)
- Bisset, Francis Archer. The Gambia Colony and Protectorate: An Official Handbook. (London: Frank CASS & CO. Ltd, 1967)
- Brook, George E. Euroafricans in Western Africa and Cabo Verde, 1790s-1830s: Symbiosis of Slave and. Legitimate Trades. (Bloomington: Authorhouse, 2010).
- Clarence, Gervase William. Islam and the Abolition of the Slave Trade: (Oxford University Press, 2006)
- Clayton, Thomas. “Conceptions of Globalisation’ Revisited: Relocating the Tension Between World-System Analysis and Globalisation Analysis. University of Chicago Press.3 (August 2004)
- Cleary, William Fr. Reaping A Rich Harvest: History of Catholic Church in The Gambia.(Gambia Catholic Church 1990)
- Conrad, David C. Oral Tradition & Perceptions of History from the Manding People of West Africa, in Themes in West Africa`s History, Edited by Emmanuel Kwaku Akyeampong( Athens: Ohio University Press,2006)
- Curtin, Philip D. Economic Change in precolonial Africa: Senegambia in the Era of Slave Trade. (Madison: Wisconsin Press, 2005)
- Diop, Samba. Épopées africaines Africaines: Ndiadiane Ndiaye et El Hadj Omar Tall. (L` Harmattan, 2004)
- Fisher, Allan B.G. and Fisher, Humphrey J: Slavery and Muslim Society in Africa (London, C. Hurst & Company, 1970)
- Gatzke, Erik. Alliance, Perception, and International Politics University of Columbia University, April 2002.
- Goldfrank, Walter L. “Paradigm Regained? The Rules of Wallerstein`s World System Method.” Journal of World System Research 2(200)
- Gray, John M. A History of The Gambia. (London: Frank CASS, 1966)
- Green, Toby. The Rise of Trans-Atlantic Slave Trade in Western Africa 1300-1589 (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2012)
- Kersbergen, Kees,Van. “National Political Systems: The Changing Boundaries of Politics”? In: Expansion and Fragmentation: Internationalization, Political Change and the Transformation of the Nation-State, (Amsterdam: Amsterdam University Press, 1999)
- Klein, Martin A. Islam and Imperialism in Senegal: Sine-Saloum, (1847-1914) (Stanford: Stanford University Press, 1968)
- Klein, Martin A., Slavery and Colonial Rule in West Africa (Cambridge University Press, 1998),