Abstract
This article examines the institution of blood partnership, first theoretically, and then with reference to northern Equatorial Africa and Dar al-Kuti, a Muslim slave-raiding and slave-trading state. Contemporary anthropologists described blood partnership schematically as the exchange of blood and of conditional curses between two individuals or groups for the purpose of guaranteeing co-operation. They also suggested that blood partnership created bonds analogous to kinship. Blood alliances were concluded almost exclusively between parties who were not related genealogically, and promoted security, co-operation and long-distance trade. They were particularly important among societies outside highly centralized states, where they provided the ideology and mechanism for wider action embracing unrelated groups. Northern Equatorial Africa was just such an area, and, in the nineteenth century at least, blood pacts were very common. The article looks at blood partnership in the region generally, pointing out how foreigners, Muslims as well as Europeans, adopted the institution as a means of allying themselves with local leaders. Muslim penetration of the region is examined, and the infiltration of thezaribasystem of the southwestern Sudan into Ubangi-Shari (in what is now the Central African Empire) is outlined. The second half of the article deals specifically with Dar al-Kuti. Oral testimony and written evidence are combined to present a picture of blood partnership among the Banda, the most important non-Muslim people included in the state. The analysis is then extended to show how Muslims in the region, mainly the Runga from the Chad basin, led by Kobur and then by al-Sanusi, used blood pacts to foster their political and economic ambitions among non-Muslim peoples south of the Islamic frontier.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Reference124 articles.
1. Toque , Essai sur le peuple et la langue Banda, 12–15.
2. Chevalier , L'Afrique Centrale Française, 162.
3. Chevalier , L'Afrique Centrale Française, 227.
4. Schweinfurth , The Heart of Africa, i, 257–61
Cited by
37 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献
1. The Blood Brotherhood and Colonial Treaties and Alliances: Between Myth and Reality;Journal of the History of International Law / Revue d'histoire du droit international;2024-04-04
2. La Centrafrique, ventre mou de l’Afrique centrale;Afrique contemporaine;2020-03-06
3. Map;Hunting Game;2020-03-05
4. Index;Hunting Game;2020-03-05
5. Sovereignty and distribution amid forceful acquisition;Hunting Game;2020-03-05