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Manumitted Slaves in Egyptian Massawa, 1873–1885

Posted: 04 Feb 2024, 16:28
by Mesob
From Bondage to Freedom on the Red Sea Coast: Manumitted Slaves in Egyptian Massawa, 1873–1885
Jonathan Miran
Pages 135-157 | Published online: 24 Aug 2012

Abstract
The study of 239 manumission acts registered in the court records of the Red Sea port of Massawa, now in the modern state of Eritrea, allows us glimpses into the practice of slavery and emancipation in that town in the 1870s and 1880s. The evidence sheds light both on urban slaves owned by local Massawans, commercial entrepreneur-sojourners, Egyptian officers and the Egyptian government, as well as on those slaves who might have been captured en route before their shipment across the Red Sea to the Arabian Peninsula and the Middle East. In the context of the scanty historiography of slavery in the Ethio-Eritrean area, the data provides unique information about gender, age, names, origins, geographic provenance and the circumstances of manumission of 276 slaves, many of whom originated in what are today areas of south-western and western Ethiopia, but also from the Eritrean borderlands and the Sudan. The evidence also provides insights into ethnic and racial distinctions and categorisations, as well as the experience of slaves before and after manumission, including concubinage, marriage and, perhaps, employment with the Egyptian government which ruled Massawa between 1865 and 1885.


https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10. ... 012.693302

Re: Manumitted Slaves in Egyptian Massawa, 1873–1885

Posted: 04 Feb 2024, 16:42
by Hazega/Tsazega.
Hazega/Tsazega. wrote:
04 Feb 2024, 16:15
هل هذا ما علمك إياه مؤلف إنجليزي أمريكي؟





أنت عبد للإنجليز

Mesob wrote:
04 Feb 2024, 16:28
From Bondage to Freedom on the Red Sea Coast: Manumitted Slaves in Egyptian Massawa, 1873–1885
Jonathan Miran
Pages 135-157 | Published online: 24 Aug 2012

Abstract
The study of 239 manumission acts registered in the court records of the Red Sea port of Massawa, now in the modern state of Eritrea, allows us glimpses into the practice of slavery and emancipation in that town in the 1870s and 1880s. The evidence sheds light both on urban slaves owned by local Massawans, commercial entrepreneur-sojourners, Egyptian officers and the Egyptian government, as well as on those slaves who might have been captured en route before their shipment across the Red Sea to the Arabian Peninsula and the Middle East. In the context of the scanty historiography of slavery in the Ethio-Eritrean area, the data provides unique information about gender, age, names, origins, geographic provenance and the circumstances of manumission of 276 slaves, many of whom originated in what are today areas of south-western and western Ethiopia, but also from the Eritrean borderlands (That means you Agamay!! :mrgreen: ) and the Sudan. The evidence also provides insights into ethnic and racial distinctions and categorisations, as well as the experience of slaves before and after manumission, including concubinage, marriage and, perhaps, employment with the Egyptian government which ruled Massawa between 1865 and 1885.


https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10. ... 012.693302

Re: Manumitted Slaves in Egyptian Massawa, 1873–1885

Posted: 04 Feb 2024, 22:58
by Mesob
Why is the history of Arab Muslim slavery such a forbidden topic in Eritrean politics and in the academia? Massawa was the main slave market.
The Beni Amir Muslim leaders in Jebha ELF knew and used it often to discriminate against the poor Tigre and against the children of former slaves from Massawa, such as Romodan, Imaro, Alamin Mohammed Saeed, Salah Sabe, and other non-qabila Massawian.
Issais knew this well and used it very well to favour the victims.
To these day, the poor in Massawa admire and thank the commandanate for kicking the Islamist Jebha.
Currently, there are many former descendants of the former slaves in the Red Sea region who want to be more Eritrean than the Eritreans in the gallant EPLF or the brave Abyssinians who fought against the invading Arab Muslim invaders.
The upper class Massawians are noble and gentle in their manners who understand the truth and the history of the region, but the slaves of Massawa pretend to be more Arab than the Arab, more Eritrean than the EPLF fighter who freed the Red Sea coast, and even more Qabila Massawian than the real Tigrayt speaking Massawians.
The former slaves who were nobodies until the 1950s tell the real Deqebat Bahre Negasians: Massawa and the Red Sea is a Muslim property.
The former slave and lower cast with no roots in Eritrea always hides in Islam because he does not have his own ethnic or linguistic identity. These are the opportunists who say: Eritrea is 50 - 50. As if Eritrea is like their little grocery store.
Thanks to the EPLF fighters and Haileselassie to some extent, these days any person can claim, my ancestors are Qabila Massawian or from the tribe of Massawa, but until the 1950s, most of these people were a walking-household item of the upper class Massawians that can be sold at any time, carried as gift in weddings, exchanged as money to a traveling Arab and as a monetized item taken to Hijja in Mecca and Medina to be sold.
Until the British and later Haileselassie arrived in Massawa, the port reflected many of the worst aspects and traditions practiced on the other side of the Red Sea coast in Yemen and Saudi Arabia.

Re: Manumitted Slaves in Egyptian Massawa, 1873–1885

Posted: 17 Feb 2024, 17:13
by Mesob
Here is the old Massawa, what used to be "the pearl of the Red Sea" during the Adulis and Axumite empires.
You only need to read the book written by the Greek navigator Cosmos in The Peripples of the Eritrean Sea.
Here is Massawa today in 2024, in the hand of idiots.