http://frontpagemagazine.com/Articles/Printable.asp?ID=17747

 

Black Slaves, Arab Masters
By Andrew G. <http://frontpagemagazine.com/Articles/authors.asp?ID=1056>  Bostom
FrontPageMagazine.com 
<http://frontpagemagazine.com/Articles/Printable.asp?ID=17747>  | April 18, 2005

A <http://washingtontimes.com/upi-breaking/20050405-074353-6532r.htm>  public 
protest in Washington, DC, on April 5, 2005 highlighted the current (ongoing, 
for centuries) plight of black Mauritanians enslaved by Arab masters. The final 
two decades of the 20th century, moreover, witnessed a jihad 
<http://www.nationalreview.com/comment/comment-eibner032503.asp>  genocide, 
including mass enslavement, perpetrated by the Arab Muslim Khartoum government 
against black Christians and animists in the Southern Sudan, and the same 
<http://www.nationalreview.com/comment/shea200406300855.asp>  governmentâs 
continued massacres and enslavement of Animist-Muslim blacks in Darfur. These 
tragic contemporary phenomena reflect the brutal living legacy of jihad 
slavery. 

Jihad Slavery

The fixed linkage between  jihad- a permanent, uniquely Islamic institution- 
and enslavement, provides a very tenable explanation for the unparalleled scale 
and persistence of slavery in Muslim dominions, and societies. This general 
observation applies as well to âspecializedâ forms of slavery, including 
the (procurement and) employment of eunuchs, slave soldiering (especially of 
adolescents), other forms of child slavery, and harem slavery. Jihad slavery, 
in its myriad manifestations, became a powerful instrument for both expansive 
Islamization, and the maintenance of Muslim societies. 

 

Juridical Rationale and Role in âIslamizationâ 

 

Patricia Crone, in her recent analysis of the origins and development of 
Islamic political thought, makes an important nexus between the mass captivity 
and enslavement of non-Muslims during jihad campaigns, and the prominent role 
of coercion in these major modalities of Islamization. Following a successful 
jihad, she notes:

 

Male captives might be killed or enslaved, whatever their religious 
affiliation. (People of the Book were not protected by Islamic law until they 
had accepted dhimma.) Captives might also be given the choice between Islam and 
death, or they might pronounce the confession of faith of their own accord to 
avoid execution: jurists ruled that their change of status was to be accepted 
even though they had only converted out of fear. Women and children captured in 
the course of the campaigns were usually enslaved, again regardless of their 
faithâNor should the importance of captives be underestimated. Muslim 
warriors routinely took large numbers of them. Leaving aside those who 
converted to avoid execution, some were ransomed and the rest enslaved, usually 
for domestic use. Dispersed in Muslim households, slaves almost always 
converted, encouraged or pressurized by their masters, driven by a need to bond 
with others, or slowly, becoming accustomed to seeing things through Muslim 
eyes even if they tried to resist. Though neither the dhimmi nor the slave had 
been faced with a choice between Islam and death, it would be absurd to deny 
that force played a major role in their conversion. 1

 

For the idolatrous Hindus, enslaved in vast numbers during the waves of  jihad 
conquests that ravaged the Indian subcontinent for well over a half millennium 
(beginning at the outset of the 8th century C.E.), the guiding principles of 
Islamic law regarding their fate were unequivocally coercive. Jihad slavery 
also contributed substantively to the growth of the Muslim population in India. 
K.S. Lal elucidates both of these points 2 :

 

The Hindus who naturally resisted Muslim occupation were considered to be 
rebels. Besides they were idolaters (mushrik) and could not be accorded the 
status of Kafirs, of the People of the Book - Christians and Jewsâ Muslim 
scriptures and treatises advocated jihad against idolaters for whom the law 
advocated only Islam or deathâ The fact was that the Muslim regime was giving 
[them] a choice between Islam and death only. Those who were killed in battle 
were dead and gone; but their dependents were made slaves. They ceased to be 
Hindus; they were made Musalmans in course of time if not immediately after 
captivityâslave taking in India was the most flourishing and successful 
[Muslim] missionary activityâEvery Sultan, as [a] champion of Islam, 
considered it a political necessity to plant or raise [the] Muslim population 
all over India for the Islamization of the country and countering native 
resistance.

 

Vryonis describes how jihad slavery, as practiced by the Seljuks and early 
Ottomans, was an important modality of Islamization in Asia Minor during the 
11th through the 14th century 3:

 

A further contributing factor to the decline in the numbers of Christian 
inhabitants was slaveryâSince the beginning of the Arab razzias into the land 
of Rum, human booty had come to constitute a very important portion of the 
spoils. There is ample testimony in the contemporary accounts that this 
situation did not change when the Turks took over the direction of the djihad 
in Anatolia. They enslaved men, women, and children from all major urban 
centers and from the countryside where the populations were defenseless. In the 
earlier years before the Turkish settlements were permanently affected in 
Anatolia, the captives were sent off to Persia and elsewhere, but after the 
establishment of the Anatolian Turkish principalities, a portion of the 
enslaved were retained in Anatolia for the service of the conquerors

 

After characterizing the coercive, often brutal methods used to impose the 
devshirme child levy, and the resulting attrition of the native Christian 
populations (i.e., from both expropriation and flight), Papoulia concludes that 
this Ottoman institution, a method of Islamization  par excellence, also 
constituted a de facto state of war 4:

 

âthat the sources speak of piasimo (seizure) aichmalotos paidon (capture) and 
arpage paidon (grabbing of children) indicates that the children lost through 
the devÃirme were understood as casualties of war. Of course, the question 
arises whether, according to Islamic law, it is possible to regard the 
devÃirme as a form of the state of war, although the Ottoman historians during 
the empire's golden age attempted to interpret this measure as a consequence of 
conquest by force beâanwa. It is true that the Greeks and the other peoples 
of the Balkan peninsula did not as a rule surrender without resistance, and 
therefore the fate of the conquered had to be determined according to the 
principles of the Koran regarding the Ahl-al-QitÃb: i.e. either to be 
exterminated or be compelled to convert to Islam or to enter the status of 
protection, of aman, by paying the taxes and particularly the cizye (poll-tax). 
The fact that the Ottomans, in the case of voluntary surrender, conceded 
certain privileges one of which was exemption from this heavy burden, indicates 
that its measure was understood as a penalization for the resistance of the 
population and the devshirme was an expresÂsion of the perpetuation of the 
state of war between the conqueror and the conqueredâ the sole existence of 
the institution of devshirme is sufficient to postulate the perpetuation of a 
state of war.

 

Under Shah Abbas I (1588-1626 C.E.), the Safavid Shiâite theocracy of Iran 
expanded its earlier system of slave razzias into the Christian Georgian and 
Armenian areas of the Caucasus. Georgian, Armenian, and Circassian inhabitants 
of the Caucasus were enslaved in large numbers, and converted, thereby, to 
Shiâa Islam. The males were made to serve as (primarily) military or 
administrative slaves, while the females were forced into harems. A transition 
apparently took place between the 17th and 18th centuries such that fewer of 
the slaves came from the Caucasus, while greater numbers came via the Persian 
Gulf, originating from Africa. 5 Ricks notes that by the reign of Shah Sultan 
Husayn, 

 

The size of the royal court had indeed expanded if the numbers of male and 
female slaves including white and black eunuchs are any indicators. According 
to a contemporary historian, Shah Sultan Husayn (d. 1722) made it a practice to 
arrive at Isfahanâs markets on the first days of the Iranian New Year (March 
21) with his entire court in attendance. It was estimated by the contemporary 
recorder that 5,000 male and female black and white slaves including the 100 
black eunuchs comprised the royal party. 6

 

Clement Huart, writing in the early 20th century (1907), observed that slaves, 
continued to be the most important component of the booty acquired during jihad 
campaigns or razzias 7:

 

Not too long ago several expeditions crossed AmoÃ-DeryÃ, i.e. the southern 
frontier of the steppes, and ravaged the eastern regions of Persia in order to 
procure slaves; other campaigns were launched into the very heart of unexplored 
Africa, setting fire to the inhabited areas and massacring the peaceful animist 
populations that lived there.  

 

Willis characterizes the timeless Islamic rationale for the enslavement of such 
âbarbarousâ African animists, as follows 8 :

 

âas the opposition of Islam to kufr erupted from every corner of malice and 
mistrust, the lands of the enslavable barbarian became the favorite hunting 
ground for the âpeople of reason and faithââthe parallels between slave 
and infidel began to fuse in the heat of jihad. Hence whether by capture or 
sale, it was as slave and not citizen that the kafir was destined to enter the 
Muslim domain. And since the condition of captives flowed from the status of 
their territories, the choice between freedom and servility came to rest on a 
single proof: the religion of a land is the religion of its amir (ruler); if he 
be Muslim, the land is a land of Islam (dar al-Islam);  if he be pagan, the 
land is a land of unbelief (dar al-kufr). Appended to this principle was the 
kindred notion that the religion of a land is the religion of its majority; if 
it be Muslim, the land is a land of Islam; if it be pagan, the land is a land 
of kufr, and its inhabitants can be reckoned within the categories of 
enslavement under Muslim law. Again, as slavery became a simile for infidelity, 
so too did freedom remain the signal feature of IslamâThe servile estate was 
hewn out of the ravaged remains of heathen villages- from the women and 
children who submitted to Islam and awaited their redemptionâ[according to 
Muslim jurist] al-Wanshirisi (d.1508), slavery is an affliction upon those who 
profess no Prophecy, who bear no allegiance to religious law. Moreover, slavery 
is an humiliation- a subjection- which rises from infidelity.

 

Based on his study and observations of  Muslim slave razzias gleaned while 
serving in the Sudan during the Mahdist jihad at the close of the 19th century, 
Winston Churchill wrote this description (in 1899) 9 :

 

all [of the Arab Muslim tribes in The Sudan], without exception, were hunters 
of men. To the great slave markets of Jeddah a continual stream of negro 
captives has flowed for hundreds of years. The invention of gunpowder and the 
adoption by the Arabs of firearms facilitated the trafficâThus the situation 
in the Sudan for several centuries may be summed up as follows: The dominant 
race of Arab invaders was increasingly spreading its blood, religion, customs, 
and language among the black aboriginal population, and at the same time it 
harried and enslaved themâThe warlike Arab tribes fought and brawled among 
themselves in ceaseless feud and strife. The negroes trembled in apprehension 
of capture, or rose locally against their oppressors.

 

All these elements of jihad slavery- its juridical rationale, employment as a 
method of forcible Islamization (for non-Muslims in general, and directed at 
Sub-Saharan African Animists, specifically), and its association with 
devshirme-like levies of adolescent males for slave soldiering- are apparent in 
the contemporary jihad being waged against the Animists and Christians of 
southern Sudan, by the Arab Muslim-dominated Khartoum regime 10.

 

Extent and Persistence

 

The scale and scope of Islamic slavery in Africa are comparable to the Western 
trans-Atlantic slave trade to the Americas, and as Willis has observed 
(somewhat wryly) 11, the former ââout-distances the more popular subject in 
its length of durationâ. Quantitative estimates for the trans-Atlantic slave 
trade (16th through the end of the 19th century) of 10,500,000 (or somewhat 
higher 12), are at least matched (if not exceeded by 50%) by a contemporary 
estimate for the Islamic slave trade out of Africa. Professor Ralph Austenâs 
working figure for this composite of the trans-Saharan, Red Sea, and Indian 
Ocean traffic generated by the Islamic slave trade from 650 through 1905 C.E., 
is 17,000,000. 13 Moreover, the plight of those enslaved animist peoples drawn 
from the savannah and northern forest belts of western and central Africa for 
the trans-Saharan trade was comparable to the sufferings experienced by the 
unfortunate victims of the trans-Atlantic slave trade. 14

 

In the nineteenth century, slaves reached the ports of Ottoman Tripoli by three 
main Saharan routes, all so harsh that the experience of slaves forced to 
travel them bore comparison with the horrors of the so-called 
âmiddle-passageâ of the Atlantic.

 

This illuminating comparison, important as it is, ignores other vast domains of 
jihad slavery: throughout Europe (Mediterranean and Western Europe, as well as 
Central and Eastern Europe, involving the Arabs [Western/Mediterranean], and 
later the Ottoman Turks and Tatars [Central and Eastern Europe]); Muscovite 
Russia (subjected to Tatar depredations); Asia Minor (under Seljuk and Ottoman 
domination); Persia, Armenia, and Georgia (subjected to the systematized jihad 
slavery campaigns waged by the Shiâite Safavids, in particular); and the 
Indian subcontinent (razzias and jihad campaigns by the Arabs in the 7th and 
8th centuries, and later depredations by the Ghaznavids, during the Delhi 
Sultanate, the Timurid jihad, and under the Mughals). As a cursory introduction 
to the extent of jihad slavery beyond the African continent, three brief 
examples are provided: the Seljuks in  Asia Minor (11th and 12th centuries); 
the Ottomans in the Balkans (15th century); and the Tatars in southern Poland 
and Muscovite Russia (mid-15th through 17th centuries). 

 

The capture of Christians in Asia Minor by the Seljuk Turks was very extensive 
in the 11th and 12th centuries. 15 Following the seizure and pillage of Edessa, 
16,000 were enslaved. 16 Michael the Syrian reported that when the Turks of Nur 
al-Din were brought into Cilicia by Mleh the Armenian, they enslaved 16,000 
Christians, whom they sold at Aleppo. 17 A major series of razzias conducted in 
the Greek provinces of Western Asia Minor enslaved thousands of Greeks (Vryonis 
believes the figure of 100,000 cited in a contemporary account is exaggerated 
18), and according to Michael the Syrian, they were sold in slave markets as 
distant as Persia. 19 During razzias conducted by the Turks in 1185 and over 
the next few years, 26,000 inhabitants from Cappadocia, Armenian, and 
Mesopotamia were captured and sent off to the slave markets. 20 Vryonis 
concludes 21 :

 

âthese few sources seem to indicate that the slave trade was a flourishing 
one. In fact, Asia Minor continued to be a major source of slaves for the 
Islamic world through the 14th century.

 

The Ottoman Sultans, in accord with Shariâa prescriptions, promoted jihad 
slavery aggressively in the Balkans, especially during the 15th century reigns 
of Mehmed I (1402-1421), Murad II (1421-1451), and Mehmed II (1451-1481). 22 
Alexandrescu-Dersca summarizes the considerable extent of this enslavement, and 
suggests the importance of its demographic effect 23 :           

 

The contemporary Turkish, Byzantine and Latin chroniclers are unanimous in 
recognizing that during the campaigns conducted on behalf of the unification of 
Greek and Latin Romania and the Slavic Balkans under the banner of Islam, as 
well as during their razzias on Christian territory, the Ottomans reduced 
masses of inhabitants to slavery.  The Ottoman chronicler AÅikpaÅazade 
relates that during the expedition of Ali pasha Evrenosoghlu in Hungary (1437), 
as well as on the return from the campaign of Murad II against Belgrade (1438), 
the number of captives surpassed that of the combatants. The Byzantine 
chronicler Ducas states that the inhabitants of Smederevo, which was occupied 
by the Ottomans, were led off into bondage. The same thing happened when the 
Turks of MenteÅe descended upon the islands of Rhodes and Cos and also during 
the expedition of the Ottoman fleet to Enos and Lesbos. Ducas even cites 
numbers:  70,000 inhabitants carried off into slavery during the campaign of 
Mehmed II in MorÃe (1460). The Italian Franciscan Bartholomà de Yano (Giano 
dellâUmbria) speaks about 60,000 to 70,000 slaves captured over the course of 
two expeditions of the akinÃis in Transylvania (1438) and about 300,000 to 
600,000 Hungarian captives. If these figures seem exaggerated, others seem more 
accurate:  forty inhabitants captured by the Turks of MenteÅe during a razzia 
in Rhodes, 7,000 inhabitants reduced to slavery following the siege of 
Thessalonika (1430), according to John Anagnostes, and ten thousand inhabitants 
led off into captivity during the siege of Mytilene (1462), according to the 
Metropolitan of Lesbos, Leonard of Chios. Given the present state of the 
documentation available to us, we cannot calculate the scale on which slaves 
were introduced into Turkish Romania by this method.  According to Bartholomà 
de Yano, it would amount to 400,000 slaves captured in the four years from 1437 
to 1443. Even allowing for a certain degree of exaggeration, we must 
acknowledge that slaves played an important demographic part during the 
fifteenth-century Ottoman expansion.  

 

Fisher 24 has analyzed the slave razzias conducted by the Muslim Crimean Tatars 
against the Christian populations of southern Poland and Muscovite Russia 
during the mid-15th through late 17th century (1463-1794). Relying upon 
admittedly incomplete sources (ââno doubt there are many more slave raids 
that the author has not uncoveredâ 25), his conservative tabulations 26 
indicate that at least 3 million (3,000,000) persons- men, women, and children- 
were captured and enslaved during this so-called âharvesting of the 
steppeâ. Fisher describes the plight of those enslaved: 27

 

âthe first ordeal [of the captive] was the long march to the Crimea. Often in 
chains and always on foot, many of the captives died en route. Since on many 
occasions the Tatar raiding party feared reprisals or, in the seventeenth 
century, attempts by Cossack bands to free the captives, the marches were 
hurried. Ill or wounded captives were usually killed rather than be allowed to 
slow the procession. Heberstein wroteâ âthe old and infirm men who will not 
fetch much as a sale, are given up to the Tatar youths either to be stoned, or 
thrown into the sea, or to be killed by any sort of death they might please.â 
An Ottoman traveler in the mid-sixteenth century who witnessed one such march 
of captives from Galicia marveled that any would reach their destination- the 
slave markets of Kefe. He complained that their treatment was so bad that the 
mortality rate would unnecessarily drive their price up beyond the reach of 
potential buyers such as himself. A Polish proverb stated: âOh how much 
better to lie on oneâs bier, than to be a captive on the way to Tartaryâ    
      

 

The persistence of Islamic slavery is as impressive and unique as its extent. 
Slavery was openly practiced in both Ottoman Turkey 28, and Shiâite (Qajar) 
Iran 29, through the first decade of the 20th century. As Toledano points out, 
30 regarding Ottoman Turkey, kul (administrative)/ harem slavery,

 

âsurvived at the core of the Ottoman elite until the demise of the empire and 
the fall of the house of Osman in the second decade of the 20th century.

 

Moreover, Ricks 31 indicates that despite the modernizing pressures and reforms 
culminating in the Iranian Constitutional Movement of 1905-1911, which 
effectively eliminated military and agricultural slavery, 

 

The presence of domestic slaves, however, in both the urban and rural regions 
of Southern Iran had not ceased as quickly. Some Iranians today attest to the 
continued presence of African and Indian slave girlsâ

 

Slavery on the Arabian peninsula was not abolished formally until 1962 in Saudi 
Arabia, 32 and 1970 in Yemen and Oman. 33 Writing in 1989, Gordon 34 observed 
that although Mauritania abolished slavery officially on July 15, 1980,

 

âas the government itself acknowledges, the practice is till alive and well. 
It is estimated that 200,000 men, women, and children are subject to being 
bought and sold like so many cattle in this North African country, toiling as 
domestics, shepherds, and farmhands.

 

Finally, as discussed earlier, there has been a recrudescence of jihad slavery, 
since 1983 in the Sudan. 35

 

An Overview of Eunuch Slavery-the âHideous Tradeâ

 

Eunuch slaves- males castrated usually between the ages of 4 and 12 (due to the 
high risk of death, preferentially, between ages 8 and 12) 36, were in 
considerable demand in Islamic societies. They served most notably as 
supervisors of women in the harems of the rulers and elites of the Ottoman 
Empire, its contemporary Muslim neighbors (such as Safavid Iran), and earlier 
Muslim dominions. The extent and persistence of eunuch slavery- becoming 
prominent within 200 years of the initial 7th century Arab jihad conquests 37, 
through the beginning of the 20th century 38- are peculiar to the Islamic 
incarnation of this aptly named âhideous tradeâ. For example, Toledano 
documents that as late as 1903, the Ottoman imperial harem contained from 400 
to 500 female slaves, supervised and guarded by 194 black African eunuchs. 39 

 

But an equally important and unique feature of Muslim eunuch slavery was the 
acquisition of eunuchs from foreign âslave producing areasâ 40, i.e., 
non-Muslim frontier zones subjected to razzias. As David Ayalon observed, 41

 

âthe overwhelming majority of the eunuchs, like the overwhelming majority of 
all other slaves in Islam, had been brought over from outside the borders of 
Muslim lands.

 

Eunuch slaves in China, in stark contrast, were almost exclusively Chinese 
procured locally. 42

 

Hogendorn 43 has identified the three main slave producing regions, as they 
evolved in importance over time, from the 8th through the late 19th centuries:

 

These areas were the forested parts of central and eastern Europe called by 
Muslims the âBild as-Saqalibaâ (âslave countryâ), the word saqlab 
meaning slave in Arabic (and related to the ethnic designation âSlavâ); the 
steppes of central Asia called the âBilad al-Atrakâ (âTurksâ countryâ 
or Turkestan); and eventually most important, the savanna and the fringes of 
the wooded territory south of the Sahara called the country of the blacks or 
âBilad as-Sudanâ. 

 

Lastly, given the crudeness of available surgical methods and absence of 
sterile techniques, the human gelding procedure by which eunuchs were 
âmanufacturedâ was associated with extraordinary rates of morbidity and 
mortality. Hogendorn describes the severity of the operation, and provides 
mortality information from West and East Africa: 44

 

Castration can be partial (removal of the testicles only or removal of the 
penis only), or total (removal of both). In the later period of the trade, that 
is, after Africa became the most important source for Mediterranean Islam, it 
appears that most eunuchs sold to the markets underwent total removal. This 
version of the operation, though considered most appropriate for slaves in 
constant proximity to harem members, posed a very high danger of death for two 
reasons. First was the extensive hemorrhaging, with the consequent possibility 
of almost immediate death. The hemorrhaging could not be stopped by traditional 
cauterization because that would close the urethra leading to eventual death 
because of inability to pass urine. The second danger lay in infection of the 
urethra, with the formation of pus blocking it and so causing death in a few 
days.

 

âwhen the castration was carried out in sub-Saharan West and West-Central 
Africaâa figure of 90% [is] often mentioned. Even higher death rates were 
occasionally reported, unsurprising in tropical areas where the danger of 
infection of wounds was especially high. At least one contemporary price 
quotation supports a figure of over 90% mortality: Turkish merchants are said 
to have been willing to pay 250 to 300 (Maria Theresa) dollars each for eunuchs 
in Borno (northeast Nigeria) at a time when the local price of young male 
slaves does not seem to have exceeded about 20 dollarsâMany sources indicate 
very high death rates from the operation in eastern Africa.. Richard 
Millantâs [1908] general figure for the Sudan and Ethiopia is 90%

 


Conclusion


 

Contemporary manifestations of Islamic slaveryâcertainly the razzias (raids) 
waged by Arab Muslim militias against their black Christian, animist, and 
animist-Muslim prey in both the southern Sudan and Darfurâand even in its own 
context, the persistence of slavery in Mauritania (again, black slaves, Arab 
masters)âreflect the pernicious impact of jihad slavery as an enduring Muslim 
institution. Even Ottoman society, arguably the most progressive in Muslim 
history, and upheld just <http://www.zaman.org/?bl=international&alt=&hn=14589> 
 recently at a United Nations conference as a paragon of Islamic ecumenism, 
never produced a William Wilberforce, much less a broad, religiously-based 
slavery abolition movement spearheaded by committed Muslim ulema. Indeed, it is 
only <http://www.frontpagemag.com/Articles/ReadArticle.asp?ID=9000>  modern 
Muslim freethinkers, anachronistically referred to as âapostatesâ, who have 
had the courage and intellectual integrity to renounce the jihad, including 
jihad slavery, unequivocally, and based upon an honest acknowledgement of its 
devastating military and social history. When the voices of these Muslim 
freethinkers are silenced in the Islamic worldâby imprisonment and torture, 
or executionâthe outcome is tragic, but hardly unexpected. That such 
insightful and courageous voices have been marginalized or ignored altogether 
in the West is equally tragic and reflects the distressing ignorance of Western 
policymaking elites.

 


Notes


1. Patricia Crone. Godâs Rule. Government and Islam. New York: Columbia 
University Press, 2004, pp. 371-72

2. K.S. Lal, Muslim Slave System India, New Delhi, Aditya Prakashan, 1994, pp. 
46, 69.

3. Speros Vryonis, Jr. The Decline of Medieval Hellenism and the Islamization 
of Asia Minor, 11th Through 15th Century, 1971, Berkeley: University of 
California Press, pp. 174-175.

4. Vasiliki Papoulia. âThe impact of devshirme on Greek societyâ in East 
Central European society and war in the prerevolutionary eighteenth century. 
Gunther E. Rothenberg, BÃla K. KirÃly and Peter F. Sugar, editors. Boulder : 
Social Science Monographs ; New York : Distributed by Columbia University 
Press, 1982,  pp. 555-556.

5. Thomas Ricks. âSlaves and Slave Trading in Shiâi Iran, AD 1500-1900â, 
Journal of Asian and African Studies, 2001, Vol. 36, pp. 407-418.

6. Ricks, âSlaves and Slave Trading in Shiâi Iranâ, pp. 411-412. 

7. Clement Huart. âLe droit de la guerreâ Revue du monde musulman, 1907, p. 
337. English translation by Michael J. Miller. 

8. John Ralph Willis. "Jihad and the ideology of enslavement", in Slaves and 
slavery in Muslim Africa- vol. 1. Islam and the ideology of enslavement, 
London, England; Totowa, N.J.: Frank Cass, 1985, pp. 17-18; 4.

9. Winston Churchill. The River War, Vol. II , London: Longmans, Green & Co., 
1899, pp. 248-50. 

10. John Eibner. âMy career redeeming slavesâ, Middle East Quarterly, 
December, 1999, Vol. 4, Number 4,  <http://www.meforum.org/article/449> 
http://www.meforum.org/article/449 . Eibner notes:

âbased on the pattern of slave raiding over the past fifteen years and the 
observations of Western and Arab travelers in southern Darfur and Kordofan, 
conservatively puts the number of chattel slaves close to or over 100,000. 
There are many more in state-owned concentration camps, euphemistically called 
"peace camps" by the government of Sudan, and in militant Qur'anic schools, 
where boys train to become mujahidun (warriors of jihad). 

11. John Ralph Willis. Slaves and slavery in Muslim Africa, Preface, p. vii.

12. This controversial topic is discussed here: Philip D. Curtin, Roger Antsey, 
J.E. Inikori. The Journal of African History, 1976, Vol. 17, pp. 595-627. 

13. John Ralph Willis. Slaves and slavery in Muslim Africa, Preface, p. x. 

14. John Wright. âThe Mediterranean Middle Passage: The Nineteenth Century 
Slave Trade Between Triploi and the Levantâ, The Journal of North African 
Studies, 1996, Vol. 1, p. 44. 

15. Vryonis, The Decline of Medieval Hellenism, p.175, note 245.

16. Bar Hebraeus. The chronography of Gregory AbÃ'l Faraj, the son of Aaron, 
the Hebrew physician, commonly known as Bar Hebraeus; being the first part of 
his political history of the world, translated from the Syriac by Ernest A. 
Wallis Budge, Oxford University Press, 1932, Vol. 1, pp. 268-273; Michael the 
Syrian, Chronique de Michel le Syrien, Patriarche Jacobite d'Antioche 
(1166-1199), translated by J-B Chabot, 1895, Vol. 3, p. 331. 

17. Michael the Syrian, Chronique, Vol. 3, p. 331. 

18. Vryonis, The Decline of Medieval Hellenism, p.175, note 245.

19. Michael the Syrian, Chronique, Vol. 3, p. 369. 

20. Michael the Syrian, Chronique, Vol. 3, pp. 401-402; Bar Hebraeus, The 
Chronography, Vol. 1, p. 321.

21. Vryonis, The Decline of Medieval Hellenism, p.175, note 245. 

22. M-M Alexandrescu-Dersca Bulgaru. âLe role des escalves en Romanie turque 
au XVe siecleâ Byzantinische Forschungen, vol. 11, 1987, p. 15. 

23. Alexandrescu-Dersca Bulgaru, âLe role des escalves en Romanie turque au 
XVe siecleâ, pp. 16-17. 

24. Alan Fisher âMuscovy and the Black Sea Slave Tradeâ, Canadian American 
Slavic Studies, 1972, Vol. 6, pp. 575-594.

25. Fisher âMuscovy and the Black Sea Slave Tradeâ, p. 579, note 17.

26. Fisher âMuscovy and the Black Sea Slave Tradeâ, pp. 580-582.

27. Fisher âMuscovy and the Black Sea Slave Tradeâ, pp. 582-583.

28. Reuben Levy, The Social Structure of Islam, Cambridge University Press, 
1957, p. 88.

29. Ricks, âSlaves and Slave Trading in Shiâi Iranâ, p. 408. 

30. Ehud Toledano. Slavery and Abolition in the Ottoman Middle East, Seattle: 
University of Washington Press, 1998, p. 53.

31. Ricks, âSlaves and Slave Trading in Shiâi Iranâ, p. 415.

32. Murray Gordon. Slavery in the Arab World, New York: New Amsterdam, 1989, p. 
232.

33. Gordon. Slavery in the Arab World, p. 234.

34. Gordon. Slavery in the Arab World, Preface, second page (pages not 
numbered).

35. Eibner, âMy career redeeming slavesâ. 

36. Jan Hogendorn. âThe Hideous Trade. Economic Aspects of the 
âManufactureâ and Sale of Eunuchsâ, Paideuma, 1999, Vol. 45, p. 143, 
especially, note 25. 

37. Hogendorn. âThe Hideous Tradeâ, p. 137.

38. Ehud Toledano. âThe Imperial Eunuchs of Istanbul: From Africa to the 
Heart of Islamâ, Middle Eastern Studies, 1984, Vol. 20, pp. 379-390.

39. Toledano. âThe Imperial Eunuchs of Istanbulâ, pp. 380-381.

40. Hogendorn. âThe Hideous Tradeâ, p. 138.

41. David Ayalon. âOn the Eunuchs in Islamâ, Jerusalem Studies in Arabic 
and Islam, 1979, Vol. 1, pp. 69-70.

42. Hogendorn. âThe Hideous Tradeâ, p. 139, note 5.

43. Hogendorn. âThe Hideous Tradeâ, p. 139.

44. Hogendorn. âThe Hideous Tradeâ, pp. 143, 145-146.



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