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  • Making Money: Life, Death, and Early Modern Trade on Africa's Guinea Coastby Colleen E. Kriger
  • Toby Green
Colleen E. Kriger. Making Money: Life, Death, and Early Modern Trade on Africa's Guinea Coast. Ohio University Press, 2017. xiii + 233pp. Illustrations. Maps. Tables. Index. $28.95. Paper. ISBN: 9780896802964.

Colleen Kriger begins her new book, Making Money: Life, Death, and Early Modern Trade on Africa's Guinea Coast, on the interconnected lives and trade of individuals in West Africa with the microhistory of Hope Heath. Heath was a freed slave from the Gambia river region who had married a solider of the Royal African Company named William, eventually coming to live near London. On William's death, his family filed suit, claiming that she was not in fact the legitimate widow and that she had been but William's servant. In point of fact, Hope had kept a number of William's letters which demonstrated his devotion to her and proved that she was legitimately living as a free woman of color with her child and inheritance in late seventeenth-century London.

Heath's life illuminates many facets of Kriger's valuable book. It reveals the importance of legal frameworks for African actors in the Atlantic trade, the complex and mixed lives of people involved in the Atlantic trade in West Africa, and also the global presence of Africans from the mixed Atlantic trading communities. It also illustrates well the archival diligence which Kriger has demonstrated in piecing together this book; it is this level of fine-grained detail which allows her to achieve her aim, that of bringing a human pattern to the complexities of the Atlantic trade in "Guinea" (the region she writes of also being known in the scholarly literature as "Greater Senegambia" and "Upper Guinea," but referred to hereafter in this review simply as "Guinea").

Kriger is a distinguished historian of Western Africa who has written important works on cloth and iron production in West and West-Central Africa. These focused especially on labor and the production of manufactured goods, and this theme is also a feature of this book, which has a more determinedly Atlantic dimension than her earlier work. Kriger devotes her concluding chapter largely to the lives of employees of the Royal African Company and the careers they forged in Africa (with a smaller section on some of their African employees). Her second chapter, meanwhile, analyzes the different producers of goods which were traded in West Africa, cloth-workers in Gujarat and peasant iron producers in England. The ways in [End Page E34]which their labor interconnected with the development of the Royal African Company and the trade destined for Europe also offers her the chance to provide a very readable summary of the complexities involved in the Atlantic trading system as it operated in West Africa.

Indeed, this is one of the impressive features of this book. In her introduction, Kriger sets out one of her core aims as writing accessibly so as to reach a wide audience. In this, she succeeds admirably, and her chapters offer both illuminating windows onto aspects of the trade along with valuable summaries for beginners to the topic. The book's first chapter, for instance, offers a very useful account of the overall framework of trade in West Africa, its many complexities, and the ways in which the Atlantic trade formed a part of a wider whole.

For scholars, however, undoubtedly the most significant elements of the book are the chapters in which Kriger's archival excavations uncover a wealth of previously untapped detail which present the lives and engagement of Atlantic African individuals from Guinea in an entirely new light. Poring minutely through the company account books, Kriger is able to discuss at length the lives and interactions of European traders in Guinea, their African hosts and trading partners, and of captives and soldiers who formed part of the complex jigsaw of African-European relations. The account books also reveal a more detailed account of the process of enslavement, the paths of rebellion, and the lives of captives in this region of Africa than has hitherto been available.

The third chapter...

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