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Collection of Zanzibar Trade Documents, 1806-1905, 1954, undated

 Collection
Identifier: MSS 1902

Scope and Contents

Collection of Zanzibar Trade Documents contains correspondence, photographs, contracts, and two Arabic manuscript volumes. The material included in this collection is chiefly related to trade and diplomatic relations between the United States and the Sultanate of Zanzibar in the 19th century.

Correspondence relates primarily to the trade relationships between Zanzibar officials and Salem-based ship captains. Most pieces of correspondence are in Arabic without English translation. A few letters have English translations contemporary to the Arabic writing. One piece of correspondence has a 21st century translation. A contract related to trade in the city of Mokha and a customs house clearing paper in Constantinople are also included.

Materials related to the U.S. Consul in Zanzibar include: a typewritten listing of U.S. Consuls in Africa and the Middle East probably dating to the 1910's; a 1905 listing of each of the Zanzibar Sultans; a piece of correspondence written in English from Said bin Sultan to Charles Ward, U.S. Consul in Zanzibar from 1845-1850; and two photographs: one of western merchants, Zanzibar merchants, and slaves; and one of a "Maharaja" and his family dated to 1882.

The first volume is written in Arabic without translation. The second is an 1839 hand-written copy made of an earlier work (dated Mahomedan year 504) on Islamic law written in poetic verse. The volume is annotated in Arabic and has some water damage.

A folder contains a photograph of an exhibit of pepper weights in the Peabody Museum's Maritime Hall and a 1954 list of Zanzibar-related materials donated to the museum.

Dates

  • Creation: 1806-1905, 1954, undated

Conditions Governing Access

This collection is open for research use.

Biographical / Historical

During the 19th century, the island of Zanzibar become an important central location for international trade with Africa. The island and its nearby coast were a part of the Sultanate of Oman until 1856, when the death of Said bin Sultan led to the splitting of the Oman Sultanate between his sons and the creation of the Sultanate of Zanzibar, which administered Zanzibar until 1964 (Zanzibar's Commercial Empire).

The island served as a hub for trade between the United States and Europe and Africa and Asia, as well as a direct exporter of slaves, cloves, and ivory from Africa (Zanzibar’s Commercial Empire).

Extent

0.417 Linear Feet (1 box, 1 flat file)

Language of Materials

English

Arabic

Abstract

Collection of Zanzibar Trade Documents contains correspondence, photographs, contracts, and two Arabic manuscript volumes. The material included in this collection is chiefly related to trade and diplomatic relations between the United States and the Sultanate of Zanzibar in the 19th century.

Physical Location

Phillips Library Stacks

Provenance

Most of this material was donated between 1910 and 1954 by: Margarette W. Brook; Mrs. E.C. Cook; Coralie Kenfield; Helen E. Waters; Mrs. J.P. Shepard and Dr. Thomas O. Shephard.

Bibliography and Related Collections

Bibliography:

Part 2: Zanzibar's commercial empire: 1800 to 1880. Part 2: Zanzibar's Commercial Empire: 1800 to 1880 – AP Central | College Board. (n.d.). Retrieved January 26, 2023, from https://apcentral.collegeboard.org/series/east-africa-indian-ocean-basin-world-economy-1760-1880/2-zanzibars-commercial-empire-1800-1880

Related Collections:

Charles Ward Papers, MSS 47

Processing Information

This material was placed in acid free folders. Many individual pieces of correspondence were previously pasted onto paper. These pieces of correspondence were removed from the papers wherever possible.

Title
COLLECTION OF ZANZIBAR TRADE DOCUMENTS, 1806-1905, 1954 undated
Author
Patrick Doyle
Date
January 2023
Description rules
Dacs
Language of description
English
Script of description
Latin

Repository Details

Part of the Phillips Library Repository

Contact:
Peabody Essex Museum
306 Newburyport Turnpike
Rowley MA 01969 USA