In exchange, East Africa ivory
Contents contributed and discussions participated by nicolezondo
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Vol.+40+-+Article+10+-+Ramey+p.+105-114.pdf - 1 views
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In exchange, East Africa became a significant exporter of ivory to India.
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Because of its sacred value, Indians required huge importations of ivory, especially from the East African coast for its pliability and the ease with which it could be formed into marriage bangles.
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The use of ivory developed over the centuries from jewelry to being the primary material of goods used throughout various areas of society.
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By consequence, the complex development of the ivory trade enhanced Indian economic control along the East African coast.
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As a result, India became a large importer of ivory that had been transported from the African interior to the Swahili East African c o a s t.
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Not only was East Africa dependent on India for goods but India was also dependent on East Africa for ivory. A strong, complex relationship emerged between East Africa and India throughout the first two millennia.
ivory trade in eastern africa 1858 - Google Search - 2 views
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'Cloths with Names': Luxury Textile Imports in Eastern Africa, c. 1800-1885.pdf - 1 views
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The same thirty or so cloth types were sought by élites, and, increasingly , the general population, across the vast area of Sub-Saharan eastern Africa engaged in the ivory , slaves, gum copal and spices which, at its peak in the 1870s, radiated from Zanzibar to Somalia in the north, to Mozambique in the south, as far west as Uganda and east to Madagascar and the Comoros Islands.
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As the export ivory trade in particular expanded far into the interior of eastern Africa in the nineteenth century , rising wealth and changing fashions led increasing numbers of people to give up their local barkcloth or hide dress for imported woven cloth.
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In 1856, English explorer Richard Francis Burton, the first European to cross the central ivory ‘cloths with names’.
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However, ivory kunguru’s fortunes. Kunguru is the probable origin of the iconic ‘Maasai plaid’, the red and
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The Human Ecology of World Systems in East Africa: The Impact of the Ivory Trade.pdf - 1 views
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Second, the ivory trade is an example of economic relationships that have been common for millennia between world system centers and areas not directly under their political and economic control. Because the populations are not forced to participate through political means, Chase-Dunn
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In comparison, the consequences for human ecology of the trade in valuables were diffuse and localized. Centers in worlds systems traded with areas outside their economic and political control in order to obtain goods of prestige value in their own societies.
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The utilization of resources, demographics, environmental influences on society, health and the environmental effects of human activity are important aspects of human ecology. As populations rise, more resources are needed, and these resources are used and exploited and exploited, environmental harm grows. These three factors are therefore closely related.
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ivory trade in eastern Africa changed the vegetation cover, caused erosion, contributed to the intensification of agriculture, the spread of pastoralism, and affected the distribution of populations in the region.
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. For example, European and Asian countries obtained gold, ivory, copal, and slaves from Africa, and furs from North America (Wolf, 1982)
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he expansion of overseas trade was explosive, and between A.D. 1000 and 1500 increasing amounts of ivory, iron, and other commodities were exported to China, India, the Middle East, and Europe (Alpers, 1992; Horton, 1987).
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The impact on human ecology of the ivory trade entailed direct and indirect effects. First, the reduction or extermination of elephant populations had direct effects on vegetation patterns over large areas. Second, the economic activities connected with hunting, transport, and trading affected regional systems of exchange and thereby, indirectly through the political economy, settlements, patterns of resource utilization, population parameters, and specialization of production.
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Waller (1985) and Sobania (1991) have elucidated the complex interactions between exchange, production, and ethnicity during the nineteenth century.
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nderstanding of the ivory trade must begin with the elephants themselves. After all, ivory is derived from animals with given biological, ecological, and demographic relationships, and characteristics. Since elephants reproduce, they are a renewable resource that can also be driven to extinction
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The amount of ivory that was obtained in the nineteenth century was therefore a function of previous exploitation during centuries of huntin
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. Using the available, albeit fragmentary, documentary evidence and a computer simulation of elephant hunting, he concluded that the coastal elephant populations could not have been the main source of ivory before the nineteenth century. If they had been, then there would not have been any substantial numbers of elephants remaining in the coastal region by that time
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During the first half of the nineteenth century elephants seem to have been widely distributed and common in many parts of the region. It is important to note that the coastal areas were harboring many elephants especially during the dry seasons when herds gathered at the lower ends of rivers
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1850 is devastating for the moving ivory frontier thesis advanced by, among others, Sheriff (1987, p. 78), who argues that the coastal elephant populations were first exterminated followed by a progressive exploitation further inland