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HISTORY
Zanzibar has lured traders, adventurers, plunderers and explorers
to its shores for centuries. The Assyrians, Sumerians, Egyptians,
Phoenicians, Indians, Chinese, Persians, Portuguese, Omani
Arabs, Dutch and English have all been here at one time or
another. Some, particularly the Shirazi Persians and Omani
Arabs, stayed to settle and rule. With this influence, Zanzibar
has become predominantly Islamic (97%) - the remaining 3%
is made up of Christians, Hindus and Sikhs. The earliest visitors
to Zanzibar were Arab traders who are said to have arrived
in the 8th century. The earliest building that remains on
Zanzibar is the mosque at Kizimkazi, which dates from 1107,
and is a present-day tourist attraction.
For centuries the Arabs sailed with the monsoon
winds from Oman to trade primarily in ivory, slaves and spices.
The two main islands, Unguja (normally known as Zanzibar Island)
and Pemba, provided an ideal base for the Omani Arabs, being
relatively small, and therefore fairly easy to defend. Indeed,
in 1832, Sultan Seyyid Said, of the Busaid dynasty that had
emerged in Oman, moved his Sultanate from Muscat to Zanzibar,
perhaps making it easier to protect, where he and his descendants
ruled for over 130 years. Most of the wealth lay in the hands
of the Arab community, who were the main landowners at that
time. They kept themselves to themselves, and generally did
not intermarry with the Africans.
This was not true of the Shirazi Persians who
came from the Middle East to settle on the East African coast.
The story goes that in AD 975, Abi Ben Sultan Hasan of Shiraz
in Persia (now Iran) had a terrible nightmare in which a rat
devoured the foundations of his house. He took this as an
omen that his community was to be devastated. Others in the
Shirazi court ridiculed the notion, but Sultan Hasan, his
family and some followers obviously took it very seriously
and they decided to migrate. They set out in seven dhows into
the Indian Ocean but were caught in a huge storm and separated.
Thus, landfalls were made at seven different places along
the East African coast, one of which was Zanzibar, and settlements
began.
Widespread intermarriage between Shirazis and
Africans gave rise to a coastal community with distinctive
features, and a language derived in part from Arabic, which
became known as Swahili. The name Swahili comes from the Arab
word sawahil, which means 'coast'. The Zanzibar descendants
of this group were not greatly involved in the lucrative slave,
spice and ivory trades. Instead, they immersed themselves
mainly in agriculture and fishing. Those Shirazi that did
not intermarry retained their identity as a separate group.
Two smaller communities were also established. Indian traders
arrived in connection with the spice and ivory trade, and
quickly settled as shopkeepers, traders, skilled artisans
and professionals. The British became involved in missionary
and trading activities in East Africa, and attempting to suppress
the slave trade centred in Zanzibar.
Zanzibar was once one of Africa's most prosperous
countries. The spices that it grew, so desired by the rest
of the world, made it so. The wealth derived from the spice
trade was augmented by the slave trade, indeed the spices
and the slaves went hand-in-hand as Zanzibar's spice plantations
depended on slave labor, and there are still sad relics of
this trade in human flesh to be found on the island. Furthermore,
Zanzibar was one of the most important ports in Africa.
Goods from Britain docked here
before they moved on to other parts of Africa. No longer very
prosperous in the fiscal sense, the island has a wealth of
historical monuments to visit which commemorate the African,
British and particularly Arab influences- sultan's palaces,
cathedrals, mosques, fortresses and old colonial houses. "Spice
Tours" are the ideal way to see the island's historic
sites and spice plantations. There is also a sanctuary for
the rare Zanzibar duiker and the red colobus monkey in the
protected Jozani Forest, just twenty-five kilometers from
the town. |