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Sokoto Caliphate
Manilla
索科托哈里發國
馬尼拉幣
Item number: A1281
Year: AD 1804-1903
Material: Copper
Size: 12.0 x 10.0 x 4.5 cm
Weight: 1635.8 g
Provenance: Teutoburger Münzauktion GmbH 2023
This is a copper manilla coin, shaped like a bracelet, minted in the Sokoto region of northwestern Nigeria between the late 19th and early 20th centuries. Historically, West Africa has been a significant source of gold; however, the local populace favoured red copper or brass for daily transactions and decorative purposes. Weighing 1.6 kg, this manilla was likely not intended for routine trade but rather served as a dowry gift for marriage or a symbolic ceremonial object within tribal contexts.
This manilla is entirely orange-red in colour and features a twisted spiral design at its centre. Its surface is adorned with a pattern composed of concentric circles, spiral motifs, triangles, and geometric lines of varying sizes.
Sokoto, in the 19th century, served as the capital of the Sokoto Caliphate, an Islamic state in West Africa. The Sokoto Caliphate was established in AD 1804 by the Islamic scholar Usman dan Fodio through a jihad, forming a loosely federated but highly influential power in contemporary West Africa. As a key transit hub between the Sahara Desert and the Gulf of Guinea, Sokoto was a vital commercial centre in the trans-Saharan trade network and a significant site for the slave trade. In AD 1853, British influence began to penetrate the declining Sokoto Caliphate, and after approximately half a century, it was annexed in AD 1903, becoming part of the British-controlled Northern Nigeria Protectorate.