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2 External demand

  • Janel M. Fontaine
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Slave trading in the Early Middle Ages
This chapter is in the book Slave trading in the Early Middle Ages

Abstract

This chapter serves as a companion to Chapter 1, with a focus on regions other than the British Isles and the Czech lands. Slave labour in the Viking world, Rus, Francia, Hungary, Byzantium, and the Islamic world varied widely, ranging from small-scale agricultural work in the North Atlantic to eunuchs and slave soldiers in Iberia and the Middle East. Discussion of each of these regions pays special attention to instances in which British, Irish, and Slavic slaves are distinguishable, as in the case of saqāliba (Slavic) eunuchs and soldiers in the Umayyad caliphate and Irish slaves in Iceland. The regions themselves can be separated into two categories: centres of demand and transit zones. The Islamic world, Byzantium, and the Viking world served as the principal centres of demand that required the importation of vast numbers of foreign slaves, particularly in the tenth century. Francia, Hungary, and Rus served primarily as transit zones connecting the areas of supply to the centres of demand, and did not themselves experience comparable increases in the demand for slaves.

Abstract

This chapter serves as a companion to Chapter 1, with a focus on regions other than the British Isles and the Czech lands. Slave labour in the Viking world, Rus, Francia, Hungary, Byzantium, and the Islamic world varied widely, ranging from small-scale agricultural work in the North Atlantic to eunuchs and slave soldiers in Iberia and the Middle East. Discussion of each of these regions pays special attention to instances in which British, Irish, and Slavic slaves are distinguishable, as in the case of saqāliba (Slavic) eunuchs and soldiers in the Umayyad caliphate and Irish slaves in Iceland. The regions themselves can be separated into two categories: centres of demand and transit zones. The Islamic world, Byzantium, and the Viking world served as the principal centres of demand that required the importation of vast numbers of foreign slaves, particularly in the tenth century. Francia, Hungary, and Rus served primarily as transit zones connecting the areas of supply to the centres of demand, and did not themselves experience comparable increases in the demand for slaves.

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