Who are these white people in this image? Could it possibly be by Portuguese and Hellenic ?. Based on background research I Conducted I found that East Africa traded with mainly Arabia, India, Persia (Iran), China, Greece, and Portugal.
This suggests that East Africa may have killed many hypothalamus animals because their region had animals that had favorable traits when it comes to the ivory trade.
The word "ancient" means a long time. This suggests that the ivory trade has been in practice in East Africa for a long time.
East African ivory is soft ivory and is ideal for carving. It was in keen demand in the Orient because of its superior quality and because it was less expensive than that from south-e
This suggests that East Africa may have killed many hypothalamus animals because their region had animals that had favorable traits such as having quality when it comes to ivory.
Carving means: fashioning an object.
This shows that in nineteen century marked a good sharp increase in the ivory trade in East Africa. It may suggest that people started to be involved in the ivory trade if they were not involved.
But it was in the nineteenth century that the great development of the East African ivory trade took place. An
This information shows that the involvement of Americans and Europeans resulted in the ivory trade increasing more. With an increase in the ivory trade meant that animals such as elephants, and rhinos were being killed in huge figures. This is what the author suggests when he/she says, "This led to extensive exploitation of ivory resources"
America's involvement does not shock One that the ivory trade was increased to a point where resources got exploited. It is because America is advanced and it had more money or things that East Africans needed.
ncreased demand for ivory in America and Europe coincided with the opening up of East Africa by Arab traders and European explorers, and
This information shows that the involvement of Americans and Europeans resulted in the ivory trade increasing more. With an increase in the ivory trade meant that animals such as elephants, and rhinos were being killed in huge figures. This is what the author suggests when he/she says, "This led to extensive exploitation of ivory resources"
America's involvement does not shock one that the ivory trade was increased to a point where resources got exploited. It is because America is advanced and it had more money or things that East Africans needed.
this led to the intensive exploitation of the ivory resources of the interior. Thro
neteenth century, East Africa ranked as the foremost source of ivory in the world; ivory over-topped all rivals, ev
The onslaught on the ivory reserves of the East African interior in the nineteenth century took the form of a two-way thrust, that from the north by the Egyptians under Muhammad Ali, which penetrated southwards into the Sudan and Equatoria, and that from the east coast by the Arabs under Sultan Said of Zanzibar, following the transference of the seat of his authority from Muscat to Zanzibar in I832. Within a decade of Said's move to Zanzibar and the Egyptian advance southwards, the ivory traders were out en masse.
Paraphrased to understand it
The nineteenth-century onslaught on the interior of East Africa's ivory valuables took the form of a two-way
den may do it in four months.' The two great inland markets for ivory were Unyanyembe (Tabora) in what is now central Tanzania, and Ujiji on the east coast of Lake Tanganyika.1
These are the places where most of the time ivory trade took place.
Cameron, arriving here in i874, speaks of the 'special ornaments' here of 'beautifully white and wonderfully polished hippopotamus ivory'. These ivory carvings at Ujiji were exceptional
The reader gets the image of how hard ivory looks.
ivory is white, opaque, and smooth, it is gently curved, and easily worked, and has what might be called 'spring'. Hard ivory, on the other hand, is translucent, glossy and of a heavier specific gravity than soft ivory; it is more subject to extremes of temperature and more difficult to carve.
Ivory tusks ranged in weight from the small tusks destined for the Indian market and weighing no more than a few pounds, to the huge tusks of 200 lb. and more which were regularly carried to the coast.13 Small
This shows that there were different types of sizes tusks that were used for ivory. The small tusks allude that these rhinos or elephants were killed at a young age.
d. The task of removal was much facilitated by using a steel axe, which the Arabs usually possessed, but the natives rarely. Bargaining for ivory required infinite pati
This is animal abuse how can they use such This is animal abuse how can they use such dangerous objects on animals? A tool as an axe is dangerous it kills animals which may resulted in hypothalamus animals extinct. How can they use dangerous objects on animals? A tool as an axe is dangerous it kills animals which may resulted in hypothalamus animals extinct.
The value of ivory was calculated in different ways. The African estimated its value by its size and qua
Nothing had a stable price like ivory in nineteenth, which means other products had increase and decrease over the price these times.
enya to trade for ivory. The original plans for an East African railway were based on the assumption that the haulage of ivory would be a valuable source of revenue.3
This shows that East Africa first planned that Ivory will be their source of income.
'. The shooting of cow elephants was prohibited, and all ivory below io lb. weight (raised to 30 lb. in I905) was liable to confiscation. Demarcation of reserves also followed.
This is good because if they give elephants a chance to grow they will be able to reproduce and maintain the population. Order to prevent elephants from being extinct.
a.40 Instances of infringement of the game laws and trading in illicit ivory continued to come before the courts throughout the earlier twentieth cen
Why is that so? was it because no one cared to calculate or there a many numbers of exports?
Various figures have been put forth to show the number of elephants killed to supply the above ivory exports. Baker's estimate that 3,000 elephants were killed annually, to supply the ivory transported down the Nile during the i86os, may not be far off the m
This is is sad ,many animals killed for their horns.
SUMMARY The East African ivory trade is an ancient one: East African ivory is soft ivory and is ideal for carving, and was always in great demand. It figures prominently in the earliest reference to trading activities on the East African Coast. But the great development came in the nineteenth century when an increased demand for ivory in America and Europe coincided with the opening up of East Africa by Arab traders and European explorers. The onslaught on the ivory resources of the interior took the form of a two-way thrust-from the north by the Egyptians who penetrated into the Sudan and E
The issue of policital leaders is covered extensively in the literature, so I will simply highlight a few key issues. First, ivory had important and widespread political meanings as a sign of authority and an item of tr
The value of these armlets grew as a result of the increasing scope and intensity of the ivory trade during the 19th century.
This marks a change in how elephants were poached, my Jstore article states that poachers used an axe to extract ivory from elephants, it was in the 19th century we see the use of guns, which id s a fast process to kill elephants.
My interest in the literature on the ivory trade and in 19th-century thinking about trade and its effects on Africa arose
In the introduction, there is an establishment of the places this journal will explore in terms of how the ivory trade affected them. But I am concerned with the East African region therefore my annotations will center more on things that involve ivory trade effects in East Africa
Ivory provided status and livelihood for porters engaged in transporting it. The ivory trade was crucial in the development of long-distance trade route
This is a source from Taylor and Francis. It talks about the participation of East African societies during the late nineteenth century. Furthermore, it shows how ivory was an economic and political activity in East Africa during the nineteenth century. It also shows how the ivory trade led to a decline in the number of elephants in East Africa. This is the PDF version, I experienced technical difficulties when trying to annotate it from the original database. But inside this PDF I annotated evidence to show this document was downloaded from the UJ database.
This section from "As ivory and copal were reserved by treaty until to the last word that says the revenue of both of these heads". They are the main idea. It tells the reader how bulk breaking is affecting them.
Not only did i post this document, I posted original gale document to show that I took this document from UJ database. I was not able to annotate it successfully that is why I annotated the PDF version .
This memorandum found in Gale store shows that the ivory trade in Zanzibar which is part of East Africa used a system which is called break bulking to be shipped in small amounts rather than one big cargo which can limit spending the amount of money on shipping goods. Zanzibar was negatively impacted by break bulking and this memorandum sought to address that.
Based on this title, seems like it will explore how the ivory trade impacted elephants from East Africa in a negative manner. In essence, it will explore how the ivory trade destroyed the existence if elephants of elephants in East Africa
This is an important date because it links to the time frame that is asked in the Digo assessment.
Eastern Africa has been a major source of elephant ivory for millennia, with a sharp increase in trade witnessed during the 19th century fueled by escalating demand from Europe and North America.
This is the author's main idea. The author tires to insinuate that elephants' existence in East Africa was threatened by the high request for ivory from Europe and North America.
Definition
is the identification of isotopic signature, abundance of certain stable isotopes of chemical elements within organic and inorganic compounds.
Desirable objects such as cutlery-handles, piano keys, and billiard balls drove the extension of global trade networks and the industrialization of the ivory-working industry
This is another idea that proves that the Elephant population was put to an end during the 19th century because their horns were used to make objects such as cutlery, piano keys, and many more.
on historic East African ivory and skeletal remains provided information about diet and therefore elephants’ likely habitat, which allowed scientists to figure out where ivory originally came from and to map elephant geography in the region
This provides information that elephants that were used to perform ivory came from East Africa which is why their ivory samples match with living elephants in East Africa.
The findings, published in PLOS ONE, support previous evidence suggesting that an increase in hunting resulted in the eradication of elephants from along the coast of southern Kenya and northern Tanzania by the mid-19th century, driving trade inland.
This is another main idea, that suggests that the increase in hunting resulted in elephants being put to an end in places that are found in the East African region for instance Tanzania.
Today, elephants live in national parks and game reserves in these same landscapes, but are more restricted in terms of their movement than they would have been in the 19th century.
This shows that in the 19th century, elephants were freed to move freely without guidance it was because of the rise of the ivory trade in East Africa that affected their movement.