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Traces of Clay: Exploring Slave and Migrant Identities in Medieval Swahili Zanzibar

Resource type
Author/contributor
Title
Traces of Clay: Exploring Slave and Migrant Identities in Medieval Swahili Zanzibar
Abstract
Abstract The East African coast has long been recognized as a cosmopolitan region, where different cultures and peoples met and exchanged ideas, goods and knowledge. The culture that developed there from the seventh century ce was shaped by these relations, often referred to under the term Swahili, and many of the coastal residents engaged in Islamic practice, long-distance trade, conspicuous consumption of valued goods, and spoke a common language. This paper investigates the presence of slaves and migrants from the East African interior, through pottery assemblages uncovered at two eleventh- to fifteenth-century ce sites in northern Zanzibar: Tumbatu and Mkokotoni. These are groups of people not usually discussed in relation to medieval Swahili towns, and slavery has been especially difficult to study archaeologically on the coast. Through a material culture of difference, I argue that enslaved and non-elite migrants can be recognized and allow for a fuller understanding of socio-economic and cultural complexity in Swahili towns.
Publication
Cambridge Archaeological Journal
Publisher
Cambridge University Press
Place
Cambridge
Date
2025
Volume
36
Issue
1
Pages
1-14
Journal Abbr
CAJ
Citation Key
rodlandTracesClayExploring2025
Accessed
12/25/25, 6:26 PM
ISSN
0959-7743, 1474-0540
Short Title
Traces of Clay
Language
eng
Citation
Rødland, H. (2025). Traces of Clay: Exploring Slave and Migrant Identities in Medieval Swahili Zanzibar. Cambridge Archaeological Journal, 36(1), 1–14. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0959774325100292