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7 - Women's Experiences of Enslavement & Slavery in Late Nineteenth- & Early Twentieth-Century Uganda

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  11 August 2017

Michael W. Tuck
Affiliation:
Associate Professor of History at Northeastern Illinois University in Chicago
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Summary

Introduction

The subject of slavery remains one of the key issues in African studies and, as the Introduction to this book makes clear, the subject of slavery and slave trading in East Africa has been relatively understudied. I would go even further to contend that the aspect of slavery about which we have the least detailed information is the lives of people in slavery. One problem has been a lack of sources. Recently I uncovered some material which, when added to known sources, will help to shed light on women's enslavement and their lives as slaves in Uganda, especially in the kingdom of Buganda. This chapter focuses on women because of their importance to the institution of slavery within Africa, and to societies in Uganda.

Since the strength of this essay is the sources, some explanation of them is required. The major sources used are descriptions of the lives of fifty-fi women who were slaves or held servile status in Uganda in the latter part of the nineteenth century. The women, or the men to whom they were connected, were preparing for Catholic baptism and the accounts are attempts by the Catholic missionaries to sort out their marriage histories. These accounts, known as ‘Marriage Cases’, were recorded by priests from the Saint Joseph's Foreign Missionary Society, known more colloquially as the Mill Hill Mission. While the individual accounts are not as long or detailed as some well-known sources from East Africa, the main value here is the number of examples. Most sources on slavery in Buganda consist of statements about categories of slaves and generalisations about what slave status was like. These records give us the best view we have of women's actual lives in slavery, and allow us to make general statements on a firmer foundation. Going beyond that, having fifty-fiv accounts means that we can see patterns in women's experiences that individual accounts cannot offer. Another point that makes these sources valuable is that they come from areas not only outside the capital, but even outside the centre of Buganda.

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Publisher: Boydell & Brewer
Print publication year: 2007

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