Zanj
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Zanj (Arabic and Persian زنج, possibly from a Persian word meaning "Bell" and referring to the people's love for dance) was a name used by medieval Arab geographers to refer to a portion of the East African coast. The geographers divided the coast into several regions and Zanj (also transliterated as Zenj or Zinj) covered the coast from roughly Mogadishu in the north to Pemba Island in the south. (To the north of Zanj lay the Somali coast, termed the Land of Berber, extending as far south as Webi Sebeli; to the south lay the Land of Sofala the northern limit of which may have been Pangani, opposite Pemba Island; beyond Sofala was the obscure realm of Waq-Waq.[1] It was from Zanj that most of the Arab trade with East Africa was conducted.
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[edit] History of the Zanj
Arab writers described the inhabitants of Zanj (the "Zanji") as, primarily East African.[2] [3] The inhabitants of East Africa were considered by Arabs to be the most culturally primitive of the three African regions long known to them[citation needed] (the other two were Nubia nuba in modern Sudan and southern Egypt, and Ethiopia ħabaš [=Abyssinia], now divided into Ethiopia and Eritrea). One important trade commodity from this region was Zanji slaves, who were captured and taken to the Middle East and India for sale; East Africa served as a source of slaves for the Middle East for many centuries. The ninth century revolt of the Zanj against the Arab slavers was termed the Zanj Revolt.
Arab, Persian and Indian traders settled in Zanj and intermarried with the local population; this is the origin of the Swahili culture and language which incorporated these along with Bantu elements.[citation needed] Prominent settlements of the Zanj coast included the legendary Shungwaya (Bur Gao), as well as Malindi, Gedi, and Mombasa. By the late medieval period the area included at least 37 substantial Swahili trading towns, many of them quite wealthy.
"Zanj" apparently fell out of use in the tenth century, but after 1861, when the area controlled by the Sultan of Zanzibar was forced by the British to split with the parent country of Oman, it was often referred to as Zanj.[citation needed]
[edit] Zanj Revolt
See Zanj Revolt
[edit] Conditions for the Zanj
The Zanj taken as slaves to the Middle East were often used in hard outdoors labor.[citation needed] They dug up layers of topsoil and dragged away tons of earth to plant labor-intensive crops like sugarcane on the less saline soil below. Fed scant portions of flour, semolina, and dates while laboring in miserable, humid conditions, they were constantly in conflict with the Iraqi slave system.[citation needed] Between the seventh and ninth centuries, the Zanj staged three rebellions, the largest of which occurred between 868 and 883.[3]
[edit] Applications of the Name:
- Although many scholars have argued that "the Zanj" were slaves from East Africa since the term Zanj describes the East African coast. There were large numbers of people imported from East Africa via Somali and Ethiopian ports from interior as far as Southern Sudan. The slaves were mainly used to work on the massive irrigation projects of the area. Bedouins, Arab mercenaries, and others from the region joined ˤAlī's fight against the central government.
- The name "Zanj" may have associations with the ancient name for the same region, Azania. (During the struggle against apartheid in South Africa, nationalists often referred to South Africa as "Azania", intending to eventually rename the country, but in the event this name was less favoured than simple retention of the previous name, South Africa, after the abolition of apartheid.)[citation needed]
- The name "Zanj" is also connected with the name of the island of Zanzibar.
- "Zanj" has also been used to refer to East Africa in general, and the Sea of Zanj was a name for that part of the Indian Ocean adjacent to East Africa. It included several islands, including Madagascar, Mauritius and Reunion.
- In the twentieth century, the name supplied the world with Zinjanthropus boisei (nicknamed "Zinj"), a famous hominin fossil, now more properly termed Paranthropus boisei.
[edit] Reference
- ^ Chittick, Neville (1968). The Coast Before the Arrival of the Portuguese, Chapter 5 in Ogot, BA and JA Kieran, eds., "Zamani: A Survey of East African History", 100-118.
- ^ "Zanj Rebellion". "Owen 'Alik Shahadah".
- ^ a b "Hidden Iraq". "William Cobb".
[edit] See also
[edit] External links
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