Nigeria THE NINETEENTH CENTURY: REVOLUTION AND RADICAL ADJUSTMENT
In the first decade of the nineteenth century, two
unrelated
developments that were to have a major influence on
virtually all
of the area that is now Nigeria ushered in a period of
radical
change. First, between 1804 and 1808, the Islamic holy war
of
Usman dan Fodio established the Sokoto Caliphate, which
not only
expanded to become the largest empire in Africa since the
fall of
Songhai but also had a profound influence on much of
Muslim
Africa to the west and to the east
(see
fig. 4). Second,
in 1807
Britain declared the transatlantic slave trade to be
illegal, an
action that occurred at a time when Britain was
responsible for
shipping more slaves to the Americas than any other
country.
Although the transatlantic slave trade did not end until
the
1860s, it was gradually replaced by other commodities,
especially
palm oil; the shift in trade had serious economic and
political
consequences in the interior, which led to increasing
British
intervention in the affairs of Yorubaland and the Niger
Delta.
The rise of the Sokoto Caliphate and the economic and
political
adjustment in the south strongly shaped the course of the
colonial conquest at the end of the nineteenth century.
Figure 4. The Sokoto Caliphate, Mid-Nineteenth Century
Data as of June 1991
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