Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: 192.168.6.56/handle/123456789/9444
Title: The Shell Money of the Slave Trade
Authors: Jan, Hogendorn
Marion, Johnson
John Dunn,
Keywords: Shell money.
Issue Date: 1986
Publisher: Cambridge
Description: Both Marion Johnson and Jan Hogendorn first became interested in the cowrie shell money of West Africa while living and working there, some 5,000 airline miles from where the shells had actually originated. Marion Johnson, trained in monetary economics at Oxford, was resident in the Gold Coast during 1937-39, but only began her inquiry into the cowrie currency much later, during a four-year stay from 1962 to 1966 in nowindependent Ghana. While undertaking research on trade routes at the University of Ghana, Legon, she noted the frequent references by nineteenth-century travellers to the existence of a shell-money standard. Little specific attention had been directed to the cowrie currency since the ambitious German works of the turn of the century, so, with four notebooks filled with material on the subject, she wrote the articles published by the Journal of African History in 1970 that ten years later furnished the impetus for this volume.1 Work on the cowrie required treatment of the Muslim gold mithqal and the "trade ounce," the eighteenth-century standard of value with no circulating equivalent, used with such frequency along the West African coast. Two further articles resulted from this research.2 Most of the writing was done at the Centre of West African Studies, University of Birmingham, where she has been for the past fifteen years.
URI: http://10.6.20.12:80/handle/123456789/9444
ISBN: 0 521 54110 7
Appears in Collections:African Studies

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