Part 1: Sub-Sahara AfricaPart 2: Subjective Quiz Review: Part 1: Sub-Sahara Africa Part 2: Subjective Quiz Review Lsn 9
Part 1: Sub-Sahara AfricaTheme: The impact of trade: Part 1: Sub-Sahara Africa Theme: The impact of trade Lsn 9
Bantu: Bantu Among the most influential people of ancient Sub-Sahara Africa were those who spoke the Bantu languages
Bantu people showed an early readiness to migrate
Canoes enabled the Bantu to move easily
Agricultural surpluses enabled the Bantu to increase their population more rapidly than the hunting, gathering, and fishing people
Bantu: Bantu After about 1000 B.C., Bantu began to produce iron tools which enabled them to clear land and expand their zone of agriculture
Iron weapons allowed them to defeat competitors Iron spearheads and
hoes gave the Bantu
an advantage
Political Organization: Political Organization By 1000 A.D, most of the migrations were complete
Instead of continued migrations, Africans developed increasingly complex forms of government that enabled them to organize their existing societies more efficiently
Initially the Bantu established “stateless societies” in which they governed themselves mostly through family and kinship groups
Political Organization: Political Organization Stateless societies worked well in small-scale communities but as they grew into large populations, resources became strained and conflicts became more frequent
Bantu communities began to organize themselves militarily and this development encouraged more formal structures of government
Chiefdoms overrode kinship networks and imposed their own authority
In general, between 1000 and 1500, clusters of smaller entities gradually formed into larger states
Kingdom of the Kongo: Toward Centralization: Kingdom of the Kongo: Toward Centralization One of the most active areas of political development was the basin of the Congo (or Zaire) River
One of the most prosperous of the Congolese states was the Kingdom of the Kongo
Kingdom of the Kongo: Toward Centralization: Kingdom of the Kongo: Toward Centralization Perhaps the most tightly centralized of the early Bantu kingdoms
King and his officials who oversaw military, judicial, and financial affairs
Six provinces administered by governors
Each province had several districts administered by subordinate officials
Each district had villages ruled by chiefs
African Empires: African Empires West Africa
(Ghana, Mali, Songhay) East Africa
(Swahili
Coast,
Kilwa)
Southern
Africa
(Great
Zimbabwe)
Kingdoms Built on Trade: Kingdoms Built on Trade
Swahili Coast
Characteristics of a Civilization: Characteristics of a Civilization Intensive agricultural techniques
Specialization of labor
Cities
A social hierarchy
Organized religion and education
Development of complex forms of economic exchange
Development of new technologies
Advanced development of the arts. (This can include writing.)
Agriculture: Agriculture
Agriculture: Bananas: Agriculture: Bananas The principal result of the Bantu migrations was to spread agriculture to almost all parts of Africa
Yams, sorghum, and millet were dietary staples
In the early centuries A.D., bananas brought from Asia by Malay seafarers, became well established in Africa
The introduction of bananas introduced a fresh migratory surge
Iron metallurgy and bananas were the keys to population growth
Cities: Cities
Cities: Timbuktu: Cities: Timbuktu Located on the southern edge of the Sahara; served as an important post on the trans-Sahara caravan route
Founded 1100 A.D. as a seasonal camp by nomads
Incorporated within the Mali Empire by Mansa Musa who built the Great Mosque of Djingareyber and a royal residence, the Madugu Djingareyber
Cities: Timbuktu: Cities: Timbuktu
Center for the expansion of Islam
Intellectual and spiritual capital
Home of Sankore, a Koranic university
In the 14th century Timbuktu became an important focal point of the gold-salt trade
With the influx of North African merchants came the settlement of Muslim scholars
Cities: Gao: Cities: Gao Mansa Musa expanded Mali’s influence into Gao which, like Timbuktu, was a terminus for trans-Saharan caravans
As Mali declined, Gao reasserted itself and eventually became the Songhay Empire
Tomb of Askia at Gao
(early 16th Century)
Cities: Kilwa: Cities: Kilwa On the east coast (Swahili Coast), Kilwa was one of the busiest city-states
Traded gold, slaves, and ivory obtained from the interior for cotton, silk, perfume and pearls from India and porcelain from China
Cities: Great Zimbabwe: Cities: Great Zimbabwe zimbabwe means dwelling of a chief
About the early 13th Century, a huge stone complex known as Great Zimbabwe began to arise in what is now Tanzania
Walls 32 feet high and 16 feet thick
Stone towers, palaces, and public buildings
At its height during the late 15th Century, up to 18,000 people lived in the vicinity of Great Zimbabwe
Cities: Great Zimbabwe: Cities: Great Zimbabwe Kings residing at Great Zimbabwe controlled and taxed trade between the interior and coastal regions
Organized flow of gold, ivory, slaves, and local products from sources of supply to the coast
Social Hierarchy: Social Hierarchy Sunni Ali
King of Songhay (1464-1493)
Painting by Leo Dillon
Social Hierarchy: Social Hierarchy Kingdoms, empires, city states
Ruling elites
Military nobles
Administrative officials
Religious authorities
Wealthy merchants
Artisans
Business entrepreneurs
Common people
Peasants
Slaves Small states and kin-based societies
Aristocratic or ruling elite
Religious authorities
Beyond that principal considerations were kinship, sex and gender expectations, and age groupings
Social Hierarchy: Kinship Groups: Social Hierarchy: Kinship Groups Extended families and clans served as the main foundation of social and economic organization
Villagers functioned in society first as members of a family or clan
Notion of private property ownership did not exist in sub-Sahara Africa
Communities claimed rights to land and used it in common
Villages consisted of several extended family groups
Male heads of families jointly governed the village
Social Hierarchy: Sex and Gender Relations: Social Hierarchy: Sex and Gender Relations Sex largely determined work roles
Men usually did the heavy labor
Both sexes participated in planting and harvesting
Women tended to domestic chores and child rearing
Men largely monopolized public authority but women in sub-Sahara Africa generally had more opportunities than their counterparts elsewhere
Women enjoyed high honor as the sources of life
Women acted as merchants
Some women engaged in combat and formed all-female military units
Even the arrival of Islam did not drastically curtail opportunities for women
Social Hierarchy: Age Grades: Social Hierarchy: Age Grades Members of age grades performed tasks appropriate for their development and bonded with one another socially and politically
Age grades offered some integration to a society otherwise organized based on family and kinship
Social Hierarchy: Slavery: Social Hierarchy: Slavery Most slaves were captives of war
Others were debtors, suspected witches, and criminals
Slaveholding allowed owners to advance their personal wealth in the absence of private land ownership
After the 9th Century, expanded trade stimulated interest in slave traffic
Slave raiding increased to meet the demand
The Islamic slave trade between 750 and 1500 created a foundation for the future Atlantic slave trade
Economic Exchange: Economic Exchange Empire of Mali in the fourteenth century (dashed lines trace the main trans-Saharan routes of the period)
Economic Exchange: Camels: Economic Exchange: Camels Camels came to north Africa from Arabia, by way of Egypt and the Sudan, around the 7th Century B.C.
A caravan took 70 to 90 days to cross the Sahara, so the camel’s ability to travel long distances without water made it very useful
After about 300 A.D., camels had replaced horses and donkeys as the preferred means of transportation across the Sahara
Economic Exchange: Gold: Economic Exchange: Gold The Kingdom of Ghana became the most important commercial site in west Africa because it was the center for trade in gold
Ghana itself did not produce gold but the kings obtained gold from lands to the south and became wealthy by controlling and taxing the trade
Muslim merchants were especially eager to procure gold for customers in the Mediterranean basin and the Islamic world
Ghana also provided ivory and slaves
In exchange they received horses, cloth, small manufactured wares, and salt
Economic Exchange: Gold: Economic Exchange: Gold Mali benefited from trans-Sahara trade even more than did Ghana
From 13th until the late 15th Century Mali controlled and taxed almost all the trade passing through west Africa
The most prominent period was under the reign of Mansa Musa from 1312 to 1337
Economic Exchange: Economic Exchange Facsimile of a map drawn in Spain and dated to 1375, showing Mansa Musa, the king of Mali, holding a gold nugget.
Mansa Musa: Mansa Musa Expanded the kingdom of Mali by capturing the neighboring kingdom of Songhay and making its major city Timbuktu an important trade center
Made a pilgrimage to Mecca in 1324-1325 and dispensed so much gold in Cairo that the value of gold declined up to 25% on local markets
Religion and Education: Religion and Education Great Mosque at Kilwa
Native Religion: Native Religion Many African recognized a creator god as the single divine force responsible for setting the world in motion and providing it with order
Beneath him were many lesser gods associated with the sun, wind, rain, trees, rivers, and other natural features
Unlike the supreme creator god, these lesser gods actively participated in the workings of the world
Diviners were religious specialists who had the power to mediate between humanity and supernatural beings
Religion: Christianity: Religion: Christianity Around the middle of the 4th Century, Christianity established a foothold in the Kingdom of Axum, in the highlands of modern Ethiopia
Missionaries later established monasteries
From the 12th through the 16th Century, Christianity was especially strong in Ethiopia
As Islam spread, Ethiopian Christians became isolated from other Christian lands and therefore retained much of the original theology and rituals
Not until the 16th Century did visiting Portuguese mariners expose Ethiopian Christians to Christians from other lands Church of St. George
at Lalibela, Ethiopia
Influence of Trade on Religion: Influence of Trade on Religion Contact with Muslim merchants encouraged sub-Sahara west Africans and coastal east Africans to adopt Islam
It served as a cultural foundation for business relationships
Yet African ruling elites and merchants did not convert for purely mercenary reasons; they took their new faith seriously
Muslim Influence in West Africa: Muslim Influence in West Africa Muslim traders came on land routes which allowed Islam to spread wherever they traveled
Rulers like Mansa Musa supported Islamic scholars which spread the religion through religious schools and education Mosque at Djenne
Muslim Influence of the Swahili Coast: Muslim Influence of the Swahili Coast Islam arrived on the African coast in many waves, at different times, rather than in one great sweep
Because Muslim traders came via ship, penetrations were very localized compared to in west Africa
The Great Mosque at Kilwa built in the 12th Century is the oldest remaining mosque on the east African coast Great Mosque at Kilwa
Specialization: Specialization West African gold merchants using weights and measures
Specialization: Specialization Textile and pottery production
Metalsmithing
Leatherworking
Mining
Architecture
Trading
Religious scholars
New Technologies: New Technologies Gold bearing quartz vein at Essakan in modern Burkina Faso in west Africa
Mining and Iron: Mining and Iron The Kingdoms of Mali, Ghana, and Songhay all used superior iron metallurgy to gain advantages over their neighbors in terms of weapons and tools
Bambuk and Takkeda were mined for gold and copper
Mud Construction: Mud Construction Mansa Musa commissioned Abu-Ishaq Ibrahim-es-Saheli to construct his royal palace and the Djingareyber Mosque at Timbuktu
Es-Saheli introduced the use of burnt brick and mud as a building material to the region
Each year before the torrential summer rains, residents replastered the mosque’s walls and roof with mud
Art and Writing: Art and Writing Manuscript from Timbuktu
Books: Timbuktu: Books: Timbuktu As a center of learning and religious scholarship, Timbuktu became a vast hub for books
Books were written, stored, copied, imported, and distributed there
Currently some 18,000 manuscripts, many from ancient libraries, are housed in the Ahmed Baba Centre, named after the famous 15th century Timbuktu scholar, Ahmed Baba
Art: Lost-wax Process: Art: Lost-wax Process Create a wax sculpture of the desired object
Encase it in soft clay to create a clay mold
Bake the clay, causing the wax to melt
Pour hot molten metal into the mold
When the metal cools, break the clay mold to reveal the object Gold weights from Ghana made
using the lost-wax process
Part 2: Subjective Quiz Review: Part 2: Subjective Quiz Review Lsn 9
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