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From Chalo Chatu, Zambia online encyclopedia
- ...n from Zambia and surrounding countries and exported from Swahili ports by Arab traders to India and Arabia.<ref>http://mondediplo.com/1998/04/02africa</re2 KB (284 words) - 10:28, 8 July 2016
- ...trade]] in the 18th Century. Numerous Arab and [[Swahili people|Swahili]] slave traders such as [[Tippu Tib]] operated around the north end of Lake Mweru, ...in the dambo by streams running out of the hills, and there was a thriving trade.<ref name="NRJ"/>6 KB (941 words) - 21:15, 15 July 2016
- ...han2016p430"/> of socio-politics behind the ivory trade, followed by slave trade market controlled by the Arabs.<ref name=fleming5/><ref name=unescoslave/> ...wn as ''muzga'' or ''kapolo'', while a ''chituntulu'' meant a young female slave.<ref>C. J. W. Fleming (1972), [http://www.jstor.org/stable/29778265 The Pec18 KB (2,775 words) - 14:39, 17 November 2016
- ...li traders of East Africa. They played a large role in the slave and ivory trade that moved goods and people from central Africa to the coasts for export.4 KB (568 words) - 15:54, 2 August 2016
- ...: essays on trade in Central and Eastern Africa before 1900|chapter=Chokwe Trade and Conquest in the Nineteenth Century| url=https://books.google.com/books? ...of captured slaves for financial gains, as well as purchasing and keeping slave women in their own homes from the profits of their craft work.<ref name="Op15 KB (2,384 words) - 12:24, 29 November 2016
- ...rom those kingdoms to the [[Atlantic]], so Mweru lay on a transcontinental trade route.<ref name="Watson">[http://www.nrzam.org.uk/NRJ/V3N1/V3N1.htm The ''N ...l to see the lake 10 km distant. However they were more interested in trade routes than discovery, they had approached from the south and their movemen18 KB (2,831 words) - 04:24, 29 June 2016
- ...Luba, Luunda, Eastern Luba-Lunda, and Luba-Lunda-Kazembe). Its position on trade routes in a well-watered, relatively fertile and well-populated area of for ...te and died within a few weeks of arriving at Kazembe's, still waiting for trade negotiations to start. He left a valuable journal which was carried back to26 KB (3,930 words) - 14:46, 22 September 2016
- ...Luba, Luunda, Eastern Luba-Lunda, and Luba-Lunda-Kazembe). Its position on trade routes in a well-watered, relatively fertile and well-populated area of for ...te and died within a few weeks of arriving at Kazembe's, still waiting for trade negotiations to start. He left a valuable journal which was carried back to26 KB (3,936 words) - 13:20, 2 September 2016
- ...a|boat transport]] from there to the [[Chambeshi River]] was the principal trade route for the [[Northern Province]], which consequently formed part of Ndol [[Image:NdolaSlaveTree.jpg|thumb|The Mukuyu Slave Tree (in Ndola, Zambia]]19 KB (2,589 words) - 09:28, 1 March 2018
- ...me would give him the influence to end the East African Arab-Swahili slave trade. "The Nile sources," he told a friend, "are valuable only as a means of ope ...frican slave trade might be destroyed through the influence of "legitimate trade" and the spread of Christianity. Livingstone, therefore, focused his ambiti59 KB (8,831 words) - 13:33, 17 November 2016
- ...[Senga people|Senga]] natives, which he used to drive off various bands of slave-raiders. He took control of a swathe of territory on the north bank of the [[Slave raiding|Slave-raiding]] was rife in Mashukulumbwe, with gangs of Arab, Portuguese and mixed [[Kunda people|Chikunda]]-Portuguese ethnicity compet23 KB (3,561 words) - 15:56, 11 November 2016