From the beginning of the nineteenth century, Nyamwezi long-distance
trading caravans dominated the central routes through Tanzania, stretching
from Mrima coast ports such as Bagamoyo and Saadani to Ujiji on Lake
Tanganyika. Despite the inroads of Omani Arab and Swahili trading
enterprises from the middle of the century, the Nyamwezi maintained a
position of strength. In the second half of the nineteenth century, market
relations emerged as the dominant form of economic organization along the
central routes, although the market for many commodities was clearly
fractured by transport difficulties, and non-market relations frequently
substituted for weakly developed commercial institutions and tools. Most
caravan porters in nineteenth-century Tanzania were free wage workers, and
nearly all were clearly migrant or itinerant labourers. The development of
a labour market for caravan porters was an early and significant stage in the
transition to capitalism, which began in a period of violence and political
upheaval. Clearly, this has implications for how scholars should view broader
processes of economic transformation prior to the imposition of colonial rule,
which cut short a series of significant indigenous innovations.The argument that porters were mostly wage labourers rests on evidence
that their labour was bought and sold according to fluctuating labour market
conditions. Market conditions in the second half of the nineteenth century
shows a broadly rising demand for porters, a demand that could only be met
if caravan operators offered adequate wages and observed the customs
established within porter work culture. Thus, market conditions along the
central routes contributed to the development of a free wage labour,
characterized by a unique labour culture.
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