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Home/ University of Johannesburg History 2A 2023/ Contents contributed and discussions participated by THABELO SADIKI

Contents contributed and discussions participated by THABELO SADIKI

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Correspondence Respecting the Prohibition of the Sale of Arms in the Colony of Sierra L... - 2 views

  • Fire-arms, &c, not to be sent to Slave Trade districts. Lists of destinations of fire-arms, &c, sold to be submitted to Governor every six mouths.,Penalties for certain offences.,Fire-arms may be issued to public forces.,Governor not to authorize withdrawal of arms of precision.,
    • THABELO SADIKI
       
      The did not want certain people to access the guns
  • Comparative Statement of Guns of all descriptions imported into the Colony of Sierra Leone and entered for duty in the years 1890 and 1891.,Description of Guns. Quantity. 1890. 1891. Flint-locks .. .. ,. .. Percussion .. .. .. .. Muzzle-loading rifles .. .. .. .. Breech-loading double- or single-barrelled guns Breech-loading rifles .. ., Total .. 1,931 346 '*97 207 1,133 619 34 82 2,543 2,581 4,411,Of the foregoing, only 25 flint-locks, 40 percussion guns, and 1 breech-loading double-barrelled gun in 1890, and 136 percussion guns in 1891, were imported and taken to Sherbro and the Sulymah district
    • THABELO SADIKI
       
      The French colony was controlling the number of guns that were being imported into its colony. Which means that they did not want the firearms could not reach the native people
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Firearms in Nineteenth-Century Botswana: The Case of Livingstone's 8-Bore Bullet.pdf - 3 views

  • Possession of guns, accompanied by a rapid adoption of new military as well as hunting tactics for their use, played a key role in the reformation of local polities during the midnineteenth century
    • THABELO SADIKI
       
      Firearms changed the tactics that were used to do things traditionally.
  • Possession of guns, accompanied by a rapid adoption of new military as well as hunting tactics for their use, played a key role in the reformation of local polities during the midnineteenth century
    • THABELO SADIKI
       
      Guns changed the way things were used to be done in African societies
  • Besides the company he kept, Sechele’s own investment in high calibre rifles and superior shot is understandable in the context of his then central role in the lucrative regional ivory trade, which provided him with a steady source of income for the purchase of munitions and other goods
    • THABELO SADIKI
       
      Ivory seems like to play a crucial role in the number of firearms that were imported in Africa because it seems like many traders wanted it in exchange for guns
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  • Besides leading to a rapid decline in wildlife, and consequent expansion of arable and pastoral lands, hunting with guns reinforced social stratification in many areas.
    • THABELO SADIKI
       
      Changed the way of hunting and now they were using more advanced weapon
  • To Europeans wishing to trade, he was known as a reliable supplier but demanding negotiator
    • THABELO SADIKI
       
      Seems like an influential person
  • e Lake via Sechele’s, Capt. Ernest Shelly, Henry Bushe and a Mr Ewart, were diverted. McCabe, who in 1846 had also had his wagons confiscated by the Boers for carrying weapons to Sechele, was ultimately fined for publishing the route to the Lake. 81
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Firearms in Southern Africa: A survey.pdf - 5 views

  • There was also a constant supply of firearms to the 'resisters' through the desertion of Khoi servants and slaves, who frequently fled with their masters' weapons to join the Khoisan in the mountains
    • THABELO SADIKI
       
      This explains how the Khoi San people got the firearm they used to fight the colonisers of the Cape
  • Later in the century the southern, and subsequently the northern, Tswana chiefdoms acquired firearms from Cape traders, and thus equipped were able to participate in the ivory trade and in the armed violence maintained (if not caused) by the migration of whites on to the highveld. Similarly the southern Sotho became armed with guns and, perhaps just as significantly, acquired horses
    • THABELO SADIKI
       
      Supporting other claims by some sources that many early African societies traded their ivory for firearms once they were introduced
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FIREARMS, HORSES, AND SLAVE SOLDIERS: THE MILITARY HISTORY OF AFRICAN SLAVERY.pdf - 4 views

  • Although Africans sought to fit firearms into the traditional fighting methods, they also recognized the need for new tech niques to take advantage of the n
    • THABELO SADIKI
       
      The fire arms were foreign to many Africans because they used traditional weapons not the one with adavanced technology
  • . Firearms in the eighteenth century were absolutely central to the trade of people for goods. Although they did not usually comprise the bulk of goods traded—muskets and gunpowder accounted for about 10 percent of the cargo offloaded on the Loango coast (present-day Angola) in the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries, third behind textiles and liquor— trading would seldom take place unless powder and shot were included
    • THABELO SADIKI
       
      It shows that fire arm trade once had a economic power in the trading sector in Africa
  • ndispensable.26 The strong preference for guns of those supplying slave traders lends support to a theory widespread among earlier historians, the so-called gun-slave cycle, which ran something as follows: Europeans fostered the slave trade through their control of guns, which they would trade only for slaves, the guns in turn providing the means to acquire more slaves to buy more guns, and so ad infinitum. In this view, Africans conducted war to supply the slave trade, and sold slaves chiefly to obtain the weaponry that allowed them to seize more slav
    • THABELO SADIKI
       
      Slave trade had a direct impact on the number of guns that are imported in Africa
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  • ted war financing and fostered the policy of demographic stripping. The simplistic 'guns-slaves cycle' of commerce-driven warfare has required revision, but commerce did play a major role, as witnessed by the eighteenth and nineteenth century expansion of Asante to gain access to coastal trade. The interlocked complex of war, firearms, captives, and the slave trade characterized the pre-nineteenth century lower Guinea coast. Military success of the coastal states of Dahomey and Asante rested chiefly on easy ac
    • THABELO SADIKI
       
      It shows that tribes in Africa who traded slaves for guns did it for using guns to protect their families
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