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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</re
    2 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 Pec
    18 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="Op
    15 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&nbsp;km distant. However they were more interested in trade routes than discovery, they had approached from the south and their movemen
    18 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 to
    26 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 to
    26 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 ambiti
    59 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 compet
    23 KB (3,561 words) - 15:56, 11 November 2016