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Animal and Slave Trading<br />

Animal/Slave<br />

Cost<br />

1 . Bull<br />

100 s.p.<br />

2 . Camel<br />

1,000 s.p.<br />

3 . Cat<br />

3 s.p.<br />

4 . Chicken<br />

2 s.p.<br />

5 . Cow<br />

20 s.p.<br />

6 . Dog, domesticated<br />

20 s.p.<br />

7 . Dog, wild<br />

2 s.p.<br />

8 . Donkey<br />

300 s.p.<br />

9 . Falcon<br />

500 s.p.<br />

10.<br />

Goat<br />

10 s.p.<br />

11.<br />

Goose<br />

5 s.p.<br />

12.<br />

Hare<br />

4 s.p.<br />

13.<br />

Hawk<br />

300 s.p.<br />

14.<br />

Horse, Bedouin<br />

500 s.p.<br />

15.<br />

Horse, Brabant<br />

700 s.p.<br />

16.<br />

Horse, Percheron<br />

600 s.p.<br />

17.<br />

Horse, Pony, Dartmoor 200 s.p.<br />

18.<br />

Horse, Pony, Exmoor 250 s.p.<br />

19.<br />

Mule<br />

50 s.p.<br />

20.<br />

Ox<br />

100 s.p.<br />

21.<br />

Pigeon<br />

60 s.p.<br />

22.<br />

Sheep<br />

10 s.p.<br />

23.<br />

Slave, adult female* 500 s.p.<br />

24.<br />

Slave, adult male* 400 s.p.<br />

25.<br />

Slave, boy*<br />

200 s.p.<br />

26.<br />

Slave, girl*<br />

300 s.p.<br />

27.<br />

Swine<br />

10 s.p.<br />

28.<br />

Wolf<br />

200 s.p.<br />

*Prices for slaves vary by race and specialty<br />

Descriptions of these animals may be found<br />

in Neveria, a companion book that details animals<br />

and beasts. The animals listed above are considered<br />

to be sold alive or as food; the prices are not set<br />

here for skins or pelts.<br />

Slave-trading is popular in many cultures. In<br />

human societies, slaves are expensive. Female slaves<br />

are more expensive than male slaves 1 . Many noble<br />

families display their status by owning slaves from<br />

exotic places. Slaves may be obtained of nearly any<br />

age and race, and for nearly any purpose ranging<br />

from farming, housekeeping, physical labor, and<br />

sexual favors. Slaves may only become free if the<br />

master dies of natural causes with no heirs and the<br />

local community does not claim them, or if the<br />

master chooses to free the slave.<br />

Before a citizen may buy or sell slaves, they<br />

must register with the local government, paying 300<br />

s.p. as a fee that is good for the rest of the master’s<br />

life in that locale. Masters are obligated to properly<br />

feed and take care of their slaves, and masters may<br />

be executed for murdering their own slaves (see Justice<br />

in Chap. 6: Sociality).<br />

There are many reasons why slaves are so<br />

numerous. The most popular claim is that slaves<br />

are prisoners of war. Once slaves reproduce with<br />

other slaves, the slave population self-perpetuates.<br />

Less popular is the fact that many slaves are citizens<br />

who are abducted by pirates and sold elsewhere as<br />

slaves. Another prevalent source of slaves is when<br />

a husband acquires a debt, and must sell his wife<br />

and children into slavery to pay his debt. Finally,<br />

since baby boys are valued far more than baby girls,<br />

female infants are often abandoned. When found,<br />

the child is usually raised as a slave.<br />

SERVI.AUT.NASCUNTUR.<br />

AUT.FIUNT<br />

Chapter 9: Equipment<br />

Slaves are either born<br />

or made.<br />

1. This comment on the gender of slaves is referenced from Wage Labor and Guilds in Medieval Europe by Steven A.<br />

Epstein. For more information, see the References section at the end of this book.<br />

419

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