The East African Ivory Trade in the Nineteenth Century.pdf - 2 views
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ican coast. By the second century A.D. the coast, as far as 10? S., was 'subject under some ancient right to the sovereignty of the power which held the primacy in Arabia', and Arab merchants were exporting ivory from it in
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hroughout the early and later middle ages. Al Masudi, writing in the early Ioth century says that elephants were extremely common in the land of Zinj, and that it was from this country that large elephant tusks were obtained: 'Most of the ivory is carried to Oman whence it is sent to India and Chin
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rtuguese domination of the coast from the sixteenth to the eighteenth century, ivory continued to be an important export; it receives more mention in Portuguese records than does the slave trade. In the sixteenth century 30,000 lb. of ivory passed through the port of Sofala
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Avorio d'ogni ragione: the supply of elephant ivory to northern Europe in the Gothic er... - 1 views
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This article accounts for the hitherto unexplained increase in the availability of ivory in mid-thirteenth-century France through an alteration in the medieval trade routes that brought elephant tusks from Africa to northern Europe
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why, after a scarcity of elephant ivory in northern Europe during the twelfth century, was there sudden access to such large tusks around 1240?
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nflux
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J Store Jornal Article.pdf - 1 views
J Store Jornal Article.pdf - 1 views
The ivory trade and elephant conservation.pdf - 3 views
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In response to significant elephant population declines in the 1970s and 1980s because of poaching for ivory, the Convention on the International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora (CITES) banned the international trade in Asian and African elephant species by listing them on Appendix I in 1973 and 1989, respectiv
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in the 1970s and 1980s because of poaching f
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In 1997, the CITES Conference of Parties voted to allow Botswana, Namibia and Zimbabwe to
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This is a very interesting reading by Daniel Stiles, it showed how the poaching of elephants became a problem when there was a slight decline in the 1970s to 1980s due to the high number of ivory trading that was taking place at the time. Non-governmental organizations and CITES came up with ways to ban the trade of ivory, of which is the reason why the generation of today is able to know about elephants without being told about them.
J Store Jornal Article.pdf - 0 views
guns in africa 1800s - Bing images - 1 views
November 12, 1856 - Document - Nineteenth Century Collections Online - 1 views
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This is the monograph which was written by the Scottish explorer David Livingston, on his expedition to Zambezi and the discoveries that he had discovered there such as a Victoria Falls. In this monograph he explained in detail how was the Victoria Falls, about the countries in Zambesi such as Tete how they lived and how the country was, and he also mentioned the Slave trade since he was against it.
THE ZULU WAR.pdf - 2 views
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The article titled The Zulu War is about an unjust war between Great Britain and the Zulus. The British Governor invaded and seized the Zulu's land ,Cetywayo. it is stated the the Zulu people were fighting for their territory and independence, however they were defeated with a great slaughter as thousands of naked Zulu people were shot.
Full article: Tracing the links between elephants, humans, and landscapes during the ni... - 1 views
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ivory had been traded out of East Africa for centuries, the increasing scale of extraction in the nineteenth century would, in all probability, have had significant consequences for humans, elephants and the landscape. In order to understand these consequences, however, it is imperative to know where this ivory was being extracted and traded along East African caravan routes to then be able to consider the local ecosystems that were most affected by the trade
SHORT NOTES: Ostrich: Vol 61, No 3-4 - 1 views
The East African Ivory Trade in the Nineteenth Century on JSTOR - 0 views
Domestic ivory trade: the supply chain for raw ivory in Thailand is driven by the finan... - 0 views
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The international trade in wildlife parts and products is of significant conservation concern. The global demand for ivory, for example, is considered to be a significant threat to African elephant populations
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Ivory products, such as jewelry or sacred items, are manufactured in two main areas: Surin in the Northeast, and Nakhon Sawan and Uthai Thani in the North. Manufacturers in Surin source tusks from Surin-based elephants that are either living locally or working in other areas. Raw tusks sourced from the South and the North have lower prices. Tusks from Southern owners are largely sold to Surin manufacturers; some are supplied to manufacturers in Nakhon Sawan.
Domestic ivory trade: the supply chain for raw ivory in Thailand is driven by the finan... - 0 views
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The chain consists of activities of five key groups of supply chain actors: elephant owners, intermediaries, manufacturers, retailers, and ivory customers.
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The international trade in wildlife parts and products is of significant conservation concern. The global demand for ivory, for example, is considered to be a significant threat to African elephant populations
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