European-inspired scholarship underscores conventional academic consensus that African commercial entrepeneurship disappeared with the European voyages of discovery, and subsequent implantation of the Potuguese, Dutch, English, and French commercial empires. Thus the people of eastern Africa are portrayed largely as technologically backward and isolated from the main currents of global history from about 1500 until the onset of modern European colonialism from the close of the nineteenth century. This article argues that the conventional view needs to be challenged, and that Eastern African history in the period 1500-1800 needs to be revised in the context of an Indian Ocean world economy
International audienceThe rise of towns and states and the expansion of exchange networks have resul...
This article aims to analyse some of the multilateral flows of capital that contributed to weaving a...
In an interesting and thought-provoking paper recently published by the Economic History of Developi...
This paper outlines the debate surrounding the emergence of the first ‘global’ economy and discusses...
From the second millennium BC, East Africa has been connected with oceanic exchange networks and has...
J. Devisse—Africans, the Sea and Historians. Most historians have written that Africans turned away ...
A revisit to the episode of Africa’s slave trade and colonialism is clearly two important issues tha...
Since the second millennium BC, East Africa has been connected with oceanic exchange networks and ha...
Land and maritime realities before and after the European empires did constitute crucial issues thro...
none1noThis article focuses on the impact of the global turn on the field of Af- rican History. The ...
This article argues for constructive responses to the dominance, in the analysis of African economic...
Africa has often been seen as a barrier between oceanic systems, and a dividing line within English ...
This is certainly not a comprehensive and final book on the intertwining relationship between Africa...
Abstract: Thirty-eight years ago, Hubert Gerbeau discussed the problems that contributed to the “his...
The essay debates the delay on the part of Economic History towards African and colonial studies. Th...
International audienceThe rise of towns and states and the expansion of exchange networks have resul...
This article aims to analyse some of the multilateral flows of capital that contributed to weaving a...
In an interesting and thought-provoking paper recently published by the Economic History of Developi...
This paper outlines the debate surrounding the emergence of the first ‘global’ economy and discusses...
From the second millennium BC, East Africa has been connected with oceanic exchange networks and has...
J. Devisse—Africans, the Sea and Historians. Most historians have written that Africans turned away ...
A revisit to the episode of Africa’s slave trade and colonialism is clearly two important issues tha...
Since the second millennium BC, East Africa has been connected with oceanic exchange networks and ha...
Land and maritime realities before and after the European empires did constitute crucial issues thro...
none1noThis article focuses on the impact of the global turn on the field of Af- rican History. The ...
This article argues for constructive responses to the dominance, in the analysis of African economic...
Africa has often been seen as a barrier between oceanic systems, and a dividing line within English ...
This is certainly not a comprehensive and final book on the intertwining relationship between Africa...
Abstract: Thirty-eight years ago, Hubert Gerbeau discussed the problems that contributed to the “his...
The essay debates the delay on the part of Economic History towards African and colonial studies. Th...
International audienceThe rise of towns and states and the expansion of exchange networks have resul...
This article aims to analyse some of the multilateral flows of capital that contributed to weaving a...
In an interesting and thought-provoking paper recently published by the Economic History of Developi...