13–16世纪埃塞俄比亚南部青尼罗(阿贝)社会的黄金、奴隶和贸易路线

Q3 Arts and Humanities Northeast African Studies Pub Date : 2018-11-21 DOI:10.14321/NORTAFRISTUD.17.2.0031
Ayda Bouanga
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引用次数: 3

摘要

摘要:13世纪时,位于青尼罗河以南、阿瓦什以西、吉贝流域东北部的达莫特Ǝnnarya、Ǝndägäbṭän和Wäräb地区属于达莫特王国。当时,motälämi王朝统治着这个王国,并试图对埃塞俄比亚东部、Šäwa和Ifat的穆斯林国家确立权威。随着14世纪所罗门王朝的登基及其领土的征服,达摩王国逐渐消失。它让位于两个不同的实体:东部被称为中世纪的damot -基督教王国的保护国,而西部成为基督教省Šäwa的南部地区。在这个地缘政治实体的南面是加莫和詹杰罗王国,它们在整个中世纪时期都以交易黄金和奴隶,尤其是太监而闻名。在青尼罗河南部的不同地区居住着农牧民,Damot, Gamo和Janjero是一个重要的奢侈品贸易的十字路口。奴隶和黄金起源于那里,然后被整合到一个长途商业网络中。货物经过埃塞俄比亚东部的穆斯林国家后,到达红海的港口(马萨瓦和泽伊拉),然后到达阿拉伯半岛和亚洲。本文分析了该地区的经济史,绘制了黄金和奴隶生产的轮廓,并追溯了他们通往红海的路线。它显示了中世纪时期埃塞俄比亚的黄金和奴隶“生产”相对稳定的本地化。在地方层面,这一现象引发了关于埃塞俄比亚奴隶贸易的各个方面的问题,例如奴隶获取方法(袭击、战争、惩罚性远征),以及身体和文化上的差异性(基于文化诋毁的污名化和合法化)的作用,以及它们对政治结构转型的影响。
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Gold, Slaves, and Trading Routes in Southern Blue Nile (Abbay) Societies, Ethiopia, 13th–16th Centuries
ABSTRACT:In the thirteenth century, the territories of Damot, Ǝnnarya, Ǝndägäbṭän, and Wäräb, located south of the Blue Nile, west of Awash, and northeast of the Gibe watershed, belonged to the realm of Damot. At that time, the motälämi dynasty ruled the kingdom and sought to assert authority over the Muslim states of eastern Ethiopia, Šäwa, and Ifat. Following the accession of the Solomonic dynasty and its territorial conquests in the fourteenth century, the Kingdom of Damot gradually disappeared. It gave way to two different entities: the eastern part is known as medieval Damot—protectorate of the Christian kingdom—whereas the western part became the southern region of the Christian province of Šäwa. South of this geopolitical entity were the kingdoms of Gamo and Janjero, which were famous for trading gold and slaves, particularly eunuchs, throughout the medieval period. Inhabited by agro-pastoralists settled in different areas of southern Blue Nile, Damot, Gamo, and Janjero were at the crossroads of an important trade in luxury goods. Slaves and gold originated from there and were then integrated into a long-distance commercial network. After passing through the Muslim states of eastern Ethiopia, the goods arrived in the ports of the Red Sea (Massawa and Zeyla) before reaching the Arabian Peninsula and Asia. This article analyzes the economic history of the region, draws the contours of the production of gold and slaves, and traces their routes to the Red Sea. It shows a relatively stable localization of the "production" of gold and slaves in Ethiopia during the medieval period. At the local level, this phenomenon raises questions about various aspects of the Ethiopian slave trade, such as the methods of slave acquisition (raids, wars, punitive expeditions), and the role of physical and cultural otherness (stigmatization and legitimization based on cultural denigration), and their impact on the transformation of political structures.
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Northeast African Studies
Northeast African Studies Arts and Humanities-History
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