Hostname: page-component-848d4c4894-pftt2 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-05-03T04:21:56.927Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Currency, Credit and Capitalism on the Cross River in the pre-colonial era

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  22 January 2009

A. J. H. Latham
Affiliation:
University of Swansea

Extract

Mary Douglas has distinguished two kinds of primitive currencies, general purpose currencies, and primitive rationing systems. She describes Bohannan's analysis of the Tiv copper rod currency as the best example of a primitive rationing system. According to Bohannan, there were three levels of exchange in the Tiv economic system: everyday consumer goods in the lowest level, rods and prestige goods in the middle level, and wives and women in the highest level. Because rods were not divisible they were too valuable to be used for lower order transactions, and so ordinary people could not accumulate rods to purchase prestige goods. Nor could rods be accumulated to buy wives, the most desired and status-conferring possession in the system. Thus the rod currency reinforced the status divisions in Tiv society, and to Douglas appeared to be coupons in a system which rationed status.

However, despite Bohannan's analysis, there is ample evidence to show that elsewhere in the Cross River rod currency area, rods were divisible into wires which were used as a medium of exchange for everyday consumer goods, and were clearly a general purpose currency. By accumulating wires, which could be exchanged for rods, prestige goods and offices could be bought.

Because it was a general purpose currency, the rod facilitated credit, and the accumulation of capital in the capitalistic commercial system. Yet capitalistic means of production in crafts or agriculture were not adopted until the late 1870s, with the attempt to develop cocoa as a cash crop, which failed due to the unsuitability of the area. Instead surplus capital was converted into slaves, because they were wealth in themselves, and enhanced their masters' security and status.

Type
Other Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1971

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

1 Mary, Douglas, ‘Primitive Rationing: A Study in Controlled Exchange’, in Raymond, Firth, Themes in Economic Anthropology (Tavistock, London, 1967), 119–47.Google Scholar

2 Bohannan, P., ‘Some Principles of Exchange and Investment among the Tiv’, American Anthropologist,LVII, 1955, 6070.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

3 Bohannan, P., ‘The Impact of Money on an African Subsistence Economy’, Journal of Economic History, XIX, no.4 (12 1959), 498.Google ScholarBohannan, P. and Bohannan, L., Tiv Economy (Longmans, London, 1968), 237.Google Scholar

4 Jones, G. I., ‘Native and Trade Currencies in Southern Nigeria during the Eighteenth and Nineteenth Centuries’, Africa, XXVIII, no. 1(12 1958), 48.Google Scholar

5 John, Watts, A true Relation of the inhuman and unparalleled Actions, and barbarous Murders, of Negroes and Moors, committed on three Englishmen in old Calabar in Guinea, Harleian Collection of Voyages and Travels (London, 1745), II, 512, 515, 516.Google Scholar

6 Latham, A. J. H., ‘Old Calabar 1600–1891: The Economic Impact of the West upon a Traditional Society’, Ph.D. thesis, University of Birmingham (1970), 23–4.Google Scholar

7 Ibn, Battuta, Travels in Asia and Africa 1325–1354 (translated by Gibb, H. A. R.) (Routledge and Kegan Paul, London, 1929), 336.Google Scholar

8 Thurstan, Shaw, Igbo-Ukwu (Faber and Faber, London, 1970), I, 106–7, 204, 261–2.Google Scholar

9 Jones, ‘Native and Trade Currencies’.

10 Mary Douglas, ‘Primitive Rationing’.

11 Bohannan, , ‘Impact of Money’, 492–9.Google ScholarBohannan, and Bohannan, , Tiv Economy, 228–37.Google Scholar

12 A., and Churchill, J., A Collection of Voyages and Travels, v: A Description of the Coasts of North and South Guinea (London, 1732), 465.Google Scholar

13 Hallett, R. (ed.), Records of the African Association, 1788–1831 (Thomas Nelson and Sons Ltd., London, 1964), 207,Google Scholar cit. Nicholls, to African Association, 15 02 1805.Google Scholar

14 Latham, , ‘Old Calabar’, III. P.P. 1906, Cd 2684–5, lxxv. I. Colonial Reports, Annual, no. 459 (Southern Nigeria, 1904), 13.Google Scholar

15 Rev. Hugh, Goldie, Dictionary of the Efik Language (Edinburgh, 1874), 255.Google Scholar

16 Rev. Hope, Masterton Waddell, Twenty-Nine Years in the West Indies and Central Africa (London, 1863), 247.Google ScholarWaddell, , Journal, I, 46, 4 05 1846.Google Scholar (Available at the National Library of Scotland, Edinburgh.) Ibid.. VII, 4, Waddell, to Jameson, , 2 11 1846.Google ScholarIbid.. VII, 29, 22 Sept. 1849. William, Marwick, William and Louisa Anderson (Edinburgh, 1897), 346,Google Scholar cit. Anderson's, Journal, 30 05 1856.Google Scholar

17 Waddell, , Journal, I, 27, 14 04 1846.Google Scholar

18 Africa (West), no. 616, West African Currency Committee 1900, 34, paras 1382–3 Cotterell, H., C.O. 879/62. P.P. 1906, Cd 2684–5, lxxv. I. Colonial Reports, Annual, no. 459 (Southern Nigeria, 1904), 13.Google Scholar

19 Latham, , ‘Old Calabar’, 57.Google Scholar

20 Ibid. 168.

21 Ibid. 142–3.

22 Africa (West) no. 645, Further Correspondence relating to the Currency of the West African Colonies, 1900–1903, 23, Moor, to Colonial Office, 7 07 1901,Google Scholar C.O. 879/66 Moor, to Foreign Office, 13 11 1897, no. 289, 295, F.O. 403/250.Google Scholar

23 United Presbyterian Church Missionary Record, 1 (11 1846), 175,Google Scholar cit. Waddell. Ibid.. VII (Mar. 1852) (page number missing), cit. Waddell, , Journal, 22(03 1851).Google Scholar Africa (West) no. 645. Further Correspondence relating to the Currency of the West African Colonies, 1900–1903, 24, Moor to Colonial Office, 7 07 1901. C.O. 879/66. Ibid. 58, Moor, to Chamberlain, 22 06 1902. P.P. 1902, Cd 788–23, lxv. 513. Colonial Reports, Annual, no. 353 (Southern Nigeria, 1900), 78.Google Scholar

24 Marwick, , Andersons, 263–4,Google Scholar cit. Anderson, , 9 08 1852.Google Scholar

25 Rev. Malherbe, W. A., Tiv–English Dictionary (Government Printer, Lagos, 1931), 10.Google Scholar

26 Ibid.. 22.

27 Bohannan, and Bohannan, , Tiv Economy, 236.Google Scholar

28 Ibn, Battuta, Travels, 336.Google Scholar

29 Polanyi, K., Dahomey and the Slave Trade(University of Washington, Seattle and London, 1966), 174–5.Google Scholar

30 Gomer, Williams, History of the Liverpool Privateers and Letters of Marque, with an account of the Liverpool Slave Trade (London and Liverpool, 1897),533–4, 541, 543–5.Google ScholarAntera, Duke, Extracts from the original text of the Diary of Antera Duke, 1785–8, in Forde, D. (ed.), Efik Traders of Old Calabar (Oxford University Press, 1956), 86, 24 06 1785, 27 06 1785; 87, 7 07 1785, 95; 20 04 1786.Google ScholarAbridgement of the Minutes of the Evidence (taken before a Committee of the whole House, to whom it was referred to consider of the Slave Trade), 4 vols, 17891791, London, II, 205–6.Google Scholar

31 Duke, , Extracts, 85–6, 21 06 1785; 87, 7 07 1785.Google ScholarHolman, J., Travels in Madeira, Sierra Leone, Teneriffe, St. Jago, Cape Coast, Fernando Po, Princes Island, etc. etc. (London, 2nd edition, 1840), 396.Google Scholar

32 Edward, Bold, The Merchants' and Mariners' African Guide (London, 1822), 78–9.Google Scholar Capt. John, Adams, Sketches taken during ten voyages to Africa (London, 1822), 112, 114. P.P, 1873, lxv (1) Commercial Reports Africa, West Coast, Report by Consul Livingstone on Trade and Commerce of Old Calabar for the year 1872.Google Scholar

33 Churchill, , Voyages and Travels, v, 383,465.Google ScholarBold, , Guide, 78, 80, 81.Google ScholarWilliams, , Liverpool Privateers, 539–40.Google ScholarAdams, , Sketches, 113, 116. Supplementary Remarks upon British Trade upon the West Coast of Africa, Tasker Nugent, 29 Apr. 1882, 30–3, F.O. 403/18.Google Scholar

34 Waddell, , Journal, VIII, 16, 26 05 1850.Google Scholar Statement of Henshaw's Town, 20 Aug. 1878, para. 10, Nigerian National Archives, Ibadan, Calprof., 4/I, vol. 6. Henshaw, to Court of Equity, 17 01 1882, Calprof. Ibadan, 3/2. UPCMR (New Series), IV (1 01. 1883),Google Scholar 13, cit. Goldie's, Journal, 28 08 1882.Google Scholar

35 Bold, , Guide, 78.Google ScholarBeecroft, to Palmerston, , 4 03 1851,Google Scholar no. 19, F.O. 84/858. Beecroft, to Malmesbury, , 20 05 1852, no. I, F.O. 2/7. P.P. 1873, lxv, Commercial Reports, Africa, West Coast, Report by Consul Livingstone on Trade and Commerce of Old Calabar for the Year 1872.Google Scholar

36 Waddell, , Twenty-Nine Years, 414.Google ScholarWaddell, , Journal, VII, 67, 6 01 1850.Google Scholar

37 Anne, Martin, The Oil Palm Economy of the Ibibio Farmer (Ibadan University Press, 1956), 9.Google Scholar

38 Latham, , ‘Old Calabar’, 180.Google Scholar

39 Chief Michael, Henshaw, interview, 18 11 1965.Google Scholar

40 Farquhar, (Forest Officer) to Secretary of Eastern Province (undated), E. 1374/1908, Caiprof. Enugu 14/3/752.Google Scholar

41 Interviews: Chief Michael, Henshaw, 18 11 1965;Google Scholar Chief Joseph, Henshaw, 6 12 1965;Google Scholar Chief Maurice, Archibong, 19 01 1966.Google Scholar

42 Bohannan, and Bohannan, , Tiv Economy, 234–7.Google Scholar

43 Latham, , ‘Old Calabar’, 129–32.Google Scholar