The transatlantic Muslim diaspora to Latin America in the nineteenth century

Since the 16th century, African Muslims figured prominently among the slave population of the Americas. While the number of Muslims pulled into the trade has always been a matter of speculation, lists of Africans rescued from slave ships provide us with some clues about the size and direction of the...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inColonial Latin American review Vol. 26; no. 4; pp. 528 - 545
Main Authors Domingues da Silva, Daniel B., Eltis, David, Khan, Nafees, Misevich, Philip, Ojo, Olatunji
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Abingdon Routledge 02.10.2017
Taylor & Francis Ltd
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Summary:Since the 16th century, African Muslims figured prominently among the slave population of the Americas. While the number of Muslims pulled into the trade has always been a matter of speculation, lists of Africans rescued from slave ships provide us with some clues about the size and direction of the Muslim diaspora to Latin America in the 19th century. Based on an analysis of tens of thousands of names recorded in these lists, this essay argues that the majority of Muslim captives leaving Africa departed from Upper Guinea and suggests that Cuba was the center of the forced Muslim diaspora in the Americas. It traces the transatlantic links that connected particular regions of embarkation in Africa to their counterparts in Latin America and considers the implications of those connections for religious and cultural change within 19th-century slave populations. The essay challenges in important ways the colonial/postcolonial divide in Latin American history and uses Islam to pose important questions about the dynamics of social change across slave societies.
ISSN:1060-9164
1466-1802
DOI:10.1080/10609164.2017.1350492