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1-17 of 17 Search Results for
Mozambique
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in The History of the Zanzibari Amakhuwa: Uprooting, Registration, and Inventions of Home in a Community of Liberated Africans
> Monsoon: Journal of the Indian Ocean Rim
Published: 01 November 2024
Figure 2 Mangrove inlets at Mocambo Bay between Mozambique Island and Angoche—the “notorious rivers and creeks” referred to in British consular reports, where barracoons were set up for slaves prior to transportation. Photograph by Preben Kaarsholm, August 2016.
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Journal Article
Monsoon (2024) 2 (1): 68–79.
Published: 01 May 2024
...-configured thought that counters the petrified continental rhetoric pervading in her society. Chiziane's nonconforming viewpoints offer distinction from colonial and postindependence rhetoric that has attempted to hegemonize Mozambique's diverse regional social and cultural outlooks. The article contends...
Journal Article
Monsoon (2024) 2 (2): 50–68.
Published: 01 November 2024
...Figure 2 Mangrove inlets at Mocambo Bay between Mozambique Island and Angoche—the “notorious rivers and creeks” referred to in British consular reports, where barracoons were set up for slaves prior to transportation. Photograph by Preben Kaarsholm, August 2016. ...
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Journal Article
Monsoon (2024) 2 (2): 17–31.
Published: 01 November 2024
... during the first half of the nineteenth century. [email protected] Copyright © 2024 The Africa Institute 2024 Mauritius slave trading Seychelles Madagascar East Africa On December 19, 1834, Lafleur, identified as a twenty-six-year-old “Mozambique” man, lodged a complaint...
Journal Article
Monsoon (2023) 1 (2): 120–127.
Published: 01 November 2023
... Mozambique Somalia Edward A. Alpers has been at the center of the development of the fields of Indian Ocean history and African history for the past six decades. His pioneering work in Indian Ocean studies and the histories of Mozambique, Tanzania, Somalia, and the African diaspora in and beyond...
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Journal Article
Monsoon (2024) 2 (2): 104–111.
Published: 01 November 2024
... by European vessels that carried slaves from Madagascar, Mozambique, and the Swahili Coast to the Americas. Many more such voyages are not included in this database because their itineraries took them not westward to the Americas, but eastward to the Mascarene Islands of Mauritius and Réunion and British...
Journal Article
Monsoon (2023) 1 (2): 46–59.
Published: 01 November 2023
... and its etymological relatives within the relative fluidity of the broader historico-linguistic landscape of the southwest Indian Ocean. He observes, for example, that msumbiji , the Swahili name for the country of Mozambique, is markedly different in etymology from mazambik , a marker of place...
Journal Article
Monsoon (2023) 1 (2): 60–74.
Published: 01 November 2023
... father's collection and in the letters from my grandfather there were stamps from other parts of Africa, mostly in north Africa, from the French colonies—Mali and Ethiopia, for example. There are also a few stamps from Mozambique. I don't know how they ended up in the collection, because people from...
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Journal Article
Monsoon (2024) 2 (2): 5–9.
Published: 01 November 2024
... before final transportation to Mauritius parallels similar experiences reported for the Atlantic traffic. 2 Hooper is equally careful to query the ethnic labels like “Mozambique” attached by British administrators to individual complainants and comments further on the frequency of name-changing...
Journal Article
Monsoon (2024) 2 (2): 88–103.
Published: 01 November 2024
... crops. Yet, as Brixius notes, “the twenty-two gardeners at Monplaisir all came from Mozambique, with the exception of one person referred to only as ‘little Malabar’ Fohi, and are listed individually.” 56 Complementary work by Eugénia Rodrigues also emphasizes the plant knowledge that enslaved...
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Journal Article
Monsoon (2023) 1 (2): 106–119.
Published: 01 November 2023
... Infante in Natal. At about the same time, another Portuguese explorer, Pedro da Covilhao, reached the port city of Sofala (in today's Mozambique) on land routes, finding that gold could favorably be obtained there. In 1497, another small flotilla of three ships left Lisbon, this time commanded...
Journal Article
Monsoon (2023) 1 (2): 2–25.
Published: 01 November 2023
... to Indian labor by the British until 1861, Réunionnais planters were increasingly tempted into the traffic in slaves, disguised as engagés . 144 Most such engagés originated from Mozambique 145 and independent regions of Madagascar which, from 1848 to 1859, supplied the French islands...
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Monsoon (2024) 2 (1): 3–12.
Published: 01 May 2024
... a central heuristic focus for five original essays that range across texts and contexts through the embrace of interpretive conjecturality. 14 Three lines of inquiry have thereby emerged. The specificities of the African Indian Ocean littoral, from Kenya to Mozambique, especially its permeability...
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Journal Article
Monsoon (2023) 1 (1): 2–21.
Published: 01 May 2023
... upon which Robe sailed into the Mozambique Channel visited Fort-Dauphin, St. Augustine Bay, and Bombetoka Bay. The expedition dossier in the Colonial Office archives contains no suggestion that the Andromache put into Tamatave in the weeks before Corroller's death there in mid-November. Could LMS...
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Journal Article
Monsoon (2024) 2 (2): 32–49.
Published: 01 November 2024
... completely destroyed, especially south of the Swahili coast. In 1902, more than one hundred slave trading vessels, many believed to have come from the Persian Gulf, were captured or destroyed by the Portuguese navy off Mozambique. 16 Figure 7 Age distribution of Africans born outside...
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Journal Article
Monsoon (2023) 1 (1): 119–136.
Published: 01 May 2023
..., is the Portuguese period. There's a lot on the Portuguese period, but not much has been used so far. So why don't you do that period?” I thought, fine, and I started learning Portuguese. Then, some couple of months later, there was a war going on in Mozambique in which Tanzania was involved. There was no way...
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Journal Article
Monsoon (2023) 1 (2): 26–45.
Published: 01 November 2023
... Century and American Leadership: Virtues of the Past .” Journal of Economic History 61 , no. 2 ( 2001 ): 263 – 92 . Harries Patrick . Work, Culture, and Identity: Migrant Laborers in Mozambique and South Africa, c. 1860–1910 . Portsmouth, NH : Heinemann , 1994 . Harvey David...
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