Making Money: Life, Death, and Early Modern Trade on Africa’s Guinea Coast
by Colleen E. Kriger and Colleen E. Kriger
Ohio University Press, 2017 Paper: 978-0-89680-296-4 | Cloth: 978-0-89680-315-2 | eISBN: 978-0-89680-500-2 Library of Congress Classification HF3920.Z7G924 2017 Dewey Decimal Classification 382.0966041
ABOUT THIS BOOK | AUTHOR BIOGRAPHY | REVIEWS | TOC
ABOUT THIS BOOK
A new era in world history began when Atlantic maritime trade among Africa, Asia, Europe, and the Americas opened up in the fifteenth century, setting the stage for massive economic and cultural change. In Making Money, Colleen Kriger examines the influence of the global trade on the Upper Guinea Coast two hundred years later—a place and time whose study, in her hands, imparts profound insights into Anglo-African commerce and its wider milieu.
A stunning variety of people lived in this coastal society, struggling to work together across deep cultural divides and in the process creating a dynamic creole culture. Kriger digs further than any previous historian of Africa into the records of England’s Royal African Company to illuminate global trade patterns, the interconnectedness of Asian, African, and European markets, and—most remarkably—the individual lives that give Making Money its human scale.
By inviting readers into the day-to-day workings of early modern trade in the Atlantic basin, Kriger masterfully reveals the rich social relations at its core. Ultimately, this accessible book affirms Africa’s crucial place in world history during a transitional period, the early modern era.
AUTHOR BIOGRAPHY
Colleen E. Kriger is a professor of history at the University of North Carolina at Greensboro. She has received numerous grants and fellowships in support of her research. Her scholarship focuses on precolonial West and West Central Africa and topics such as social history, artisans, oral history, and material culture.
REVIEWS
“Kriger shows how West African traders, producers, and workers in countless urban occupations contributed to a vast commercial system that moved goods and people across oceans and continents. Her narrative centers on African people, mainly in African settings, and draws connective lines from there outward to the Middle East, Europe, Asia, and the Americas. While not diminishing the importance of slavery and slave trading to West Africa’s economy, Kriger illuminates crucial lesser-known aspects of the commodities central to it and the multicultural milieus in which traders operated. By focusing on the African economy more broadly, Making Money neatly explains what those teaching the history of Atlantic Africa are rarely able to convey and what students often fail to understand: Africans' reasons for participating in the slave trade.”—Rebecca Shumway, The William and Mary Quarterly
“Kriger’s archival excavations uncover a wealth of previously untapped detail which present the lives and engagement of Atlantic African individuals from Guinea in an entirely new light.…By humanizing too the political actors, traders, and captives produced by the Atlantic system in Africa, Kriger brings the current fashion in Atlantic studies for microhistories to bear on the Guinea region for an earlier period than usual. There’s no doubt that this book should be a standard feature on course curricula for many years to come.”—Toby Green, African Studies Review
“In this wonderfully researched book, Colleen Kriger anchors the coastal activity of the Europeans in the African cultures they met, making them only one set of many actors in a society that had to marry widely different economic cultures into a wor
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Contents
Illustrations
Series Editors’ Preface
Acknowledgments
Introduction: Atlantic Lives: Anglo-African Trade in Northern Guinea
One: Buyers and Sellers in Cross-Cultural Trade
Two: “Artificers” and Merchants: Making and Moving Goods
Three: West Africans Profiting in Atlantic Trade
Four: Company Property: Captives, Rebels, and Grometos
Five: Free Agents and Local Hires: Managing Men in Northern Guinea
Making Money: Life, Death, and Early Modern Trade on Africa’s Guinea Coast
by Colleen E. Kriger and Colleen E. Kriger
Ohio University Press, 2017 Paper: 978-0-89680-296-4 Cloth: 978-0-89680-315-2 eISBN: 978-0-89680-500-2
A new era in world history began when Atlantic maritime trade among Africa, Asia, Europe, and the Americas opened up in the fifteenth century, setting the stage for massive economic and cultural change. In Making Money, Colleen Kriger examines the influence of the global trade on the Upper Guinea Coast two hundred years later—a place and time whose study, in her hands, imparts profound insights into Anglo-African commerce and its wider milieu.
A stunning variety of people lived in this coastal society, struggling to work together across deep cultural divides and in the process creating a dynamic creole culture. Kriger digs further than any previous historian of Africa into the records of England’s Royal African Company to illuminate global trade patterns, the interconnectedness of Asian, African, and European markets, and—most remarkably—the individual lives that give Making Money its human scale.
By inviting readers into the day-to-day workings of early modern trade in the Atlantic basin, Kriger masterfully reveals the rich social relations at its core. Ultimately, this accessible book affirms Africa’s crucial place in world history during a transitional period, the early modern era.
AUTHOR BIOGRAPHY
Colleen E. Kriger is a professor of history at the University of North Carolina at Greensboro. She has received numerous grants and fellowships in support of her research. Her scholarship focuses on precolonial West and West Central Africa and topics such as social history, artisans, oral history, and material culture.
REVIEWS
“Kriger shows how West African traders, producers, and workers in countless urban occupations contributed to a vast commercial system that moved goods and people across oceans and continents. Her narrative centers on African people, mainly in African settings, and draws connective lines from there outward to the Middle East, Europe, Asia, and the Americas. While not diminishing the importance of slavery and slave trading to West Africa’s economy, Kriger illuminates crucial lesser-known aspects of the commodities central to it and the multicultural milieus in which traders operated. By focusing on the African economy more broadly, Making Money neatly explains what those teaching the history of Atlantic Africa are rarely able to convey and what students often fail to understand: Africans' reasons for participating in the slave trade.”—Rebecca Shumway, The William and Mary Quarterly
“Kriger’s archival excavations uncover a wealth of previously untapped detail which present the lives and engagement of Atlantic African individuals from Guinea in an entirely new light.…By humanizing too the political actors, traders, and captives produced by the Atlantic system in Africa, Kriger brings the current fashion in Atlantic studies for microhistories to bear on the Guinea region for an earlier period than usual. There’s no doubt that this book should be a standard feature on course curricula for many years to come.”—Toby Green, African Studies Review
“In this wonderfully researched book, Colleen Kriger anchors the coastal activity of the Europeans in the African cultures they met, making them only one set of many actors in a society that had to marry widely different economic cultures into a wor
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Contents
Illustrations
Series Editors’ Preface
Acknowledgments
Introduction: Atlantic Lives: Anglo-African Trade in Northern Guinea
One: Buyers and Sellers in Cross-Cultural Trade
Two: “Artificers” and Merchants: Making and Moving Goods
Three: West Africans Profiting in Atlantic Trade
Four: Company Property: Captives, Rebels, and Grometos
Five: Free Agents and Local Hires: Managing Men in Northern Guinea
Conclusion: Anglo-African Relations
Notes
Works Cited
Index
ABOUT THIS BOOK | AUTHOR BIOGRAPHY | REVIEWS | TOC