Economic role Slavery in Tunisia responded mainly to the needs of the citizen society. However, study of the main businesses of the city of Tunis, which has been performed by many scholars, does not indicate concentrated use of slaves in labour-intensive sectors. The major traditional industries like weaving, making the
chéchia or leather continued to be reserved for the local workforce. Labour in these businesses was still performed by free people and one could not attribute slavery to economic needs. However, in the oases of southern Tunisia, groups of slaves were employed in
agriculture and especially in
irrigation works. It was in the south of the country that slavery continued most prominently after its abolition in 1846 and into the twentieth century. Viviane Pâques relates similar phenomena, "At the oases, slaves were especially in use as domestic servants, for sinking wells and for digging canals. They worked from sunrise to sunset, getting only a plate of
couscous for their toil. When they become
chouchane, their status is that of
khammès and they get a percentage of the harvest. But their workload remains the same..."
Domestic Female slaves were primarily used as either domestic servants (
house slaves), or as
concubines (sex slaves). The sex slave-concubines of rich urban men who had given birth to the son of their enslaver were counted as the most privileged, since they became an
Umm walad and became free upon the death of their enslaver; the concubine of a Bedouin mainly lived the same life as the rest of the tribal members and the women of the family. Female domestic slaves lived a hard life and reproduction among slaves was low; it was noted that infant mortality was high among slaves, and that female slaves were often raped in their childhood and rarely lived to their forties, and that poorer slave owners often prostituted them. The sources are unanimous about the heavy domestic character of slavery in Tunisia. In fact, the possession of slaves constituted a mark of nobility in Tunis and the almost universal possession of one or more slaves for domestic tasks attests to a pronounced tendency of contempt for physical work, a traditional aristocratic characteristic. Some general practices in the Tunisian court contributed to entrench this tradition: the princes from the
Hafsid period down to the
Husainid beys solely employed slaves as palace guards and servants in their
harem. By integrating slaves into the daily life of the court, the princes provided a model of slave use for the thousands of aristocrats living at court and for the civic nobility.
Government In addition, as the French doctor and naturalist Jean-André Peyssonnel notes, Christian slaves of European origin who converted to Islam could rise to high positions - even to the chief offices of state, like the
Muradid Beys, whose dynasty was founded by a
Corsican slave, or several ministers of the Husainid dynasty, such as
Hayreddin Pasha, who was captured by
corsairs and sold in the
Istanbul slave markets. Some princes, like
Hammuda Pasha and
Ahmed I Bey were even born to slave mothers. Other slaves of European origin became corsairs themselves after converting to Islam and captured other European slaves (sometimes attacking their own hometowns). == Abolition ==