A
desire for glory and profit from trade, missionary zeal, and considerations
of global strategy brought Portuguese navigators to the West African coast in
the late fifteenth century. Locked in a seemingly interminable crusading war
with Muslim Morocco, the Portuguese conceived of a plan whereby maritime
expansion might bypass the Islamic world and open new markets that would
result in commercial gain. They hoped to tap the fabled Saharan gold trade,
establish a sea route around Africa to India, and link up with the mysterious
Christian kingdom of Prester John.
The Portuguese achieved all these goals.
They obtained access to the gold trade by trading along the Gulf of Guinea,
establishing a base at Elmina ("the mine") on the Gold Coast
(Ghana), and they made their way into the Indian Ocean, militarily securing a
monopoly of the spice trade. Even the Christian kingdom turned out to be
real; it was Ethiopia, although Portuguese adventures there turned sour very
quickly. Portugal's lasting legacy for Nigeria, however, was its initiation
of the transatlantic slave trade.
By
1471 Portuguese ships had reconnoitered the West African coast south as far
as the Niger Delta, although they did not know that it was the delta, and in
1481 emissaries from the king of Portugal visited the court of the oba
of Benin. For a time, Portugal and Benin maintained close relations.
Portuguese soldiers aided Benin in its wars; Portuguese even came to be
spoken at the oba's court. Gwatto, the port of Benin, became the depot
to handle the peppers, ivory, and increasing numbers of slaves offered by the
oba in exchange for coral beads; textile imports from India;
European-manufactured articles, including tools and weapons; and manillas
(brass and bronze bracelets that were used as currency and also were melted
down for objets d'art). Portugal also may have been the first European power
to import cowrie shells, which were the currency of the far interior.
Benin
profited from its close ties with the Portuguese and exploited the firearms
bought from them to tighten its hold on the lower Niger area. Two factors
checked the spread of Portuguese influence and the continued expansion of
Benin, however.
First, Portugal stopped buying pepper because of the
availability of other spices in the Indian Ocean region. Second, Benin placed
an embargo on the export of slaves, thereby isolating itself from the growth
of what was to become the major export from the Nigerian coast for 300 years.
Benin continued to capture slaves and to employ them in its domestic economy,
but the Edo state remained unique among Nigerian polities in refusing to
participate in the transatlantic trade. In the long run, Benin remained
relatively isolated from the major changes along the Nigerian coast.
The
Portuguese initially bought slaves for resale on the Gold Coast, where slaves
were traded for gold. For this reason, the southwestern coast of Nigeria and
neighboring parts of the present-day Republic of Benin (not to be confused
with the kingdom of Benin) became known as the "slave coast." When
the African coast began to supply slaves to the Americas in the last third of
the sixteenth century, the Portuguese continued to look to the Bight of Benin
as one of its sources of supply.
By then they were concentrating activities
on the Angolan coast, which supplied roughly 40 percent of all slaves shipped
to the Americas throughout the duration of the transatlantic trade, but they
always maintained a presence on the Nigerian coast.
The
Portuguese monopoly on West African trade was broken at the end of the
sixteenth century, when Portugal's influence was challenged by the rising
naval power of the Netherlands. The Dutch took over Portuguese trading
stations on the coast that were the source of slaves for the Americas. French
and English competition later undermined the Dutch position.
Although slave
ports from Lagos to Calabar would see the flags of many other European
maritime countries (including Denmark, Sweden, and Brandenburg) and the North
American colonies, Britain became the dominant slaving power in the
eighteenth century. Its ships handled two-fifths of the transatlantic traffic
during the century. The Portuguese and French were responsible for another
two-fifths.
Nigeria
kept its important position in the slave trade throughout the great expansion
of the transatlantic trade after the middle of the seventeenth century.
Slightly more slaves came from the Nigerian coast than from Angola in the
eighteenth century, while in the nineteenth century perhaps 30 percent of all
slaves sent across the Atlantic came from Nigeria. Over the period of the
whole trade, more than 3.5 million slaves were shipped from Nigeria to the
Americas.
Most of these slaves were Igbo and Yoruba, with significant
concentrations of Hausa, Ibibio, and other ethnic groups. In the eighteenth
century, two polities--Oyo and the Aro confederacy--were responsible for most
of the slaves exported from Nigeria. The Aro confederacy continued to export
slaves through the 1830s, but most slaves in the nineteenth century were a
product of the Yoruba civil wars that followed the collapse of Oyo in the
1820s.
The
expansion of Oyo after the middle of the sixteenth century was closely
associated with the growth of slave exports across the Atlantic. Oyo's
cavalry pushed southward along a natural break in the forests (known as the
Benin Gap, i.e., the opening in the forest where the savanna stretched to the
Bight of Benin), and thereby gained access to the coastal ports.
Oyo
experienced a series of power struggles and constitutional crises in the eighteenth
century that directly related to its success as a major slave exporter. The
powerful Oyo Mesi, the council of warlords that checked the king, forced a
number of kings to commit suicide. In 1754 the head of the Oyo Mesi, basorun
Gaha, seized power, retaining a series of kings as puppets. The rule of this
military oligarchy was overcome in 1789, when King Abiodun successfully
staged a countercoup and forced the suicide of Gaha.
Abiodun and his
successors maintained the supremacy of the monarchy until the second decade
of the nineteenth century, primarily because of the reliance of the king on a
cavalry force that was independent of the Oyo Mesi. This force was recruited
largely from Muslim slaves, especially Hausa, from farther north.
The
other major slave-exporting state was a loose confederation under the
leadership of the Aro, an Igbo clan of mixed Igbo and Ibibio origins, whose
home was on the escarpment between the central Igbo districts and the Cross
River. Beginning in the late seventeenth century, the Aro built a complex
network of alliances and treaties with many of the Igbo clans. They served as
arbiters in villages throughout Igboland, and their famous oracle at
Arochukwu, located in a thickly wooded gorge, was widely regarded as a court of
appeal for many kinds of disputes.
By custom the Aro were sacrosanct,
allowing them to travel anywhere with their goods without fear of attack.
Alliances with certain Igbo clans who acted as mercenaries for the Aro
guaranteed their safety. As oracle priests, they also received slaves in
payment of fines or dedicated to the gods by their masters as scapegoats for
their own transgressions. These slaves thereby became the property of the Aro
priests, who were at liberty to sell them.
Besides
their religious influence, the Aro established their ascendancy through a
combination of commercial acumen and diplomatic skill. Their commercial
empire was based on a set of twenty-four-day fairs and periodic markets that
dotted the interior. Resident Aro dominated these markets and collected
slaves for export. They had a virtual monopoly of the slave trade after the
collapse of Oyo in the 1820s.
Villages suspected of violating treaties with
the Aro were subject to devastating raids that not only produced slaves for
export but also maintained Aro influence. The Aro had treaties with the
coastal ports from which slaves were exported, especially Calabar, Bonny, and
Elem Kalabari. The people of Calabar were Efik, a subsection of Ibibio, while
Bonny and Elem Kalabari were Ijaw towns.
The
Ijaw, who occupied the tidal area in proximity to the Igbo, had wrested a
frugal living from the sale of dried fish and sea salt to the inland
communities for centuries before the rise of the slave trade. Traditionally,
they had lived in federated groups of villages with the head of the ranking
village presiding over general assemblies attended by all the males. During
the heyday of the slave trade in the eighteenth century, the major Ijaw
villages grew into cities of 5,000 to 10,000 inhabitants ruled by local
strongmen allied with the Aro. Their economies were based on the facilities
they offered to slave traders.
They were entrepreneurial communities,
receiving slaves from the Aro for resale to European agents. Personal wealth
rather than status within a lineage group was the basis for political power
and social status. Government typically was conducted by councils composed of
leading merchants and headed by an amanyanabo (chief executive), an
office that in time became hereditary.
By
the end of the eighteenth century, the area that was to become Nigeria was
far from a unified country. Furthermore, the orientation of the north and the
south was entirely different. The savanna states of Hausaland and Borno had
experienced a difficult century of political insecurity and ecological
disaster but otherwise continued in a centuries-long tradition of slow
political and economic change that was similar to other parts of the savanna.
The southern areas near the coast, by contrast, had been swept up in the
transatlantic slave trade. Political and economic change had been rapid and
dramatic. By 1800 Oyo governed much of southwestern Nigeria and neighboring
parts of the modern Republic of Benin, while the Aro had consolidated
southeastern Nigeria into a confederation that dominated that region.
The Oyo
and the Aro confederations were major trading partners of the slave traders
from Europe and North America.
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