The Swahili: Reconstructing the History and Language of an African Society, 8-15
By Derek Nurse and Thomas Spear
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Reviews for The Swahili
6 ratings1 review
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5A slim book focusing largely on the history of the Swahli language, emphasizing that it is essentially a Bantu language which in relatively recent times borrowed a good-sized Arabic vocabulary; it is not a Arabic dialect with Bantu loanwords (as was said at the time by many writers) but the reverse --a view now standard. Also questions the claim that the Swahili people, or even most of their chiefs, were descended from Arab or Persian settlers on the East African coast --maintains the Swahili are primarily Bantu ethnically as well as linguistically. This means rejecting most of the traditional written and oral history/legends of the Swahili about themselvs
Book preview
The Swahili - Derek Nurse
THE SWAHILI
Ethnohistory
A series edited by
Anthony F. C. Wallace and Lee V. Cassanelli
LEE V. CASSANELLI, The Shaping of Somali Society: Reconstructing the History of a Pastoral People, 1600–1900
LAWRENCE J. TAYLOR, Dutchmen on the Bay: The Ethnohistory of a Contractual Community
DEREK NURSE AND THOMAS SPEAR, The Swahili: Reconstructing the History and Language of an African Society, 800–1500
JAMES MCCANN, From Poverty to Famine in Northeast Ethiopia: A Rural History, 1900–1935
THE SWAHILI
Reconstructing the History
and Language of an African Society,
800–1500
DEREK NURSE
and THOMAS SPEAR
Designed by Carl Gross
Copyright © 1985 by the University of Pennsylvania Press
All rights reserved
Library of Congress Cataloging in Publication Data
Nurse, Derek.
The Swahili: reconstructing the history and language of an African society, 800–1500.
Bibliography: p.
Includes index.
1. Swahili-speaking peoples—History. 2. Swahili language—History. I. Spear, Thomas T. II. Title.
DT365.45.S93N87 1984 306′.089963 84-3659
ISBN 0-8122-7928-X
ISBN 0-8122-1207-X (pbk.)
Printed in the United States of America
Third paperback printing, 1991
CONTENTS
Preface
Acknowledgments
1.Swahili and Their History
2.The African Background of Swahili
3.The Emergence of the Swahili-Speaking Peoples
4.Early Swahili Society, 800–1100
5.Rise of the Swahili Town-States, 1100–1500
Appendixes
Abbreviations
Notes
Bibliography
Index
Maps
1. Eastern Africa and the Indian Ocean
2. The East African Coast
3. Khoisan and Southern Cushitic
4. Bantu Expansion
5. Bantu Languages of Eastern Africa
6. Northeast Coast Bantu Languages
7. Swahili Dialects in the Nineteenth Century
8. The Swahili Diaspora
Figures
1. Sample Language Tree
2. Language Tree with Sound Changes
3. Variant of Figure 2
4. Southern Cushitic Languages
5. Eastern Cushitic Languages
6. Northeastern Bantu Languages
7. Sabaki Languages
8. Dialects of Swahili
9. Northern Dialects of Swahili
10. Southern Dialects of Swahili
11. Rulers of Kilwa
PREFACE
The history of the Swahili has long been tangled in the web of their own and other people’s perceptions and misperceptions of them. At its most extreme, they have been seen as cultural aliens, Caucasian Arabs who brought civilization to a primitive continent. Just as state formation across the continent was seen as the product of Hamitic (Caucasian) invaders from the north, so the Muslim trading towns of the eastern coast were seen as cultural transplants from the Arabian peninsula. This view is not simply racist; it also implies an understanding of history that sees all cultural innovation in Africa as the result of diffusion of peoples and ideas from elsewhere, thus denying African historical actors roles in their own histories.
Our intention is to cut through this web by combining modern techniques of African historians with recent discoveries relating to the Swahili to portray their history. For all the interest in the Swahili language, few have attempted to reconstruct its historical development. Only recently have archaeologists turned their attention to the indigenous peoples of the coast and started to reconstruct the ways in which coastal towns and societies developed. Historians have tended to accept Swahili traditions pointing to Arabian origins at face value without seeking to discover what the traditions mean to the people who relate them. Finally, anthropologists have only recently started mapping the full dimensions of Swahili society and culture and the ways these relate to those of their neighbors.
This book has a message. We hope that it is argued convincingly and supported carefully, but lest it be misunderstood, let us briefly outline our argument here. Our basic point is that the Swahili are an African people, born of that continent and raised on it. This is not to say that they are the same as other African peoples, however, for in moving to the coast, participating in Indian Ocean trade, and living in towns their culture has developed historically in directions different from those of their immediate neighbors. It is also not to say that they have not borrowed freely from others. Arabs have been trading along the coast for a long time, and many have remained to settle and to become Swahili. They have influenced the development of coastal culture. But the influence has gone both ways, and the result has been a dynamic synthesis of African and Arabian ideas within an African historical and cultural context. The result has been neither African nor Arab but distinctly Swahili. It is this process we seek to trace.
The Swahili provide a laboratory unique in African history in the detail and the time depth over which we are able to use documentary, linguistic, archaeological, and traditional data, both to test the validity of each and to explore ways of combining them into a meaningful historical synthesis. We hope our attempt will be useful for other historians struggling with the implications of oral traditions, ethnographic data, or comparative linguistics in the more usual absence of supporting documentary or archaeological data and of absolute chronologies. Within the immense historical diversity and complexity of African societies, we all share the problems of method and of understanding.
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
Our work has been made easier by and has benefited greatly from a number of recent and some not so recent studies that encourage one to view the history of the Swahili-speaking peoples in new ways. We trust our debt to them is made clear in the notes and bibliography. We would like to thank the following for facilitating our research, offering their ideas freely, and challenging ours: James de Vere Allen, Lee Cassanelli, Neville Chittick, Christopher Ehret, Mark Horton, Gillian Feeley-Harnik, Thomas Hinnebusch, Gerard Philippson, Randall Packard, Gill Shepherd, John Sutton, and Thomas Wilson. We would also like to thank the Institute of Swahili Research of the University of Dar es Salaam, the National Museums of Kenya, the British Institute in Eastern Africa, and the W. H. Whiteley Memorial Fund for supporting Nurse’s research, and the National Endowment for the Humanities, the American Council of Learned Societies, and Williams College for grants supporting Spear’s research and writing. Publication has been made possible by a generous grant from the President and Trustees of Williams College. The responsibility for what follows is, of course, ours.
DEREK NURSE
THOMAS SPEAR
1SWAHILI AND THEIR HISTORY
Dotted along the eastern coast of Africa from Somalia to Mozambique are a number of old Swahili towns (see map 1). Perched on the foreshore or on small offshore islands, their whitewashed houses of coral rag masonry crowd around a harbor where a few seagoing dhows are tied. Among the coral houses are a number of small mosques where men from the immediate neighborhood gather in their white gowns and small embroidered caps for prayers and outside of which they gather afterward to discuss town affairs in measured tones. Their wives and older daughters are not to be seen until evening, when, under cover of darkness and their loose, flowing black robes, they visit discreetly with their female relatives and friends.
The East African coast has long been involved in the wider world of Indian Ocean trade and culture. From early in the first millennium after Christ, dhows have sailed south from the Arabian peninsula and the Persian Gulf on the annual northeast monsoon to trade pottery, cloth, and iron tools for African slaves, ivory, gold, timber, shells, dyes, and perfumes, returning home after the monsoon winds shifted around to the southeast. Although African goods reached the Greco-Roman world before the third century and China by the seventh, trade during the first millennium was largely with Arab and Persian traders from Shirazi ports in the Persian Gulf. For much of the second millennium, however, East African trade passed to the Arabian peninsula. The first sign of the shift occurred in the ninth century with the rise of the First Imamate at Oman, but the focus of trade shifted permanently during the twelfth century to southwestern Arabia (Aden, Yemen, and the Hadhramaut) and, later, to Oman.
Map 1. Eastern Africa and the Indian Ocean
Most trade in East Africa itself during the first millennium was coasting trade, conducted on the beach between seafaring Arab merchants and African residents of the mainland. Only two market towns (Rhapta and Kanbalu) are known to have existed before 800, but we still do not know where they were located. The first permanent trading settlements that we can identify were established during the ninth century in the Lamu Archipelago (at Pate, Shanga, and Manda) and on the southern Tanzanian coast at Mafia and Kilwa. By the eleventh century, trade centered on Muqdisho in Somalia, where local dhows brought gold north from Mozambique and ivory, slaves, and other goods from elsewhere along the coast to trade with Arabs during the annual trading season. Muqdisho was noted in the thirteenth century for its wealth, size, and Muslim character, and Arabs had already begun to settle in the town. During the fourteenth century, however, Muqdisho lost its monopoly over the gold trade to Kilwa, located nearer to the gold fields at the southern limits of the monsoon trade. Kilwa continued to dominate coastal trade until conquered by the Portuguese in 1505, when the center of trade shifted north again to Mombasa in the fifteenth century and Pate-Lamu in the sixteenth. Trade and the coastal towns were badly disrupted during the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries by ongoing Portuguese raids and conquests until Oman defeated the Portuguese late in the seventeenth century, initiating two centuries of Omani Indian Ocean dominance, which culminated in the establishment of the Omani sultanate at Zanzibar and the extension of Omani power and cultural influence to towns all along the coast during the nineteenth century.
Though the Muslim maritime towns of the coast were not exceptional by themselves, they contrast with the rest of eastern and southern Africa. The Swahili language is spoken in towns scattered along two thousand kilometers of coastline, while their neighbors on the mainland speak dozens of different local languages. In the drier areas of Kenya and Somalia to the north, these neighbors are pastoralists, herding cattle, camels, sheep, and goats, whereas in the more fertile areas of southern Kenya, Tanzania, and Mozambique they raise maize, eleusine, millet, and sorghum together with various fruits and vegetables and small numbers of livestock. The peoples of the mainland rarely live in concentrated villages and never in coral houses, preferring to construct their thatched mud and wattle houses among the fields they farm or to erect simple temporary shelters as they migrate with their herds. And until recently very few were Muslim; most respected the spirits of their own particular lineage and clan ancestors.
Coastal Swahili-speakers have long stressed the differences between themselves and their neighbors, emphasizing their descent from immigrants from Shiraz in Persia and from Arabia who had come centuries earlier to the African coast to trade and who stayed to settle, build coral towns, live a sophisticated urban life, and rule. Later, when Omanis established themselves in Zanzibar and sought to impose their rule over the coast, Arabs exerted strong economic and cultural influences. Trade boomed, and during the prosperity that followed merchants from the Hadhramaut in southern Arabia became prominent community leaders, immigrant sharifs reformed and revitalized coastal Islam along contemporary Arabian lines, and people built elegant houses copying current Arabian and Indian features.
Thus, when Europeans visited the coast in the nineteenth century, Swahili towns appeared to be products of a Persian and Arabian diaspora that had spread around the Indian Ocean. The towns were not then very numerous or very large, numbering no more than a dozen containing a few thousand inhabitants each, but abundant evidence was found in ruins all along the coast of a vibrant period of Swahili civilization in the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries, marked by extensive and elaborate building and large-scale imports of Islamic and Chinese pottery, that lasted until the Portuguese destroyed a number of towns during the sixteenth century in their attempt to monopolize Indian Ocean trade. With the loss of trade, the coast went into decline until the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries when the Omanis initiated a new period of prosperity and of Arab influence.
The marked Arab appearance of the coastal towns, in contrast with the villages of neighboring Africans, and the claim to Arab and Persian origin made by the Swahili themselves have long led historians to portray coastal culture as an alien Muslim civilization divorced from the cultures of indigenous Africans, strange foreign jewels on a mournful silent shore.
Writing in the 1890s, Justus Strandes observed of Mombasa:
Shirazi Sheikhs are described as the earliest rulers, and according to the History of Kilwa found by the Portuguese, Muhammad the son of Ali bin Hasan, the founder of Kilwa, is considered to be the first of the line. These