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INTENSIVE SLAVE RAIDING IN THE COLONIAL INTERSTICE: HAMMAN YAJI AND THE MANDARA MOUNTAINS (NORTH CAMEROON AND NORTH-EASTERN NIGERIA)*

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  09 January 2013

WALTER E. A. VAN BEEK*
Affiliation:
African Studies Centre, Leiden & Tilburg University
*
The author may be contacted at: vanbeek@ascleiden.nl
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Abstract

A rare document, the diary of a slave raider, offers a unique view into the sociopolitical situation at the turn of the nineteenth century in the colonial backwater of North Cameroon. The Fulbe chief in question, Hamman Yaji, not only kept a diary, but was by far the most notorious slave raider of the Mandara Mountains. This article supplements the data from his diary with oral histories and archival sources to follow the dynamics of the intense slave raiding he engaged in. This frenzy of slaving occurred in a ‘colonial interstice’ characterized by competition between three colonial powers – the British, the Germans and the French, resilient governing structures in a region poorly controlled by colonial powers, and the unclear boundaries of the Mandara Mountains. The dynamics of military technology and the economics of this ‘uncommon market’ in slaves form additional factors in this episode in the history of slavery in Africa. These factors account for the general situation of insecurity due to slave raiding in the area, to which Hamman Yaji was an exceptionally atrocious contributor. In the end a religious movement, Mahdism, stimulated the consolidation of colonial power, ending Yaji's regime, which in all its brutality provides surprising insight in the early colonial situation in this border region between Nigeria and Cameroon.

Type
Politics of Hunting and Raiding
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2012

The voice of my long-time informant and friend Vandu Zra Tè rises to a higher pitch, as he describes the slave raiding atrocities of Hamman Yaji, archenemy of the Kapsiki:

He used people as money, Hamman Yaji. He asked a Fulbe woman for a pounding stick and paid with a slave. He bought a mat, and paid with a slave. To buy a calabash, or a pot, he paid with people. Even a jar with shikwedi [a crop for the sauce] he paid with a slave. That is what he did.

Hamman Yaji is the name of the area's most inveterate slave raider at the start of the twentieth century; tales of his wilful destruction of human life still reverberate in the Mandara Mountains, on the border between North Cameroon and North-eastern Nigeria, not only among the Kapsiki/Higi, with whom I work, but among many groups in the region. In this article I will treat him partly as an example of a wider phenomenon, since the slave raids of Yaji fit into a general pattern of slavery linked to the ‘slave mode of production’ that has characterized most of the West African subcontinent in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. But I will also argue that Hamman Yaji's brutality and the sheer intensity of his slave raiding were exceptional, not as an accident of history or personality, but as a result of some specific historical dynamics that marked the turn of the century in that particular area.

The first dynamic is what I call the ‘colonial interstice’, the slow and difficult transition from the Moslem realm of the Sokoto Caliphate of which the Adamawa Emirate was a part, towards the colonial regime that was to emerge as Northern Nigeria. This slow change in power resulted, at least during the interstice, in a power vacuum, a suspension of supralocal authority that made such systematic atrocities possible. The temporal power vacuum in itself is not unusual and has been documented elsewhere as well, but is clearer in the region south of Lake Chad because of its peculiar border situation in which three competing colonial powers, Great Britain, France and Germany, all competed for control.Footnote 1

The second dynamic is economic. A network of market towns at the periphery furnished the Sokoto Caliphate with the captive human labour the realm needed for its functioning.Footnote 2 Hogendorn calls this economic exchange an ‘uncommon market’, both for its extreme human inequality, and for its peculiar human ‘currency’, that could be productive and reproductive, potentially emancipative and rebellious.Footnote 3 Yet, any market obeys rules of supply and demand, including slave markets, and I will set out to argue that Hamman Yaji supplied for a market that was essentially collapsing.Footnote 4

A relevant background factor is the technology of war. A stable system of one-sided slave raiding demands a structural technological dominance. In this aspect Yaji is not exceptional. Throughout West Africa the dealings between the raiding Moslem emirates and the victim ‘pagan’ populations in refuge zones pitted cavalry against archers on foot. Hamman Yaji emerged late enough in colonial history to profit as well from the availability of the breech loading rifle. Taking into account these factors I analyse why and how this intense slaving was generated and how it ended, in order to explain why, according to my friend Vandu Zratè, Yaji bought a calabash with a slave.

This Mandara Mountain story is set in the history of the early colonization of Adamawa Emirate, and thus of the Sokoto Caliphate. In order to combine the points of view of the raided, the raiders, and the early colonials, my tale is based on three types of sources, the first of which is oral histories collected by various anthropologists working in the area.Footnote 5 The second is archival sources and the secondary sources using archival materials.Footnote 6 The third source is a remarkable diary kept by Hamman Yaji, the raider himself. From 1902 till1927 this Fulbe lamido (chief) of the town of Madagali (which now lies on Nigeria's border with Cameroon) recorded his exploits in the Mandara Mountains in astounding detail. The diary manuscript was found and kept by the European officials who deposed him, and was later published with a commentary by James Vaughan and Anthony Kirk-Greene.Footnote 7 It offers a unique view of a Fulani slave raider and of his dealings with the potential slave populations, the ‘pagans’, and with the first European colonial officers.Footnote 8 These three sources – each with its own inevitable biases – offer insight into the explosive slave raiding in the early days of colonial presence.

So the ‘villain’ in this story is Hamman Yaji, feared by the mountain populations, notorious among the colonial administrators, who spoke about: ‘ … a quarter century of unbelievable tyranny and cruelty, of slave-raiding and oppression’.Footnote 9 With his militia he scourged the mountains, taking, torturing and killing men, stealing women and cattle, punishing villages that resisted. He was not the only raider, as other Fulbe chiefs in the area did the same, though not nearly as intensively as Yaji. In any case he was the only one who produced a diary. Why exactly he started this record and kept it up is not clear, but he did assign a particular slave the task of writing in the diary and hiding it from unwelcome eyes. The diary was found by the colonial forces when they finally arrested him; evidently the slave-scribe in the mêlée of the arrest piously sat on the Koran instead of on top of the diary, as he had been instructed by his master. The manuscript found its way into the colonial archives, and later into the Nigerian archives, but both the colonial and postcolonial regimes considered it too explosive to publish.Footnote 10 When the first military government of Nigeria lifted the ban, the text circulated for a time in manuscript form. The Vaughan and Kirk-Greene edition, then, provides us with access to a rare and valuable source for the region.

One of the revealing aspects of this curious document is Yaji's absolute self-righteousness when he mentions how many captives his soldiers had taken or killed, and how many cows and slaves they drove off to Madagali. On the other hand, he also meticulously records his gift relations with the first Europeans and with other lamibe (chiefs), and complains of everyday household annoyances, such as when one slave girl refused to cook for him or a when he suffered stomach cramp. In many ways it is more an accountant's report than a diary. Clearly not meant for our eyes, its absolute frankness offers a glimpse of the political situation at the start of the twentieth century in North-eastern Nigeria and North-Cameroon. And this was not any slave raider; he was reputedly the fiercest ‘ravageur’ in the area, the scourge of the Mandara Mountains.

All over the western rim of the Mandara Mountains, Hamman Yaji has become the focal point for multiple popular memories, overshadowing all other Fulbe chiefs. Oral literature does have a tendency to focus in on one name and one heroic or atrocious deed, but Yaji seems somehow to have no peers.Footnote 11 The eastern region of the Mandara had its own raiders, but the threat from them was much less intense, and while oral history there tells of wars and skirmishes, the raiders have no face – they are just remembered as Fulbe. Among the Mofu Diamaré, the eastern neighbors of the Kapsiki, slavery seems to have been a marginal threat and in the southern part of the Mandara, Islamisation – in Cameroon called Fulanisation – was a more common option.Footnote 12

THE SCOURGE OF THE MOUNTAINS

For the start of our story we return to Vandu Zra Tè, a locally renowned expert in the oral history of the area:

Hamman Yaji came from Madagali, he was born there. He wanted to be chief of Madagali, but he did not succeed, as his father was not old yet.

‘You are still small, you cannot be chief.’

‘Says who?’

His father answered: ‘Zubeiru [the emir of Yola] has said that you cannot be chief.’ Hamman Yaji went to Zubeiru: ‘Make me chief.’

‘Never, you would never be able to do it.’

‘Of course I can; what do I have to do?’ ‘If you can, you operate on your father; you take his heart and his liver and you eat those. If you can do this, you can become chief.’

Hamman Yaji went out and – behu – killed his father, – praw praw – he took his liver and his heart and ate them. So people gave him the chieftaincy.Footnote 13

The tale depicts Hamman Yaji as larger than life, feared but also admired, ruthless, and without fear. As might be expected, other accounts of his succession differ slightly from the almost mythical rendering of my informant.

Hamman's father Bakari was Fulbe lamido at Madagali, part of the Adamawa Emirate under Zubeiru, who was under the nominal tutelage of the Sokoto Caliphate. Zubeiru had a long and complicated relationship with each of the three colonial forces, German, French, and British, for he was caught in their inter-colonial rivalry as they coped with Mahdist insurrections. Gradually he became, in the British eyes, a major obstacle to colonization, and the ambivalent relationship of the 1880s changed into open warfare.Footnote 14 After his defeat by the Germans in 1902 (the ‘Marua massacre’), Zubeiru was later killed by non-Moslem local people.Footnote 15 When Bakari realized that the Germans considered him to be an associate of Zubeiru, he fled but was caught and the German commander Dominik ordered him to abdicate in favour of his son.Footnote 16 Bakari told the Germans that Hamman was not acceptable as chief and escaped again. However, the German commander sought him out at his mountain refuge, and forced him to return to Madagali, promising to spare his life.Footnote 17

On the hunt for Zubeiru during that year, 1902, the German officer Hans Dominik recounts that he heard that against his orders Bakari had sheltered Emir Zubeiru. Determined to punish the Madagali lamido for this ‘disobedience’, he attacked, and in a skirmish the lamido was killed inside his own compound. His son Hamman Yaji surrendered, using as a token a ring Dominik had given Bakari in an earlier encounter.

As usual among the Fulbe, the Yerima (prince) was not very sad about his father's death. After all, he was now Lamido, and he thought he had been waiting long enough. A loud wailing rose from the court of the Lamido. The women flocked around the corpse, rubbed their faces with ashes, lifted their arms to the sky and shrieked in wild grief.Footnote 18

The next day Hamman Yaji, aged 35, was installed as chief.

Oral history has its own rendering of the succession itself, as recounted by a tale from Mokolo, the regional centre of the Cameroonian side of the Mandara Mountains:

The day he was enthroned lamido, the German officer led him before the bleeding corpse of his father Lamido Bakari, of which they chopped off the head, and they asked Hamman Yaji: ‘Are you ready to become lamido instead of your father, knowing you will undergo the same treatment if you do not obey the authority of the German?’ Without blinking an eye he answered: ‘Yes, I am ready.’Footnote 19

Yaji started his diary on 16 September 1912, and kept a succinct record of his ‘administration’ until 25 August 1927. He raided the whole of the North-western part of the Mandara Mountains, and faithfully recorded these raids. As an example some entries regarding Higi/Kapsiki villages (omitting the Fulbe dates):

6-7-1913 I sent my people to Sina and they captured 30 cattle and 6 slave girls [A week later the same ‘pagans from Sina would drive his ‘soldiers’ off; eventually some of the captives were returned]

Between 2 and 27-2-1915 I raided Humumzi [a Higi village in Nigeria] and captured 4 slave girls and 20 cattle.

29-9-1918 I raided Futu in the morning and captured 23 cattle, 22 gowns, 3 red fezzes and 15 goats.

7-5-1919 I raided Sir with Lawan Aji of Gaur and we captured 8 slaves, 122 cattle and 200 sheep.

30-12-1919 I raided Wula and we captured 20 slaves

15-5-1920 I sent Jauro Soji to raid the pagans of Gumshi. They took from them 70 slaves, 48 cattle and 90 goats.

During the period covered by the diary, Yaji was in view of the various colonial powers: from 1884–1916, the region was under German control, 1916–22 the region was French, and from 1922–61 it was under the British, as part of the Northern Cameroon. At independence in 1960 it would go to Nigeria. Yaji had to adapt to three colonial regimes, each different in its colonial policy, but with one common denominator: administration and control were marginal, the local rulers were left in place, and the mountain people were of peripheral concern to the administrators. The first report on Yaji was not particularly negative. Captain Zimmerman led a military mission against what he referred to as ‘pagan excesses’ – attacks on Hausa merchants on the roads to Madagali. He seemed to be quite taken in by his visit with Hamman Yaji:

After resting a day I took my farewell from Hama Jádi in the morning of the 5/1 [1906], who accompanied me a little on the road, with my heartfelt wish: ‘May Allah grant him a long life.’ Fortunately, his 12 year old son … seems to take after his father.’Footnote 20

Later the opinions changed considerably. In 1914 a British colonial reported that ‘[t]he chiefs are indulging in an orgy of oppression and confiscation’.Footnote 21 Yet successive officials had no option but to extend a mandate to the Fulbe rulers to continue their administrative hold on the Kirdi [‘pagans’], as the mountain people were called.Footnote 22 It was only from the 1920s that a semblance of direct control was established. For most of his rule, Yaji did as he wished: up to 1920 he raided the mountain peoples for slaves and cattle, tortured, lopped off heads and stole cattle wherever he could. In his diary he recorded some 100 raids, in which a total of 2,016 captives were taken or killed (at any rate counted) and a far greater number of cattle stolen.Footnote 23 Sukur, the mountain chiefdom between Madagali and the Kapsiki, bore the terrible brunt of his horrors,Footnote 24 both in his slave raiding and in his meddling in the internal politics of this important chefferie, which was in his immediate vicinity:

On one raid Hamman Yaji's soldiers cut off the heads of dead pagans in front of the Llidi's [Tlidi's or Chief's] house, threw them into a hole in the ground, set them alight and cooked their food over the flames. Another time he forced the wives of the dead Sukur men to come forward and collect their husbands' heads in a calabash … One witness told me how he had seen children have a coil of wire hammered through their ears and jaws by the soldiers, while another related how, when Hamman Yaji learned of the great significance attached to the Sukur burial rites, he ordered his troops to cut up the bodies of the dead so that they could not be given a decent burial.Footnote 25

For Yaji himself this was simply the way of life of a Fulbe chief: ‘Hamman Yaji's values were those of nineteenth-century Moslem Fulbe society, which had established suzerainty over the pagans of the area in a complex arrangement with the much larger emirate of Adamawa.’Footnote 26 A callous dismissal of pagan lives contrasts sharply with the personal concern he showed for his own domestic slaves, just as the theft of cattle seems at odds with the meticulous book keeping of gift exchanges with other chiefs. He took considerable care that cattle rustling and slave raiding only take place on his ‘own’ territory, in those villages which constituted his fief, though he sometimes crossed that border as well. After the British made it clear on 25 December 1920 that there could be no more slave raiding, no more raids were entered in his diary. In short, he evidently adhered to the law, his law and that of his superiors; but, as we shall see, other factors made that compliance easy. The halt to his raiding did not mean the real end of slavery or even slave trading, as the internal conflicts in the region kept providing him with a trickle slaves to sell abroad.Footnote 27 For instance, accusations of witchcraft or theft in the villages generated slaves for the market:

7-11-1922 The pagans of Sina brought a woman of theirs to me, who they say stole from the people.

24-11-1925 The pagans of Kamale accused one of their men of being a ‘witch’Footnote 28 and they caught him and brought him to me. They wanted too to reap his corn, so I sent my horsemen to them.

Yaji's relation with Mogode, the home of of Vandu Zra Tè, reveals his fashion of ‘keeping of the law’. Though he raided the surrounding villages of Kamale, Sena, Garta and especially Sukur, he generally spared Mogode, which housed already a minor Fulbe chief,Footnote 29 who depended on Gawar, part of the Marua lamidate.Footnote 30

It was not his slave raiding that eventually turned the colonial forces against Hamman Yaji, it was religion. Hamman started to follow the Mahdi faith that had been propagated by Rabeh up until 1900:

15-5-1915 I took on the devotional practices of the Mahdist sect under Malam Muhammad's instruction.

8-8-1922 I renounced the practice of praying to God for things of this world, and adopted the practice of praying for things of the world to come.

This brush with Mahdism would in the end cost him dearly. More than the slave raiding – which he had ended by then – it was the threat of a Mahdist insurrection that convinced the colonial administration to get rid of Hamman Yaji.Footnote 31 British experience in the Sudan had made them wary of Mahdism, and when they arrived in Cameroon the Mahdist rebellion of Hayat Sa'id had already shown the anti-establishment and anti-colonial force of such a movement, which could also incite the massive slave population to flee.Footnote 32 Later, the British had been confronted with the Mahdist rebellion of Satiru.Footnote 33 So the mention of Mahdism, even as late as 1922, immediately sounded warning bells.Footnote 34 And Yaji flirted with a strain of Mahdism straight from the Sudan. For in the Lake Chad area it was Rabeh, a war lord who had come from Mahdist Sudan, who was at the origins of Mahdism in the region. Rabeh had wrought havoc under the established emirates, including the Wandala in the late nineteenth century; ultimately he was killed by the French in 1900.Footnote 35 It was the daughter of this very Rabeh who contacted Yaji and gave him presents (entry 28-10-1918), including a rifle, during his gradual adoption of Mahdism.Footnote 36

So the British decided to get rid of Hamman Yaji, as a Mahdist Fulbe chief was a thorn too many in the colonial flesh. It took some time, but in 1927 they moved to arrest him. In Kapsiki/Higi even his arrest was to become the stuff of myth. As Vandu Zra Tè put it:

The white man looked for him, in Madagali. Plenty of people were there, but where was Hamman Yaji? One of the soldiers of Yaji told the white people: ‘He is in the earth. He has a hole in the earth, where his bed is, inside his compound.’

‘Can you show it to us?’

‘Yes, I can show it to you.’

The white man gave money to the soldier, and they went to the tomb.Footnote 37

‘Hamman Yaji, you are finished now.’ Yaji came out, totally naked. They put him on a horse, drove off and never has Hamman Yaji been seen again.’

All montagnards were happy to see him gone. Judy Sterner noted a splendid story in Sukur:Footnote 38

He was stopped by the Europeans who captured him and poisoned him. When he died he fell spread-eagled with the arms outstretched. When you go down to the town [Madagali] you see wooden crosses that the Europeans have put in memory of his death.

The British written sources tell a slightly different story, but also an exciting one. The colonial administration wanted to get rid of Yaji, but their control of the region was weak and they expected fierce resistance. Kirk-Greene relates an intensive correspondence between Yola, the centre of the Adamawa administration, and their colonial superiors in Kaduna and Lagos. They decided on a cautious strategy: separate military columns would depart from Yola with varying marching orders, as if they were reinforcing the Maiduguri garrison. In Madagali they would meet ‘by chance’. This was done with great circumspection, but in the end a police detachment of 30 men proved sufficient to carry out the arrest, and the rest of the 300 men were kept behind.Footnote 39 Yaji thought he was to receive guests, but was apprehended on the spot with his son Bello and his chief slave Ajia. It was then that the diary was found.Footnote 40 There was to be no insurrection and Yaji was transported to Yola on 26 August 1927. However, his reputation did not fade that quickly, and Yola was too close to French colonial territory (Yaji's brother was lamido of Mokolo in Cameroon), so after a perfunctory trial he was put on a steamer to Sokoto.Footnote 41 In the colonial office in Kaduna this arrest was hailed as an important victory over Mahdism, though it was in effect a disavowal of Lugard's doctrine of indirect rule. Mahdism – and thus Yaji – was still considered dangerous in Sokoto, so the prisoner was transferred to Kaduna, where he died of a renal infection.

A FRONTIER OF VIOLENCE

Hamman Yaji was the epitome of slave raiding and Fulbe cruelty, but he was never the only raider.Footnote 42 Paul Lovejoy estimates that at the time of the collapse of the trans-Atlantic slave trade Adamawa, the province that includes the Mandara mountains, exported 5,000 slaves per year to the centre of the realm, Sokoto, ‘a policy of relocation on a gigantic scale’, not only of ‘pagans’ as also some Moslem were enslaved.Footnote 43 As Lovejoy remarks, ‘Under the guise of pursuing the jihad, slave raiding and war were institutionalized into a coercive system for the mobilisation of labor and for the redistribution of peasant output.’Footnote 44 The very first contact Europeans had with the Mandara Mountains was in a slave raid: Major Dixon Denham, in 1823, was the first ‘Nasara’ [white man] to see the Mandara hills.Footnote 45 Denham was travelling from Bornu on his way to the Sultan of Wandala – as the emirate which included the mountain was called – in a mixed expedition ‘as much a result of internal politics at the court of Bornu as it was a slaving expedition’.Footnote 46 In the Wandala capital he saw a mountain tribe give 200 slaves to the sultan as tribute in order to buy off a raid, plus a host of other gifts. Gifts were regularly given as tribute to the sultan of Wandala by the montagnard settlements in the neighbourhood.Footnote 47 Denham estimated that a thousand slaves a year were captured in the hills and sold on the slave markets of Mora, the capital.Footnote 48 However, the relations between Wandala and montagnards were sometimes non-violent as well, with the latter serving as free soldiers in the armies of the Sultan, while freed slaves carried out trade between plains and mountains; the mountain people traded iron with the Wandala emirate, against salt and fish. As a Mafa montagnard put it, capturing the paradoxes of the relationship: ‘They bought our iron, then used it to make the shackles they held us with.’Footnote 49

A generation later the famous German explorer Heinrich Barth witnessed slave trading in the Bornu capital and he too visited the mountains as part of a slave raid, this time against the plains dwelling Musgum (though it had set out as a punitive expedition against the Wandala). The raid he saw failed, at least for the raiders, just as the one witnessed by Denham had.Footnote 50

From the first, these Europeans admired their Moslem hosts. Barth was impressed with the cosmopolitan character of the West African savannah realms that hosted him, but the ‘wretched state of the pagans’ he noted was in fact the result of those very emirates.Footnote 51 The early German colonist Morgen, from the other side of the colonial border, remarked on the state of mountain peoples, though he complained more about economic loss than about human suffering:

It is sad to see how our German borderlands are depopulated through these slave raids. All captives are transported by the Benue to the North; either they serve as tribute in slaves to Yola and from there to Sokoto, or they are sold to Hausa traders, who in their turn sell them on to Sokoto, or bring them to the markets of Kuka or Kano. It is high time to care for these wretched people, together with Great Britain, in particular with the Royal Niger Company.Footnote 52

Mountain people like the Kapsiki were not simply the passive victims of slave raids, as they learned to defend themselves with increasing efficacy, both through habitat and organisation.Footnote 53 The Mandara Mountains became a refuge from slave raids.Footnote 54 In the phrase of Eric Wolf, the people of the Mandara mountains tried to ‘stay out of history’, adopting a strategy of resistance that countered violent aggression with fierce defence, forceful inclusion with deliberate marginalisation, and central administration with seeming anarchy.Footnote 55 The military equation was less unequal than Barth's picture evokes, and Denham only just managed to escape with his life from the Musfeia raid.Footnote 56 The mountains did form a viable defence area, as did the riverside swamps of the Massa, Tupuri, and Musgum.Footnote 57 Raids into the mountains were not without risk for the cavalry, and the poisoned arrows of the defenders did score many a victim, and sometimes a victory: Yaji's men were repulsed several times. This may be one reason why the Wandala emirate, the closest to the Kapsiki, never mounted large scale expeditions into the mountains, just hit-and-run raids, and relied instead on tribute.Footnote 58

However, the external threat was by no means the only one for the montagnards like Kapsiki/Higi. Throughout remembered history, villages have fought each other; internal war is one of the structuring principles of Kapsiki sociopolitical organisation.Footnote 59 In principle all neighbouring villages waged war on each other. Some villages trace common descent, and either did not fight each other, or did not capture slaves or use poison. The number of pitched battles between villages in the twentieth century has been limited: each village had about three to five, each lasting one or two days. Though captives caught in these skirmishes were often ransomed back, these conflicts have nevertheless presented a constant threat, a condition of ‘Warre’, in Hobbesian terms: life was, indeed, ‘brutish, nasty and short’. Raiding and war still figure at the background of human relations inside mountain villages.Footnote 60 Most villages in Kapsiki have one clan or lineage called ‘mava’, slaves, usually descendants of slaves, or an immigrant group likening their position to slaves.Footnote 61 Still, though slaves were not solely the product of Fulbe raids, the number of slaves and the intensity of warfare increased dramatically with Fulbe slave raiding.

For the northern neighbours of the Kapsiki, the threat of internal enslavement must have been even greater.Footnote 62 Particularly during the hunger years around 1914–5, Mafa sold their own people, sometimes their own kith and kin, into slavery, just as some of them also served as middlemen in the slave trade.Footnote 63 Especially for women the threat was severe, as their value in internal slavery was much greater than of men, and their selling price was often correlated with the bride wealth: if the selling price was higher than the bride wealth, girls and also women were in danger. The one taboo that seems to have held was against selling a pregnant woman into slavery.Footnote 64

Hamman Yaji appears to fit into this pattern, his slave raiding seemingly an extension of the long established slave raiding in the larger region. But the scale and intensity of his operation are exceptional, and he never exacted tribute; he lacked the stable relations with local heads that such an exchange demands. His rule, crucially, came after the demise of the slave-hungry emirates that had dominated much of the nineteenth century – and in the context of the new presence of European colonialism.

THE INTERSTICE: DYNAMICS OF EARLY COLONIZATION

For European colonizers – British, French and German – the Sokoto Caliphate presented first a military and then a moral challenge. The British had been prime actors in abolishing the slave trade, so an African empire that fed on slave labour was a considerable moral problem. However, wider colonial experience encouraged a policy of gradual transition: stopping slave raids, halting the slave trade, but preserving for the rest the status quo.Footnote 65 Thus on the Caliphate and Emirate level the Europeans took over the existing structures. At Yola, the centre of the Emirate, their arrival did change the situation of slaves considerably, as the Fulani slave keepers made the system more lenient for the slaves; in the words of a very old informant in Yola:

I was not aware of how the Europeans came here. But then some slaves began returning home. Some ran away and some would go and come back. Their masters reduced their work; they stopped beating them and tying them with chains. They only gave them light work, if any at all.Footnote 66

In the far away Mandara Mountains the effects were different, though. The political superstructure was removed by the colonial conquest, creating a power vacuum beyond the local lamibe. The complex, personal relations of these local Fulbe chiefs with their superior in Yola were severed, and the local Fulani chiefs were more on their own than they ever had been. Thus, in this region at the margin of the realm the colonial interstice set in, a period between the old established Adamawa Emirate with its functional political and economic system, and de facto colonial rule, as the latter took a considerable time to establish. This macro-political vacuum offered chiefs at the border of the realm the opportunity to expand their raiding activities as the network of patron-client relations that had permeated the local chiefdoms, linking them also to local chiefs and endogenous slave traders, had crumbled. In part these relations had been secured through tribute payment. The colonial interstice isolated the different Fulbe chiefs from each other; even if they did usually respect one another's fiefs, their commonalities under the emirate had fallen apart and they simply became competitors on the slave market.

The interstice also changed the military equation. European military might was superior, but could incidentally be used to further the causes of a lamido, for in this ethnically fragmented backwater of their colonies, the early colonizers had little choice but to try to rule through the lamibe. So Yaji took great care to have good relations with the Europeans. When the expedition of Fritz Bauer, one of the early arrivals in the region, visited Madagali, he was extremely welcoming: ‘The present lamido [of Madagali] three hours before arrival, put 40 horsemen at our disposition and received us with great cordiality. … The lamido sent us two cattle and a very good horse.’Footnote 67 Yaji tried to convince the Germans to subdue the ‘Mildouh pagans’ near Madagali (north of Sukur), but Bauer refused as those ‘pagans’ had left him at rest.Footnote 68 But this hospitality did pay off: when two years later Hamman Yaji asked the German Resident permission to include the village of Mildouh in his district, this was granted.Footnote 69

The leeway Yaji had in this interstice was considerably enlarged by the peculiarities of colonial geography. Madagali was right on the border between three colonial territories: the Germans in present-day Cameroon, the English west of them, the French to the north. Besides, after the First World War the turnover of the Kamerun colony to Britain and France meant redrawing the colonial borders around and in the mountains, a marginal area that served as a bargaining chip in the negotiations between the three – later two – powers.Footnote 70 For some time Yaji managed to play them against each other, and the vagueness of the precise border created a splendid opportunity to intensify his hold on the population.

In fact, discussion about border infringements characterized the relationship between the German and the English colonial officers in the area, and started right in the year of Hamman Yaji's instalment as Lamido. The German Lieutenant Dominik was accused of having ‘entered a village of Kilba, where, though meeting with no opposition, they killed seventeen people and took the same number prisoners returning to Garua with over a hundred head of cattle’. High Commissioner Lugard, who wrote this letter (and promised in a handwritten postscript to the report to verify it), pointed out that this was British territory, also acknowledged by the French, and urged von Puttkammer to take measures against Dominik, to ‘prevent the repetition of such regrettable incidents’.Footnote 71 Three months later, Dominik complained to the British about the ‘removal of the emir of Bornu’ from German territory; to this allegation Lugard answered – to von Puttkammer – that Dikwa, the town in question had never been German and that the sultan ‘came entirely of his own free will’.Footnote 72 Dominik was defended by von Puttkammer acting as a character witness, vouching for his pleasant personality.Footnote 73 A year later, Lugard had to respond to German charges that lamibe from the British side collected tribute in villages on the German side.Footnote 74 Not only did Hamman Yaji prefer the French (who did not interfere much with him), after his land had been transferred to the British the borders of his own land with that of other chiefs were redrawn on several occasions, as a number of diary entries in 1920 and 1921 testified. This constant redefinition of land ownership also set up the chiefs against each other, further destroying any remaining patron-client relationship that could mitigate the impact of slave raiding.

Overall, early colonial administration generally helped the Fulani chiefs against the ‘predations’ of the pagans, as the colonizers were thin on the ground and governed in fact by a concordance between them and the Moslem chiefs.Footnote 75 Eckert notes that the German attitude towards the slave raiding and keeping societies was even more permissive than the French one, in fact bordering on admiration for the Fulbe, which is one reason why German Kamerun remained a ‘notorious source of slaves in the first decade of colonial rule’.Footnote 76 Their principal worry was to keep the political agreements with the Moslem emirates intact, and German control remained largely nominal.Footnote 77 It took the Germans some time to realize that they were habitually fooled by the Fulani into helping them in slave raids under the pretence of action against anarchy and keeping the region calm. Yaji was not the only one to benefit from this period of transition. Similar opportunism occurred in the ‘French territories’, where the transition from French to German colonizers changed little on the ground:

The colonial structures at the arrival of the German colonizer hardly changed. The relations between the Habé (pagans) and the Fulbe remained those of vassals paying tribute to their feudal lords, with the proviso that European military might was put at the service of the existing autochthonous authorities, which played into the hands of the Fulbe chiefs. In fact, these German officers relied on the Lamibe; thus they helped them to officially establish Fulbe rule over those pagan groups that had rejected that rule, and never in the past had been subservient.Footnote 78

The British and the French were quick to criticize the Germans for their half-hearted policy towards slave raiding and trading, but often were not much more effective in implementing their own emancipatory policies.Footnote 79 Thus, for the mountain people like Kapsiki/Higi, genuine pacification came late. On the British side the Resident characterized the northern districts of Madagali, Cubunawa and Mubi in a report of 1920 as:

the most lawless, ill-governed places I have seen in Nigeria since the early years of the Northern Nigerian Protectorate. Slave dealing and slave raiding are rampant. … chiefs of minor importance were given rifles with which they were encouraged to attack the wretched pagans (who are) hiding like frightened monkeys on inaccessible hilltops … of course everyone goes about fully armed: spears, shields, bows and arrows, clubs etc.Footnote 80

In 1922 the Western part of the mountains was ceded to Great Britain as ‘Northern Cameroon’ and the first major expeditions ventured into the mountains from the western side. Though instructions were that ‘the pagans that have never been subjugated, for example, those living in the Mandara hills are to be left untouched for the moment’, a skirmish between montagnards and colonial forces ensued at Bazza, the first Higi taste of English colonial force. Shortly afterwards, some degree of administration was set up, but well into the thirties this did not amount to much.

The mountain people resisted the new colonizer as well, especially their taxes. But slowly the mountains became ‘quiet’. The British part, after the collapse of the League of Nations in 1942, became British Trust Territory, until with independence approaching in 1960, it would choose to belong to Nigeria.Footnote 81 Only during the 1950s, in the very last days of British and French rule, were the mountains drawn into the realm of administration.

Despite their initial resistance, peace was welcome for montagnards, and the liberation from the Fulani is fondly remembered. The memory of Yaji and his cronies is still fresh, and so gratitude for the liberation by the colonial powers and the appreciation of the pax colonialis, are readily expressed:

My first encounter with the chief of Wula, in the North of the Kapsiki area, was revealing. The chief looked me straight into the eyes, and asked: ‘Why have you, white people, left us? Why did you not stay?’ I started out to explain that independence had been forced on the colonizers, but he cut me short: ‘You have let the brown man [Fulbe] betray you. The brown man tricked you into leaving. You should have stayed.’ So much for any colonial guilt.Footnote 82

INFLATION IN AN ‘UNCOMMON MARKET’

Let us return to our main character, Hamman Yaji, who according to Vandu Zra Tè ‘bought calabashes with slaves’. Though Yaji was part of a much more general picture of slavery, he was exceptional in the ferocity and intensity of his slave raiding. Why? One factor has become clear: the vacuum created by the colonizers on the fringe of the former emirate and the support given to him by the early colonizers. The Fulbe world of the old emirate was fragmented and in the colonial interstice no new supralocal power structure had emerged. Three other factors should be examined: ecology, weaponry, and market. The climate in this part of the Sudanic belt was relatively wet in the nineteenth century, an important precondition for state formation, as both people and horses grew more abundant.Footnote 83 However, after the wet nineteenth century, the turn of the century experienced a series of droughts and famines, a locust plague in 1899, a drought in 1904, and in 1906 an epidemic of chicken pox.Footnote 84 The terrible drought of 1914 and 1915 was still uppermost in people's memories when I started my research. So Yaji operated in conditions in which people were impoverished, even sometimes selling their kinsmen in to slavery, and existence meant a struggle for sheer survival. The increase in slave raiding coincided with a series of natural disasters, a combination that made Yaji the ready emblem of all evil. To the extent that slavery was a means of survival for the victim populations, this only increased their resentment against their atrocious enemy.

Slave raiding is based upon military inequality. Horses have been for centuries the main ‘means of destruction’, in a type of battle that is strongly associated with Islam in the region: the cavalry attack. But against this weaponry, the montagnards were not without defense: bow and arrows scored many a small victory, especially in the rugged mountain terrain. This, admittedly skewed, balance on the battlefield changed however with the coming of the rifle. Before the mid-nineteenth century the trans-Sahara trade had furnished horses and muzzle-loading muskets, both of course paid for in slaves.Footnote 85 But these muskets did not greatly upset the balance in the battle field: Denham's account makes clear that muzzle-loaders were not a decisive force in the cavalry battles of his time. Reyna, in his Baghuirmi military history, mentions only the startling sound of muskets: ‘The dogs jumped from it.’Footnote 86 Most slave raiding in the Mandara Mountains prior to the coming of the colonials was done without muskets; the Kapsiki, at least, did not really know any type of guns till the arrival of colonial forces. But then the colonizers brought the much more effective breech-loading rifle, and from that moment onwards, the slaving field was not level any longer, and the military supremacy of the slave raiders became absolute. The diary shows Hamman Yaji continuously busy with obtaining rifles and ammunition, and much of his raiding was aimed at getting exchange value for rifles; transactions over rifles are meticulously recorded, down to the details of minor damage to a weapon.

Yaji became more ‘efficient’ at capturing and killing ‘pagans’, which brings us to a final consideration, the market. What happened to the slaves Hamman Yaji caught? House slaves, children and young women were the last to be captured, and often the last to be freed as well, so their perspectives are represented in the majority of the oral history tales collected by the anthropologists in the field. Van Santen cites at length a woman taken captive by the Fulbe of Hamman Yaji in MokoloFootnote 87 at the end of the Yaji era, who returned to Mokolo just before the Second World War. However, the stories usually come from domestic slaves who were lucky enough to stay alive, to return, and even those lucky ones still were slaves.

Yaji only occasionally mentions a sale (25/2/1917: ‘I received 50 shillings and two gowns for a slave girl’). Sometimes the villagers ransomed their women back (36 shillings, 7/11/1914), but most slave women were given away (21 & 22/2/1919). For ‘slaves’ – presumably men – there is the case of six slaves returned to Sena (a Higi village, 23/7/1913).Footnote 88 The diary never indicates a slave market. So it remains an open question how much Yaji actually profited from his slave raiding. It is difficult to gauge the slave market at the start of the twentieth century, but the market for plantation slaves had already disappeared. The global situation in slavery had changed drastically.Footnote 89 It is unlikely that many slaves from the Mandara region had in the past found their way to the south, as Moslem slavers rarely furnished slaves for that trade.Footnote 90 Nevertheless the end of the trans-Atlantic trade had changed the overall market situation.Footnote 91 As Lovejoy has shown, the slave markets of the Sokoto Caliphate in the nineteenth century were balanced between the trans-Atlantic, trans-Saharan trades on the one hand and the huge domestic slave market on the other; this market seems to have been remarkably stable.Footnote 92 At the start of the twentieth century the internal demand had disappeared.Footnote 93 With the trans-Saharan trade the situation was slightly different. The bulk of that trade collapsed in the first decades of the nineteenth century,Footnote 94 but there must have remained at least a trickle going, for the local, physical slave markets of Mora, Madagali, and Yola were still in existence. Footnote 95 In 1928 the English colonial resident Browne indicated that Madagali was still infamous as a slave market town.Footnote 96 Yet, much of the market must have slumped, and it is astonishing that Hamman Yaji never mentions the sale of his slaves. Kopytoff and Miers correctly state that: ‘The essential impossibility of extracting any surplus value from labor, does not, however, eliminate the exchange value of human beings.’Footnote 97 Yet getting a good market price is another thing and Yaji needed cash, for horses and guns. He never developed a plantation system, as did Sokoto in the nineteenth century.Footnote 98 So the story we started with, about the use of slaves in petty transactions, does ring true. Female slaves in particular did become a currency, as when he priced a horse at three slave girls. If he indeed used slaves to buy things as simple as a calebash that meant two things: that he had plenty of captives, but also that as the slaves had come to be used as currency they lost value and the system had become inflationary. In fact in his diary Yaji gives almost the same weight to the capture of cattle, which have had a commodity and exchange value for a much longer time.

In order to see how this ‘orgy of violence’ was brought about at the local level, let us look at the diary, at the most intense periods in his slave raiding. After the diary's start in September 1912, the relative absence of any raiding over the course of the period from the end of 1913 to the end of 1914, is remarkable. In 1915 as well the ‘low’ was 52 captives.Footnote 99 It is against the second half of 1915 that the true reign of terror starts, with more and larger raids. Why the interval? The conflict of 1914–15, between the British and the Germans, coincided with the time Yaji stopped raiding; the diary here is full of contacts with the whites, first the Germans, then the British. The numbers from cattle raiding give about the same picture: a lull during the war. Yaji never mentions his men being taken for service in the colonial army, but that is a possibility. It is clear that the Europeans needed his logistics: in mid-1914 he furnished 100 ‘carriers’, but those must have been slaves; late in 1914 he was instructed to deliver porters for the Germans, and mid-1915 he delivered 22 horses to the British in Mandara (the sultanate), which were paid for later. Immediately after the surrender of the Germans in June 1915, Yaji started raiding again, and on a sizeable scale: June 25 slaves, June 30 in Kamale (a Higi village under Gawar tutelage) 40 slaves and 56 cattle, a sizeable operation which suggests that he had his men and horses back.

As for the women – the most valuable captives for the internal Caliphate market – before 1914 slave girls were explicitly mentioned, and form the majority of the captives.Footnote 100 At the resumption of the raiding, they were only mentioned till 1917 and then at lower numbers; after 1917 it is just about ‘slaves’. In 1920 (14 January) the diary mentioned the sale of three slave girls as Yaji needed cash, but that is all. So it might well be that 1914 was a watershed year, in which colonial political fortunes reversed, but also changes in the market became apparent. The first reason is ecological; we saw that 1914 and 1915 were drought years, and even if the precise effects of drought on the slave markets are not overly clear, the slave market must have felt its impact. The drought probably increased supply: the montagnards sold their own people, the productivity of slaves was at an all time low and other value was scarce as well; cattle died in great numbers. A drought as severe as the 1914–15 inevitably lowers the value of human life.

While the early colony gradually became monetarized, it is doubtful whether this really penetrated Yaji's slave economy very quickly. Hogendorn discusses at some length whether slaves can be considered ‘money’ in the Caliphate, contrasting them with the cowries and Maria Theresia thaler serving as currency in the area.Footnote 101 Probably slaves were never so close to general coinage as in this period in the Mandara area. Cowries did not function here, nor the thaler. Whatever limited purpose money there was consisted of iron bars and goats, both serving mainly in bride price payments.Footnote 102 Slaves became their own coin, an ‘uncommon market’ which then suffered its own inflation, both through an increased supply and a lower demand.

This inflation, which dramatically reduceed the exchange value of slaves, might explain some of Yaji's extreme cruelty, as in the case of Sukur. In raids people die, but the deliberate slaughter of able bodied men is, in ‘normal slave times’, the destruction of capital. Some struggle for power with Sukur might have contributed to the violence, but at that time the struggle for power had already been decided in favour of the British colonials. The inflational dynamic may also clarify why Yaji seemed to have stopped rather easily. As Hogendorn's analysis shows, slavery is more difficult to eradicate when slaves are currency. The reverse holds as well: raiding can be stemmed by low prices. When inflation runs wild, the only way is to abandon it and shift to another currency; indeed, when the colonials halted Yaji's raiding, they had already introduced their own currency, and the monetary vacuum was disappearing. So in two ways the slave system had run its course: slaves were no longer the coin of the realm and their value had dissipated anyway. Also, after 1918 the colonial border situation steadily became clearer, and the division of the colonial spoils brought a greater attention of the British and the French to the area. Borders and a series of corrections to borders kept the Europeans on Yaji's doorstep.Footnote 103

So it was in the colonial interstice, before the settling of the border disputes, that the old system of slavery ran amok. Ecological problems had made any kind of tribute extraction problematic, the usual market had fallen away, and no other means of extraction presented itself.Footnote 104 Inflation meant that more raids were held than ever, and larger numbers of slaves which became worth less and less; so the attention turned more to cattle and even goats and sheep (744 in 1919!). Hamman Yaji's men became just a professional band of well-armed marauders. The fact that they raided even more in the wet season than in the dry months strengthens this view of raiding as a purely destructive system. Maybe Yaji saw the end of this rule coming when he turned to Mahdism. This is the period from which the tales of Vandu Zra Tè stem, when slavery was no longer an institutional relationship between people, but was pure destruction based upon an inflated market wringing the last profits out of a dying system.

CONCLUSION: DYNAMICS OF THE INTERSTICE

A long story should have a short conclusion. Hamman Yaji, the epitome of evil for the western Mandara montagnard populations, was both a man of his time and a figure of excess. His exploits at the turn of the century form an example of the dynamics during the colonial interstice, when traditional polities were shattered, and their exploitative relations loosened from their institutional context. The power vacuum created by the colonizers belongs to the vicissitudes of early indirect rule. The ‘slavocracies’ of West Africa, as one might well call polities like the Caliphate, presented a huge challenge to the colonizing powers. High Commissioner Lugard, for one, successfully pleaded with the Colonial Office to grant North Nigeria a more lenient policy of gradual abolition of slavery.Footnote 105 Both the situation on the ground and the grudging admiration many colonials had for the cultural sophistication of the Fulbe induced them to work through local rulers.Footnote 106 They had, in fact, no other viable option. The fact that the Europeans not only supported but actually reinforced local potentates became clear only much later, but anyway, the moral dilemma – that of bolstering a slavery based society – had to give way to the ‘logic of empire’. This gradual implementation of colonial rule is characteristic of the backwaters of the new realms.

But Hamman Yaji was also exceptional, his ravages made possible by some contingencies of colonial history. The presence of three colonial powers in a marginal area, the bickering about colonial borders and the internal strife between the European powers in question, deepened, and lengthened the political vacuum in this area. The introduction of new weapons shifted the uneasy military balance between raiders and raided, opening a window for ruthless slave hunting. At the same time severe ecological stress rendered all life cheap. Thus slaves became the principal coin at a time when the external slave markets were disappearing. With this larger supply, and a drastically reduced demand, inflation set in and the slave system ran wild. And thus did Hamman Yaji becoming the emblem of all that was evil in the past. Unwillingly and unwittingly, the colonizers were party to this frenzy of slavery; fortunately, when they fully took control, they also ended the darkest days these mountains ever saw.

Footnotes

*

I thank my colleagues Jan-Bart Gewald (African Studies Center) and Jan Jacobs (Tilburg University) for their valuable and constructive criticism on an earlier version of this article, as well as the anonymous reviewers for the Journal of African History. Research on the Kapsiki/Higi started in 1972–3, and proceeded with return visits every three to five years, the last one in January 2012. Grants from NWO/WOTRO, Utrecht University, the African Studies Center (Leiden), and Tilburg University are gratefully acknowledged.

References

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5 As collected by Judy Sterner, Jeanne-Francoise Vincent, José van Santen, Eldridge Mohammadou, and Godula Kosack. Many examples stem from my own fieldwork among the Kapsiki/Higi who straddle the border between the two countries.

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53 For an overview of the defensive processes generated by the slave threat, see Klein, M. A., ‘The slave trade and decentralized societies’, Journal of African History, 42:1 (2001), 4965Google Scholar; and Bah, T. M., ‘Slave-raiding and defensive systems south of Lake Chad from the sixteenth to the nineteenth century’, in Diouf, S. A. (ed.), Fighting the Slave Trade: West African Strategies (Oxford, 2003), 1530Google Scholar. For a discussion on defensive structures, see David, N. et al. , Performance and Agency: The DGB Sites of Northern Cameroon (Oxford, 2008)Google Scholar.

54 van Beek, W. E. A. and Avontuur, S., ‘The making of an environment: ecological history of the Kapsiki/Higi of North Cameroon and North-Eastern Nigeria’, in Gausset, Q., Whyte, M. A., and Birch-Thomsen, T. (eds.), Beyond Territory and Scarcity: Exploring Conflicts over Natural Resource Management (Uppsala, 2005), 7089Google Scholar.

55 Wolf called these fringe areas ‘target zones of slave-raiders’, or ‘shatter zones’. As an example, he described Central Nigeria, where the slave-raids from the south overlapped with those of the northern emirates. Wolf, E. R., Europe and the People without History (Berkeley, CA, 1982), 230Google Scholar.

56 Denham lost his horse, his clothes, and almost his life at the end of the siege, and quite miraculously managed to escape and rejoin his Arab war party: see Denham, Narrative of Travels, 341; Vincent, ‘Sur les traces’, 601.

57 Barth mentions the Mousgoum (‘Musgun’), living in an open and accessible countryside: ‘All these people hunting them down from every quarter, and carrying away yearly hundreds, nay thousands of slaves, must in the course of time exterminate this unfortunate tribe’ (cited in Barkindo, Sultanate, 50). However, the Mousgoum are still there; the impressions of the first Europeans must have been coloured by their own participation in the slave raids. See Schilder, K., Quest for Self-Esteem: State, Islam, and Moundang Ethnicity in Northern Cameroon (Leiden, 1994)Google Scholar.

58 Barkindo, Sultanate, 112.

59 van Beek, Kapsiki, 45.

60 Ibid, 26.

61 See for the Marghi, the Western neighbours of the Kapsiki/Higi, see Vaughan, J. H., ‘Mafakur: a limbic institution of the Marghi (Nigeria)’, in Kopytoff, I. and Miers, S. (eds.), Slavery in Africa: Historical and Anthropological Perspectives (Madison, WI, 1977), 85104Google Scholar. For the Mofu on their Eastern border, see J.-F. Vincent, Princes.

62 S. Morrison, ‘Clients and slaves in the development of the Mandara elite: Northern Cameroon in the nineteenth century’ (unpublished PhD thesis, Boston University, 1984).

63 Kosack, G., ‘Aus der Zeit der Sklaverei (Nordkamerun): alte Mafa erzählen’, Paideuma, 38 (1992), 177–94Google Scholar.

64 Kosack, ‘Aus der Zeit’, 193.

65 Lord Lugard, the first Commissioner for the Northern Nigeria Protectorate had been instrumental in this: see Lovejoy, Slavery, 293–4; and Goodridge, R. A., ‘The issue of slavery in the establishment of British rule in Northern Cameroun to 1927’, African Economic History, 22 (1994), 1936CrossRefGoogle Scholar. The German and French policies were far more ‘laissez faire’ based upon the vague hope that slavery would die a natural death, mixed with admiration for the Fulbe emirates: see Eckert, A. E., ‘Slavery in colonial Cameroon, 1880s to 1930s’, in Miers, S. and Klein, M. A. (eds.), Slavery and Colonial Rule in Africa (London, 1999), 133–48Google Scholar; and Weiss, H., The Illegal Trade in Slaves from German Northern Cameroon to British Northern Nigeria, Parts 1 and 2 (Helsinki, 1998)Google Scholar.

66 VerEecke, C., ‘The slave experience in Adamawa: past and present perspectives from Yola (Nigeria)’, Cahiers d’Études Africaines, 34:133 (1994)Google Scholar, 34.

67 Bauer, F., L'Expédition allemande Niger – Benoué – Lac Tchad (1902–1903), (Paris, 2002), 75–6Google Scholar.

68 Ibid. Mildouh is north of Sukur.

69 Barkindo, Sultanate, 35.

70 Yearwood, P. J., ‘“In a casual way with a blue pencil”: British policy and the partition of Kamerun, 1914–1919’, Canadian Journal of African Studies, 27:2 (1993), 234–5Google Scholar. The actual dispute over the border did not cease, though, and recently the International Court of Justice made the – hopefully – last in a long series of rulings on the issue: UN Press Release, ‘Nigeria, Cameroon sign agreement ending decades-old border dispute’, AFR/1397, 12 June 2006. For an overview, see Barkindo, B. M., ‘The Mandara astride the Nigeria-Cameroun boundary’, in Asiwaju, A. I. (ed.), Partitioned Africans: Ethnic Relations across Africa's International Boundaries 1884–1984 (London, 1985), 2949Google Scholar. Anyway, the Fulani are well used to being in several countries and to making the most out of this situation: Franz, C., ‘Fulbe continuity and change under five flags atop West Africa: territoriality, ethnicity, stratification, and national integration’, in Galaty, J. G. and Salzman, P. C. (eds.), Change and Development in Nomadic and Pastoral Societies (Leiden, 1981), 89114Google Scholar.

71 German Colonial Archives, Berlin, R 175F FA 1, Inbesitznahme des Schutzgebietes, 118/27, Angeblicher Grenzübergriff der Garoua-Expedition.- Untersuchungen wegen eins britische Protest, 4 Apr. 1902; RFA 175F FA 1/211-220, Britischen Anklage gegen Oberleutnant Dominik, 1902-1903; RFA 175F FA 1/73/189-191, Bericht von Gouverneur von Puttkamer an das Auswärtige Amt, 10 Jan. 1910; RFA 175F FA/1/74/41, Vorziehige Rückkehr des Oberleutnants Dominik nach Deutschland. – Bericht von Gouverneur von Puttkamer, 21 Mar. 1903.

72 German Colonial Archives, Berlin, R 175F FA 1, Inbesitznahme des Schutzgebietes, 73/100-104, Schreiben des militärischen Residenten von Brittisch-Bornou, C. Morragh (Úbersetzungen), 19–7 Apr. 1902.

73 German Colonial Archives, Berlin, R 175F FA 1, Inbesitznahme des Schutzgebietes, 73/215-217, Schreiben von Gouverneur von Putkamer, June 1902. This picture of Dominik is definitely on the rosy side, given his fierce reputation in the area.

74 German Colonial Archives, Berlin, R 175F FA 1, Inbesitznahme des Schutzgebietes, 73/55, Letter from Lord Lugard to Governor von Putkamer, May 1903; see also Wedi-Pasha, B., Die deutsche Mittelafrika-Politik 1871–1914 (Pfaffenweiler, Germany, 1992)Google Scholar.

75 Weiss, Illegal Trade, 126 ff.

76 Lovejoy, P. E. and Hogendorn, J. S. (eds.), Slow Death for Slavery: The Course of Abolition in Northern Nigeria, 1897–1936 (Cambridge, 1993), 267CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

77 The Germans were also busy with another project, hunting for gold. Rumours had it that the Mandara mountains contained considerable gold reserves, and a real geological expedition was mounted to find the truth, in 1909: no gold! Barkindo, Sultanate, 184, n. 69.

78 Lestringant, Le Pays de Guider au Cameroun : Essai d'histoire régionale (Paris, 1964), 162Google Scholar. Translation from the French by the author.

79 Weiss, Illegal Trade; German Colonial Archives, Berlin, R 175F FA 1, Inbesitznahme des Schutzgebietes, 75/210-218, Letter of Resident Westerby to Lieutenant Von Bülow, 2 Aug. 1902.

80 Kirk-Greene, Adamawa, 84.

81 Both Mandates, the British and the French, became the British and French Trust Territories under the UN in 1946. For the British part, a plebiscite was held in December 1959. The population of the British Cameroons chose to remain with British Cameroons. Cameroon got its independence in October 1960, and a second plebiscite had to be held to decide the question finally. The Northern territories, in which the Higi reside, chose to join Nigeria while the Southern territories (now the North-West and South-West privinces of Cameroon) chose Cameroon: see Anene, International Boundaries.

82 Similar instances are reported in other places in the mountains. Sterner was ‘embarrassed to find them thanking me for saving them from the Fulbe’. Sterner, Ways, 39.

83 See Thiermeyer, H., ‘Environmental and climatic history of Lake Chad during the Holocene’, in Krings, M. and Platte, E., Living with the Lake: Perspectives on History, Culture and Economy of Lake Chad (Köln, 2004), 47Google Scholar.

84 German Colonial Archives, Berlin, R 175F FA 1, Organisation und Aufgabe der Verwaltung, 120/202, Bericht Gouverneur von Puttkamer an das Auswärtige Amt, Oct. 1906.

85 Local horses were interbred with Arabian steeds for resistance against illnesses: see Webb, J. L. A. Jr., Desert Frontier: Ecological and Economic Change Along the Western Sahel, 1600–1850 (Madison, WI, 1995), 6870Google Scholar.

86 Reyna, S. P., Wars without End: The Political Economy of a Precolonial African State (Hanover, NH, 1990), 142Google Scholar.

87 van Santen, They Leave, 78.

88 This return might have been a ransom for a Yaji soldier caught during a failed raid on 12 July, but this is conjecture. Another reason might be that Sena was claimed by the Lamido of Gawar as his fief and that Yaji honored that claim, but then he did raid Sena and Kamale (for which the same holds) extensively. Mohammadou Lamidats, 264.

89 Pétré-Grenouilleau, O., Les Traites Négrières: Essai d'Histoire Globale (Paris, 2004), 181Google Scholar.

90 Lovejoy, P. E., ‘Islam, slavery, and political transformation in West Africa: constraints on the trans-Atlantic slave trade’, Outre Mers, 336/337 (2002), 247–82CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

91 For a discussion of this transition and its far-reaching influence, see McDougall, E. A., ‘In search of a desert-edge perspective: the Sahara-Sahel and the Atlantic trade, c. 1815–1890’, in Law, R. (ed.), From Slave Trade to ‘Legitimate’ Commerce: The Commercial Transition in Ninetheenth-Century West Africa (Cambridge, 1995), 215–39Google Scholar.

92 Lovejoy, Slavery, 96–100.

93 With the probable exception of young female slaves for concubinage, the demand for which has still not completely disappeared. Lovejoy Slavery, 117.

94 Austen, R. A., ‘The trans-Saharan slave trade: a tentative census’, in Gemery, and Hogendorn, Uncommon Market, 2376Google Scholar; Austen, R. A., ‘The Mediterranean Islamic slave trade out of Africa: a tentative census’, in Savage, E. (ed.), The Human Commodity: Perspectives on the Trans-Saharan Slave Trade, 222–7Google Scholar; Lovejoy, P. E., ‘Commercial sectors in the economy of the nineteenth-century Central Sudan: the trans-Saharan trade and the desert-side salt trade’, African Economic History, 13 (1984), 85116CrossRefGoogle Scholar; La Rue, G. M., ‘The frontiers of enslavement: Bagirmi and the trans-Saharan slave routes’, in Lovejoy, P. E. (ed.), Slavery on the Frontiers of Islam (Princeton, NJ, 2004), 37Google Scholar.

95 M. A. Klein and P. E. Lovejoy, ‘Slavery in West Africa’, in Gemery and Hogendorn, Uncommon Market, 193; E. A. McDougall, ‘Salt, Saharans and the trans-Saharan slave trade: nineteenth century developments’, in Savage, Human Commodity, 72.

96 Vaughan and Kirk-Greene, Diary, 43.

97 I. Kopytoff and S. Miers, ‘Introduction’, in Kopytoff and Miers, Slavery in Africa, 56.

98 Lovejoy, Slavery, 153–205.

99 Yaji does not mention in his diary a few raids undertaken in September 1913. Two villages near Madagali complained to the German Hauptmann Schwarz, who then forced Yaji to return the captives but did not take any other measures against him. Maybe Yaji did not record this ‘catch’ as he had to give it back. This, however, was an exception, and those two villages must have had good contacts with the German overlords. See German Colonial Archives, Berlin, R 175F FA 1, Organisation und Aufgabe der Verwaltung, 95, Marschtagebuch Hauptmann Schwarz, 1913; and Weiss Illegal Trade, 2, and 27–8.

100 Lovejoy, Slavery, 81–116.

101 Hogendorn, J. S., ‘Slaves as money in the Sokoto Caliphate’, in Stiansen, E. and Guyer, J. I. (eds.), Credit, Currencies and Culture: African Financial Institutions in Historical Perspective (Stockholm, 1999), 5671Google Scholar; Hogendorn, J. S. and Johnson, M., The Shell Money of the Slave Trade (Cambridge, 1986)CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

102 van Beek, Kapsiki; van Beek, W. E. A. and Avontuur, S., ‘Dynamics of agriculture in the Mandara Mountains: the case of the Kapsiki/Higi of Northern Cameroon and North-eastern Nigeria’, in Baroin, C., Seidensticker-Brikay, G., and Tijani, K. (eds.), Man and the Lake: Proceedings of the 12th Mega Chad Conference, Maiduguri, 2nd–9th December 2003 (Maiduguri, Nigeria, 2005), 335–82Google Scholar.

103 German Colonial Archives, Berlin, R 1001/3334/183-208, Landes- und völkerkundliche Expedition von Günter Tessman nach Neu-Kamerun 1913–19.

104 Goodridge, ‘Issue of slavery’, 29.

105 Lovejoy, Slavery, 291–317.

106 And thanks to that same sophistication, we do have Yaji's diary, without which this story could not have been told.