In the century prior to European colonialism, African societies and economies had begun rapidly and sometimes violently changing.
1 A vast literature, but best presented in the nineteenth-century military revolution illustrated in Richard J. Reid, Warfare in African History (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2012). In South-Central Africa, from the late eighteenth century, caravan traders, by importing foreign cloth and guns from the Eastern Swahili and Western Angolan ports, intensified the production and trade of international exports, first slaves and then ivory. A range of local manufactures, destined for regional and not global markets, were also increasingly commercialised as part of this economic process, namely raffia cloth, salt and, most of all, copper. Not only did Katangese copper ingots function as a type of regional currency, as they had for some centuries prior, but copper was manufactured into everyday items, weapons, bullets, decorative arts, and status objects, all of which could be traded regionally for international exports and imports.
Caravan traders from the west, east and north of Katanga contributed to the expansion of copper production in the early nineteenth century. From the east, the Nyamwezi of present-day central Tanzania pioneered the nineteenth-century copper trade, using copper for regalia, status items, and exchanging it for ivory destined for the east coast.
2 Andrew Roberts, ‘Nyamwezi Trade’, in Richard Gray and David Birmingham (eds), Pre-colonial African Trade: Essays on Trade in Central and Eastern Africa before 1900 (London: Oxford University Press, 1970), pp. 54–7. From the west, the Chokwe (and perhaps Lunda), as well the Ovimbundu began to seek trading opportunities in the interior.
3 Chokwe and Ovimbundu trade with Katanga is well documented. John Thornton has recently argued that eighteenth and nineteenth centuries encompassed a period of Lunda expansion northwards and eastwards, instead of the usual assumption of a westward expansion towards Angola: John K. Thornton, ‘Rethinking Lunda’s Expansion: 1720–1800 from Within’, paper presented to ‘Angola in the Era of the Slave Trade’, London, 19–20 June 2019. From the north, Luba traded salt and hoes for copper from Katanga.
4 Anne Wilson, ‘Long Distance Trade and the Luba Lomami Empire’, Journal of African History 13, 4 (1972), pp. 575–89, p. 580. Within Katanga, local polities, the Sanga in particular, responded to the increase in long-distance trade by producing large copper ingots.
5 Wilson, ‘Long Distance Trade’, pp. 579–80, citing Jacques Nenquin, Excavations at Sanga, 1957: The Protohistoric Necropolis (Tervuren: RMCA, 1963), pp. 194, 198, 200.The Eastern Lunda Kazembe kingdom centred on the Luapula River and Lake Mweru was at the nexus of these early nineteenth-century trade routes. A series of Portuguese expeditions describe the Kazembe polity in the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries organised around a wealthy, apparently all-powerful, and sometimes despotic Mwata Kazembe titleholder.
6 F. J. M. de Lacerda e Almeida, ‘Explorações dos Portuguezes no Sertão da África Meridional’, Annaes Maritimos e Coloniaes 4, 7–11 (1844); 5, 1–3 (1845); F.J. Pinto, ‘Explorações dos Portuguezes no Sertão da África Meridional’, Annaes Maritimos e Coloniaes 5, 4,5,7,9,10,11,12 (1845); P. J. Baptista, ‘Explorações dos Portuguezes no Sertão da África Meridional’, Annaes Maritimos e Coloniaes III, 5–7, 9–10 (1843); Antonio C. P. Gamitto King Kazembe (2 Vols., Lisbon: Junta de Investigaçŏes do Ultramar, 1960), trans. Ian Cunnison, orig. A. C. P Gamitto O Muata Cazembe (2 Vols. Lisbon, 1937; 1st edn., 1854); J. R. Graça, ‘Expidicão ao Muatayanvua: Diaro de Joaquim Rodrigues Graça’, Boletim da Sociedade de Geographia 9, 8/9 (1890). This description of the Kazembe polity obfuscates the range of reciprocal relationships that underpinned its political and economic structure. The diversity of its local sources of wealth, including salt, fish, copper and the fertile Luapula Valley, entwined the polity in an array of local political structures difficult to discern in Portuguese accounts focused on powerful kings and lucrative ivory exports.
7 For agriculture and salt, Giacomo Macola, The Kingdom of Kazembe: History and Politics in North-Eastern Zambia and Katanga to 1950 (Hamburg, LIT, 2002), 44–54; for long-distance trade, Macola, Kazembe, pp. 128–35. For fish and agriculture, David Gordon, Nachituti’s Gift: Economy, Society and Environment in Central Africa (Madison: University of Wisconsin Press, 2006), pp. 50–59. Instead, oral traditions, including those emanating from copper-producing elites, indicate webs of reciprocation.
8 For an example of political reciprocation related to dishing resources, see the role of narrative in defining relationships between Lunda aristocrats and owners of the lagoon, discussed in Gordon, Nachituti’s Gift, pp. 36–50. For example, the oral traditions that refer to the earliest chiefs who controlled the copper production of Katanga, notably, the Kipimpi, Kibuye and Kasongo titleholders, relate their settlement to that of the migration story in the Eastern Lunda oral tradition of Mwata Kazembe. They, in turn, tell how they formed alliances, through marriage, with local owners of the land and copper-producing artisans. This may or may not mean that the ancestors of these titleholders migrated from Lunda with Kazembe in the eighteenth century; they do reveal the early nineteenth-century ties of trade and clientage that came to be expressed in terms of these narratives.
9 Oral traditions ‘Procès-Verbal’. Also see R. Marchal, ‘Renseignements historiques relatifs à l’exploitation des mines de cuivre par les indigènes de la région de Luishia’, Bulletin des juridictions indigènes et du droit coutumier congolais BJIDCC (1936), p. 10. Copper was one way that reciprocal forms of tribute incorporated the diverse autonomous polities of Katanga into the titleholders that underpinned the Eastern Lunda Kazembe political structure, expressed in terms of relationships of fictive and perpetual kin.
10 For perpetual kinship, see Ian Cunnison, ‘Perpetual Kinship: A Political Institution of the Luapula Peoples’, Rhodes-Livingstone Journal, 20 (1956), 28–48; Gordon, Nachituti’s Gift, 27–50.Such interpretations of oral traditions are further supported by a close examination of oral testimony about production found in colonial documentary sources. These sources suggest that mining copper was labour intensive, even as it involved an extensive division of labour based in a differentiation of expertise, especially compared with other high risk or hyper-exploitative activities linked to the consolidation of polities, such as hunting elephants, trading slaves or collecting wild produce like rubber or wax. Copper production instead seemed akin to activities like the production and processing of fish, salt and raffia cloth, all of which were traded over long distances but involved local and rooted forms of production and expertise. Elites profited little from the production of copper in Katanga itself; instead, copper production distributed wealth across society, constituting cross-gender sodalities that included individuals of different expertise, such as miners, smelters, and those who produced energy inputs, food and other commodities essential to copper production. Different skills encouraged salaried labour, along with a relatively egalitarian form of copper rent: the final product belonged to many workers, including those who dug the mineral, who were involved in smelting, smithing, provision of wood and charcoal, and even those who fed the workers.
The most prominent position associated with copper production was a spiritual expert, a titled position that could be occupied by a man or a woman, termed
fondeur in the colonial sources, or
sendwe. This titled
sendwe position was a mediator, an owner of the copper mine, who gave permission for others to work the mine.
11 See for example the Inamfumo of Kalabi discussed by Hermenegildo Capelo and Roberto Ivens, De Angola á contra-costa: Descripcão de uma viagem através do continente africano (Lisbon: Impresa Naçional, 1886), p. 70. Nineteenth-century traveller’s accounts indicates that the
sendwe owner
of the mines were frequently women. In other regards, however, oral testimony suggests that a gendered division of labour was evident. Teams of men extracted the copper-bearing rocks with hoes and axes, while women and children washed and dried it. Nonetheless, the distinctive masculine culture found in the blacksmithing traditions of West-Central Africa does not seem prevalent.
12 Coleen E. Kriger, Pride of Men: Ironworking in Nineteenth-Century West-Central Africa (Portsmouth NH: Heinemann, 1999).Work began after harvest and at the commencement of the dry season. When enough mineral was acquired, the
sendwe titleholder chose an appropriate termite hill for a smelting site. Malachite ore was transported for several kilometres from the site of initial processing to the smelting furnace in special baskets made out of strong and fibrous wood. Near the furnace, charcoal was produced out of hardwood, and transported to the foundry furnace. The process took several months – during which time food had to be supplied to workers.
13 For wood, food, termite hills, religious and technical expertise, see ‘Procès-Verbale’, p. 14. For description of process, see de Hemptinne, ‘Les “Mangeurs”’, 380–82.Oral evidence collected by the colonial District Administrator, R. Marchal, indicates that by the 1850s or even prior, the exploitation of these deposits had reached a veritable boom, attracting labour from across the region. Even as the sources do not indicate the exact nature of servitude, they claim that ‘slaves’ could purchase their freedom after three to four seasons of copper mining.
14 For forms of slavery and manumission in this region during the nineteenth century based mostly on oral testimony, see David M. Gordon, ‘The Abolition of the Slave Trade and the Transformation of the South-Central African Interior’, William and Mary Quarterly 66, 4 (2009), pp. 915–38. An example of Catholic Missionary sources on slavery and manumission, in David M. Gordon, ‘Slavery and Redemption in the Catholic Missions of the Upper Congo, 1878–1909’, Slavery and Abolition, 38, 3 (2017), pp. 577–600. Testimonies indicate that migrant (or foreign) workers outnumbered original inhabitants. This was a cosmopolitan copper rush, with people arriving to make their fortune. The Kapururu titleholder ensured they were fed, which created the need for a food service, with those who provided food also paid in copper.
This form of labour differentiation suggests a degree of permanent settlement and political organisation linked to the production of copper. The mining camp of Lubushia (present-day Luishia), only one of several prosperous Katangese mining centres, was, according to informants in the 1930s, ‘aussi important que celui de l’Union Minière.’ An uninterrupted line of carriers transported the mineral from the mine to the foundry four kilometres away. In fact, informants remembered it being so busy that there had to be a two-way road. At the foundry, workers supplied charcoal, and they were also paid in copper. Even given potential exaggeration, these were years of prosperity. Marchal estimated that the number of miners at Lubushia mine surpassed 900, with approximately one-third migrants. According to his estimates, to feed these miners, Lubushia would need to have had four to five thousand inhabitants, an expansive economic endeavour for this region and this time period.
15 Marchal, ‘Renseignements historiques’, p. 15.Mining was also undertaken in a decentralised fashion, perhaps typical of older mines and foundries. In the area of a chief, called Kiembe, each village had one or two copper mining teams, consisting of ten to fifteen men, producing around 1,000 kg in a season. In these areas, migrants who had an agreement with the
sendwe titleholder could as well be part of teams, or form their own teams, which seems to have been the general preference. Kiembe claimed some twenty villages of his chieftaincy were involved in copper mining, with around 300 local workers and 200 migrants working on the copper fields.
16 Ibid.Worker remuneration, according to Marchal’s informants, was fairly standard, and rendered in the form of the famous 20 kg Katanga copper crosses (
fishinkoro).
17 De Hemptinne describes these as milopolo. All the families from the titleholder Katanga’s area where men mined copper and the women and children furnished food, received three crosses or about 60 kg of copper for one season’s work (up to five months), or equivalent trade items, including cloth, tools and arms. Two crosses were received immediately after work and another one or two months later, when the Katanga titleholder called all chiefs and distributed refined copper and trade items. Those from away, migrant workers who received food from Katanga as part of their payment, were paid from 30 to 50 kg of copper for a complete season. Workers used the copper to purchase cloth and slaves in addition to local manufactures. Thus, copper production multiplied into other economic activities.
In terms of political structure and authority, copper tribute reinforced the titleholding system found across this region (represented in the oral traditions discussed above). At the base of a triangle, independent teams of about fifteen men producing around 1,000 kg per season, gathered around lesser titleholders. In addition to each member of the team receiving three crosses (60 kg) as payment, each team gave a tribute (
mulambo) to the lesser titleholder of 100 kg. Moving up the triangle, lesser titleholders gave 60 kg as tribute to the chief
sendwe titleholder. Each
sendwe titleholder sent tribute to political titleholders, such as the Katanga titleholder, who in turn sent an annual tribute to regional political authorities at the apex of the triangle, such as the Kazembe titleholder. Katanga sent Kazembe around 450 kg annually, which had to be carried by 20 to 25 men. Marchal estimated that about 115,000 kg was distributed from workers through these titleholders yearly.
18 Marchal, ‘Renseignements historiques’, p. 17. The Kazembe apex of this copper production was so well known in the 1860s, prior to the consolidation of Msiri’s polity, that copper was known to come from ‘Kazembe’s country’, not Katanga.
19 As evidenced in collections made in by David Livingstone along the Shire in 1861 of copper wire from ‘Bazembe’s country’ (presumably Kazembe). National Museum of Scotland (henceforth NMS), Museum Reference A.762.4. Presumably the labeller used the common prefix “Ba” instead of the correct “Ka”. Personal communications, Sarah Warden and Lawrence Dritsas.That this oral testimony makes such a clear distinction between a local, ancestral community on the one hand and new migrants on the other suggests that migration in response to copper production had increased through the nineteenth century. By the middle of the century this was an expanding industry, spurred on by greater trade opportunities and the emergence of commodities that entered central Africa via Eastern African trade routes, in particular cloth. These imported commodities, in turn, inspired the need for local manufactures, copper in particular, that could be traded regionally for commodities, chiefly ivory, that underpinned international trade. By the middle of the century, the Nyamwezi (from present-day Tanzania) were the brokers of this regional-global trade.
20 Roberts, ‘Nyamwezi Trade’, p. 57. The best contemporary documentary record of Zanzibari and Nyamwezi copper traders in this period is from David Livingstone, The Last Journals of David Livingstone in Central Africa (London: John Murray, 1874), pp. 291, 298, 301, 310, 331–3, 337, 358–9. They dealt directly with the titleholders who sat at the apex of tribute triangles, and accumulated quantities of copper to exchange. One such titleholder who worked closely with the Eastern African traders was Nsama, who, at the time of his defeat by Hamed ben Muhammed (Tippu Tip), had some 700
frasilahs (24,500 lb.)
of copper stored in his village (alongside 68,250 lb of ivory), which he was then trading with the Nyamwezi.
21 François Bontinck (trans. and ed.), L’autobiographie de Hamed ben Mohammed el-Murjebi Tippo Tip, ca. 1840–1905 (Brussels: Académie Royale des Sciences d’Outre-Mer, 1974), pp. 56, 202–3, fn. 103.Beyond mining and trade, copper items were produced for various uses during this period. Here, the archaeological record, in particular De Maret’s informative work, needs to be supplemented by additional sources, including documentary sources and ethnographic collections. De Maret identified a gradual move towards the proliferation of small crosses and the production of larger copper ingots, probably due to inflationary pressures on copper (see Figures 6.1–6.3).
22 Pierre de Maret, ‘L’évolution monetaire du Shaba Centrale entre le 7e et le 18e siecle’, African Economic History 10 (1981), pp. 117–49. Pierre de Maret, ‘Histoires de croisettes’ in Luc de Heusch (ed.), Objets-signes d’Afrique (Tervuren, Musée royal de l’Afrique centrale, 1995), pp. 133–45. The point to appreciate, however, is also that due to the increasing availability of copper within expanding economies, finer amounts of copper were generally traded in the form of copper wire (or strips and nails) instead of crosses. (Dating the introduction of techniques of producing Katangese copper wire still requires investigation). In 1861, during his Zambezi Expedition (1858–64), David Livingstone acquired a finely smithed coil of copper wire in the Shire River (Manganja), identified as being from the country of Kazembe.
23 NMS, A.762.4. The label identifies the object as .Manganja from the country of Bazembe’. Henry Stanley collected a very similar copper wire coil, as illustrated below. In 1884–85, Capelo and Ivens detail a well-established technique of wire manufacture and use:
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Figure 6.1 Copper ingots from Sanga, Haut-Lomami, Katanga. From thirteenth to fifteenth century, 4cm in length (PO.0.0.79265, collection RMCA Tervuren; photo J.-M. Vandyck, RMCA Tervuren ©)
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Figure 6.2 Copper ingots from Sanga, Haut-Lomami, Katanga. Likely sixteenth to eighteenth century, 6cm in length (PO.0.0.79647, collection RMCA Tervuren; photo J.-M. Vandyck, RMCA Tervuren ©)
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Figure 6.3 Copper ingots from Sanga, Haut-Lomami, Katanga. 24.2cm x 18.3cm fishinkoro cross, likely nineteenth century (EO.1954.57.137, collection RMCA Tervuren; RMCA Tervuren ©)
The people of Katanga … reduce it [copper] to long and fine bars, which after spinning, reduce to wires the size of chords of European musical instruments, which they adorn on handles of axes, of weapons, and above all bundles of buffalo or gnu hair, to make the celebrated manillas and bracelets that today are fashionable across the countryside.
24 ‘A gente da Katanga … reduzem-no a longas e finas barras, que depois por fieiras sucessivas elles adelgaçam até ao ponto de fazerem fios da grossura de qualquer das cordas dos instrumentos musicaes da Europa, com que guarnecem cabos de machadas, canos de armas, e sobretudo feixes de pelo da cauda do búfalo ou gnú, para confeccionar as celebradas manilhas e braceletes, que têem hoje voga por todo o sertão.’ Capelo and Ivens, De Angola á Contra-costa, pp. 70–71. Production of copper and use of wire also observed by David Livingstone, Last Journals, 265. Livingstone collected a fine example of copper wire from the ‘Manganja’ to the east of the Copperbelt, and now in the National Museum of Scotland (NMS), Museum Reference A.762.4. Copper wire could be fashioned into many items and used for a range of decorative purposes, along with other manufactures such as hoes, axes, and knives. The currency function of copper crosses began to decline, as trade items began to be measured in terms of imported beads and cloth. These imports nonetheless spurred copper production, particularly wire (see Figure 6.4).
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Figure 6.4 Mitako wire coil collected by Henry M. Stanley, in the style collected by Livingstone and described by Capelo and Ivens (HO.1954.72.82, collection RMCA Tervuren; photo J.-M. Vandyck, RMCA Tervuren ©)
Ethnographic collections of objects from the late nineteenth century also indicate that artifacts, many of them made with copper wire, strips or nails, proliferated through this period. Around the Kazembe kingdom, copper was used as a form of status, decorating weaponry as well as adorning bodies of men and women. Artifacts collected near Lake Mweru by Emil Torday in 1904, but which appear to have been used for decades before that, include status items: a snuff box inlaid with copper and brass strips and a large knife, engraved with two triangles on each side, with a handle of wood inlaid with copper and brass wire, with copper/brass studs and a conical copper cap. A third object collected by Torday in the same Lake Mweru area, identified as a ‘Luba Charm’, is a remarkable small figure of hard black wood studded with copper nails, probably indicating the status of the spiritual figure or ancestor depicted.
25 British Museum (hereafter BM), Snuff box, Copper with brass, Asset #351644001, Reg. #Af1904,0611.12; Knife, Asset #1613039012, Reg. #Af1904,0611.31.a; Luba Charm: Asset #1613057240, Reg. #Af1904,0611.20. (On the knife and the ‘charm’, the studs here are labelled as copper, even though they are usually brass; I have not been able to inspect the items closely.)By the middle of the century, Katanga, then referred to as the land of Kazembe, was known across Central Africa as the place of copper and associated opportunities. Leaders like Katanga Kapururu encouraged in-migration, benefitting from their labour and exploitation of copper, and facilitating relationships from migrants and local masters of country. They also served as intermediaries between migrants, autochthonous titleholders, the Mwata Kazembe titleholder, and the growing number of Swahili and Nyamwezi traders.
26 Marchal, ‘Renseignements historiques’, p. 15; for family exploitation, also see ‘Procès-Verbale’, p. 14. Oral traditions expressed political relationships between these new migrant workers, long-standing owners, traders, and the titleholders of the Eastern Lunda, defining the rules of access to resources, systems of trade and clientage, and hence, when examined closely, an entire political economy.