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Journal ArticleDOI

The Import of Firearms into West Africa in the Eighteenth Century

W. A. Richards
- 01 Jan 1980 - 
- Vol. 21, Iss: 1, pp 43-59
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TLDR
The records of probably the biggest Birmingham gun-making firm specializing in the African trade and records of the Dutch West India Company are used in this article to throw more light on the quantities, types and quality of the guns imported into West Africa and on their effects in the eighteenth century.
Abstract
The records of probably the biggest Birmingham gun-making firm specializing in the African trade and records of the Dutch West India Company are used in this article to throw more light on the quantities, types and quality of the guns imported into West Africa and on their effects in the eighteenth century. Inikori's estimate of 45 per cent as the proportion of English firearms in the total annual West African import of between 283,000 and 394,000 guns per annum is probably an underestimate because of the unknown quantities of English guns which were re-exported from Continental ports to West Africa. It is estimated tentatively that 180,000 guns per annum were being imported into the Gold and Slave Coasts by 1730, and that some of the most dramatic effects of the import of guns occurred between 1658 and 1730. A revolution in warfare began in the 1690s in the Senegambian coastal areas and along the Gold and Slave Coasts. The trebling of slave prices and the sharp reduction in gun prices between 1680 and 1720 enabled large militarized slave-exporting states to develop along the Gold and Slave Coasts. There was a strong demand for well-finished and well-proved guns as well as for the cheapest unproved guns, and the dangerous state of many of the guns imported into West Africa has been exaggerated. The reputations of European nations for the quality of their guns fluctuated. There was probably no steady deterioration in the quality of English guns imported between 1750 and 1807, but the quality of the cheapest guns deteriorated during periods of intense competition.

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Citations
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Historical Legacies: A Model Linking Africa's Past to its Current Underdevelopment

TL;DR: In this article, the authors developed a model, exhibiting path dependence, which provides one explanation for why these past events may have lasting impacts, and showed that external extraction, when severe enough, causes a society initially in the high production equilibrium to move to a low production equilibrium.
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Culture: Panacea or Problem?

Eric R. Wolf
- 01 Apr 1984 - 
TL;DR: It is suggested that ideology-making derives from the prevalent mode of production and is entailed in its operations.
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A Microcosm of Why Africans sold Slaves: Akan Consumption Patterns in the 1770s.

TL;DR: Miles's documents also make it clear that generalizations drawn from the Gold Coast in this period cannot be extended automatically to other areas; Akan history tells us that neither can they be extended on the gold coast into a different era as discussed by the authors.
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1807 : economic shocks, conflict and the slave trade

TL;DR: This paper used geo-coded data on African conflicts to uncover a discontinuous increase in conflict after 1807 in areas affected by the slave trade, indicating that suppression increased the incidence of conflict between Africans.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

The Royal African Company

Journal ArticleDOI

The Import of Firearms into West Africa 1750–1807: a quantitative analysis

TL;DR: A series of articles on firearms in Africa published in the Journal of African History in 1971 raised a number of questions which have not been given adequate attention since those articles appeared as discussed by the authors.