Читать книгу Slaves, Spices and Ivory in Zanzibar - Abdul Sheriff - Страница 11

Оглавление

Illustrations

Frontispiece Zanzibar from the sea, c. 1860

Plate 1 Zanzibar from the sea, c.1857

Plate 2 Seyyid Said bin Sultan

Plate 3 Fort Jesus, Mombasa, c.1857

Plate 4 Mwinyi Mkuu Muhammad bin Ahmed bin Hasan Alawi

Plate 5 Coconut oil milling using camel power

Plate 6 Chake Chake Fort, Pemba, c. 1857

Plate 7 Clove picking in Pemba

Plate 8 Zanzibar harbour, 1886

Plate 9 Ahmed bin Nu’man

Plate 10 Landing horses from Sultana, London, 1842

Plate 11 Ivory market at Bagamoyo, 1890s

Plate 12 Indian nautch in Zanzibar, c.1860

Plate 13 Zanzibar crowded with dhows

Plate 14 Dhow careening facilities in the Zanzibar creek

Plate 15 Sokokuu fruit market under the walls of the Old Fort

Plate 16 View of Zanzibar town, c. 1885

Plate 17 Forodhani – Zanzibar sea-front

Plate 18 Ground plan of an Arab house in Zanzibar

Plate 19 Zanzibar architecture

Plate 20 The carved Zanzibar door

Plate 21 Horse racing on the Mnazi Mmoja, Zanzibar, c.1846

Plate 22 An Indian shop in Zanzibar, c. 1860

Plate 23 Hamali porters in Zanzibar

Plate 24 A slave caravan approaching the coast

Plate 25 Bagamoyo, c. 1887

Plate 26 An ivory caravan approaching Morogoro, c. 1887

Plate 27 Porters of the interior

Plate 28 Arab traders visiting Livingstone and Stanley at Kwihara

Plate 29 Ujiji, 1871

Plate 30 Tippu Tip, Arab trader of the Congo

Plate 31 Seyyid Barghash bin Said

Plate 32 Slave dhow chasing in the Indian Ocean

Plate 33 Slaves captured by H.M.S. London, 1870s

Plate 34 Zanzibar town and harbour after the hurricane, 1872

Acknowledgements for illustrations

Plates 1, 3 and 6 from R.F. Burton, Zanzibar: City, Island Coast (2 vols, 1872); Plates 2, 9, 11, 13, 14, 17, 23, 31 and 33 from The Peabody Museum, Salem, Massachusetts; Plates 4, 5, 12, 19, 22 and frontispiece from Carl von der Decken, Reisen in Ost-Afrika (1869); Plate 7 from Abdul Sheriff; Plate 8 from H.H. Johnson, The Kilima-Njaro Expedition (1886); Plate 10 from The London Illustrated News, 18th June 1842; Plates 15 and 16 from V. Giraud, Les Lacs de l’Afrique Equatoriale (1890); Plate 18 from ‘The Stone Town of Zanzibar: A Strategy for Integrated Development’, a technical report commissioned by the UN Centre for Human Settlement, 1983; Plate 21 from J. R. Browne, Etchings of a Whaling Cruise with Notes of a Sojourn on the Island of Zanzibar (1846); Plates 24, 25 and 26 from Baur and Le Roy, A Travers le Zanguebar (1886); Plate 27 from R.F. Burton, The Lake Regions of Central Africa (2 vols, 1860); Plate 28 from H.M. Stanley, How I Found Livingstone (1872); Plate 29 from M.G. Alexis, Stanley L’Africain (1890); Plate 30 from H.M. Stanley In Darkest Africa (1890); Plate 32 from P. H. Colomb, Slave Catching in the Indian Ocean (1873); Plate 34 from Harper’s Weekly, 5th July 1873.

Slaves, Spices and Ivory in Zanzibar

Подняться наверх