Resource Guide An Introduction to the History of Africa 2017–2018 The vision of the United States Academic Decathlon® is to provide students the opportunity to excel academically through team competition. Toll Free: 866-511-USAD (8723) • Direct: 712-326-9589 • Fax: 712-366-3701 • Email: info@usad.org • Website: www.usad.org This material may not be reproduced or transmitted, in whole or in part, by any means, including but not limited to photocopy, print, electronic, or internet display (public or private sites) or downloading, without prior written permission from USAD. Violators may be prosecuted. Copyright ®2017 by United Academic Decathlon®. All rights reserved. SKT, IASD - International, NA Shanghai Foreign Language School Affiliated to SISU - Shanghai, China SOCIAL SCIENCE INTRODUCTION............. 4 SECTION II SUMMARY........................................21 Introduction...................................................................... 5 Climates.............................................................................. 5 Geographic Characteristics of the African Continent............................................................................ 7 What Is in a Name?......................................................... 9 Peoples................................................................................ 9 Languages........................................................................11 Eurocentrism..................................................................11 Western Myths about Africa.........................11 European Religion and Myths about Africa..................................................................... 13 West African Empires.................................................28 Ghana......................................................................31 Mali..........................................................................31 SECTION III: EARLY AFRICAN AFRICA—MYTH AND CIVILIZATIONS.............23 REALITY...................... 5 Ancient Egypt.................................................................23 SECTION I: Roman Catholicism.........................................13 Calvinism............................................................14 Eurocentrism and the Atlantic Slave Trade...........................................................14 Afrocentrism..................................................................15 Cheikh Anta Diop...............................................16 Martin Gardiner Bernal..................................16 SECTION I SUMMARY..........................................17 SECTION II: HUMAN ORIGINS..........18 Evidence for Human Origins in Africa.................18 Archaeological Evidence of Tools................18 Fossil and Genetic Evidence..........................18 Hunter-Gatherers, Herders, and Farmers..........20 2 Sundiata Keïta...................................................31 Mansa Musa and Mansa Kaw......................33 Ibn Battuta and Mali.......................................34 Songhay................................................................ 34 Kanem-Bornu......................................................37 Other Types of African States.................................37 SECTION III SUMMARY...................................... 38 SECTION IV: TRADITIONAL AFRICAN RELIGION, ISLAM, AND CHRISTIANITY.............40 Traditional African Religion....................................40 Islam in Africa................................................................43 North Africa.........................................................43 Early Islam, Bilal, Axum, and Al-Azhar......43 West Africa.......................................................... 46 T he Sokoto Caliphate and Nana Asma’u.................................................................47 East Africa........................................................... 48 Swahili Culture..................................................48 Christianity in Africa..................................................50 USAD Social Science Resource Guide • 2017–2018 SKT, IASD - International, NA Shanghai Foreign Language School Affiliated to SISU - Shanghai, China Table of Contents SECTION V: Shanghai Foreign Language School Affiliated to SISU - Shanghai, China THE ATLANTIC AND WEST AFRICAN SLAVE TRADE..............53 Origins of the Atlantic Slave Trade.......................53 Introduction........................................................ 53 African Slavery before the Europeans..... 54 The Portuguese and the Spanish............... 55 The Dutch, the British, and the Asante... 58 Slavery in West Africa: The Narrative of Olaudah Equiano...........................................................62 The End of the Atlantic Slave Trade......................67 SECTION V SUMMARY....................................... 68 SECTION VI: SECTION VI SUMMARY...................................... 83 SECTION VII: THE RISE OF INDEPENDENT WEST AFRICA................ 84 The End of Imperial Rule in Africa........................84 Ghana, Pan-Africanism, and Kwame Nkrumah..........................................................................85 The Problems of Independence..............................86 Nigeria and the Nigerian-Biafran War.................86 Democracy in Independent Africa.........................88 Globalization and Africa............................................88 Challenges to National Unity in Mali....................90 Challenges to Economic Independence in Ghana............................................................................90 Other Issues in Twenty-First Century Africa..................................................................................92 Section VII Conclusion................................................93 SECTION VII SUMMARY.................................... 94 SKT, IASD - International, NA Egypt and Abyssinia (Ethiopia).................. 50 Christianity from Europe...............................51 SECTION IV SUMMARY.......................................52 IMPERIALISM AND COLONIALISM............... 70 CONCLUSION...............95 Introduction....................................................................70 TIMELINE OF EVENTS....96 The Berlin Conference................................................73 GLOSSARY.................102 The Nature of Imperial and Colonial Rule in West Africa.................................................................75 APPENDIX: MAPS.......113 The French in West Africa: Amadou Bamba and Touba.........................................................76 NOTES......................115 The British in West Africa: The British, the Asante, and the Gold Coast...............................78 BIBLIOGRAPHY..........120 Challenges to Colonial Systems..............................80 Section VI Conclusion.................................................83 USAD Social Science Resource Guide • 2017–2018 3 Westerners often create negative caricatures when imagining the continent of Africa. Poverty, disease, slavery, drought, and violence perhaps may come to mind. Some of us in our ignorance even see Africa as one country. As with people anywhere, Africans have had their share of misfortune, but they have also been extraordinarily resilient and successful in adapting to their environments. A major goal of this Resource Guide is to put the African experience into perspective, so you will see Africa and Africans as part of our shared planet and representative of all human experience. Imagine this: West Africa, the region of Africa that we will discuss in the greatest depth in this resource guide, is about four-fifths as large as the continental U.S.—about 2.5 million square miles. West Africa is about 2,000 miles across, almost the same distance as that between San Diego and Atlanta. While there is certainly a diversity of people within the United States, consider that while the U.S. is one country, West Africa is comprised of sixteen different nations, and Africa in its entirety has fifty-four countries. There are more than five hundred languages spoken in West Africa and more than two thousand languages spoken in Africa as a whole. Here is a final statistic to consider in embracing the sheer complexity of Africa: in terms of land mass, Africa is more than three times the size of the United States. Given Africa’s enormous distances and diversity of peoples and climates, the history of Africa 4 is extremely complex. African history is also the oldest on Earth as human beings originated in Africa. Remember that your resource guide on Africa is only an introduction. The history of Africa, with its multitude of ethnic groups, empires, and modern-day nations is incredibly wide-ranging and multifaceted. Given the limits of space and time, the discussion presented in this resource guide will often focus more specifically on the region of West Africa rather than on Africa as a whole. Some of the themes you will study are human origins, ancient Egypt, communal life, the slave trade, colonial rule, independence movements, and religions. Along the way, you will find successes and failures, heroes and villains, slaves and freedmen, rulers and subjects, small kingdoms and large empires as well as many examples of human ingenuity. NOTE TO STUDENTS: Throughout the resource guide you will notice that some terms have been both boldfaced and underlined—these terms are included in the glossary at the end of the resource guide. Also, students should be aware that early historical dates frequently vary depending on the source and are often highly contested. The dates presented in this resource guide are not necessarily definitive, but are those dates provided by the sources consulted by the author in writing this guide. USAD Social Science Resource Guide • 2017–2018 SKT, IASD - International, NA Shanghai Foreign Language School Affiliated to SISU - Shanghai, China Introduction Section I Introduction Africa is often referred to as the “Mother Continent” of humanity, for in the long term of human development, our oldest ancestors originated from Africa. Fossil, genetic, linguistic, and archaeological evidence confirm that all the members of your Academic Decathlon® team, as well as those you are competing against, are your distant cousins. Your friends and all the people across the world are your extended family, global Africans. People have different appearances because their ancestors have lived in different environments. Over time, all life, including humans, physically adapts to its environment to survive. Humans who live near the equator, for example, developed darker skin to protect their bodies from the strong sun. The process of change in any species over time, which was first proposed by Charles Darwin, is called natural selection—nature selects those most fit to survive. To put it a different way, if your body cannot adapt to its environment, you and others like you will die. Thus, “race” is biologically not possible. Of course, humans have different ethnicities distinguished from one another by language, culture, and nationality, but the extraordinary fact of humanity’s existence is our singularity, our family character, or to use our scientific description, our shared identity as Homo sapiens. That you are human is a major lesson in life that Africa can teach us. Let us look at humanity’s home another way. Imagine all human pre-history and history as a towering African Baobab tree, with the Americas, Asia, and Europe making up major branches of that tree. Given our African origins, Africa would provide the SKT, IASD - International, NA Shanghai Foreign Language School Affiliated to SISU - Shanghai, China Africa—Myth and Reality If we imagine all human pre-history and history as a towering African Baobab tree, the Americas, Asia, and Europe would make up major branches of the tree, and Africa would be the trunk and roots. Photo by Bernard Gagnon - Own work, CC BY-SA 3.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=3646805 trunk and roots to support the American, Asian, and European branches. Human history is African history. Climates There are a series of different climate zones in Africa, which range from the wet tropical zone along the equator in central Africa and become drier as one moves to the north or south, resulting in large USAD Social Science Resource Guide • 2017–2018 5 SKT, IASD - International, NA Shanghai Foreign Language School Affiliated to SISU - Shanghai, China Figure 1.1 Climate Map of Africa Shillington 2012: 5 6 USAD Social Science Resource Guide • 2017–2018 coast and tropical regions where high rainfall impeded land transportation. There are thousands of examples of ancient Saharan rock art, with some remaining visible today. Photo by David Stanley from Nanaimo, Canada - Prehistoric Rock Paintings, CC BY 2.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index. php?curid=51016097 deserts in the interior of northern and southern Africa. The exceptions are coastal regions that get proportionately more rainfall than adjacent regions in the interior, and the East African coast where the climate is isolated from the rest of Africa by a mountainous ridge and is most influenced by weather in the Indian Ocean. Generally, rainfall (or its absence) affects African climates more than any other factor.1 One of the most interesting features of climate change in Africa over the millennia has been the contraction and expansion of the Sahara Desert and its effect on life. More recently, researchers have discovered fossils of dinosaurs and bones of ancient peoples in the Sahara. Thousands of examples of Saharan rock art, showing long extinct animals drawn by ancient Africans, remain visible today.2 Scholars have concluded that the expansion and contraction of the Sahara Desert over time led to innovations in food production, new forms of irrigation, migratory movements, and the formation of centralized states along the Nile River and the Niger River to address the problems of increasingly dense populations.3 Historians of pre-colonial and colonial Africa are also interested in the interaction of pastoralists (animal herders) and farmers in the semi-arid Sahel region along the southern edge of the Sahara Desert and the influence of the Indian Ocean monsoons on East Africa. Other important climate factors include the impact of Africa’s mountain range along its east Africa is the world’s second largest continent (11.7 million square miles). The continent of Africa is mostly a plateau with over 16,000 miles of coastline and fifty-four countries. Africa contains about 20 percent of the world’s landmass. Some 20 percent of Africa is desert, and about fifteen percent is rain forest. Three United States, including Alaska and Hawaii, can fit on the African continent. One United States can comfortably stretch across North Africa’s Sahara Desert. The Nile River, which begins south of the equator and flows northward, is about 4,160 miles and is the world’s longest river. The size of Africa, like the history of Africa, has been significantly misrepresented in the past by Western cartographers, who made it smaller compared with the rest of the world. Kai Krause attempted to correct the misconception of the relative size of Africa in the map shown in Figure 1.2.4 The Center for Geographic Analysis (CGA) at Harvard University has created a far more complex and deep cartographic tool for academic use. Researchers designed an open source interactive map that overlays large databases of knowledge of Africa. It also contains six helpful base maps: http://worldmap.harvard.edu/africamap/. You can plot national borders, overland trade routes, slave ports, language groups, and so on. Africa is larger than the U.S., China, Europe, and India combined. As a result, distances that need to be traversed are much longer in Africa than in Europe or the Middle East. One historical consequence of this was that it cost proportionately more to transport goods for trade, so only products of extremely high value with respect to their weight, like gold or spices, were profitable in preindustrial Africa. Otherwise, Africans generally relied on food they produced in their own region, rather than importing it from far away. Long distances and large land areas also meant that in most places, the African population was not very dense (the Nile River Valley was a notable exception). This lack of population density allowed USAD Social Science Resource Guide • 2017–2018 7 SKT, IASD - International, NA Shanghai Foreign Language School Affiliated to SISU - Shanghai, China Geographic Characteristics of the African Continent growing populations to find new land without having to fight for it and made control over people, rather than land, the basis for power and wealth. It also made it possible to grow food using methods that relied more on land than labor, such as “slash-and- SKT, IASD - International, NA Shanghai Foreign Language School Affiliated to SISU - Shanghai, China Figure 1.2 burn” farming, which cleared new land with fire instead of applying fertilizer or rotating crops to restore productivity on existing farms. Low-labor farming methods enabled even single families to be self-sufficient, so there was less pressure to form Map of Africa showing its land mass relative to other countries 8 USAD Social Science Resource Guide • 2017–2018 In a continent where long dry seasons and deserts placed limits on farmers and where heavy rainy seasons limited travel in forested areas, rivers played an essential role in determining where and how humans lived and traveled. Africa has the world’s longest river, the Nile, which flows for about 4,200 miles from Central Africa to the Mediterranean Sea, and the world’s tenth-longest, the Congo-Zaire, which flows 2,718 miles from Central Africa to the Atlantic Ocean. Two other major rivers are the Niger, which flows around 2,600 miles through West Africa to the Atlantic Ocean, and the Zambezi, which flows about 1,800 miles from central Africa to the Indian Ocean. Many of the largest rivers are navigable for extremely long distances during the rainy season. For instance, the Niger River is navigable for more than 1,000 miles, roughly the distance between Philadelphia and Chicago. However, they all share one characteristic that makes them different from rivers in Europe or North America—all have rapids (also called cataracts) or waterfalls that prevent boats from sailing all of the way to the sea. This is because the continent is basically a large, flat “table” of fairly hard soil with relatively few mountains. Consequently, rainwater flows slowly toward the edge of the table and “tumbles” down the last stretch to the ocean. Although some rivers are navigable inland for short distances from the coast, navigation to the interior is impossible. Since the interior sections of most African rivers are navigable for long distances, they served as trade routes and food sources, which provided the means for larger states and larger populations to develop. As a consequence, the largest African populations developed in the interior, and the coast remained sparsely populated until the Europeans arrived. Although the continent is basically flat, there is a long stretch of mountains and plateaus high in eastern Africa, which was formed by the collision of two tectonic plates, and a few older mountain ranges in western Africa that are mostly of volcanic origin. Since most travel took place on foot, the mountains were not usually a barrier to human contact. Instead, they offered “islands” that provided a base for people whose culture was often different from As this political cartoon indicates, when European powers met at the Berlin Conference in 1884–85, they divided up Africa among them. The boundary lines of the colonies did not take into account African ethnic groups. that of the “flatlanders” who lived in the plains and forests. What Is in a Name? The name “Africa” has not always been used to refer to the continent of Africa. The name was initially used limitedly to refer to Roman North Africa after the fall of Carthage in 146 bce. The Arab conquerors of the seventh century referred to the same region as “Ifriqiya.” Subsequently, the name “Africa” was applied to the entire continent during and after the voyages of exploration in the fifteenth century by the Portuguese and other Europeans. Later, some Europeans began to use the word “Africa” to describe the “Other.”5 Africa was so diminished in the European mind that the name Africa took on a demeaning connotation, suggesting Africans were primitive both in culture and “race.” Peoples Until the early part of the twentieth century, academics were strongly influenced by Social Darwinists who took Charles Darwin’s ideas about the evolution of a single species and falsely applied them to human societies. These Eurocentrists argued that Western nations, which they believed were more advanced, were destined to rule those areas that they believed were less advanced. As apologists for empire, Europeans arranged Homo sapiens into “races” with Africans being seen as a lesser race. As was mentioned earlier, race is a social rather than a scientific construct. However, there is a great USAD Social Science Resource Guide • 2017–2018 9 SKT, IASD - International, NA Shanghai Foreign Language School Affiliated to SISU - Shanghai, China larger groups than in places where land was more limited. deal of ethnic diversity within Africa. If we use a broad definition of “ethnic group,” there are some three thousand ethnic groups across Africa, each with its own language dialect and culture. Physically, Africans have great variety due to the continent’s climate zones. Think for a moment about the diverse populations and subcultures that make up the United States today. Apply that to Africa on a much larger scale, and you will then have a better perception of the diversity of the many peoples of Africa. Figure 1.3 SKT, IASD - International, NA Shanghai Foreign Language School Affiliated to SISU - Shanghai, China Major West African ethnic groups include the Hausa, Yoruba, Igbo, Mande, Akan, and Fula. They are spread across several African countries because when Europeans drew boundary lines for their African colonies in 1884–85 at the Berlin Conference, they did not take into consideration African ethnic groups. Of those above, only the Igbo (28 million) of Nigeria are concentrated largely within a single African country. In contrast, the Mande (30 million) are spread across thirteen African countries. The Hausa (60 million), who live across the Sahel from Ghana to Sudan, are the largest West African eth- Map of Bantu migration. 10 USAD Social Science Resource Guide • 2017–2018 Shanghai Foreign Language School Affiliated to SISU - Shanghai, China Languages There are about two thousand languages spoken in Africa, which fall into five major categories: Afro-Asiatic, Nilo-Saharan, Niger-Congo (including the Bantu-speakers), Khoisan, and Austronesian. Many Africans also speak Arabic or a European colonial language, most commonly English, French, or Portuguese. Arguably, the languages most interesting to Africanists who research human origins are those in the Bantu-speaking group, which are part of the larger Niger-Congo language family. Using advanced computer technology that can establish word relationships between the 1,600 Bantu languages, researchers have concluded that around 1000 bce there was a population explosion near where Nigeria and Cameroon meet today.6 Over the course of centuries, the Bantu-speakers expanded across the Sahel and southward in waves, reaching northern South Africa by about 500 ce. The Bantu-speaking ethnic group of Nelson Mandela (1918–2013), the Xhosa, took on clicking sounds from the Khoisan peoples with whom they assimilated or whom they conquered as they moved south. The “X” in Xhosa designates one of its many clicking sounds. Swahili, which denotes a language and a culture, is spoken by East Africans who are largely Muslim and were once involved in significant maritime trading networks of the Indian Ocean. Swahili culture extends from southern Somalia to northern Mozambique. The name “Swahili” derives from the Arabic word meaning “coast.” Swahili is primarily a Bantu language influenced by Arabic, Hindi, Persian, English, and Portuguese. You can see the locations and names of African language groups using Harvard’s CGA map. Eurocentrism The process of adopting culture is called “centering,” and it influences how people evaluate everything they encounter. Those who employ European beliefs and attitudes to view the world are called “Eurocentric.” Some of their ideas include allegiance to a national state rather than a human ruler, re- liance on material science to solve problems, and the use of hierarchical structures to organize each individual’s relationships to others in society. As a corollary, centered perspectives divide the world into “things that are familiar” and “the Other.” This proved useful for Eurocentrists when it came to justifying the transatlantic slave trade, imperialism, and colonialism.7 Western Myths about Africa Historically much of what Westerners learned about Africa was affected by stories told by Europeans to justify slavery and colonial conquest, which in the United States led to Jim Crow laws that were enacted to deny newly freed slaves their civil and political rights. Western myths about Africa developed over the last six hundred years and remained entrenched well into the twentieth century. Marcus Garvey (1887–1940), Martin Luther King (19291968), and many other Civil Rights activists and leaders spent their lives working to dispel those myths. A representative source of Western fantasies about Africa is the important German historian and philosopher Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel (1770–1831), who wrote the following in his major work Philosophy of History: Africa is not a historical continent; it shows neither change nor development…; its Negro peoples have been capable of neither progress nor education. As we see them today, so they have always been.8 More recently, the Regius Professor of Modern History at Oxford University, Hugh Trevor-Roper (1914–2003), enraged Africanists in 1963 when he claimed on the BBC that: Perhaps in the near future, there will be some African history to teach. But at present there is none; there is only the history of Europeans in Africa…. The present world is so dominated by western European ideas, techniques and values, that for the last five centuries at least, in so far as the history of the world has significance, it is only European history that counts. We cannot afford to amuse ourselves with the unrewarding gyrations of barbarous tribes in picturesque but irrelevant corners of the globe.9 USAD Social Science Resource Guide • 2017–2018 11 SKT, IASD - International, NA nic group of Muslims. You can see the locations and names of African ethnic groups using Harvard University’s CGA maps. Additionally, other notions of Africa have eased into our consciousness through popular culture. You may be familiar with certain images of Africa from Hollywood films and the media. Africa is sometimes portrayed as an exotic place of colorful costumes, strange customs and rituals, and unending revelry and festivals. Visions of local wildlife and Masai warriors are the most used trope. Some movies show a wild and dangerous Africa of civil wars, warlords, and child soldiers. For Afro-Pessimists, Africa is broken because nothing works. Daunting cultural, environmental, and historical challenges plague the continent.10 Yet, Africa’s image in the West has not always been so negative. The Greek philosophers Plato (c. 428–c. 348 bce) and Aristotle (384–322 bce) thought highly of Egypt and Ethiopia and considered those African states to be the most advanced nations on earth. Plato used Egyptian knowledge to create his program for education and teaching. Ancient Greek traditions that held Africa in high regard remained in place in the West for more than two thousand years—from the 700s bce to the 1500s ce.11 Old Testament Hebrews—the Jews— concurred with the Greeks that Egypt was a place of advanced civilization. 12 Historian Hugh Trevor-Roper enraged Africanists with his Eurocentric views of Africa. Photo by Rob Mieremet / Anefo - Derived from Nationaal Archief, CC BYSA 3.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=38299043 What happened? The Atlantic slave trade and its rationalization by Europeans and Americans diminished the prestige of Africans. Those involved in and supportive of the slave trade argued that black Africans never developed civilization and that any evidence of civilization in Africa was brought there by foreign invaders. Proponents of the slave trade also offered the spurious rationalization that Africans who were forced into chattel slavery in the New World were being rescued from their “barbarism.” Western myths about Africa were expanded further by attempts to diminish Egypt’s contributions to world civilization and by categorizing Egyptian civilization as being separate from “Black Africa.” This delusion flew in the face of the Egyptian/Mediterranean and inner-African trans-Saharan connection that was many thousands of years old. Regardless of the environmental hostility of the Sahara Desert, the highways across the desert were sus- USAD Social Science Resource Guide • 2017–2018 SKT, IASD - International, NA Shanghai Foreign Language School Affiliated to SISU - Shanghai, China The German historian and philosopher Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel is a source of Western myths about Africa. Plato (left) and Aristotle (right), a detail of The School of Athens, a fresco by Raphael. Plato and Aristotle thought highly of Egypt and Ethiopia and considered those African states to be the most advanced nations on earth. tained, widespread, and reciprocal, much like the relationships ancient Greece and Rome had maintained with inner Europe. Some Western writers caricatured Africa as dark, alien, and evil, portraying it as a brooding jungle. Others described Africa as an open sunlit land of noble savages. The most prolific European mythmakers about Africa were the British. Britain’s imperial involvement in Africa led to a library of mythmaking about the British presence all over the continent. Until the 1950s, British literature about Africa usually conveyed a relationship of opposition between the image of the African and that of the Briton. For example, whereas the British were portrayed as brave, the Africans were shown as cowardly; where the British were seen as disciplined, the Africans were thought to lack self-control; where the British were civilized, the Africans were savages; Somewhat related to British power is an allegory about the relationship between British hunters and African lions. Often conveyed by African griots (teachers who convey oral traditions), this fable explains that because the hunters are the ones who write the books and tell the stories, the hunters are always shown as the ones who win. If lions wrote the books, they would at least occasionally win.13 The point here is that until the mid-twentieth century, most descriptions of Africa and Africans were written by Westerners, not Africans, and were about Western experiences in Africa rather than about Africans themselves or their cultures. European Religion and Myths about Africa Roman Catholicism Although Africa lies closer to Europe than any other continent except Asia, for a long period after the Roman Empire there was little interaction between Europe and Africa because of conflict between Muslims and Christians.14 By the time that contact was renewed in the sixteenth century, Europeans had developed their own ideas about how the world worked. Many of these ideas were embodied in Roman Catholicism, the religion of the late Western Roman Empire. During the centuries of chaos that followed Rome’s fall, Catholicism provided explanations, order, and a basis for unity as Europeans reestablished governments, laws, and trade. As a result, when Europeans started to sail along the African coast in the late fifteenth century, they brought not only a fixed set of beliefs about the nature of humanity and its relationship to an all-powerful spiritual creator, they also believed they had an obligation to spread those beliefs and feared opposition from other religions. Europeans USAD Social Science Resource Guide • 2017–2018 13 SKT, IASD - International, NA Shanghai Foreign Language School Affiliated to SISU - Shanghai, China and where Britain was good, Africa was evil. Seen through British eyes, Africa and Britain represented two poles of a single value system. While the British understood there were Africans in intermediate stages between the poles of civilization and savagery, four hundred years of British writing about Africa produced a literature that described not Africa or Africans, but the British response to both. To British eyes, Africa remained the negative reflection of the British self-image partly to justify rule and partly to assert subjugation.12 The Calvinists were by no means the only group to hold racist views, but the Calvinist belief system nonetheless had an enormous influence in the United States and in Africa.16 The legacy of their intolerance remains, as they and others—religious and secular—helped nourish the foundation of racism so widespread toward Africa today. Eurocentrism and the Atlantic Slave Trade Portrait of the French theologian and pastor John Calvin (1509–64). used forced conversion to Catholicism as a way to justify enslaving Africans.15 European Protestants, meanwhile, used opposition to Catholicism as a reason to extend their commercial activities to Africa. Calvinism Calvinism, a sect of Protestantism credited to John Calvin (1509–64), included beliefs about salvation and value that led to racist views toward Africans. Dutch Calvinists participated in the Atlantic slave trade, especially from Elmina Castle on the coast of Ghana, where about one million Africans began the Middle Passage to the New World. Dutch Calvinists, along with the French Huguenots, carried similar views to South Africa. In the United States, the Pilgrims were also Calvinists. These groups of people believed that God chose them for a special mission—to share everlasting bliss in heaven with God. The original promotion of this idea—referred to as predestination—was actually first put forward by an African, Augustine of Hippo (354–430), who lived in what is now northeastern Algeria. Relying on Augustine, the Calvinists believed that for reasons only God understands, God “predestined” cer- 14 European beliefs justified a new kind of slave trade—chattel slavery—which proved particularly destructive. Africans had practiced slavery, but bondage within African societies was quite different from chattel (property) slavery of the West. African slaves in most African societies had rights; they could marry and raise families; and their children were often born free. They were not chattel of their masters to be bought and sold. Slaves in Africa provided both reproductive and labor functions, although at times they were killed to accompany their deceased masters in the afterworld. African slavery could be quite appalling, but its cruelty was not on the same level as that of chattel slavery in the West.17 The Atlantic slave trade was horrific and complex. While some crews from European slave ships captured and enslaved Africans, most often Africans were captured and enslaved onshore by other Africans seeking profit or protection. African slaves sold to European slave ship captains were often captured in war and were often from other ethnic groups. Others were criminals or were given in annual tribute to acknowledge the power of one African group over another. Whatever the immediate circumstances of enslavement, those in bondage were usually moved USAD Social Science Resource Guide • 2017–2018 SKT, IASD - International, NA Shanghai Foreign Language School Affiliated to SISU - Shanghai, China tain believers to share heaven with God. If you were not selected by God, then you could not enter heaven, regardless of your prayers, good works, and exemplary faith. Even individual Calvinists were never certain they were one of the select, but at least they had a chance, they believed, for they were Calvinists, God’s select. Everyone else not destined for heaven was to serve those who were. This worldview had a decided impact on the Pilgrims’ perspective on Native Americans and the Calvinists’ perspective on Africans. Afrocentrism While some crews from European slave ships captured and enslaved Africans, most often Africans were captured and enslaved onshore by other Africans seeking profit or protection. in groups from the interior to the coast, were often imprisoned in slave fort dungeons, and were sold in negotiations between their African captors and visiting slave ship captains. Depending on the time period, almost all slave ships originated from Spain, Portugal, France, England, the United States, Holland, Norway, or Denmark. The ship captains would sail their ships to West African or Southwest African ports under African control and negotiate onboard or onshore. Once ship captains and African slave traders had concluded negotiations and brought the slaves onboard, the Middle Passage would begin. Although statistics vary depending on the source, approximately 12.5 million Africans, crammed and chained horizontally below stifling decks, began the Middle Passage with about one to two million dying en route. Seeing life through African eyes inside African culture and African environments is a good definition of Afrocentrism. You would expect Africans who have lived their lives in Africa and have been influenced by African culture to be Afrocentric in the same sense that most people who grow up in the U.S. are Eurocentric. Yet when the relationship between Afrocentrism and Eurocentrism is considered over the last six hundred years, that link has had a very troubled history. Eurocentric people advocated for the Atlantic slave trade, imperialism, and colonialism in Africa. Eurocentrists viewed Africans as objects impeding the European quest for material gain, land, or labor. During the mid-to-late twentieth century, two provocative scholars—Cheikh Anta Diop (1923– 86) and Martin Gardiner Bernal (1937–2013) opposed Eurocentric views of Africa with significant scholarship. Both Diop and Bernal concentrated on Egypt, although from different perspectives, and in a general sense, their scholarship could be considered Afrocentric, or Africa-centered.18 The African independence movements of the 1950s and 1960s USAD Social Science Resource Guide • 2017–2018 15 SKT, IASD - International, NA Shanghai Foreign Language School Affiliated to SISU - Shanghai, China Although European self-confidence left little room for Europeans to question their beliefs, as more Europeans had contact with Africans, new ideas began to emerge. For example, John Newton (1725–1807)—an English sailor and captain of slave ships, who later became a clergyman and abolitionist—almost died in a major storm aboard the Greyhound in 1748. His harrowing experience led him to ask God to forgive him for his many sins in return for accepting Christianity. At first, like many other Christians, including Calvinists, Newton did not denounce slavery. In fact, he participated in or led crews on five slave trading voyages and invested in others. Over time, however, he left the life of a sailor and became a minister. John Newton first published “Amazing Grace” as “Faith’s Review and Expectation,” hymn #41, in Olney Hymns in 1779. It was not until 1788 that Newton published his influential anti-slavery tract “Thoughts upon the African Slave Trade.” He lived just long enough to experience the Parliament of the United Kingdom’s passage of the Slave Trade Act of 1807, which abolished the Atlantic slave trade in the British empire (although slavery itself was still permitted). different published and unpublished works, Diop successfully overturned racist myths about Pharaonic Egypt’s alleged white origins. Diop’s scholarship was complex and covered many disciplines, which he summed up in UNESCO’s General History of Africa, the first multi-volume encyclopedic series about Africa from Afrocentric perspectives.20 While not all scholars agree with Diop’s findings, he certainly removed Egypt from Eurocentric myth and placed it firmly within Africa. Cheikh Anta Diop spent much of his life analyzing the relationship between ancient Egypt and West Africa, especially Senegal. also contributed to the effort to see African history through the African experience.19 Cheikh Anta Diop Cheikh Anta Diop was born in Senegal and educated in an Islamic school that followed the Murid teachings of Amadou Bamba. He carried out his advanced academic work at the University of Paris. Like Martin Bernal, Diop drew upon his deep interdisciplinary knowledge of history, linguistics, sociology, archaeology, colonialism, and Egyptology. Unlike Bernal, Diop also earned degrees in chemistry and worked in nuclear physics. He spent much of his life analyzing the relationship between ancient Egypt and West Africa, especially Senegal. His compatriots thought so highly of him they changed the name of Senegal’s national university, Université de Dakar, to Université Cheikh Anta Diop. Much of Diop’s research was driven by his desire to disprove Eurocentric notions that whites, not Africans, created the Egypt of the Pharaohs. In many 16 Martin Gardiner Bernal, who like Diop sought to work against the legacies of European racism, imperialism, and colonialism, argued that some of the great wisdom of Pharaonic Egypt contributed to the glory of ancient Greek civilization—the Athens of Socrates, his student Plato, and Plato’s student Aristotle. Using linguistics, ancient manuscripts, and archaeology, Bernal challenged Eurocentric academics to revise their understanding of the relationship between Pharaonic Egypt and Greece.21 Many classicists and Egyptologists argued that there had been no substantial Egyptian contribution to Greek civilization. Countering that view, Bernal argued that ancient peoples had noted the connection between Egypt and Greece, but during the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, Europeans severed that link because of notions of European imperial supremacy and pseudo-scientific racism, not because of new evidence. Bernal’s arguments were quite provocative, in part because he inferred that his academic opponents supported a racist interpretation. His critics also challenged his use of linguistics and his interpretation of art. Like Diop before him, Bernal helped place Egypt among the great civilizations of the world, one created by Africans. Together with other academics, Diop and Bernal helped to restore respect for Africa and its peoples, recovered significant portions of the African past, and enhanced African contributions to our common humanity. Cheikh Anta Diop and Martin Bernal spent much of their academic lives exploring the relationship between humans and Africa. Now that it is clear that all humans are descendants of Africans who migrated out of Africa about 50,000 years ago, humanity itself can now be “centered.” Section I of your Resource Guide has introduced USAD Social Science Resource Guide • 2017–2018 SKT, IASD - International, NA Shanghai Foreign Language School Affiliated to SISU - Shanghai, China Martin Gardiner Bernal was based on false assertions made by Europeans to justify slavery and colonialism. The rest of your resource guide is devoted to sharing with you the results of the enormous expansion in knowledge about Africa and its peoples that has taken place over the last seventy years. Section I Summary  Martin Gardiner Bernal used linguistics, ancient manuscripts, and archaeology to challenge Eurocentric academics to revise their understanding of the relationship between Pharaonic Egypt and Greece. you to evidence that supports Africa as the site of origin for human beings. You now have a better idea of the sheer size of the African continent, its varied climates, and its large number of ethnic groups, languages, and cultures. You also know that until the 1950s, much of what we knew about Africa  frica is the second largest continent with A a very diverse assortment of people, landforms, and climates. Specific geographic characteristics—like long distances, the location of water, and the possibilities for travel—determined where people lived, how populations grew, and what kind of communities they formed. From the late 1400s to the mid-1900s, West ern knowledge about Africa was distorted by European notions of racial, cultural, and technical superiority. Over the centuries, Western writers and government officials either wrote about themselves in Africa or interpreted sacred literature to give themselves privileged status, often in an effort to justify the Atlantic slave trade. With the advent of African independence movements in the 1950s, post-independence writers and scholars in and outside Africa began to challenge Eurocentric myths about Africa. Those who sought to share the reality of Africa through African eyes were called Afrocentrists. Two of the many scholars who contributed to presenting an African-centered view of Africa, especially Egypt, were Cheikh Anta Diop and Martin Gardiner Bernal. USAD Social Science Resource Guide • 2017–2018 17 SKT, IASD - International, NA Shanghai Foreign Language School Affiliated to SISU - Shanghai, China  Section II Evidence for Human Origins in Africa Natural scientists have made many new discoveries about human origins in Africa, and these revelations have added to the significant fossil evidence that already pointed to human origins in Africa. Scientists in the fields of anthropology, paleontology, biology, genetics, and primate zoology have all found evidence that points toward the same conclusion—the ancestors of all humans lived in Africa. This section of the resource guide presents their findings and conclusions. Archaeological Evidence of Tools Tools made of stone, bone, or clay offer one kind of evidence of ancient human history. Humans made tools to extend their natural physical abilities—to withstand bad weather, to cut wood, carry water, grind grain, and kill other animals, among other things—so tools help us to understand how ancient humans lived. While most tools were probably made from materials that decayed over time, such as wood, those made out of harder materials or which were lucky enough to be preserved by burial or low humidity show where humans lived, what they ate, how they constructed shelters, and whether they traded with others. Many sites in Africa have yielded human tools for study. For example, the well-known site at Olduvai Gorge in Tanzania, where remains of H. Habilis, Australopithecus boisei, H. Erectus, and H. Sapiens have been found, has also yielded large quantities of stone chips, which were used as knives and projectiles. Although are still many disagreements among 18 Olduvai Gorge in Tanzania, where remains of H. Habilis, Australopithecus boisei, H. Erectus, and H. Sapiens have been found as well as large quantities of stone chips, which were used as knives and projectiles. scholars, the archeological finds suggest that large numbers of humans occupied this site for a long period of time, ate meat and plants, and may have even developed specialized occupations like toolmaker.22 Fossil and Genetic Evidence Fossil evidence strongly supports the origins of humanity in Africa. The early hominid fossil record begins in Africa about 6 million years ago.23 The earliest hominine fossils belonged to members of the Ardipithicus group and date from over 6 million bce. Later fossils from the Australopithecines date from around 4.2 million bce. Additional fossils—Homo habilis (2.4–1.4 million bce) and Homo erectus (1.89 million to 143,000 bce)—are associated with the USAD Social Science Resource Guide • 2017–2018 SKT, IASD - International, NA Shanghai Foreign Language School Affiliated to SISU - Shanghai, China Human Origins SKT, IASD - International, NA Shanghai Foreign Language School Affiliated to SISU - Shanghai, China Figure 2.1 Fossil evidence strongly supports the origins of humanity in Africa. USAD Social Science Resource Guide • 2017–2018 19 Scholars have devoted much effort to explaining how these African ancestors are related to humans all over the world. There is general agreement that early humans migrated out of Africa, and two major theories about how that occurred. Paleoanthropologists believe that around 1.8 million bce members of the genus H. erectus migrated out of Africa to Asia and Europe, but they disagree on how that migration produced modern populations. Rebecca Cann, Mark Stoneking, and Allan Wilson examined tiny structures in the cells of women called mitochondria (mtDNA).24 By examining mutations in the mitochondria of a large number of women from all over the world, they concluded that the San of Namibia were the likely source of an ancestor of all of the women in the study, somewhere between 140,000 to 280,000 years ago. Based in part on the findings of Cann, Stoneking, and Wilson, paleoanthropologists came to agree that around 200,000 bce a new hominid, Homo sapiens, appeared in Africa. Then around 70,000 bce, like H. erectus before them, H. sapiens migrated out of Africa to Europe and Asia, and then to America.25 Hominids who look like us, i.e., H. sapiens, appeared in many places in Europe and Asia by about 40,000 years ago and in the Americas by about 20,000 years ago. In the 1990s, improved scientific techniques enabled researchers to examine Y chromosomes in an effort to find the earliest male ancestor of modern humans. Ann Gibbons concluded that African men had the greatest concentration of Y chromosomal markers—twice as many markers as other groups of men on Earth.26 While there is general agreement that the oldest human ancestors lived in Africa, there are scientists who argue that the earliest modern humans, H. Sapiens, developed elsewhere. In 1984, Milford Wolpoff (1942– ), Alan Thorne (1939–2012), and Xinzhi Wu (1928– ) first argued that H. sapiens evolved from pockets of H. erectus in different regions of the world at about the same time, giving rise to all humans today. Whichever two-stage model one supports, the African origin of our genus Homo seems certain. 20 You can explore the evidence for and theories about human origins here: http://www.actionbioscience. org/evolution/johanson.html and can visualize the appearance of ancient hominids here: http:// www.becominghuman.org/node/human-lineagethrough-time. Hunter-Gatherers, Herders, and Farmers Some of the factors that enter into human decisions about how to obtain food include climate, level of technology, the effort required, and the availability of alternatives. Archaeologists have concluded that humans hunted and gathered their food throughout most of prehistory, but once farming was invented, it replaced hunting and gathering in every place where the conditions were right. That was true in Africa, where humans became farmers wherever there was enough water to grow plants that humans can eat. In places that were too dry, humans adopted an alternate strategy by raising animals on plants (like grass) that humans cannot eat. In places like the Sahara Desert that were too dry even to grow grass, small groups of humans survived by hunting and gathering whatever was edible and trading at the desert edge to get the supplies they needed.27 Given the wide range of climatic conditions in Africa, there were many ways to be successful at farming. In the dry plains that separate deserts from forests, a mixture of grain farming and animal herding provided food. In regions that experienced longer rainy seasons, tree crops and vegetables played a larger role in local diets. In tropical regions where water was not a problem, fruit trees, root crops, and green leafy vegetables were more important. Climate also determined what livestock could survive—camels did well in the desert but succumbed to disease in moist areas, while cows could survive in the Sahel and savanna, although they did poorly in the forest where insect-born disease was a problem. In the fifth century bc, the Greek historian Herodotus described the diet of the people who lived along the Nile. Besides fish, beans, beef, and goose flesh, he listed grains like wheat, barley, and another called spelt, and noted that they drank wine, milk, and water. Herodotus also claimed that priests were USAD Social Science Resource Guide • 2017–2018 SKT, IASD - International, NA Shanghai Foreign Language School Affiliated to SISU - Shanghai, China groups that include modern humans. The oldest fossils of humans who look like us, Homo sapiens, were found in Africa and date from as early as 200,000 years ago. forbidden to consume the most common items, like fish and beans, and could only eat bread made from wheat or barley, but not spelt.28 Since spelt required less water and a shorter growing season, while beef and geese needed land that would have otherwise grown food for humans, Herodotus provides evidence that growing conditions made some food more valuable than others, and the choice of food was (in this instance) affected by social standing. Farming differed from hunting and gathering in another important aspect—the timing of the work and the amount of work it took to get something to eat. Hunters and gatherers looked for food when they were hungry and stopped when they had enough because they had no way to store extra food or transport it if they had to move. In contrast, farmers remained in one place for the growing season and worked many days between planting and harvest, yet they got nothing to eat until the harvest was finished. When conditions were right, farmers worked more and produced much more food, but they also risked disaster if something went wrong with the harvest. Even if they were successful, a year’s worth of food made them a target for farmers who had a bad harvest, or even hunters and gatherers who thought it was easier to steal from farmers. As a result, farmers developed defenses, like the walled city of Segu in Mali, or trading relationships with herders and fishermen to make their food supply more flexible. Section II Summary   here are many different kinds of evidence T about prehistoric humans. They include human remains, tools, and human DNA. All point toward the same conclusion—that the ancestors of modern humans started out in Africa. Paleoanthropologists have found the oldest fossils and tools in East Africa, dating from 6 million to 3.3 million bce respectively.  Scientific advances in studying the human genome have added genetic evidence to that USAD Social Science Resource Guide • 2017–2018 21 SKT, IASD - International, NA Shanghai Foreign Language School Affiliated to SISU - Shanghai, China Farmers developed defenses to protect their harvest, such as the walled city of Segu shown here. here are two theories about how humans T who originated in Africa evolved and populated Earth. One theory holds that both H. erectus and H. sapiens originated in Africa before migrating outward to Europe, Asia, and the Americas. Another theory contends that while H. erectus originated in Africa, H. sapiens could have evolved from pockets of  H. erectus in different regions of the world at around the same time. Recent evidence supports the theory that H. erectus and H. sapiens migrated out of Africa to populate the world. W ith a wide variety of climate zones, ancient Africans had various means of getting the food they needed to survive. Each method had its advantages and risks, and humans developed strategies to improve production and minimize losses. SKT, IASD - International, NA Shanghai Foreign Language School Affiliated to SISU - Shanghai, China  derived from ancient tools and fossils. Data analyzed from mitochondrial and Y chromosomal DNA support the African origins of H. erectus and H. sapiens. 22 USAD Social Science Resource Guide • 2017–2018 Section III Ancient Egypt Historians consider the invention of agriculture, which increased and stabilized the human food supply, as the starting point for urban civilization. By requiring people to remain in one place for the duration of a growing season, farming led humans to settle in one place, construct durable housing, and accumulate possessions. By making land valuable, farming triggered disputes that led to the creation of laws and government. By increasing the amount of available food, farming promoted trade and allowed societies to pay for specialized professions, such as priests, tool makers, governors, and military leaders. Coincidentally, because all of these activities produced increasing numbers of objects and records, historians have found it much easier to learn about urban civilizations than earlier hunter-gatherer groups.29 The earliest evidence of farming was found in southwestern Asia and dates from around 10,000 bce. By roughly 3,000 bce there were urban civilizations located along the Tigris and Euphrates Rivers in present-day Iraq and along the Nile River in modern Egypt. In Egypt, humans organized to take advantage of the annual river floods, which resulted when the central African rainy season poured large amounts of water into the Nile’s three major tributaries—the Blue Nile and the Atbara River from Ethiopia and the White Nile River from the region that includes present-day Kenya and Uganda. As they flowed north (i.e., downstream), the floods eroded the land through which they passed and carried the resulting sediment (called silt) to Egypt, depositing it along the Nile River’s banks. With plenty of water and sunshine plus fresh soil every year, The Palette of Narmer contains images that led historians to conclude that Upper Egypt, led by Menes, conquered Lower Egypt. Egyptian farming was some of the most productive in the ancient world, able to support large populations and produce surpluses that paid for buildings, art, education, and government. The Nile Valley has three distinct regions. At the mouth of the river is the Nile Delta, known in ancient history as “Lower Egypt.” It is a low, flat area that is prone to flooding and which contains some of the best soil in Africa, thanks to the annual floods. To reach the delta, the Nile flows through a long channel that winds between sandstone cliffs and narrow floodplains, through a region known in ancient history as “Upper Egypt.” Upper Egypt ended at the first of six major rapids known as “cataracts,” and beyond that was the land called “Nubia” by the Egyptians. At first, there were many small communities along the Nile River, but as the Sahara Desert dried USAD Social Science Resource Guide • 2017–2018 23 SKT, IASD - International, NA Shanghai Foreign Language School Affiliated to SISU - Shanghai, China Early African Civilizations SKT, IASD - International, NA Shanghai Foreign Language School Affiliated to SISU - Shanghai, China Figure 3.1 Map of the Nile River 24 USAD Social Science Resource Guide • 2017–2018 The largest pyramid of all, Cheops, required humans to lift stone blocks to a height of more than four hundred feet. Photo by Nina - Own work, CC BY 2.5, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=282496 out, population pressures along the river may have led to warfare and centralization. A carved stone tablet known as the “Palette of Narmer” contains images that led historians to conclude that Upper Egypt, led by Menes, conquered Lower Egypt. The result was Egypt’s first centralized government, called the “Old Kingdom,” which formed around 2686 bce. During this period, strong pharaohs exerted highly centralized authority over peasants, using local nobles to transmit their orders from the capital at Memphis (near modern Cairo), on the border between Upper and Lower Egypt. The evidence for the power of the pharaohs comes from the major archaeological finds of this period— the great pyramids. A pyramid is a large structure that served as a tomb for a pharaoh. It was constructed from blocks of stone weighing several tons each that were brought to the construction site from elsewhere in the Nile Valley. The pyramids were not built in the valley itself—that would have taken up valuable farm land—but on the plateau overlooking the valley, at the edge of the desert. In a period when there were no machines for moving heavy loads, all of this had to be done using human muscle power. The largest pyramid of all, Cheops, required humans to lift stone blocks to a height of more than four hundred feet. The labor to do this came from Egyptian farmers, and it had to occur when the farmers were not busy farming, i.e., during the flood season. The Nile floods begin at Cairo about June and reach their maximum in September, during the hottest time of the year in Egypt. It must have been difficult to keep Pharaonic and Post-Empire Egypt Predynastic – c.5300–3000 bce Early Dynastic Period (Dynasties I–II) – c.3000–2686 bce Old Kingdom (Dynasties III–VIII) – 2686–2160 bce 1st Intermediate Period (Dynasties IX–XI [Thebes only]) – 2160–2055 bce SKT, IASD - International, NA Shanghai Foreign Language School Affiliated to SISU - Shanghai, China farmers at work moving heavy stone blocks, and it must have also required extensive organization to provide food, water, and housing for a workforce that probably numbered in the tens of thousands. All of this leads historians to conclude that the leaders of Old Kingdom Egypt possessed extensive power and the means to control large numbers of people. Middle Kingdom (Dynasties XI [all Egypt]–XIV) – 2055–1650 bce 2nd Intermediate Period (Dynasties XV–XVII) – 1650–1550 bce New Kingdom (Dynasties XVIII–XX) – 1550–1069 bce 3rd Intermediate Period (Dynasties XXI–XXV) – 1069–664 bce Late Period (Dynasties XXVI–XXX) – 664–332 bce Ptolemaic Period – 332–30 bce Roman Period – 30 bce–395 ce Source: Ian Shaw, ed. The Oxford History of Ancient Egypt (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2000), 480–483. Pharaonic Egyptian culture flowered greatly during the Old Kingdom and then retained much of its characteristic style for millennia afterward. USAD Social Science Resource Guide • 2017–2018 25 Egyptians regarded the earliest pharaohs of the Old Kingdom as incarnations of the raven god Horus. Monumental building, for example, reached a peak in about 2600–2500 bce (Dynasty IV), when some of the most impressive pyramids were constructed at Giza, and then continued over the next millennia. Other art styles that emerged early in the Old Kingdom continued to influence art produced as much as two thousand years later. Egyptian religion underwent modifications over time. Egyptians regarded the earliest pharaohs of the Old Kingdom as incarnations of the raven god, Horus. Without quite giving up this claim, later pharaohs claimed to be god-descendants of Ra (also spelled Re), the sun god, or Osiris, the god-ruler of the underworld. Historians believe that the original pharaohs came to rule over a country with a great deal of religious diversity, with each of the small original kingdoms having its own gods and local priesthoods. One way to reconcile them all might have been to establish an authoritative account that would show them as members of a common pantheon, where one god was supreme, but all found an honored place. Another solution that worked better for the central authorities was not to worry about 26 Before the Middle Kingdom, Egyptian religion and a belief in an eternal life were concerns of the elite. Little was organized at the level of the peasants. During the Middle Kingdom, the priesthood expanded, and with the construction of temples more Egyptians began to share the experience of faith, deities, and the possibilities of an afterlife. The New Kingdom Pharaoh Amenhotep IV (Akhenaten, ruled about 1353–1336 bce) even attempted to place these new developments under the auspices of a single paramount god.30 A more communal religious experience was also expressed in perceptions of the afterlife. In the Old Kingdom, only the pharaoh and those entombed with him could enter the afterlife. During the New Kingdom, however, the famous Book of the Dead appeared, which described how Egyptians generally could influence their own afterlives.31 The pharaoh was not merely a deity; his personal physical health was intimately associated with the land, the harvest, and especially with the supply of water from the Nile flood. If the pharaoh became ill, the people expected a grim future, perhaps drought. The linkage of the health of the ruler to the fate of the people became common in much of Africa and probably arose in various forms independently of Egypt through time to justify the rise of the central authority over emerging societies. In terms of law, or Ma’at, people considered the pharaohs divine instruments of the universe who symbolized and carried out truth, justice, order, and harmony. Free peasant communities formed the base of Egyptian society, although some slaves also existed. During the Old Kingdom, which had its capital at Memphis, no important social group stood between the peasantry and the royal household. The entire organization of the country, including foreign trade and irrigation works, was in the hands of the royal household. Imagine such power! Peasants either had their labor taxed or they worked on irrigation projects and monumental architecture like the pyramids. Tens of thousands of people must have been mobilized each year during the dry season to supplement or replace those freed from agriculture during the flood season to create public works on USAD Social Science Resource Guide • 2017–2018 SKT, IASD - International, NA Shanghai Foreign Language School Affiliated to SISU - Shanghai, China primacy among the gods, but to allow each group of priests to go its own way so long as all recognized that the pharaoh himself was a god-king incarnate on earth. After the first millennium of pharaonic rule, the royal household became less efficient. Perhaps it grew too big and unwieldy, or perhaps officials began to make their offices hereditary. In any case, the centralized kingdom broke down after about 2200 bce, leading to the First Intermediate Period during which political authority was fragmented. Several local leaders claimed to be the god-king of all Egypt, though none of them could make the claim stand. Then, after c.2055 bce, centralized authority was restored with the foundation of the Middle Kingdom, but the rise of local power, which had begun during the First Intermediate Period, remained. Landlords and local priests—the new gentry—became an important intermediate group between the peasantry and the royal household. Egypt also was no longer as isolated by the surrounding deserts. Pharaohs had already sent Egyptian naval expeditions down the Red Sea to southern Arabia, Ethiopia, and the horn of Africa at the end of the Old Kingdom. During the Middle Kingdom, the naval expeditions became more organized and frequent. Increased trade by sea in the Levant (the eastern part of the Mediterranean) and overland contact with the Fertile Crescent also made Pharaonic Egypt less isolated than it had been previously. Up the Nile, several kingdoms of Nubia had existed during the Old Kingdom. Parts of Nubia probably fell under Egyptian rule even before 2000 bce. The first Nubian kingdoms were likely similar to Egypt itself, with divine rule associated with rain, soil fertility, and nature generally. Later on, during the New Kingdom, Nubians adopted Egyptian gods and hieroglyphic writing. Although not constant, the expansion of Egyptian culture into sub-Saharan Africa continued for centuries. Egypt’s contact with the outer world further increased during the Second Intermediate Period with the invasion of the Hyksos. Historians are divided as to just who the Hyksos were. One possibility is that they were chariot-riding warriors who swept down and conquered Egypt, as similar charioteers had recently conquered Mesopotamia. Yet they also could have simply been immigrants from Asia who infiltrated and then rose more slowly to power with- Pharaoh Akhenaten (center) and his family worshiping the Aten, the supreme god. in Egypt. In any event, the Hyksos ruled most of the Nile delta while native Egyptians continued to rule over Upper Egypt. Whatever their political role, the Hyksos brought new Asian influences and technologies, including military chariots, bronze metallurgy, textile manufactures, musical instruments, olive trees, and new breeds of cattle. The New Kingdom began after c.1550 bce when an Egyptian dynasty reunited Egypt. Although the Hyksos may have assimilated into the Egyptian population, increased foreign contact continued. Several Egyptian armies invaded the Fertile Crescent. After 1500 bce Egypt seemed on the verge of uniting all urban societies of the Middle East, much as Rome later united the Mediterranean world. At some period in the New Kingdom, Egypt did succeed in ruling Nubia almost as far as the rainfall region of what is now South Sudan. The growing power of other states, however, thwarted Egyptian expansion. After 1069 bce, a series of Asian powers succeeded each other as rulers in Egypt. The Hittites from USAD Social Science Resource Guide • 2017–2018 27 SKT, IASD - International, NA Shanghai Foreign Language School Affiliated to SISU - Shanghai, China the vast scale of those that remain. This was a testament to the organizational skills of the leadership of the Old Kingdom. Anatolia (located in present-day Turkey), then the Assyrians (roughly present-day northern Iraq between the Tigris and the Euphrates), and finally the Persians conquered Egypt. In 332 bce, Alexander of Macedonia brought Egypt under his rule. Other foreigners founded Egyptian dynasties, including Libyans from the west (people ancestral to the present-day Tuareg of the Sahara) and Egyptianized Nubians from the south. Well before the end of the New Kingdom, foreign elements had strongly influenced Egyptian life and art. Iron metallurgy came in from Anatolia. Thus, even before the Ptolemaic rule of Egypt, foreign cultures had already paved the way for Greek influences that would pull Egypt into the intercommunicating Hellenistic world of the Mediterranean and the Middle East. After approximately two thousand years, the relative stability, isolation, power, and creative glory of the Old, Middle, and New Kingdoms of Pharaonic Egypt had passed. West African Empires Nilotic Egypt had the river as its lifeline and adjacent fertile land, which was replenished annually by floods, but west of the Nile River, northern Afri- 28 ca has no major rivers, and rainfall is sparse except along the southern coast. As a result, when large states formed in West Africa, they were based on the control of revenue from long-distance trade. The rise of ancient Ghana, the first of the “savanna empires,” did not begin until several centuries after the age of Pharaonic Egypt had ended. West Africans did not have a written language that was comparable to Egyptian hieroglyphs. Thus, our knowledge of ancient Ghana from before 900 ce is based on archaeology, linguistics, and indirect evidence. From 900 to 1300 ce, Arabic written sources and the earliest oral traditions increase our understanding of ancient Ghana. After 1300, accounts from Portuguese and other European traders sailing along the coasts of the Gulf of Guinea—and from visitors like Ibn Battuta who went to Mali in 1352–3 and Leo Africanus, who visited Songhay several times— provide written records of the African societies they encountered. After 1600, oral traditions that are more detailed and some written records compiled by Africans assist historians. Written sources, however, are spotty; the written historical record of some areas of West Africa from 1000 to 1500 has significant gaps. Clearly, there is much we do not USAD Social Science Resource Guide • 2017–2018 SKT, IASD - International, NA Shanghai Foreign Language School Affiliated to SISU - Shanghai, China The Hyksos may have been chariot-riding warriors who swept down and conquered Egypt or could have simply been immigrants from Asia who infiltrated and then rose more slowly to power within Egypt. West Africans and North Africans created a network of trade routes on either side of the Sahara, but there were only a few ways to travel across the desert. Usually Berbers acted as intermediaries between the two groups. The exchange of gold for salt was one of the most important transactions. Sources of West African gold came from three separate fields, but no West African empire was ever able to control all three: Bambuk between the Senegal and Faleme Rivers, Bure near the upper Niger River, and Akan in the forest and savanna of present-day Ghana (which led Europeans to call the adjacent coastline the Gold Coast). It must be noted, however, that the eastern region of West Africa had a trade route Figure 3.2 north from Kanem-Bornu to Tripoli that involved no significant amounts of gold.33 Instead, caravan merchants traded in slaves, salt, and weapons. The West African commercial empires of Ghana, Mali, and Songhay strove to control the trans-Saharan trade, which took place at transshipment points located in the desert fringe areas (Sahel). By providing a safe place for traders from different regions to find each other, rulers could charge taxes, and traders could make shorter, more numerous trading trips, thus increasing profits. The danger of commercial travel in the desert was left to Tamahaq-speaking desert dwellers called Tuareg, who transported goods through the Sahara. Each West African empire provided a vital extension to the SKT, IASD - International, NA Shanghai Foreign Language School Affiliated to SISU - Shanghai, China know.32 Early African Trade Routes USAD Social Science Resource Guide • 2017–2018 29 SKT, IASD - International, NA Shanghai Foreign Language School Affiliated to SISU - Shanghai, China Figure 3.3 Ghana Empire c.1050 30 USAD Social Science Resource Guide • 2017–2018 commercial trade of North Africa, and much West African gold ended up as currency in Europe.34 One of West Africa’s greatest dynasties—that of ancient Mali—would soon fill this vacuum in power. Ghana, the first West African commercial empire, was bounded by the Senegal River Valley, the upper Niger River Valley, and the Sahara Desert in what is today Mali and southern Mauritania, about a thousand miles northwest of the present-day country of Ghana. Ghana’s terrain in the Sahel was predominantly grassland, and its major transshipment point was Kumbi-Saleh. Many of its inhabitants were Iron Age farmers under the rule of a local chief. The major ethnic group and rulers of Ghana were the Soninke. Over time, local rulers were integrated into a more centralized administration that ultimately evolved into imperial Ghana. With the Saharan trade in chaos, it was natural that someone would seek to restore order and take control. The next Sahel empire was founded by Malinke herders from the area between the Senegal and Niger Rivers. More is known about the Mali Empire than ancient Ghana, in part because the story of its founder, Sundiata (also spelled Sunjata) Keïta, is still told to this day in West Africa and has been published in numerous translations. A major catalyst for Ghana’s growth was the gold that was mined from one of the richest goldfields in Africa—Bambuk. Soninke merchants bought gold from the Wangara of Bambuk, who live in present-day Senegal and the Gambia, and often transported it via the Tuareg from transshipment points like Awdughast, Timbuktu, and Gao north toward another transshipment point in contemporary Morocco, and from there goods were distributed across North Africa as far as the Mediterranean coast. In the desert between Sijilmasa and Ghana was Taghaza, the location of great quantities of salt deposited during the evaporation of an ancient Saharan sea. As astonishing as it may sound today, the people of ancient Ghana occasionally traded gold for salt in equal weight. If we put this in perspective, however, consider the necessity of salt in one’s diet and its food preservation value. After acquiring it from Ghana, North Africans traded gold throughout the Mediterranean world. Other Ghanaian exports included ivory, ostrich feathers, hides, leather, and slaves. In return, traders in Ghana took a variety of goods, especially weapons, textiles, horses, and salt. In 1042 ce, Muslim Sanhaja Berbers known as the Almoravids, who over the centuries had traded with Ghana, became Ghana’s enemies and took control of the transshipment points. For a time they ruled Ghana as a province of an empire that reached into central Spain, but Ghana recovered some of its independence within fifty years. Ghana fell for the last time in 1203 ce to the Sosso from farther south. Mali Sundiata Keïta Both Sundiata Keïta and his epic are exceptional in West African history. Sundiata is credited in oral tradition with founding Mali, the West African Malinke empire that succeeded ancient Ghana, although some of its earliest origins date to about 900 under the Keïtas, who were the ancestors of Sundiata. Mali, or “Mallel,” as found in Arabic literature by the 800s ce, means “where the king resides.”35 Sundiata defeated the conquerors of Ghana, the Sosso, at the Battle of Krina in 1235 and ruled Mali from 1235–55. The Epic of Sundiata Griots, who inherit their vocations as oral historians and who give performances, often accompanied by drums and koras, have theatrically conveyed Sundiata’s life and accomplishments for some eight hundred years.36 There are several versions of the Sundiata epic, including an entertaining and educational film, Keïta: The Heritage of the Griot, although the film only considers Sundiata’s life until his exile in his twenties.37 Themes in the epic and film include the importance of lineage, destiny, prophecy, Islam, traditional African religion, perseverance, right action, and the tension between tradition and modernity. From the Gambian and Senegalese river estuaries to the famous trading cities of Timbuktu and Gao on the Niger River, the Mande-speakers of Mali built their power on gold extracted from Bambuk and a USAD Social Science Resource Guide • 2017–2018 31 SKT, IASD - International, NA Shanghai Foreign Language School Affiliated to SISU - Shanghai, China Ghana SKT, IASD - International, NA Shanghai Foreign Language School Affiliated to SISU - Shanghai, China Figure 3.4 Mali Empire 32 USAD Social Science Resource Guide • 2017–2018 new goldfield at Bure, which produced perhaps twothirds of the world’s production at the time. Working with peoples in the Soninke, Kassonke, and Futanke language groups, Ancient Mali traded gold across the Sahara to Sijilmasa and Taghaza.38 Ancient Mali was located further south than the more arid Ghana. Mali’s farmers grew sorghum (a grass plant that looks somewhat like corn and from which molasses is derived), millet (another grass plant from which cereal is made), and rice. From this southern center of power, some distance from the fringes of the Sahara, the Mande-speakers of Mali spread Islam further than their North African Muslim trader predecessors.39 Those who led this process were the successors of Sundiata, the Mansas (kings) of the Keïta clan. Mansa Musa and Mansa Kaw The most famous ruler of Mali after Sundiata was Mansa (king or emperor) Musa (ruled 1312–37 ce), who is noted for his hajj (pilgrimage to Mecca) in 1324 ce. According to Egyptian sources, Mansa Musa’s hajj caravan of 60,000 porters included five hundred servants dressed in gold and with staffs of gold, and he spent so much gold that the precious metal’s market price fell and did not recover for over twelve years.40 As historian Ross Dunn stated, “In the history of medieval West Africa no single incident has been more celebrated. Indeed the hajj of Mansa Musa sums up Mali’s important place among the kingdoms of Africa and Asia in Ibn Battuta’s time.”41 More significant than tales of gold, Mansa Musa promoted Islam; he financed the construction of many mosques, including the Great Mosques of Gao and Timbuktu, the transcription of Qur’ans, and Islamic scholarship by surrounding himself with Muslim teachers. Some of these scholars were foreigners who had followed him back to Mali. Timbuktu became a major center of Islamic scholarship in West Africa. Mansa Musa was well remembered for his wealth, generosity, and good manners. Indeed, Ar- USAD Social Science Resource Guide • 2017–2018 33 SKT, IASD - International, NA Shanghai Foreign Language School Affiliated to SISU - Shanghai, China Depiction of Mansa Musa sitting on a throne and holding a gold coin. Mansa Musa’s predecessor, Mansa Kaw, also deserves mention because there are sources which suggest that he may have financed a fleet of some two thousand ships that sailed west to explore the Atlantic Ocean. They never returned, but Mali’s greatness has encouraged scholars to seek its connection with other epic historical events including the crossing of the Atlantic by ship. Some scholars speculate that Mende-speaking West Africans from Mali made it to the New World about two hundred years before Columbus.42 Ibn Battuta and Mali Ibn Battuta (1304–69), who some consider the Marco Polo (1254–1324) of Islam, visited Mali after traveling through and working in the Muslim world between Morocco and perhaps China and certainly India from 1325 to 1351.43 Ibn Battuta visited Mali from February 1352 to December 1353, about fifteen years after Mansa Musa died.44 Ibn Battuta headed south from Tangier to Sijilmasa and joined a caravan headed to Timbuktu.45 Along the way, Ibn Battuta described the trade based on dromedaries, single-humped camels, which were used to carry loads in the desert as early as the 100s ce. A typical caravan would begin before dawn and travel until it became too hot, at which time the camels would be unloaded and awnings stretched over the animals and men to protect them from the harsh sun. As the sun receded, the caravan would set out again and continue until nightfall whereupon they would set up camp.46 Whatever route traders took across the desert, danger was never far. Even the veteran traveler Ibn Battuta fell seriously ill for several months in Mali. Ibn Battuta also commented on Tuareg he met as “good for nothing,” perhaps because they did not practice Islam according to his standards.47 On the eve of the voyage of Christopher Columbus to the New World and Europe’s Christian Reformation, the heyday of Mali was coming to an end, but the next Great West African empire—Songhay—was on the rise. 34 Songhay Although Mali continued to exist into the 1800s as a small state, control of the desert trade passed to Songhay (1450–1591 ce), whose people traced their origins back to the 600s ce. Its rise to power began with the imperial policies of its founding king Sonni Ali (?–1492), who from his base of Gao conquered Timbuktu in 1468. Within a year after the death of Sonni Ali, Mohammed Askia (?–1537) seized power in a coup. During his rule, he expanded the borders of Songhay, reorganized its government, and reformed Islam. Unlike the Mande of Mali, however, the Songhay ethnic group was a minority in a multi-ethnic state. Their center of power was at their capital, Gao, about three hundred miles due east of Timbuktu on the northern bend of the Niger River, and the Songhay practiced Islam as their faith. Songhay eventually stretched from the coast along the Gambia River to the Niger River in the south, to Katsina and Agades to the east, and to Taghaza in the north. As with Ghana and Mali, Songhay’s power was based on trade, especially gold. Other exports included ostrich feathers, slaves, ebony (a hard black wood), and ivory. Imports included copper, iron, brass, sword blades, salt, and cloth. The rulers of Songhay enhanced Timbuktu as a center of Islamic studies by establishing a Muslim university in the city. Muslims from as far away as Arabia studied there. The historian Leo Africanus (al-Hasan ibn Muhammad al-Wazzan al-Fasi) has left a good written account of Songhay. A Moor (Spanish Muslim) born into nobility in Grenada (c.1485–c.1554), Leo Africanus later traveled widely in Arabia and North Africa. He visited Songhay several times, perhaps as early as 1509 and as late as 1515. In about 1518, pirates captured him on his way back from Egypt to Spain, and then gave him to Pope Leo X as a present. The pontiff freed him and convinced him to convert to Christianity whereupon the new Catholic took the pope’s name. Pope Leo X gave Leo Africanus a stipend and encouraged him to write. Leo Africanus added a knowledge of Latin and Greek to his mastery of Arabic. Leo Africanus first wrote his Description of Africa in Arabic (now lost) and later in Latin (1526). In this text he described life in Songhay.48 He noted USAD Social Science Resource Guide • 2017–2018 SKT, IASD - International, NA Shanghai Foreign Language School Affiliated to SISU - Shanghai, China abic scholars give more recognition to Mansa Musa than to Sundiata, the founder of Mali, because Musa did so much to promote Islam in Mali. SKT, IASD - International, NA Shanghai Foreign Language School Affiliated to SISU - Shanghai, China Figure 3.5 African Empires and Trade Routes USAD Social Science Resource Guide • 2017–2018 35 SKT, IASD - International, NA Shanghai Foreign Language School Affiliated to SISU - Shanghai, China Figure 3.6 Songhay (also spelled Songhai) Empire 36 USAD Social Science Resource Guide • 2017–2018 The end of Songhay came suddenly in 1591 when a vastly outnumbered Moroccan army began to cross the Sahara in an offensive against Songhay. Though the Moroccans were outnumbered, they had the significant advantage of gunpowder technology in the form of cannons and an early form of rifle called the arquebus. In the Battle of Tondibi just outside Gao, some 4,000 Moroccans defeated 18,000 cavalry and 9,000 infantry fighting for Songhay and then sacked Gao and Timbuktu.50 Thus, the last of the three major West African empires ended just as the Atlantic slave trade was about to significantly expand. Ghana, Mali, and Songhay had several common characteristics. Their power depended on regulating trade north across the desert. Much of that trade also relied on access to at least one of West Africa’s three major gold fields of Bambuk, Bure, and Akan. All three empires affected Mediterranean economies to the north. Third, their rulers demanded only allegiance and tribute, which meant control from the center was rather loose. Finally, Africans inside the empires largely retained their West African cultures while becoming part of the Islamic world. The effect of Islam on ordinary people varied, but the rulers and their advisors were usually Muslims. Thus, Islam helped solidify state power. Kanem-Bornu Although it was not directly linked to the three western empires, a similar state developed in the vicinity of Lake Chad. About a thousand miles east of the Timbuktu-Sijilmasa caravan route was another north-south route across the Sahara. Once loaded with Bilma salt, the Tuareg headed south to the land of the Hausa in northern Nigeria to trade salt for Hausa goods before returning to their locations across the desert after traveling some 1,500 miles. For centuries, Tuareg have carried out a similar car- avan trade with the Saharan oasis and salt depository of Bilma, located about 350 miles north of Lake Chad. The north-south Saharan trade provided the revenue that sustained the kingdom of Kanem, located northeast of Lake Chad. Kanem was founded by pastoral clans from the Sahel who converted to Islam by the eleventh century. Although they had no access to gold like the empires to the west, they controlled a much shorter trade route to the Mediterranean coast. By raiding non-Muslim Bantu from further south, Kanem obtained a supply of human slaves whom they brought on a long march across the desert to the Libyan coast, where they were exchanged for horses (and later guns), which were used in war to capture more slaves. Kanem reached the height of its power from 1210 to 1248 under Mai Dunama Dibalami and then began to decline. Bornu—a state south of Lake Chad, which made tribute payments to Kanem—rose to take its place in the fourteenth century. After a civil war forced the leaders of Kanem to flee to Bornu, it became independent and served as a launching pad for the reconquest of Kanem. By the fifteenth century, Bornu was the capital of a revived Kanem-Bornu, and was strengthened by its ability to attract gold traders from Akan. It remained powerful for nearly two centuries after the fall of Songhay, but declined after desert Tuareg armed with guns seized control of the Bilma salt mines in the 1750s.51 Other Types of African States Throughout Africa—and indeed throughout all human history—the basis for state formation involved an exchange between leaders and followers. Leaders provided law, security, and organization for their followers, in exchange for the means needed to operate the state. For example, in our modern-day nation, people pay taxes (the “means”), which pay for the army, the police, judges, people who inspect our food, and so on. In the savanna states like Ghana and Mali, traders paid for access to transshipment points, which enabled them to trade more profitably, while others paid for access to the goods brought there by traders. Much of what we think of as taxation took the form of gift-giving and doing favors, and there were many different ways for people to participate. For USAD Social Science Resource Guide • 2017–2018 37 SKT, IASD - International, NA Shanghai Foreign Language School Affiliated to SISU - Shanghai, China that societies in Timbuktu and Gao had a few very wealthy rulers and merchants while the vast majority of the populace was very poor. Women covered their faces with a veil. Corn, cattle, milk, and butter were available, but salt was scarce. The king maintained doctors, judges, and Muslim clerics at his own expense. The coin of Timbuktu was unmarked gold, but for small transactions, cowrie shells from Persia were used like coins. The king greatly promoted the creation and sale of manuscripts, as had Mansa Musa before him.49 teenth-century Zulu of southern Africa took this approach to its highest level, creating a state that, for a time, was able to prevent Europeans from conquering their land. Sketch of Zulu King Shaka (1781–1828) from 1824. For a time, the nineteenth-century Zulu of southern Africa were able to prevent Europeans from conquering their land. example, in central Africa the Luba people occupied an area that produced valuable minerals, so other groups gave them presents in exchange for the right to extract minerals. At some point in their history, members of other groups married members of the Luba, creating a new form of exchange—wedding presents and favors owed to members of one’s family. Over time, those marriage networks expanded to cover much of the Congo River basin and extended south into present-day Angola. Other groups formed around the herding of cattle, which took place in areas that were too dry for farming. As a means to accumulate wealth, cattle and other livestock are unique because they produce more cattle when they breed, and humans can get food from them without killing them. Thus, a cattle herd was a source of wealth that increased over time, and the ability to give cattle as presents provided a way to attract followers. The nine- 38 Long before the Zulu were a powerful force, the Shona of southern Africa had created a state based on cattle that became powerful enough to control the trade route between the Indian Ocean coast and gold mines near the Zambezi River. As their power increased even further, the Shona constructed Great Zimbabwe (also known as the “house of stone”) beginning around the eleventh century.52 It is comprised of three parts. The most impressive part is the oval shaped Great Enclosure with walls skillfully constructed without mortar some thirty feet high that likely enclosed the residence of the king. The second section is the so-called Acropolis from which the king could address subjects in the valley below. The stone dwellings of the residents made up the third section of Great Zimbabwe. Since the late nineteenth century, teams of amateur and professional archaeologists have found evidence linking Great Zimbabwe to international trade carried out by the Swahili some 250 miles due east on the coast. Section III Summary  ased on the Nile River and screened from B outsiders by distance and deserts, pharaonic Egypt lasted for about two thousand years. Major themes in its existence included advances in agriculture, especially irrigation, writing, engineering, commerce, and a re- USAD Social Science Resource Guide • 2017–2018 SKT, IASD - International, NA Shanghai Foreign Language School Affiliated to SISU - Shanghai, China The ruins of Great Zimbabwe  The first great West African empire was Gha na. It amassed enormous wealth by taxing trade between the desert to the north and the savanna to the south, especially the exchange of salt for gold. That wealth financed alliances based on tribute that formed the basis of Ghana’s power until Muslim Almoravids from the north, who sought control of Ghana’s gold trade and conversion of its population to Islam, overthrew the empire in 1042 ce. The second great West African empire was Mali, whose foundation is memorialized in the Epic of Sundiata. Mali extended further south than Ghana, allowing it access to more fertile lands and more trade goods. Mali’s rulers, called Mansas, encouraged the spread of Islam. One of Mali’s most notable rulers was Mansa Musa, who gained great fame for his generosity, his promotion of Islamic scholarship, and his hajj to Mecca.  T he third great West African empire, Songhay, also taxed the commercial activities of caravans as they left or returned from Taghaza and Sijilmasa. Like its predecessors, Songhay was influenced by Islam brought from the north, but because it existed later, it also felt the influence of changes in Europe, notably the spread of firearms, which played a role in its conquest.  A lthough ancient African empires’ sparse population and relative wealth meant that Africans experienced less insecurity than contemporaneous Europeans or Asians, throughout Africa there are examples of individuals and families who attracted followers and solidified their authority by the ritual exchange of tributary gifts. One of the most impressive, and most puzzling to Europeans, was Great Zimbabwe, whose leaders used access to livestock—and later, access to gold—as a means to attract followers. Others, like the Luba of central Congo, created states via intermarriage. USAD Social Science Resource Guide • 2017–2018 39 SKT, IASD - International, NA Shanghai Foreign Language School Affiliated to SISU - Shanghai, China  ligion that promised either reward or punishment. As the centuries passed and Egypt became less isolated, the absolute power of pharaohs declined. Egypt was eventually conquered by various foreign powers, including Alexander the Great. Section IV Traditional African Religion The essential beliefs of Africans who follow traditional religion acknowledge God as the all-powerful creator of both humanity and a universe infinite in space and time. Within that universe humans are brought into existence by a process started by God, and pass through stages that correspond to Western ideas of infancy, childhood, adulthood, maturity, death, and ancestry. Each stage puts an individual closer to the creator, and thus ancestors serve as intermediaries to the creator and elders as intermediaries to the ancestors. For this reason, humans are defined by their ancestors, and the past offers the explanation for how the present came to be. Individuals also believe in intermediate deities with whom they communicate. Sometimes traditional healers acquire the power to become intermediaries. Just as they caricatured African history, Western academics and missionaries misconstrued traditional African religion. Without understanding its nature, they often described traditional African religion as “primitive” and “savage.”53 Two of the first African scholars to challenge such misconceptions were John Mbiti (b.1931) and Bolaji Idowu (1913– 93). Both became Christian ministers—Anglican and Methodist respectively. They shattered many Eurocentric notions about traditional African religion.54 Although Eurocentrists characterized traditional African religion as shallow, believers are often more religious than either Muslims or Christians, the continent’s two majority religions. This is because traditional African religion, older than both Islam and Christianity, permeates all components of African 40 Religious philosopher and writer John Mbiti was one of the first scholars to challenge the Western perception of traditional African religion as “primitive” and “savage.” life. In traditional African religion, there is no formal distinction between the sacred and the secular, between the religious and non-religious, and between the material and spiritual areas of life. To paraphrase the ideas of Mbiti, traditional African religions are not primarily for the individual, but for the community of which a person is a part. To be human is to belong to the whole community and participate in the beliefs, rituals, and festivals of that community. When Africans leave the village for the city and abandon their religion, they can suffer severe strain since this detaches them from their religious foundation. Contrast this with Christianity and Islam, which require Africans to attend a church or mosque once a week and can be readily practiced outside one’s village. Interestingly, many African converts to these faiths revert to their traditional beliefs in times of crisis.55 USAD Social Science Resource Guide • 2017–2018 SKT, IASD - International, NA Shanghai Foreign Language School Affiliated to SISU - Shanghai, China Traditional African Religion, Islam, and Christianity SKT, IASD - International, NA Shanghai Foreign Language School Affiliated to SISU - Shanghai, China Gye Nyame (God’s Omnipotence) The Ghanaian stamp above illustrates the importance of God in all matters in traditional African religion. Gye Nyame also translates as “Except for God,” which means, for example, that nothing is perfect, “Except for God.” Accompanied by Asante Kente cloth surrounding the Adinkra symbol, this stamp demonstrates the power of a creator God in the traditional African religion of the Akan people.56 While pervasive in Ghana, Gye Nyame can also convey Asante-centric views of superiority over other Africans. The symbol came to be associated with the extension of the Asante’s hegemony over other ethnic groups that began in the 1600s. Followers of traditional African religion have neither sacred scriptures nor missionaries. Religion is instead written in people’s hearts and minds and is transmitted via oral histories and rituals and by religious specialists, such as priests, rainmakers, officiating elders, and kings. To understand African traditional religion, one needs to know not only the beliefs concerning God and the spirits, but also the religious journey of the individual from birth to after physical death and the beliefs of the persons responsible for formal rituals and ceremonies.57 The conveyance of traditional African religion is usually through participation in communal rituals, which are often accompanied by drums. It is believed that the beat and sound of the drums help those par- ticipating in the ritual to gain access to knowledge hidden within the spirit world—to seek answers to pressing individual or communal questions. Sometimes the purpose of the ritual is to call upon a deity or ancestral spirit to provide the knowledge sought. Another form of communicating with the spirit world of deities and ancestors is through divination. The means to carry out the ritual vary, but a common one is “throwing the cowries.” The diviner will toss cowrie shells and then interpret the way they fall as a means for predicting the future or recommending certain courses of action. Traditional African art is functional and is often related to religion. Unlike artists in the West who create objects to provoke admiration or intellectu- USAD Social Science Resource Guide • 2017–2018 41 Followers face the past more fully than the present, for instead of an eternal life of bliss or damnation, those who have died take on existence as the “living departed.” They cling as long as possible to this world by living in the minds of their family and close friends. If libations or sacrifices of remembrance are not maintained, then the “living departed” are forced to enter a state of non-existence. Those not yet in that stage resent being pushed toward it. Families who do not carry out forms of remembrance risk the “living departed” expressing their displeasure by bringing illness or misfortune on the family. Thus, time is two-dimensional; that is, there is a past and present but no distant future. About two years is as far forward as traditional African words express. With cowrie shell divination, the diviner will toss cowrie shells and then interpret the way they fall as a means for predicting the future or recommending certain courses of action. al engagement, traditional African art is created to carry out some kind of purpose. Sometimes its function is secular—an earring or fly whisk, for example. Other times its function is religious. Intricate masks and intimidating figures are often used in religious rituals to call upon the spirits to intercede.58 Followers of traditional African religion believe in the continuation of life after death. Unlike Christians and Muslims, this belief does not constitute a hope for a future and a better life. To live in the hereand-now on Earth is the most important concern of African religious activities and beliefs. Heaven and hell are nonexistent. A person’s soul does not long for redemption or for closer contact with God in the next world. There is no savior who might bring 42 Paradoxically, when a person dies, he or she enters a state of personal immortality that lies not in the future, but in the past. Thus, marriage and having children to perpetuate honoring one’s memory are very important, as you will remain in the present through their efforts. The “living departed” only become completely dead when the last person who knew him or her also dies. At that point, the “living departed” enter the state of collective immortality and become members of the community of spirits. This is the final destination between God and the living. With such a spiritual foundation, it was logical that religion played a major role in encounters between Africans and outsiders. The two religions that have had the greatest impact on Africa (as they have in other parts of the world) are Islam and Christianity. Both are similar in their concept of a universal creator, which traditional African religion also recognizes. But Islam and Christianity both claim to be universal (i.e., not related to any particular person or place) and for the most part they reject the idea of intermediaries between humans and the creator. In addition, both Islam and Christianity became ideologies of empires, so their effect on Africa was political as well as spiritual. USAD Social Science Resource Guide • 2017–2018 SKT, IASD - International, NA Shanghai Foreign Language School Affiliated to SISU - Shanghai, China about a radical reversal of a human’s earthly life. There is no ethical-spiritual relationship between humans and God. Human acts of worship and turning to God are pragmatic and utilitarian rather than spiritual or mystical. Traditional African religious practitioners see God as the creator who then largely steps aside. Muhammad came from a prestigious tribe and clan, the Quraysh and Hashim respectively. After his parents died early in his life, Muhammad lived first with his grandfather and then with his uncle Abu Talib (?–619). He learned about camels, caravans, Bedouins, and probably traveled to Jerusalem and Damascus to buy and sell goods. Muhammad remained illiterate his entire life. While he could not read or write, he had enormous talents in diplomacy and assessing human character and had outstanding judgment. The stories about his life are called hadith, and they form part of the foundation of Islam that directs the lives of Muslims—much in the way that Christians attempt to live by the example of the life of Jesus. Also like Christians with their bible, Muslims have sacred literature called the Qur’an, which they believe is made up entirely of revelations from Allah (God) to Muhammad conveyed through the Archangel Gabriel. Dogon ceremonial mask. Intricate masks and intimidating figures are often used in religious rituals to call upon the spirits to intercede. Photo by Ferdinand Reus from Arnhem, Holland - Pays Dogon, CC BY-SA 2.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=3249564 Islam in Africa North Africa Early Islam, Bilal, Axum, and Al-Azhar Islam, along with Judaism and Christianity, is one of three great monotheistic religions attributed to the patriarch Abraham of Ur. Approximately onefifth of the world’s population is Muslim. About two out of five Africans are Muslim. Much of the history of Africa has been shaped by followers of the prophet of Islam, Muhammad ibn Abdallah (c.570–632 ce) of Mecca, a city which was famous as a religious and trading city prior to Muhammad’s birth. Mecca’s rectangular shrine of the Ka’bah housed some 360 manifestations of various gods and goddesses of Muhammad was around forty years old before he received his first revelations, which called the Arabs back to one God and to abandon the false gods they had come to revere. Part of Muhammad’s early message was presented as beliefs Meccans had once cherished but had lost through the years—this was symbolized by the Ka’bah, which had once been dedicated to God but prior to the birth of Muhammad had become desecrated with some 360 gods and goddesses. In that sense, Muhammad was a conservative advocating a return to tradition. Another view of Muhammad, given his respect for and treatment of women, was that he was an advocate for women’s rights. Although opposed by the Meccans, Muhammad ended female infanticide and the Arab practice of a man marrying as many women as he pleased. Muhammad effectively enforced marrying one woman, unless a man could provide up to four wives with equal provisions and affections. From a Muslim perspective, the improved treatment of women came from Allah—Muhammad was only the messenger. Muslims believe that is the miracle of the Qur’an—they believe that it is made up not of Muhammad’s words, but those of God. Meccans were troubled by Muhammad’s demand USAD Social Science Resource Guide • 2017–2018 43 SKT, IASD - International, NA Shanghai Foreign Language School Affiliated to SISU - Shanghai, China the practitioners of traditional Arab religion, which adherents placed inside the Ka’bah during their annual pilgrimage held simultaneously with an annual trade fair.59 The Ka’bah is still used today by pilgrims to Mecca. Photo by Tab59 - Flickr: Mosquée Masjid el Haram à la Mecque, CC BY-SA 2.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=25697057 that they must be charitable. Who was Muhammad, largely outside the power structure and illiterate, to tell them what to do? What especially troubled them was Muhammad’s insistence on the reality of one unseen God. If Arabs came to believe this, what would become of Mecca’s fame? Pilgrims might stop bringing sacred objects representing their gods to Mecca and the Ka’bah. The religious leaders of Mecca came to perceive Muhammad as a danger to Mecca’s prestige and wealth. Thus, Muhammad’s message was an economic threat to Mecca’s established order. In some ways, the life of Muhammad brings to mind Socrates who fought similar battles and who was executed for them a thousand years earlier. Both challenged tradition and were accused of corrupting youth and of believing in false religions. While Muhammad did not lose his life as Socrates did, Muhammad suffered greatly from Meccan op- 44 position. His life and mission were in doubt many times. Meccan persecution eventually forced the Muslims to migrate to Yathrib in 622, which soon afterward was renamed Medina, or City of the Prophet. Shortly after arriving in Medina, Muhammad and his followers built the first mosque, gave the first call to prayer, and formed their congregation. Subsequent Meccan efforts to overthrow Muhammad’s power failed. In 630, Muhammad and about 10,000 Muslims took control of Mecca against little opposition and cleansed the Ka’bah of its many gods and goddesses. The Umayyads, who were Muhammad’s powerful Meccan enemies and his distant relations, converted to Islam once Muhammad took the city. They eventually created the first great Muslim caliphate USAD Social Science Resource Guide • 2017–2018 SKT, IASD - International, NA Shanghai Foreign Language School Affiliated to SISU - Shanghai, China The Ka’bah is still used today by pilgrims to Mecca. Over time the Muslims continued to argue over who was qualified to be caliph and thus split into two sects, the Sunni—people of the tradition—and the Shia—followers of Ali (601–661), cousin and son-in-law of Muhammad. To sum this split up in the briefest of terms: those who argued that any rightly guided Muslim could be caliph were called Sunni; those who claimed one had to be descended directly from Ali and Muhammad’s daughter Fatimah (604–632) came to be called Shia. Until about 941 ce, those we call Shia today had their own caliphs, called Imams.60 With the disappearance of the Twelfth Imam, Muhammad al-Mahdi (c.868–c.941), perhaps in a house after leading a funeral procession at the age of five, the Shia began to rely on spiritual leaders who were later called Ayatollahs, a term which came into frequent use during the twentieth century. The Shia believe Muhammad al-Mahdi remained alive and usually unseen in occultation until he was about seventy years old. Iran is the best-known country today whose population is largely Shia. Today, about 85 percent of Muslims in the world are Sunni of various sects and schools of law. There are two important connections between Africa and Islam during the life of Muhammad. The first concerns the flight to Axum, Ethiopia (Abyssinia) of Muslims persecuted by Meccan leaders, which predated the migration to Yathrib/Medina.61 Around 613 ce, the Abyssinian Negus (king) granted Muslims sanctuary. This kindness generated a tradition that promotes eternal friendship between the Ethiopian Coptic Christians and Muslims. While that relationship has not always been peaceful, Muhammad explicitly encouraged Muslims to respect Abyssinians. A second important connection between Africa and early Islam involves one of Muhammad’s companions from Mecca, Bilal ibn Rabah (580–640), whose mother was an Ethiopian slave. As the first muezzin (caller to prayer) of the followers of Mu- An Islamic miniature depicting Bilal giving the call to prayer. hammad, some Muslims cite Bilal as proof that there is no “race” in Islam, that all Muslims are as equal in the eyes of God as the teeth in a comb. There are claims that Bilal’s descendants migrated to West Africa and established the Keïta clan that gave rise to Sundiata and the empire of Mali.62 When Muslim armies began to expand the ummah (community of Muslims) beyond the Arabian Desert soon after the death of Muhammad in 632 ce, the same Meccan leader who had tried to retrieve Muslims from the Negus of Axum led the successful invasion of Egypt in 640 ce. Amr ibn al-As (585– 664) created the city of Fustat (“City of the Tents”), which became the Muslim capital of Egypt before Cairo emerged. Africa’s second oldest mosque and USAD Social Science Resource Guide • 2017–2018 45 SKT, IASD - International, NA Shanghai Foreign Language School Affiliated to SISU - Shanghai, China (empire led by the successor to Muhammad). What they could not do outside Islam—maintain their power—they did from within. Later accused of corruption and overthrown by the Abbasids (named after one of Muhammad’s uncles) in 750 ce, the Umayyads were able to retain control over a separate caliphate in Spain. to the depth of Islam in West Africa and to the understanding of history worldwide. A statue of Ibn Khaldun, the most famous Muslim historian, stands in his native Tunis. oldest university, Al-Azhar, was founded in approximately 970 by the Fatimids, a Muslim Shia group who named themselves after Muhammad’s daughter and established the Fatimid Caliphate with its capital at Cairo. When Sunni control of Egypt was restored after the Crusades, Al-Azhar University became the academic home to both Sufi and Sunni Islam. Arguably the most celebrated Muslim university in the world, Al-Azhar retains its distinction as both a secular educational institution and a religious mosque.63 The most famous Muslim historian, largely unknown to the West until the nineteenth century, was for part of his life a teacher at Al-Azhar. Ibn Khaldun (1332–1406) (Abu Zayd ‘Abdu r-Rahman bin Muhammad bin Khaldun Al-Hadrami) wrote the first world history text from a Muslim perspective. His interpretation of a series of Muslim invasions across North Africa over the centuries supported the theory that history works in cycles. Arnold Toynbee (1889–1975), the famous British historian who also believed in the cyclic interpretation of history, employed the ideas of Ibn Khaldun. When one considers the rise and fall of civilizations as a way to understand the past—as the Mayans of Mesoamerica did—Ibn Khaldun’s Muqaddimah (Introduction to Universal History) must now routinely be taken into consideration.64 The intellectual influences of Ibn Khaldun and Al-Azhar have significantly added 46 The initial expansion of Islam into Africa in the seventh century ce took place at a time when the Byzantine Empire controlled the Mediterranean, and assorted warlords controlled Western Europe. By the following century there was a military stalemate, so subsequent expansion took place more slowly by peaceful means. Traders who followed the desert routes south to Ghana, Mali, Songhay, and Kanem brought their values and beliefs with them, and some found that Islam—with its belief in ethical behavior and literacy—was a useful adjunct to trade. African leaders also recognized the advantage that employing Muslim scholars brought to administration, and gradually Islam spread south of the Sahara into the Sahel. The most dramatic evidence was the hajj of Mansa Musa to Mecca mentioned in the previous section, but many ordinary Africans also adopted Muslim beliefs. The process was not always smooth. For many Africans, Islam was something that could be “added” to traditional religious beliefs by acknowledging Allah as the sole creator, while still maintaining ritual ties to ancestors and local gods. Orthodox Muslims called this practice “syncretism,” and it triggered numerous attempts throughout history to “purify” the practice of Islam. One such attempt even resulted in a revolution that established the Fatimid Caliphate in Egypt. More often these efforts resulted in the dispatch of teachers into areas where syncretism seemed to be a threat, and the farther away from Mecca that one lived, the more likely that Islam deviated from Muhammad’s teachings. West Africa was especially distant from Mecca and thus became the site of many reform movements, including that of the Almoravids who conquered Ghana in the eleventh century ce, that of the Almohad who overthrew the Almoravids, and others. In the late eighteenth century, the Muslim world seemed to be losing ground to Europeans. People all over the Muslim world argued about whether this decline was due to the strength of Europe or the weakness of Muslims; those who believed the latter to be the case thought the solution would be to remove influences that weakened Islam. In Africa, this manner of thinking led to a series of jihads—reform USAD Social Science Resource Guide • 2017–2018 SKT, IASD - International, NA Shanghai Foreign Language School Affiliated to SISU - Shanghai, China West Africa efforts that turned into military confrontations— which swept across the Sahel from Lake Chad to the Senegalese coast and paved the way for the European conquest of the late nineteenth century.65 The most influential of those jihads, in terms of numbers affected and connections to secondary jihads, began in northwest Nigeria and led to the creation of the Sokoto Caliphate. One of the most important West African Muslim women and teachers of the nineteenth century was Nana Asma’u (1793–1864). She was born into a mercantile society in what is today northwest Nigeria that was both cosmopolitan and literate, thanks to Islam. Her father, Usman dan Fodiyo (1754–1817), often called the Shehu (Hausa for sheik), had begun a reform movement in northwestern Nigeria before her birth. He was a Sufi (one who helps others attain Figure 4.1 By the time of his death, the Shehu and his followers had created the Sokoto Caliphate, which attempted to imitate Muhammad’s early community at Medina and encouraged those whom they defeated to join ranks, as was the case with Muhammad’s Meccan Umayyad enemies. The Sokoto Caliphate inspired other West Africans to launch reform movements during the nineteenth century that influenced the foundations of the twentieth-century nation states of Senegal, Mali, and Sudan.67 Nana Asma’u was exceptionally fortunate in her education. The Shehu provided her with a wide Qur’anic education including “philosophical texts SKT, IASD - International, NA Shanghai Foreign Language School Affiliated to SISU - Shanghai, China The Sokoto Caliphate and Nana Asma’u spiritual understanding) of the Qadiriyya order who argued against corruption among the elites and for living humbly according to the teachings of the Qur’an and hadith.66 He encouraged all to abandon traditional African religion and practice pure Islam. The Sokoto Caliphate68 USAD Social Science Resource Guide • 2017–2018 47 Nana Asma’u memorized the Qur’an, spoke four languages, and wrote prolifically.72 Her message to other women concentrated on piety, patience, and kindness rather than material possessions. Character, not status, was another theme she advocated. One of her great innovations was to teach women who believed in Bori, a cult led by women which ministered to psychological, social, and emotional stress, to substitute Muslim remedies instead. Rather than ban Bori, she understood the greater power of persuasion. She enjoined others that “If you need rain, pray to God for it, not to pagan spirits.”73 Nana Asma’u taught people in their own languages and instructed her own students, jajis (Hausa for itinerant women teachers), to do likewise—all in the spirit of expanding the ummah (the Muslim community) as they understood it during Muhammad’s time at Medina. She sought to recruit jajis from all ages and ethnic groups to convert others to Islam, to promote the education of women, and to harness their talents to maintain and expand the caliphate with Medina as its model.74 Clearly, Nana Asma’u was one of West Africa’s most influential nineteenth-century female leaders and arguably the Sokoto Caliphate’s greatest woman. She exemplifies the presence of important women in pre-colonial West African societies. East Africa As in West Africa south of the Sahara, Islam spread to East Africa by peaceful means through the actions of traders. After the initial success of Islam 48 in the seventh century ce, the Abbassid revolution of 750 ce triggered a new round of expansion toward Asia. Asia and East Africa had been connected by maritime trading routes since at least the Roman Republic. By the ninth century, Muslim traders sought deals in African ports from the Red Sea to Zanzibar. Swahili Culture Despite the contrast with the overland trade routes of West Africa, there are similarities between what happened along the Swahili coast and the Sahel (both words are derived from the Arabic word for “coast.). In both regions trade resulted in cultural and ethnic exchanges, although Swahili culture survived the European colonial era with greater unity than Sahelian culture in the west. In East Africa, Swahili traders relied on a type of single-masted ship called a dhow that could take advantage of ocean currents and seasonal winds in the Indian Ocean called monsoons.75 The monsoon winds blew north and east toward Arabia and India from November to March, and then reversed to the south and west back toward the Swahili coast between April and September. By using the combination of winds and currents, sailors could make long round-trip voyages each year between Asia and East Africa. Their activities stimulated commerce all along the coast as farmers, craftsmen, laborers, and local fishermen generated goods for trade.76 A dhow in the Indian Ocean, near the islands of Zanzibar on the Swahili Coast. In East Africa, Swahili traders relied on the dhow, which could take advantage of ocean currents and seasonal winds. Photo by Muhammad Mahdi Karim https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=13092558 USAD Social Science Resource Guide • 2017–2018 SKT, IASD - International, NA Shanghai Foreign Language School Affiliated to SISU - Shanghai, China on prayer, mysticism, legal matters, fiqh (which regulates religious conduct), and tawhid (dogma).”69 As such, Asma’u became a religious scholar “of the highest order, writing philosophical treatises and preaching the urgency of following the straight path of positive life [as exemplified by Muhammad], the Sunna.”70 Like her father, she lived a humble and simple life in harmony with hadiths about Muhammad. Nana Asma’u spent her life educating women from Islamic and traditional African religious (Bori) backgrounds, from educated and uneducated upbringings, and from rich and poor families. She spent over forty-five years writing poems and prose that sought to teach women how to live during wartime, to follow the Sunna, and to adhere to roles of women in the Qadiriyya community.71 Like her father the Shehu, Nana Asma’u was a Sufi. Figure 4.2 it required intervention by major Muslim powers to stop the European effort. In the late eighteenth century much of the coast came under the control of Oman from the Arabian Peninsula. In 1840, the Omani prince Sayyid Said transferred his capital to the island of Zanzibar and set up a commercial empire that stretched from Iran to Mozambique. Besides trading slaves and ivory, the sultan established clove plantations on Zanzibar that relied on slave labor obtained in the interior. Ibn Battuta, the great traveler who visited Mali in 1352, also visited the Swahili coast around 1329. He spent perhaps two months sailing by dhow and SKT, IASD - International, NA Shanghai Foreign Language School Affiliated to SISU - Shanghai, China East Africans from Somalia to Mozambique practiced Islam along the coast while traditional African religion remained dominant in the interior. The development of the coast as a market for African slaves induced non-Muslims to convert in order to avoid enslavement. Otherwise relations between the port cities were relatively peaceful until the arrival of the Portuguese in the early sixteenth century. They diverted enough gold from the Swahili trade to draw European rivals into the area and disrupt the economies of Muslim powers further north. Individual Swahili cities attempted to resist the European encroachment, but were overpowered, and Indian Ocean Monsoon Pattern Source: Asians in East Africa: Images, Histories, and Portraits by Gijsbert Oonk USAD Social Science Resource Guide • 2017–2018 49 Christianity in Africa Egypt and Abyssinia (Ethiopia) The impact of Christianity on Africa began centuries before Islam arrived, thanks to the inclusion of North Africa in the Roman Empire. As the state religion of Rome, Christianity spread to port cities Figure 4.3 like Alexandria and Tripoli although it had little influence in the countryside. Africans played a role in defining Christian thought during the period after the Western Roman Empire collapsed, and a branch that thrived in Egypt, the Monophysites, found refuge in Ethiopia where they survived the Arab Muslim invasion. In Christianity’s early centuries, Christian theologians argued over the nature of Jesus of Nazareth. Was Jesus God? Was Jesus human? Could Jesus be both God and man? What was the relationship between Jesus the son of God and God the father? Theologians pondered these questions for centuries before agreeing on dogma. Orthodox Christians, including Catholics, Protestants, and Greek and Russian Orthodox, adhere to the general answer to those questions found in the Nicene Creed, created at the Council of Nicaea in 325 ce, that God the Father begot Jesus. This made God the Son as eter- The Spread of Christianity, c.300–600 ce 50 USAD Social Science Resource Guide • 2017–2018 SKT, IASD - International, NA Shanghai Foreign Language School Affiliated to SISU - Shanghai, China visiting some of the most important ports, including Mogadishu and Kilwa.77 In the nineteenth century a long list of European explorers (including Dr. David Livingstone and Henry Morton Stanley) passed through Zanzibar on their way to the African interior. Since then the commerce of the Swahili coast has shifted from ivory, gold, and spices to petroleum, diamonds, and other minerals, but the unique aspects of Swahili culture, including Bantu, Arab, Persian (Shirazi), and European influences, remain dominant in East African cities. The Chapel of the Tablet at the Church of Our Lady Mary of Zion in Axum, Ethiopia, where Coptics today believe the Ark of the Covenant resides. nal as God the Father and became critical to understanding the nature of the Trinity. According to tradition, St. Mark introduced Christianity into Egypt in 42 ce. At that time, Egyptians were called Coptics and spoke Coptic. The Coptics entered the discussion over the relationship between the human and the divine aspects of Jesus and came to believe that Jesus had a single nature with his divine and human nature fully united. At the Council of Chalcedon in 451 ce, those who advocated for the Coptic understanding of Jesus, sometimes called Monophysites, were declared heretics. The Orthodox view, which is supported by the Nicene Creed and accepted by most Christians today, is that Jesus was one person with two natures—one divine and one human. Such theological disputes also had political implications dating back to the Roman rule of Egypt. Some Copts were adamant in their beliefs as a means to oppose Roman imperial power; Rome eventually adopted Orthodox Christianity and threatened Coptic independence. When the Muslims invaded Egypt in 640, Copts did not come to support the Orthodox Christians who had persecuted them as heretics. Rather, many Copts regarded the Muslims as liberators. Others resisted the Muslims and fled up the Nile River toward Axum in Abyssinia (modern-day Ethiopia). The continued influx of Muslims along the Red Sea coast and into the Nile Valley concentrated Christians in remote areas of the interior. Leaders who managed to unify the refugees and local inhabitants Ethiopian Christians believe that they possess the Jewish Ark of the Covenant, a chest built by Moses to house the stone tablets containing the Ten Commandments. Coptic Christians believe that the Abyssinian ruler Menelik I, who traditionally is considered the son of King Solomon and the Queen of Sheba, brought the Ark of the Covenant to Axum after traveling to Jerusalem to meet his father shortly after reaching manhood.79 This and the subsequent legitimization of the Solomonid Dynasty (kings descended from Solomon through Menelik) are documented in the fourteenth-century work of sacred literature the Kebra Nagast. Coptics today believe the Ark resides in Axum in the Chapel of the Tablet at the Church of Our Lady Mary of Zion. Since only its guardian is allowed to see it, much mystery continues to surround it. Christianity from Europe From the birth of Jesus until 1500, significant Christian contact with Africans was largely confined to North and Northeast Africa. Maritime advances after 1500 enabled Europeans to explore Africa’s west coast, but from then until the advent of modern medicine and hygiene in the late nineteenth century, few Europeans spent much time in equatorial Africa, and they usually succumbed to diseases for which they had few immunities.80 This, of course, significantly reduced European missionary activity in West Africa until the late nineteenth century. When the New Imperialism (1870–1914) and the Berlin Conference (1884–85) largely coincided with advances in hygiene and medicine, missionaries began to arrive and challenge followers of traditional African religion and Islam. Catholics, Methodists, Anglicans, Calvinists, and Baptists established missionary stations. For West Africans in the interior, missionaries sometimes preceded explorers, traders, and soldiers. Whatever the European form of first contact, they introduced Africans to Christianity as well as to Western ideas and technology. Unfortunately, Europeans interpreted Christianity in ways that demeaned Africans, including justifying the Atlantic slave trade and colonialism. Eventually West Africans like Kwame Nkrumah, who were products of mission schools, turned their Christian educations to their advantage by organizing resis- USAD Social Science Resource Guide • 2017–2018 51 SKT, IASD - International, NA Shanghai Foreign Language School Affiliated to SISU - Shanghai, China embraced Coptic Christianity as a basis for unity and obedience to authority.78 Section IV Summary A mission school in Akpafu, Volta-region of Ghana, in 1899, which at that time was a German colony by the name of Togo. When the New Imperialism (1870–1914) and the Berlin Conference (1884–85) largely coincided with advances in hygiene and medicine, missionaries began to arrive and challenge followers of traditional African religion and Islam.   Photo Source: By Missionar der Norddeutschen Mission CC-BY-SA-3.0 via Wikimedia Commons tance to European rule and overthrowing colonialism. Like many Asians and Latin Americans, Africans also adapted Christianity to their own cultures and initiated what has been called “the fourth great age of Christian expansion.”81 Just as they did with Islam, West Africans blended the teachings of established Christian sects with local beliefs and circumstances. As a result, large numbers of small, independent Christian churches exist throughout much of Africa. 52  frican traditional religion acknowledges a A single all-powerful creator of a universe in which humans are born, live, and die in a sequence that moves from the spiritual to the material and back to the spiritual. Within that sequence, ancestors connect the living to the creator and elders connect the young to the ancestors. As a consequence, humans are defined by their ancestors, and the past offers the explanation for how the present came to be. Islam, one of the world’s major religions, had an enormous impact on Africa. Around 40 percent of Africans today practice Islam. The most celebrated Muslim in African history is Bilal, a companion of Muhammad who gave the first call to prayer in Mecca. The first wave of Muslims invaded and settled North Africa in the seventh century ce. Subsequently merchants and soldiers brought Islam across the Sahara Desert to West Africa and to East Africa along ocean trade routes. Christianity reached Africa during the Ro man Empire and survived in Ethiopia after the Muslim invasion. A second era of Christian contact began in the sixteenth century with European overseas expansion. Christianity served as a tool for conquest and pacification. Ultimately, Christian schools provided training for Africans who led the way to independence in the twentieth century. USAD Social Science Resource Guide • 2017–2018 SKT, IASD - International, NA Shanghai Foreign Language School Affiliated to SISU - Shanghai, China  Section V Origins of the Atlantic Slave Trade Introduction Slavery has ancient roots, although the word used to denote it, “slav,” came into use only after Spanish Muslims enslaved ethnic Slavs of Eastern Europe in the 800s ce.82 Many ancient civilizations—including Sumerians, Babylonians, Jews, Egyptians, Abyssinians, Christians, Muslims, Mayans, and Aztecs—supported the traffic in humans for profit and for forced, unpaid labor. Some scholars have argued that slavery may have made possible the Golden Age of Athens (480–404 bce).83 Aristotle believed slavery was the natural order of existence because the souls and intellectual powers of some humans were not well formed. He said, “Some men are by nature free, and others slaves, and that for these latter slavery is both expedient and right.”84 Between 800 and 1492, slave traders sold relatively small numbers of African slaves to buyers in the Mediterranean world, the Middle East, and Asia just east of Africa. With the arrival of Columbus to the New World, circumstances changed dramatically. The new transatlantic slave trade added a dynamic dimension of millions of people to the older trade. The transatlantic slave trade was significantly different in numbers, geography, and value. When Europeans began arriving in greater numbers in the Middle American World in the 1500s, they found significant levels of Native American cultural development in the Mayan and Aztec civilizations, but little development in terms of long distance trade. This would change significantly when A Roman soldier leads slaves in chains, relief found at Smyrna, 200 ce. Many ancient civilizations supported the traffic in humans for profit and for forced, unpaid labor. Photo by Jun - Flickr: Roman collared slaves, CC BY-SA 2.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=16289799 Europeans took control of Native American land by force and seized Native American resources valued in European markets. The devastating consequence of this process was the unwitting introduction of germs to which Native American populations had little or no immunities.85 In Central Mexico, for example, the estimated population of up to 26.3 million people in 1492 fell to 1.1 million by 1605.86 European conquerors looked elsewhere for labor to compensate for the dramatic shortage. Seizing land was easy enough; however, working it for agriculture or mining it for gold and silver required a new labor force. Historian J.E. Inikori argues that once Europeans began to use enormous amounts of African slave labor during the heyday of the Atlantic slave trade, the slave labor economy led to the dominance of Western capitalism today and the ongoing USAD Social Science Resource Guide • 2017–2018 53 SKT, IASD - International, NA Shanghai Foreign Language School Affiliated to SISU - Shanghai, China The Atlantic and West African Slave Trade Shanghai Foreign Language School Affiliated to SISU - Shanghai, China African Slavery Before the Europeans Forms of slavery existed among West African ethnic groups long before the arrival of Europeans. In Europe, one invested in land as private property. In Africa, one invested in slaves as private property. Ownership of land in Africa was largely nonexistent; rather, land was controlled by the king and ruling families, and land was given to those who could farm it. One gained status in African societies through the acquisition of slaves, much like in Europe one could rise in society through the acquisition of land. Historian John Thornton has argued that, “In Africa the development of commerce and social mobility based on commerce was intimately linked to the growth of slavery, for slaves in villages performing agricultural work or carrying goods in caravans or working in mines under private supervision were essential to private commercial development.”87 Whereas in Europe land was revenue producing, in Africa slavery fulfilled that function. Wealthy Africans also used slaves to increase their power, as slaves could serve as loyal administrators or effective military leaders and soldiers. Unlike in the Americas, African slaves could wield much power. When the Portuguese began to make their way down the west coast of the African continent, they found slaves widely available. Africans who had the most slaves—royalty and merchants— were also the ones with the authority to carry out the traffic in humans. The early Europeans who initially became involved in trading African slaves simply tapped into an ancient, well-developed market, whether on the northern edge of the Sahara or the coast of West Africa.88 As the technology of the gun advanced in Europe, slave traders were able to put pressure on their African counterparts to accelerate the traffic in humans. African societies which refused were liable to find their African enemies using the weapons against them instead. Sometimes Africans fought wars to gain captives to match demand; at other times they fought to settle political differences. The winners then sold their captives to Europeans. Sometimes economics and politics mixed to produce the same result—the acquisition of slaves to meet the increas- 54 ing demand of the transatlantic slave trade. Capturing slaves in war was not the only means by which slaves were acquired in traditional African societies. Some Africans kidnapped others. Some Africans sold their relatives to settle grievances. Some Africans who were convicted by judicial authorities in their societies for adultery and theft, for example, were enslaved to compensate society.89 Whatever the reason one became a slave in African societies, it is important to distinguish between chattel slavery in the New World and African slavery. Both were forms of slavery, but usually were quite different in terms of how slaves were treated. In the New World, a slave was a piece of property with no rights. Owners could buy and sell chattel slaves like any other form of personal property. In Africa, a slave was more like a member of one’s extended family. A slave’s status was not fixed as in chattel slavery, but could be flexible. A slave might assimilate into the owner’s family as a junior member, have children born free, and serve in tasks outside the chattel slave’s hard labor. Many slaves in Africa were women sought for their reproductive capacity, in contrast to New World owners who preferred men, whose strength in various forms of labor was more important.90 Some scholars have argued that the small size of most African states along the coast of West Africa, which themselves were often broken down into even smaller ethnic groups, contributed indirectly to the Atlantic slave trade. Think of the area of a large metropolitan area in the U.S., approximately six hundred square miles, which is about half the size of Rhode Island.91 If one keeps in mind that the acquisition of slaves rather than land determined wealth, the small size of most African kingdoms is not surprising. After all, adding land expansion to slave capture would require the expenses of an occupation force and ruling infrastructure. Rulers would also have to negotiate with those whom they defeated. Thus, many Africans took slaves but passed on the land. Africans who were recently captured were usually the first to be sold to Europeans, as ties to their captors would not have had time to develop. Some scholars have argued that the advanced firearms technology of the Europeans significantly facilitated the increase in the Atlantic slave trade. USAD Social Science Resource Guide • 2017–2018 SKT, IASD - International, NA dependence of South American and African economies. The Portuguese and the Spanish Prior to Islam, the Romans brought African slaves to Europe from North Africa. As Muslims advanced west across North Africa in the early 700s, they took control of the North African slave trade. Some slaves must have crossed into Portugal and Spain shortly thereafter, if not before, in smaller numbers, accompanying the Saharan caravan trade. In 1441, the Portuguese delivered their first cargo of West African slaves to Lisbon. From 1450 until 1500, the Portuguese imported about eight hundred slaves each year. In 1454 and 1456, the papacy approved Portugal’s slave trade on the grounds that the Portuguese slave traders were to advance Christianity as well. Papal authority helped lay the foundation for Portugal’s monopoly (asiento) of slave trading south of Senegal in 1468. Portugal was the first of several countries, including Holland, France, Spain, and England, that would assume asientos over the centuries.93 The growing number of slaves created a critical mass of African workers, both slave and free, who worked as bodyguards, soldiers, menial laborers, couriers, and concubines in maritime urban Spain and Portugal. Africans who were free formed brotherhoods and worked to free those still in bondage. By the mid-1500s, African slaves accompanied conquistadores to explore the New World. The Spanish carried their first enslaved human cargo from West Africa to the Caribbean in 1518, initiating the transatlantic slave trade.94 The Portuguese followed with shiploads to Brazil. A new destination for slave labor—the east coast of North America—soon came about, although it was far less significant than Brazil and the Caribbean in terms of the long-term Atlantic slave trade. In Au- An engraving depicts three African slaves newly arrived on the shores of Virginia. The first Africans disembarked at Point Comfort, on the James River, late in August 1619. gust 1619, a ship, perhaps Dutch, took about twenty Africans on the high seas from the Portuguese slave ship Sáo Joáo Bautista, which had been crossing the Atlantic from Luanda, Angola, to Vera Cruz, and debarked at Port Comfort, Virginia, about thirty miles down the James River from Jamestown.95 Between 1619 and 1700, racism and profit convinced European colonists along the East Coast to pass legislation creating the extreme form of bondage called chattel slavery. These laws transformed humans into beasts of burden at the disposal of their masters with little to no oversight by the state. Once this became clear to growing slave populations in both the Caribbean and the Americas, slave leaders organized revolts. Some of the largest occurred in Brazil, Jamaica, Guyana, Cuba, Mexico, Virginia, Carolina, and Louisiana. Slaves attempted to burn New York City in 1712 and Boston in 1723.96 Major forces behind the traffic in humans were much the same forces that are significant drivers of our material world today—profit and wealth. During the implementation of plantation slavery in the New World in the period of preindustrial capitalism, African slaves increasingly provided the intensive labor necessary for the production of plantation-grown cane sugar in the New World. (Cooler European climates north of the Mediterranean were not suited for cane cultivation.) As European demand increased, more slaves were required in the New World to meet greater tonnage. Increased Eu- USAD Social Science Resource Guide • 2017–2018 55 SKT, IASD - International, NA Shanghai Foreign Language School Affiliated to SISU - Shanghai, China Yet Thornton argues that a close review of the evidence suggests a greater force driving the increased supply was in fact local warfare brought about by differences between Africans themselves rather than pressure from Europeans to produce slaves. The defeated were enslaved and sold at the coast. Surely there was some mix of catalysts here—both African agency and European pressure contributed to the growth of the Atlantic slave trade—but Thornton gives more weight to causes internal to African politics than to external European pressure to produce slaves.92 ropean and New World demand for cane sugar was due not only to its desirability as a sweetener and the high caloric content it provided in diets, but also to its byproduct of molasses, which was used both in cooking and in the distillation of rum.97 Figure 5.1 The origins of New World sugar-producing plantations date back to the Crusades when Arabs and Crusaders created plantations in the Mediterranean and supplied them with enslaved war captives. As the European taste for sugar grew and the Crusades ended, Italian merchants looked to slave markets SKT, IASD - International, NA Shanghai Foreign Language School Affiliated to SISU - Shanghai, China In addition to frequent irrigation, the fast pace of harvesting and processing the tall grass-like plant was critical to its success. The mill that contained crushing, boiling, and storage facilities was proximate to the fields to facilitate production. Process- ing sugar cane in the mill was dangerous, required long hours, and was carried out in very hot conditions. Only slaves could be forced to carry out such onerous work.98 Early Areas of Slave Trade and West African Gold Fields Source: Lindsey, Captives as Commodities, 15. 56 USAD Social Science Resource Guide • 2017–2018 Source: Beverly McMillan, ed., Captive Passage, The Transatlantic Slave Trade and the Making of the Americas (Old Saybrook, CT: Konecky & Konecky and Smithsonian Institution, 2002), 128–129. proximate to the Black Sea to provide slave labor for plantations on Cyprus and elsewhere in the Mediterranean.99 The foundation for the plantation sugar complex was already in place in the early 1400s when the Portuguese began to explore the Atlantic world. They first established the plantation model in Madeira, worked by slaves from the Canary Islands, which were about three hundred miles due south. (Both Madeira and the Canary Islands are off the west coast of present-day Morocco.) By 1480, the Dutch were importing several hundred tons of sugar for the European market. Soon after the plantation system was established on Madeira, the supply of slaves from both the Canaries and the Black Sea ended, forcing the Portuguese to turn to the slave traders along the West African coast.100 These new European-African contacts led the Portuguese to establish the Madeira plantation model on São Tomé, about 180 miles due west off the coast of present-day Gabon. The problem with the location of São Tomé, however, was that it was home to equatorial pathogens to which the Portuguese had little resistance. Thus, the plantations on São Tomé attracted few Portuguese. The Portuguese used their friendship with the Kongo, who sold the Portuguese their war captives The Portuguese present themselves before the King of Kongo. The Portuguese benefited from their friendship with the Kongo, who sold the Portuguese their war captives to work sugar cane on São Tomé. to work sugar cane on São Tomé. At its peak in the mid-1500s, São Tomé was the furthest resource-producing area from Europe that was run by Europeans for European consumption in history, as it was some 4,500 miles away. As European exploration expanded and the European population increased in the New World, Europeans took the model of the plantation complex at São Tomé and improved upon it in the Americas. By the second half of the sixteenth century, São Tomé went into significant decline as a sugar producer due to slave revolts, tropical diseases, and the rise of sugar production in Brazil. Early European contact with the Native Americans devastated the Native American population. When European workers could not be found to carry out the difficult work of sugar production, especially in the Bahia region of Brazil, the Portuguese turned to Africa. By 1600, Brazil had become the greatest sugar producer in the world. Most of the 12.5 million slaves forcibly transported in the Middle Passage from the Africa to the Americas were destined to work in sugar production. Yet the acquisition of slaves, which the Portuguese first carried out largely by slave raiding, was not initially successful. Africans were already people with tools and weapons of iron. Some Africans also had horses. Africans also had an ally in tropical diseases to which they had some immunity. In contrast, USAD Social Science Resource Guide • 2017–2018 57 SKT, IASD - International, NA Shanghai Foreign Language School Affiliated to SISU - Shanghai, China Processing sugar cane in the mill was dangerous, required long hours, and was carried out in very hot conditions. Only slaves could be forced to carry out such onerous work. The Triangular Trade Source: Davidson, West Africa, 198. the Portuguese were vulnerable to the pathogens of the African tropics and succumbed to malaria and yellow fever quite quickly. Hampered by the impact of tropical diseases, European slave raids into the tropical maritime areas of Africa could not supply sufficient slave labor for the production of New World sugar. Thus, some other means to acquire African slaves had to be developed. The Portuguese began to negotiate with Africans along the coast to provide a steady supply of slaves for purchase. As the maritime component of the African slave trade gathered force, the triangular pattern of the transatlantic slave trade began to develop. West and southwest Africa provided the slaves. Molasses from the sugar plantations in Brazil and the Caribbean— an important ingredient in bread and bean recipes and for use in feeding livestock—was exported to 58 New England. The New Englanders distilled rum from the molasses, which they exported to both Europe and Africa. The Europeans exported processed goods, including cloth and metal products, back to Africa, thus initiating the maritime triangular trade once again.101 The Dutch, the British, and the Asante Profits made in the Atlantic slave trade soon gained the attention of other European powers. In 1637, the Dutch took Elmina Castle from the Portuguese. Thereafter, the Portuguese traffic in humans was largely carried out south of the Congo River. At first the Dutch and English fought to dominate the Atlantic slave trade; however, pressure to supply the plantations of the Caribbean with slave labor helped USAD Social Science Resource Guide • 2017–2018 SKT, IASD - International, NA Shanghai Foreign Language School Affiliated to SISU - Shanghai, China Figure 5.2 SKT, IASD - International, NA Shanghai Foreign Language School Affiliated to SISU - Shanghai, China Figure 5.3 Volume and Direction of the Atlantic Slave Trade Source: Kwasi Konadu, Transatlantic Africa, 1440-1888 (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2015), 3. end the squabbling. As Basil Davidson described it, “While the seventeenth century was the period of the establishment of the European-American trade with West Africa, the eighteenth was the period of its large expansion.”102 Europeans built some forty-one castles on the West African coast in part to establish their national interests in the transatlantic slave trade. As plantation slavery in Brazil, the Caribbean, and Spanish America began to increase in number and sugar tonnage after 1625, the English, French, Dutch, and Danes challenged the Spanish and Portuguese dominance of the business. Even so, due to the diseases of the tropics and the organization of the Africans, Europeans could only control the sea. European demand for slaves continued to grow, which in turn encouraged some Africans to raise their level of violence inland to capture and supply those slaves. To carry out that violence, Africans increasingly needed access to firearms from Europe. Elmina Castle, viewed from the sea, 1668. The Dutch took Elmina Castle from the Portuguese in 1637. By the mid-1700s, Africans were trading slaves for 100,000 muskets per year manufactured in England. New weapons brought new violence. Africans—including the Fon of Ardrah, Dahomey, and Whydah, USAD Social Science Resource Guide • 2017–2018 59 the Asante of Gold Coast, the Yoruba of Oyo, and the Igbo of the Niger Delta—carried out much of that violence among themselves. Basil Davidson described the process of slave ship captains trading with West Africans: Figure 5.4 SKT, IASD - International, NA Shanghai Foreign Language School Affiliated to SISU - Shanghai, China Buying and selling with the European and American captains…was a tricky business. There was much bargaining. The money used was generally composed of trade goods like iron bars, rolls of cotton or quantities of yams (needed by the slaveships to feed their captives as well as their crews during the voyage across the Atlantic); cowrie shells were also an important form of money. Any attempt by the European traders to bully or cheat their African partners was likely to be answered by a boycott. The Africans…simply closed the river to European trade until the Europeans made good the damage they had caused. Here in the Delta the Europeans had no castles and few shore stations. In- The Expansion of the Asante Empire Source: Davidson, West Africa, 221. 60 USAD Social Science Resource Guide • 2017–2018 The complications of this trading system can be seen from the deals that were made. In 1676, for instance, the captain of the English ship Bonaventure bought one hundred men, women, and children and had them duly branded by his crew with the special mark of the British Royal African Company: DY for Duke of York. For these carefully selected captives he paid five muskets, twenty-one iron bars, seventy-two knives, half a barrel of gunpowder and various lengths of cotton…. As the trade increased, European crews stripped, branded, chained, and confined slaves below deck in extremely crowded conditions in a toxic environment replete with extreme heat, germs, stench, and claustrophobic terror. One of the major West African ethnic groups that participated in the slave trade was the Asante. The Asante originated in the early 1600s as a coalition Figure 5.5 Diagram of a slave ship. European crews confined slaves below deck in extremely crowded conditions in a toxic environment replete with extreme heat, germs, stench, and claustrophobic terror. of Akan-speaking farmers in the region of what is today Kumasi. In about 1695, two Asante leaders, Osei Tutu and the priest Anokye, joined together to enlarge their coalition and gain complete independence from their powerful neighbors. They created Major West African Slave Regions in the 1700s Source: Davidson, West Africa, 199. USAD Social Science Resource Guide • 2017–2018 61 SKT, IASD - International, NA Shanghai Foreign Language School Affiliated to SISU - Shanghai, China stead, they lived in old ships, called hulks,… permanently anchored near the shore of the trading towns. The Asante expanded outward to seek participation in the lucrative trade in slaves with the Dutch at Elmina by defeating the Denkyira, whose trade contract with the Dutch then passed to the Asante. In the ensuing century, the Asante continued to expand their power until they came into conflict with the Fante and their British allies at Cape Coast Castle. Between 1807 and 1816, a series of Asante mil- itary operations strengthened Asante control over the Fante. Between 1824 and 1900, the Asante and British fought several wars, including the Sagrenti War (1874) and the Yaa Asantewaa War (1900). Some of the Asante’s hostility toward the British resulted from Britain’s ban on the Atlantic slave trade in 1807 and the ban on slavery within the Gold Coast in 1875. Asantehene Osei Bonsu expressed his objections to the ban in 1820. Yet even after 1875, British administrators often looked the other way when African producers of much sought after palm oil used young African female slave labor. Slavery in West Africa: The Narrative of Olaudah Equiano Much of the revulsion we feel today toward the Atlantic slave trade has been stirred by the writings of slaves themselves. Olaudah Equiano is one of the most famous of those writers. He claimed to have been born an Igbo in the mid-1740s in the eastern part of what is now Nigeria. African slave traders captured Equiano and his sister when he was about eleven years old. About a year later, Equiano arrived at the coast, was sold to a slave ship captain, and crossed over on the Middle Passage from the Bight of Biafra to Barbados. Before he was twenty-one, he lived as a slave in Virginia and London, where he learned to read and write. In 1766, after serving as a slave at sea, he purchased his freedom. He traveled widely for the next twenty years before joining the abolition movement. In 1788, he appeared before the House of Commons to argue for the improvement of conditions for slaves on slave ships. In 1789, he published his autobiography and his plea for the abolition of the slave trade.108 While the Atlantic slave trade was not abolished in Equiano’s lifetime—that would take another ten years or so—his famous book was translated into French, Russian, and Dutch and went through nine British editions.109 Equiano’s book and his speeches reached thousands of Europeans who otherwise would not have had much empathy for those who suffered so greatly in bondage. Equiano successfully conveyed to his readers and listeners the horrors of slavery through the eyes of an ex-slave and fellow human. The following is his recollection110 of the Middle Passage, which he experienced when he was about twelve years old: The first object which saluted my eyes when I arrived on the coast was the sea, and a slave ship, which was then riding at anchor, and waiting for its cargo. These filled me with astonishment, which was soon converted into terror when I was carried on board. I was immediately handled and tossed up to see if I were sound by some of the crew; and I was now persuaded that I had gotten into a world of bad spirits, and that they were going to kill me. Their complexions too differing so much from ours, their long hair, and the language they spoke, (which was very different from any I had ever heard) united to confirm me in this belief. Indeed such were the horrors of my views and fears at the moment, that, if ten thousand worlds had been my own, I would have freely parted with them all to have exchanged my condition with that of the meanest slave in my own country. When I looked round the ship too and saw a large furnace or copper boiling, and a multitude of black people of every description chained together, every one of their countenances expressing dejection and sorrow, I no longer doubted of my fate; and, quite overpowered 62 USAD Social Science Resource Guide • 2017–2018 SKT, IASD - International, NA Shanghai Foreign Language School Affiliated to SISU - Shanghai, China the legend of the Golden Stool, a unifying symbol brought down from the sky and placed on Osei Tutu’s knees by Anokye, who instilled it with the spirit of the Asante people. Those who accepted this story joined in the coalition under the leadership of Osei Tutu. SKT, IASD - International, NA Shanghai Foreign Language School Affiliated to SISU - Shanghai, China with horror and anguish, I fell motionless on the deck and fainted. When I recovered a little I found some black people about me, who I believed were some of those who brought me on board, and had been receiving their pay; they talked to me in order to cheer me, but all in vain. I asked them if we were not to be eaten by those white men with horrible looks, red faces, and loose hair. They told me I was not; and one of the crew brought me a small portion of spirituous liquor in a wine glass; but, being afraid of him, I would not take it out of his hand. One of the blacks therefore took it from him and gave it to me, and I took a little down my palate, which, instead of reviving me, as they thought it would, threw me into the greatest consternation at the strange feeling it produced, having never tasted any such liquor before. Soon after this the blacks who brought me on board went off, and left me abandoned Olaudah Equiano (known as Gustavus Vassa) was to despair. I now saw myself deprived of all chance of returning to my native country, or a prominent abolitionist whose narrative conveyed even the least glimpse of hope of gaining the the horrors of his first-hand experience as a slave. shore, which I now considered as friendly; and I even wished for my former slavery in preference to my present situation, which was filled with horrors of every kind, still heightened by my ignorance of what I was to undergo…. I was not long suffered to indulge my grief; I was soon put down under the decks, and there I received such a salutation in my nostrils as I had never experienced in my life: so that, with the loathsomeness of the stench, and crying together, I became so sick and low that I was not able to eat, nor had I the least desire to taste any thing.111 Despair began to consume Equiano. Forcing slaves to eat preserved both their lives and the profits made from the slave trade. Thus, the sailors soon intervened to force Equiano to eat, and he describes both the cruelty and the character of the sailors: I now wished for the last friend, death, to relieve me; but soon, to my grief, two of the white men offered me eatables; and, on my refusing to eat, one of them held me fast by the hands, and laid me across I think the windlass, and tied my feet, while the other flogged me severely. I had never experienced any thing of this kind before; and although, not being used to the water, I naturally feared that element the first time I saw it, yet nevertheless could I have got over the nettings, I would have jumped over the side but I could not, and, besides, the crew used to watch us very closely who were not chained down to the decks, lest we should leap into the water: and I have seen some of these poor African prisoners most severely cut for attempting to do so, and hourly whipped for not eating. This indeed was often the case with myself. In a little time after amongst the poor chained men, I found some of my own nation, which in a small degree gave ease to my mind. I inquired of these what was to be done with us; they gave me to understand we were to be carried to these white people’s country to work for them. I then was a little revived, and USAD Social Science Resource Guide • 2017–2018 63 While on board, Equiano became interested in the ships themselves and wondered how they made their way over the water. I asked how the vessel could go? they told me they could not tell; but that there were cloths put upon the masts by the help of the ropes I saw, and then the vessel went on; and the white men had some spell or magic they put in the water when they liked in order to stop the vessel. I was exceedingly amazed at this account, and really thought they were spirits. I therefore wished much to be from amongst them, for I expected they would sacrifice me: but my wishes were vain; for we were so quartered that it was impossible for any of us to make our escape. While we stayed on the coast I was mostly on deck; and one day, to my great astonishment, I saw one of these vessels coming in with the sails up. As soon as the whites saw it, they gave a great shout, at which we were amazed; and the more so as the vessel appeared larger by approaching nearer. At last she came to an anchor in my sight, and when the anchor was let go I and my countrymen who saw it were lost in astonishment to observe the vessel stop; and were now convinced it was done by magic. Soon after this the other ship got her boats out, and they came on board of us, and the people of both ships seemed very glad to see each other. Several of the strangers also shook hands with us black people, and made motions with their hands, signifying I suppose we were to go to their country; but we did not understand them.113 As the Middle Passage was about to begin, the sailors took Equiano and the other slaves down into the bowels of the ship and shackled them: At last, when the ship we were in had got in all her cargo, they made ready with many fearful noises, and we were all put under deck, so that we could not see how they managed the vessel. But this disappointment was the least of my sorrow. The stench of the hold while we were on the coast was so intolerably loathsome, that it was dangerous to remain there for any time, and some of us had been permitted to stay on the deck for the fresh air; but now that the whole ship’s cargo were confined together, it became absolutely pestilential. The closeness of the place, and the heat of the climate, added to the number in the ship, which was so crowded that each had scarcely room to turn himself, almost suffocated us. This produced copious perspirations, so that the air soon became unfit for respiration, from a variety of loathsome smells, and brought on a sickness among the slaves, of which many died, thus falling victims to the improvident avarice, as I may call it, of their purchasers. This wretched situation was again aggravated by the galling of the chains, now become insupportable; and the filth of the necessary tubs [latrines], into which the children often fell, and were almost suffocated. The shrieks of the women, and the groans of the dying, rendered the whole a scene of horror almost inconceivable.114 64 USAD Social Science Resource Guide • 2017–2018 SKT, IASD - International, NA Shanghai Foreign Language School Affiliated to SISU - Shanghai, China thought, if it were no worse than working, my situation was not so desperate: but still I feared I should be put to death, the white people looked and acted, as I thought, in so savage a manner; for I had never seen among any people such instances of brutal cruelty; and this not only shewn towards us blacks, but also to some of the whites themselves. One white man in particular I saw, when we were permitted to be on deck, flogged so unmercifully with a large rope near the foremast, that he died in consequence of it; and they tossed him over the side as they would have done a brute. This made me fear these people the more; and I expected nothing less than to be treated in the same manner. I could not help expressing my fears and apprehensions to some of my countrymen: I asked them if these people had no country, but lived in this hollow place (the ship): they told me they did not, but came from a distant one. “Then,” said I, “how comes it in all our country we never heard of them?” They told me because they lived so very far off. I then asked where were their women? had they any like themselves? I was told they had: “and why,” said I, “do we not see them?” they answered, because they were left behind.112 Happily perhaps for myself I was soon reduced so low here that it was thought necessary to keep me almost always on deck; and from my extreme youth I was not put in fetters. In this situation I expected every hour to share the fate of my companions, some of whom were almost daily brought upon deck at the point of death, which I began to hope would soon put an end to my miseries. Often did I think many of the inhabitants of the deep much more happy than myself. I envied them the freedom they enjoyed, and as often wished I could change my condition for theirs. Every circumstance I met with served only to render my state more painful, and heighten my apprehensions, and my opinion of the cruelty of the whites. One day they had taken a number of fishes; and when they had killed and satisfied themselves with as many as they thought fit, to our astonishment who were on the deck, rather than give any of them to us to eat as we expected, they tossed the remaining fish into the sea again, although we begged and prayed for some as well as we could, but in vain; and some of my countrymen, being pressed by hunger, took an opportunity, when they thought no one saw them, of trying to get a little privately; but they were discovered, and the attempt procured them some very severe floggings. One day, when we had a smooth sea and moderate wind, two of my wearied countrymen who were chained together (I was near them at the time), preferring death to such a life of misery, somehow made through the nettings and jumped into the sea: immediately another quite dejected fellow, who, on one account of his illness, was suffered to be out of irons, also followed their example; and I believe many more would very soon have done the same if they had not been prevented by the ship’s crew, who were instantly alarmed. Those of us that were the most active were in a moment put down under the deck, and here was such a noise and confusion amongst the people of the ship as I never heard before, to stop her, and get the boat out to go after the slaves. However two of the wretches were drowned, but they got the other, and afterwards flogged him unmercifully for thus attempting to prefer death to slavery. In this manner we continued to undergo more hardships than I can now relate, hardships which are inseparable from this accursed trade. Many a time we were near suffocation from the want of fresh air, which we were often without for whole days together. This, and the stench of the necessary tubs [latrines], carried off many. During our passage I first saw flying fishes, which surprised me very much: they used frequently to fly across the ship, and many of them fell on the deck. I also now first saw the use of the quadrant; I had often with astonishment seen the mariners make observations with it, and I could not think what it meant. They at last took notice of my surprise; and one of them, willing to increase it, as well as to gratify my curiosity, made me one day look through it. The clouds appeared to me to be land, which disappeared as they passed along. This heightened my wonder; and I was now more persuaded than ever that I was in another world, and that every thing about me was magic.115 SKT, IASD - International, NA Shanghai Foreign Language School Affiliated to SISU - Shanghai, China As Equiano was frail from the physical and psychological trauma of the slave ship, the sailors put him back on deck to recover for greater lengths of time. While on deck, Equiano described the continued cruelty of the white sailors and the utter pathos of the slaves. Usually, the cry of “Land Ho!” would inspire joy. As Equiano continues to relate from a slave’s perspective, the end of the Middle Passage only introduced another fearful chapter of the unknown. At last we came in sight of the island of Barbadoes, at which the whites on board gave a great shout, and made many signs of joy to us. We did not know what to think of this; but as the vessel drew nearer we plainly saw the harbour, and other ships of different kinds and sizes; and we soon anchored amongst them off Bridge Town. Many merchants and planters now came on board, though it was in the evening. They put us in separate parcels, and examined us attentively. They also made us jump, and pointed to the land, signifying we were to go there. We thought by this USAD Social Science Resource Guide • 2017–2018 65 Once the slaves had debarked, the psychologically painful process of buying and selling began. Equiano describes that practice and how it affected family members separated by the process. We were not many days in the merchant’s custody before we were sold after their usual manner, which is this: — On a signal given, (as the beat of a drum) the buyers rush at once into the yard where the slaves are confined, and make choice of that parcel they like best. The noise and clamour with which this is attended, and the eagerness visible in the countenances of the buyers, serve not a little to increase the apprehensions of the terrified Africans, who may well be supposed to consider them as the ministers of that destruction to which they think themselves devoted. In this manner, without scruple, are relations and friends separated, most of them never to see each other again. I remember in the vessel in which I was brought over, in the men’s apartment, there were several brothers, who, in the sale, were sold in different lots; and it was very moving on this occasion to see and hear their cries at parting. 0, ye nominal Christians! might not an African ask you, learned you this from your God, who says unto you, Do unto all men as you would men should do unto you? Is it not enough that we are torn from our country and friends to toil for your luxury and lust of gain? Must every tender feeling be likewise sacrificed to your avarice? Are the dearest friends and relations, now rendered more dear by their separation from their kindred, still to be parted from each other, and thus prevented from cheering the gloom of slavery with the small comfort of being together and mingling their sufferings and sorrows? Why are parents to lose their children, brothers their sisters, or husbands their wives? Surely this is a new refinement in cruelty, which, while it has no advantage to atone for it, thus aggravates distress, and adds fresh horrors even to the wretchedness of slavery.117 Opponents of Equiano as well as some modern scholars have challenged Equiano’s claim that he was born in Africa. Vincent Carretta has discovered discrepancies between Equiano’s assertions and recent evidence suggesting he was born in South Carolina.118 Regardless, the importance of his work is not his country of origin, but rather the general veracity of his accounts of the Atlantic slave trade, the Middle Passage, and chattel slavery. To those points, there is no controversy. 66 USAD Social Science Resource Guide • 2017–2018 SKT, IASD - International, NA Shanghai Foreign Language School Affiliated to SISU - Shanghai, China we should be eaten by these ugly men, as they appeared to us; and, when soon after we were all put down under the deck again, there was much dread and trembling among us, and nothing but bitter cries to be heard all the night from these apprehensions, insomuch that at last the white people got some old slaves from the land to pacify us. They told us we were not to be eaten, but to work, and were soon to go on land, where we should see many of our country people. This report eased us much; and sure enough, soon after we were landed, there came to us Africans of all languages. We were conducted immediately to the merchant’s yard, where we were all pent up together like so many sheep in a fold, without regard to sex or age. As every object was new to me every thing I saw filled me with surprise. What struck me first was that the houses were built with stories, and in every other respect different from those in Africa: but I was still more astonished on seeing people on horseback. I did not know what this could mean; and indeed I thought these people were full of nothing but magical arts. While I was in this astonishment one of my fellow prisoners spoke to a countryman of his about the horses, who said they were the same kind they had in their country. I understood them, though they were from a distant part of Africa, and I thought it odd I had not seen any horses there; but afterwards, when I came to converse with different Africans, I found they had many horses amongst them, and much larger than those I then saw.116 The End of the Atlantic Slave Trade Scholarship on the abolition of the Atlantic slave trade focuses on three major topics. First, scholars have written much on the abolitionists themselves, including Olaudah Equiano, who appealed to the collective conscience of Europeans, especially those of the rising middle class in England who aspired to the civilizing ideas of the European Enlightenment and liberalism. Other scholars have examined the relationship between industrial capitalism and abolition, arguing that advances in machinery and technology made slave labor costly and obsolete.119 The inference here is that abolition was facilitated less by conscience than it was by industrial advances and free trade capitalism, which succeeded the economic protectionist system of mercantilism. Still others have pointed to the impact that slave revolts in Haiti and elsewhere had on the process of abolition. Those emphasizing this cause suggest that if abolition did not progress voluntarily, it would be brought about by force. Whatever the exact mix of causes, the end of slavery was imminent as the nineteenth century began. Some of the first Britons to oppose the Atlantic slave trade were Quakers, who founded the first British anti-slavery society in 1783.120 Renowned advocates of abolition included ex-slaves Olaudah Equiano and his friend Ottobah Cugoano, lawyer Granville Sharp, student Thomas Clarkson, Member of Parliament William Wilberforce, former slave ship captain John Newton, who was also the author of the lyrics to the hymn “Amazing Grace,” and slave ship doctor Alexander Falconbridge.121 British abolitionists first devised a plan to attack the transatlantic slave trade. They believed that the abolition of slavery itself would follow the end of the traffic in humans. They successfully organized a nationwide political campaign to promote their plan. They held mass meetings, presented Members of Parliament with petitions signed by many thousands of citizens, and boycotted slave-produced products, including sugar. Tactics common to today’s protests—including provocative imagery, bracelets, and graphic illustrations (such as that of the slave ship Brookes)—were largely used for the first time during the British abolitionist movement. Although the French Revolution and slave revolts in the French colonies of St. Domingue and Haiti temporarily slowed the British abolitionist movement, in 1807 Parliament banned British slave trading with all nations. The United States likewise banned USAD Social Science Resource Guide • 2017–2018 67 SKT, IASD - International, NA Shanghai Foreign Language School Affiliated to SISU - Shanghai, China A German copper engraving depicting a slave revolt in Haiti in 1791. Such revolts impacted the move toward abolition insofar as they lent support to the notion that if abolition did not progress voluntarily, it would be brought about by force. I n Europe, slaves rarely held high status; in Africa, they could often gain status. Slave owners in the West held people as chattel, as property with no rights; slave owners in Africa often considered slaves as junior family members with some rights.  Some scholars have argued that internal African conflicts contributed more to the rise of the Atlantic slave trade than did European pressure on maritime African societies to produce slaves. “Am I Not a Man and a Brother?” 1787 medallion designed by Josiah Wedgwood for the British antislavery campaign. the traffic in humans in the same year.122 In 1838, Parliament banned slavery throughout the British Empire. The Danes had prohibited the slave trade to their colonies even earlier in 1803. The Atlantic slave trade formally ended in 1850, but the West was not yet finished with African labor. Before the last slave ship sailed, Europeans were settling parts of the African continent.123 New colonies were about to be created amid a burst of European imperialism.124 Section V Summary  68 orms of slavery existed in West Africa F before the arrival of Europeans. One of the major differences between European and African societies was that in Europe people invested in land. In Africa, because Africans held land communally, individuals invested in slaves as private property. Large property owners in Europe gained status; Africans who owned many slaves held similar sta- lthough some African slaves entered Europe  A through trade with Muslims in the 700s, the slave trade began to expand with the Portuguese in the mid-1400s. In 1454 and 1456, the papacy approved Portugal’s slave trade on the grounds that the Portuguese were to advance Christianity as well. The Spanish first entered the transatlantic slave trade in 1518. By the early 1600s, slaves were being transported to Brazil, the Caribbean, and North America.  C apitalists created chattel slavery to force humans to produce labor-intensive sugar on plantations first in the Mediterranean, and then outward into the Atlantic. Slaves often revolted against such brutal treatment.  nlike Europeans or Native Americans, AfriU cans were often resistant to tropical diseases. Their strength in that sense contributed to their enslavement.  O ver the years the triangular pattern of the transatlantic trade developed: Africa provided the slaves for America; Brazil and the Caribbean produced sugar and molasses for North America; distillers from North America created rum for the European market; and the Europeans shipped cheap cargo to barter along the African coast for slaves.  In the 1600s, the Dutch became the world’s leading maritime slave traders. They constructed Elmina Castle along the Gold Coast and transformed it into one of their most important trading centers in West Africa. USAD Social Science Resource Guide • 2017–2018 SKT, IASD - International, NA Shanghai Foreign Language School Affiliated to SISU - Shanghai, China  tus. In Europe, land was revenue-producing while in Africa slavery fulfilled that function.  I n return for slaves, collaborating Africans sought guns from England. Negotiations were often complex and were carried out either on shore or on ship. As the trade increased, so did the brutality of the Middle Passage. The Asante and Fante of present-day Ghana were two of the most important ethnic groups involved in the traffic in humans with the British. After the British banned slavery, the Asante and British carried out a series of devastating wars that lasted through 1900. Slave writings about the Atlantic slave trade, chattel slavery, life as a freedman, and the abolition movement are extremely rare. The eyewitness accounts of Olaudah Equiano are some of the most important and famous such   writings. Whatever the full truth is about the authenticity of Equiano’s recollections, the descriptive horrors of slavery and the courage to oppose it are well expressed. Scholarship on the abolition of the Atlantic slave trade focuses on three major topics: the abolitionists themselves, the relationship between industrial capitalism and abolition, and slave revolts in Haiti and elsewhere. Those who led the opposition to slavery included Quakers, freedmen, members of Parliament, and ship captains. Abolitionists carried out many innovative tactics, which included mass meetings, petitions, images, and boycotts in their attempts to end the Atlantic slave trade. Their tactics proved so successful in the nineteenth century that protestors today adopt many of them to promote their causes worldwide. he ban on slavery by no means ended the T subjugation of African populations by Europeans, but rather was a prelude to unprecedented European imperialism and colonialism, which was unleashed on the African continent in the second half of the nineteenth century. USAD Social Science Resource Guide • 2017–2018 69 SKT, IASD - International, NA Shanghai Foreign Language School Affiliated to SISU - Shanghai, China  After the loss of Elmina, the Portuguese expanded their traffic in humans in the vicinity of present-day Angola. Soon the English and other Europeans joined in the traffic in humans. By the 1700s, monthly averages in the European traffic in humans were in the thousands. The trade was carried out largely through some forty-one slave castles on the West African coast. Section VI Introduction European overseas trade and the Industrial Revolution sparked changes that altered the relationship between Europeans and Africans. The most visible result was the decline of the Atlantic slave trade during the first two thirds of the nineteenth century, but that was only one symptom of economic changes that resulted from the Industrial Revolution. The Industrial Revolution brought about new ways to use labor, a deThe opening of the railway in the British colony of Rhodesia (now mand for new kinds of products, and the need to defend access to increas- Zimbabwe), 1899. Railroads reduced the cost of moving goods over long distances. ingly profitable world markets. Europeans called their new trading relationship with Africans “legitimate commerce”—as opposed to slave trading; in 1807 the British Parliament had passed the Abolition of the Slave Trade Act, which abolished slave trading in the British Empire. Instead of taking Africans elsewhere to produce tropical goods like sugar and tobacco, Europeans replaced slave labor with machinery. Under the right circumstances, machines outperformed human labor, so the amount of sugar and other products increased as the value of the slave trade declined. This made tropical products less expensive, so more people in Europe could afford them, and it triggered a boom in the demand for things like tea and coffee, soaps and perfumes made with tropical fats and scents, clothing waterproofed with rubber, and even things like pianos, which used elephant ivory for the keys. At the same time, the construction of factories in Europe to make these 70 goods provided wages for new kinds of workers, enabling them to buy things that would have been unaffordable luxuries for their parents. Some of these products were manufactured out of raw materials that were only available in the world’s tropical zones. Africa, the closest tropical zone to Europe, became the focus of the new trading relationship. Other developments accelerated further changes to the relationship between Europe and Africa. As steam engines made transportation cheaper and more reliable, first ships and later railroads reduced the cost of moving goods over long distances. Improvements in medicine like quinine, which prevented malaria, made it safer for Europeans to stay longer periods in the tropics and made it easier to convince Europeans to go to Africa. Geographical societies backed by business groups financed explorers who gathered information about areas in- USAD Social Science Resource Guide • 2017–2018 SKT, IASD - International, NA Shanghai Foreign Language School Affiliated to SISU - Shanghai, China Imperialism and Colonialism By the mid-nineteenth century, some Europeans started to promote the idea of conquering Africa. They were inspired by many things—the expansion of Russia, the United States, and Canada across their respective continents; frustration with African coastal leaders who competed with European traders for the profits available from the export of goods produced farther inland; and concern that other European countries might squeeze them out of African markets and keep all the benefits to themselves. The causes of the change in European attitudes toward Africa—and the relative weight of these causes— has provided much material for historians who attempt to answer the question: “Why did Europeans, after centuries of trading with Africans along the coast, decide to invade and take over most of the continent at the end of the nineteenth century?” Marxist theorists argued that economics explained everything—profits from the new kind of trade enriched businessmen who used their money to influence governments, aided by new methods of communication like low-cost printing, which made public opinion a factor in democracies like Great Britain and France. Vladimir Lenin, who eventually became the leader of the world’s first communist government, went so far as to claim that colonial conquest was the inevitable result of capitalism’s need to expand in search of profits.126 Since much of this scholarly debate took place in the mid-twentieth century during the Cold War, a time when communist and capitalist societies were bitterly opposed to each other, there were plenty of historians who challenged the Marxist approach. Some said that conquest was driven by the need for national security, others claimed that European moral idealism was the cause, and there were even some who argued that conquest was supported by Vladimir Lenin, who eventually became the leader of the world’s first communist government, claimed that colonial conquest was the inevitable result of capitalism’s need to expand in search of profits. Africans themselves. These arguments were focused in an article by Ronald Robinson and John Gallagher, which charged that the British occupation of Egypt in the 1880s resulted from unrest in Egypt that threatened the Suez Canal, the essential route to India, Britain’s largest trading partner. The threat made it possible for British imperialists to justify the conquest, while Egyptian leaders accepted British occupation as a means to keep their own opponents under control.127 Robinson and Gallagher’s article triggered a sequence of responses and counter-responses that continues today,128 but there is agreement on the starting point and the outcome. As the map in Figure 6.1 shows, Europeans held only a few places along the African coast in 1884. Within fifteen years, however, they claimed control over everything but Ethiopia and Liberia. USAD Social Science Resource Guide • 2017–2018 71 SKT, IASD - International, NA Shanghai Foreign Language School Affiliated to SISU - Shanghai, China land from the coast. Advances in metal production made weapons lighter, more powerful, and cheaper to produce, giving outnumbered Europeans a greater sense of security and making it cheaper to consider conquest as a way to resolve trade disputes. Governments become involved reluctantly, but saw the benefit in having stable outposts along the African coast (where they could store coal for their increasingly steam-powered navies) and in receiving taxes on the value of African exports and domestic manufactures.125 SKT, IASD - International, NA Shanghai Foreign Language School Affiliated to SISU - Shanghai, China Figure 6.1 Europe in Africa on the Eve of Partition, 1884-1885129 72 USAD Social Science Resource Guide • 2017–2018 Disagreements between European nations over both colonial and European issues led to a period of conquest that became known as the “Scramble for Africa.” The clearest colonial ambitions were those of King Leopold II of Belgium, who thought that acquiring overseas colonies might make his small nation important. Questions about how far Leopold could go led the new German Chancellor Otto von Bismarck to call for a conference in Berlin to settle the questions and to avoid war between Europeans over territory in Africa. Two months of discussions between representatives of Great Britain, Austria-Hungary, Belgium, Denmark, France, Germany, Italy, The Netherlands, Portugal, Russia, Spain, Sweden-Norway, Turkey, and the United States produced the “General Act of the Berlin Conference on West Africa, 26 February 1885.” The attending At the Berlin Conference, European powers met and effectively carved up Africa among themselves. Figure 6.2 SKT, IASD - International, NA Shanghai Foreign Language School Affiliated to SISU - Shanghai, China The Berlin Conference 130 West African States and the European “Scramble,” 1883–1910131 USAD Social Science Resource Guide • 2017–2018 73 SKT, IASD - International, NA Shanghai Foreign Language School Affiliated to SISU - Shanghai, China Figure 6.3 The Partition of Africa, 1914132 74 USAD Social Science Resource Guide • 2017–2018 nations agreed on matters regarding trade on the Congo River, the slave trade in the Congo, navigation on the Niger River, and rules to regulate European claims to territory in Africa. European powers effectively carved up Africa among themselves without a single African present. As the straight lines on the map in Figure 6.3 suggest, Europeans drew boundaries across the African continent with little consideration of Africans living in those regions. The majority of West Africans experienced European rule conducted by the British or French, who controlled approximately seventy-five percent of Africa after 1918. Although there were many local variants, scholars associate direct rule with the French and indirect rule with the British. Both the British and the French administered their colonies by devising agreements with African collaborators to collect taxes, mobilize labor for agriculture and mining, maintain order, and provide security—all under European control. In both systems Europeans occupied the highest positions while Africans occupied the lowest, but they differed in how low (i.e., how close to African peasants) the positions held by Europeans were allotted. The British preferred to rule through collaboration with local chiefs already in place when the British arrived. British colonial administrator Frederick Lugard, who became the Governor of Nigeria, called the goal the “Dual Mandate.” Colonial administrators were to rule efficiently for the economic benefit of Great Britain in return for “uplifting” the indigenous populations with British civilization and material advancement.133 The French, on the other hand, sought to replace traditional chiefs by appointing Africans educated in French-run schools. French colonial administrators expected these collaborators to recreate the idea of modernization which was already underway in France. Not surprisingly, French-appointed African authorities rarely had widespread support, and the French practice of transferring African chiefs to rule over ethnic groups different from their own made the situation even more challenging. Both authorities were often considered outsiders. French colonial officials were also transferred British colonial administrator Frederick Lugard called the goal of administering colonies via collaboration with local chiefs the “Dual Mandate.” often. Their focus was not on learning and adapting to local cultures, but rather on achieving French material and social goals and convincing educated Africans to assimilate French culture and values. Africans who did so came to be called évolués. The goals of the French had some of their origins in the French Revolution, whose motto was liberté, égalité, fraternité. Of course, the French interpreted these terms in ways that strengthened French rule; Africans did not have the liberté to reject French orders, for example. They assumed that African culture was inferior and used this noble motto to justify their attempts to transform it. Both British and French colonies usually had a governor or commissioner who administered with the assistance of some kind of council or legislature. Both the British and the French divided their colonies into regions, much like states in the U.S. are divided into counties. The French called these regions USAD Social Science Resource Guide • 2017–2018 75 SKT, IASD - International, NA Shanghai Foreign Language School Affiliated to SISU - Shanghai, China The Nature of Imperial and Colonial Rule in West Africa Most African labor was applied to producing taxable exports and constructing the infrastructure required to export goods. Some African labor was used to construct schools, electricity networks, and water systems to improve the quality of life and education for Africans, but these types of projects did not become important until after the Second World War. By that time, such efforts came more as an afterthought, and they failed to convince Africans that they should remain as colonies. To pay for all of this, Europeans taxed the African populations, and to keep everyone in line they created courts of justice to enforce their legal systems. Police and soldiers—often recruited from among African collaborators—helped maintain order, although there are cases where they worked from within the colonial system to undermine it, as was the case with many African war veterans who joined independence movements.134 To pull the complex colonial system together required a transportation infrastructure of railways, roads, and harbors. Colonial officials designed and constructed their transportation networks not only to promote exports, but also to facilitate the movement of soldiers and police. To increase security and generate taxable exports, European governments offered their citizens cheap or free land taken from Africans and incentives to invest. They distributed propaganda to promote colonial settlement and generate support for empire. The colonial system was very one-sided—Europeans sought African labor, but kept the Africans out of import-export businesses, which remained in British or French hands. Colonial officials denied Africans access to funding for entrepreneurial activities, especially mining.135 The colonial system did little to develop local industry or manufacturing although the British model probably succeeded more in this regard than the French did. Generally, the emphasis was on extracting raw materials, transporting them to the coast, shipping them to Europe, and processing them in Britain or France for their 76 Amadou Bamba maintained an autonomous space within the French colony of Senegal. internal and external markets. As A. Adu Boahen writes, “the nature of the colonial system…was the ruthless exploitation of the human and material resources of the African continent to the advantage of the owners and shareholders of expatriate companies and the metropolitan governments and their manufacturing and industrial firms.”136 The French in West Africa: Amadou Bamba and Touba The two case studies that follow will help us better understand French and British rule in West Africa and the reaction of Africans to the loss of their sovereignty. Senegal is especially interesting because of the relationship between Sufism and French colonialism. Rather than call for military jihad, leaders of the influential Sufi order known as the Murids sought to create a space inside the colonial regime in which Sufism could flourish. The French at first did not know what to make of the founder of the Murids, Amadou Bamba. The French eventually decided to send him into exile, first in central Africa from 1895–1902 and then, after the French conquest was completed, to southern Mauritania from 1903–07. Prior to Bamba’s rise to power, Dammel Lat Joor Joop, a Muslim leader, local hero, and contemporary of Bamba, at first reluctantly supported the French. The French, however, whittled away at Lat Joor’s power by using his land for peanut production and railway construction. A year after the Conference of Berlin, Lat Joor was shot and killed by French soldiers. USAD Social Science Resource Guide • 2017–2018 SKT, IASD - International, NA Shanghai Foreign Language School Affiliated to SISU - Shanghai, China cercles, while the smallest British territorial division was the district, which was run by a district commissioner. At the most local level, the British carried out indirect rule by collaborating with local chiefs, who retained much of their local power. The French, however, usually replaced local rulers with Africans sympathetic to the French. SKT, IASD - International, NA Shanghai Foreign Language School Affiliated to SISU - Shanghai, China Figure 6.4 Touba and the Murids137 USAD Social Science Resource Guide • 2017–2018 77 across Senegal, have created cohesion among Muridiyya within Senegal and abroad. Even New York City now celebrates “Amadou Bamba Day.” Over the next few years, while studying hadith and the Qur’an in exile in Mauritania, Bamba decided to establish a new Sufi order that would be more appropriate to the culture and politics of Bamba’s Wolof ethnic group and its colonial relationship with the French. He called this order the Muridiyya, meaning “novices” who seek the Lord.138 British involvement in the Gold Coast offers a second case study of colonial rule in West Africa. The British influence began in the region of Cape Coast, the location of the infamous slave castle. After 1850, the British purchased the remaining Danish and Dutch trading forts in the region, including the slave castle of Elmina in 1872, which was as large as their Cape Coast castle and gave them a trading monopoly in the region. This meant the British could now charge customs duties on imports and exports to strengthen the administration of the “Fante protectorate,” which they established near their trading posts in 1844. The Asante, a powerful African state located inland to the north, however, opposed the growing British presence along the Fante coast. Bamba’s teachings and writings, his adherents’ beliefs that he walked and prayed on water, and his adaptability to colonialism in exchange for a space within which to promote the Murids, secured his place in West African history. Photos of him and the mosque at Touba, and many examples of his likeness In 1873, the Dutch transferred Elmina to the British without either Fante or Asante approval. The latter believed it held a right of refusal from the Dutch and invaded the coast to assert their right. The British defended their new colonial possession and repulsed the Asante attack, and as the war deepened, Garnet Wolseley led a British force inland. With their advanced weapons, British soldiers defeated The mosque at Touba was founded by Amadou Bamba in 1887 and completed in 1963. By 1910, Bamba announced the acceptability of French rule. He declared the quiet struggle within each individual to remain sinless to be the most important goal of jihad, rather than violent struggle against the French. Bamba came to the support of the French during the First World War, which was particularly important because the French were at war with the Ottoman Empire, the Sunni Muslim sponsors of the annual hajj and the custodians of the Holy Mosque in Mecca. In return for his support, the French permitted Bamba to maintain his autonomous space in Senegal, remain independent from Western schools, and retain his capital at Touba. After Bamba’s death, the French permitted members of Bamba’s family to construct the famous mosque at Touba, which has its own hajj of more than a million Muslims each year. The French also appreciated the volume of peanut production carried out by Muridiyaa laborers. 78 This had not been the case in the past. During the last half of the 1700s, the British, Fante, and Asante had cooperated in the Atlantic slave trade. The Asante sent African captives as slaves to the coast to the Fante, who then sold the slaves to the British and Dutch. After the abolition of the Atlantic slave trade, however, the Asante came to view the British as intruders, and their disagreements resulted in a series of five Anglo-Asante Wars. In 1824, the Asante defeated the British and beheaded the British commander Sir Charles McCarthy. Three years later the British avenged their defeat but did not venture inland to Kumasi, the capital of the Asante. In 1844 the British signed agreements with the Fante to establish a coastal protectorate. The Asante and British resumed hostilities in 1863, but neither gained a significant advantage. USAD Social Science Resource Guide • 2017–2018 SKT, IASD - International, NA Shanghai Foreign Language School Affiliated to SISU - Shanghai, China The British in West Africa: The British, the Asante, and the Gold Coast SKT, IASD - International, NA Shanghai Foreign Language School Affiliated to SISU - Shanghai, China Figure 6.5 Asante Empire, 1750–1850140 USAD Social Science Resource Guide • 2017–2018 79 the Asante again and occupied Kumasi briefly.139 The war of 1873 did not end hostilities between the Asante and the British. As part of the Scramble for Africa which got underway after the Congress of Berlin, the British occupied Kumasi again in 1896. After crushing another Asante revolt in 1900, Great Britain annexed the Asante territory and declared it a crown colony. Factors that had helped the British defeat the Asante included advances in medicine, products of the industrial revolution, and collaboration with enemies of the Asante, especially the Fante Confederation. In the aftermath of the victory of 1873—whether in the protectorate where chiefs were sympathetic to Britain or in the colony where the British themselves ruled formally—the British imposed their “civilizing mission.” They built British-style houses, streets, and schools with African labor. To pay for it all, they taxed the Africans and sought profits and tariff revenue from palm oil exports used in Great Britain to lubricate machines and produce soap. As 80 time went by, the British were able to employ a growing population of mixed Anglo-Africans in low-level positions in the colonial administration or in business. This went on for more than eighty years until the people of the Gold Coast won their independence from Great Britain (described in Section VII). Challenges to Colonial Systems After conquest ended, the highest European priority was to make the colonies pay for themselves. In the short run this meant building railroads and port facilities to enable African products to reach European factories. In the longer run, it meant making African workers more productive by providing them with education and health care. In theory, highly productive workers would earn enough to turn them into consumers of European products, which governments could tax. Then governments could use the resulting revenue to make improve- USAD Social Science Resource Guide • 2017–2018 SKT, IASD - International, NA Shanghai Foreign Language School Affiliated to SISU - Shanghai, China A wood engraving depicting the evacuation of wounded British soldiers during the Anglo-Asante Wars. ments, both in Africa and at home. But colonial conquest failed to eliminate the rivalries between Europeans, and in 1914 these rivalries erupted into the First World War. Although Europeans hesitated to arm colonial Africans for service in Europe, their officers led African troops into battles in Africa, and when the French army ran short of new recruits, they brought about a quarter million Africans to the trenches on the Western Front.141 For African civilians, the most common effect was harder work for less pay, because the colonizers pressed their subjects to produce more for the war effort, but kept wages and prices low to free up more money for the war at home. The effect was uneven—Africans who lived in the cities and/or worked for Europeans noticed it more, while those who made their living in the local economy suffered less. However, everyone noticed that the number of Europeans declined as officials were pulled back to Europe to fight. As a result, the European system appeared vulnerable for the first time since the end of the conquest, and as World War I dragged on, there were strikes and revolts, which the Europeans tried to prevent by promising improvements after the war ended.142 After the war ended in 1918, European governments faced demands from their own citizens to repair the damage caused by the war, so the promises made to Africans were watered down or delayed. The French adopted a novel approach, which they called “assimilation,” whereby a small number of Africans were granted access to European privileges in the hope that their success would promote pa- Italian artillery in Tembien, Ethiopia, in 1936. Any remaining trust Africans had in Europeans was shattered by the 1935 Italian invasion of Ethiopia. tience among the rest of the population.143 The other European colonial powers merely stalled while they tried to get back on their feet. It took nearly a decade for the economies of Europe to stabilize, but just as they started to address the expectations of Africans, a new crisis developed—a worldwide economic depression. From 1929 to 1939, the value of world trade dropped by more than fifty percent.144 For Africans, this meant that the market for their products shrank, so the price paid for their labor did too. For colonial governments, the loss of tax revenue based on trade meant they had to force Africans to do work to get things done like bridge-building and road repairs. Just like the First World War, the Great Depression was harder on Africans who were more closely connected to the export economy, so it seemed to penalize those who had shown the most trust in the promises made by Europeans. Without the money needed to build schools and carry out other promises, colonial governments faced with African resistance tried to stop it with increased police activity. When this approach proved inadequate, colonial governments offered legal reforms that granted Africans more rights. Although the first reforms were small and affected very few people, they raised the expectations of change across entire colonial populations. Any remaining trust in Europeans was shattered by the 1935 Italian invasion of Ethiopia, the only African state besides Liberia that remained independent at the end of the conquest period. As a USAD Social Science Resource Guide • 2017–2018 81 SKT, IASD - International, NA Shanghai Foreign Language School Affiliated to SISU - Shanghai, China Senegalese soldiers served on behalf of France during World War I. member of the League of Nations (the forerunner to the United Nations), Ethiopia was theoretically the equal of Italy in the eyes of the world. But when the League failed to order the Italians to stop their invasion, Africans understood the European powers— like Great Britain and France which dominated the League—would never take action against other Europeans to protect African rights. Instead, it took the Second World War between the Europeans to get the Italians out of Ethiopia in 1941, but by then a new generation of Africans had begun to resent the sacrifices demanded by the countries that controlled them.145 The Second World War was longer and far costlier than the First World War, so the demands it placed on Africans were commensurately greater. This time Europeans readily armed Africans and sent them into combat, with the result that African families suffered more disruption and loss. The colonial governments made more and larger promises to insure loyalty, but the Africans who survived the war acquired other ideas. They had seen non-European Japanese challenge the British and their American allies, and had acquired the skills required to wage war themselves. They also absorbed the arguments 82 used by the Allies to justify the war, like the Atlantic Charter’s condemnation of one people’s domination by another, and understood the meaning of Article 73 of the United Nations Charter when it called for movement toward self-government in colonies.146 With European countries badly damaged by the war, their promises to Africans about postwar improvements took on a new form. Instead of “assimilating” Africans into European society, they offered that Africans could now “associate” with Europe. This meant maintaining economic ties, but granting political rights to Africans to decide local issues. It also offered a way to shift the cost of development to Africans by granting them the “right” to determine what to develop and how to pay for it. Europeans made some additional investments in education and health care and built new roads, which promoted both export production and the movement of rural people toward coastal African cities, but they continued to favor trade over improving the quality of African lives. As a consequence, a new generation of African leaders found an increasing number of people who were willing to support their demands for more legal rights and eventually independence. USAD Social Science Resource Guide • 2017–2018 SKT, IASD - International, NA Shanghai Foreign Language School Affiliated to SISU - Shanghai, China East Africa Division troops march in Burma during world War II. Europeans readily armed Africans and sent them into combat. Section VI Conclusion Translating that power into effective administration proved impossible. European rivalries absorbed a great deal of attention and resources and turned colonized Africans into pawns in larger European conflicts. As a result, Africans perceived European colonialism as exploitative, and when Africans weren’t struggling to survive, they looked for ways to take advantage of European weaknesses in order to free themselves from colonial rule. The next section will discuss how this independence was accomplished and the consequences that followed.   he Industrial Revolution altered the ecoT nomic relationship between Europeans and Africans and furnished the means for Europeans to take direct control over Africa. nce the conquest was complete, EuropeO ans had to decide what to do with their new territories—integrate them into their own territory, like the United States did with the region west of the Mississippi, or use their new power to extract a larger share of the profits from the work done by Africans. The perception of difference between Europeans and Africans—a legacy of the slave trade— made the first alternative unlikely, but there was no clear way to achieve the second while keeping the costs to a minimum.  For Africans, the desire to avenge the conquest conflicted with the attraction of the new possibilities offered by Europeans. When Europeans involved Africans against their own will and self-interest in two world wars and an economic depression, even those Africans who were attracted by European life ceased to believe they could obtain it. Instead, they looked for ways to shape their own lives and countries. USAD Social Science Resource Guide • 2017–2018 83 SKT, IASD - International, NA Shanghai Foreign Language School Affiliated to SISU - Shanghai, China For a very brief time in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, European powers commanded much of the world and justified it with Social Darwinism—the “survival of the fittest.” More important, they had advanced weaponry to enforce their will on the Africans they conquered. As the poet Hilaire Belloc once wrote: “Whatever happens, we have got / The Maxim Gun, and they have not.”147 Section VI Summary Section VII The End of Imperial Rule in Africa Independence came suddenly and rapidly to Europe’s African colonies. Despite promises made to secure their subjects’ loyalty during the Second World War, as the fighting drew to a close in 1945, the colonial powers had already begun to plan how to restore their control and use their colonies to help rebuild their own countries. But starting in 1951 when Libya became independent, thirty-nine African colonies became independent in the next twenty years. Most did this peacefully, but there were exceptions. In colonies like Algeria and Kenya, which had large European minorities who had settled there permanently, war broke out when the colonial power (France and Great Britain, respectively) tried to delay independence in order to safeguard settler privileges.148 The Belgian Congo had a smaller proportion of Europeans, but they were clustered around the extremely valuable mining industry in the southeastern province of Katanga (modern-day Shaba) whose shareholders pressured the Belgian government to delay independence.149 The widest violence occurred in the Portuguese colonies—Angola, Mozambique, Cape Verde, and Guniea-Bisseau—because the government refused to consider independence until it was overthrown in 1974.150 Several things happened at independence. In cases where independence was achieved peacefully, large celebrations demonstrated relief, jubilation, and a sense of national unity, or at least acceptance by those who had hoped for another outcome. Where 84 Portuguese soldiers in Angola. The widest violence occurred in the Portuguese colonies because the government refused to consider independence until it was overthrown. independence was violent, those who lost emigrated while the rest came to terms with a government whose first priority was eliminating any remaining opponents. In either case, new governments received offers of aid from the two major Cold War powers, the USA and USSR, with the understanding that they would return the favor with votes at the United Nations, military alliances, and trade agreements. Each new government also had to work out its relationship with its former colonial power, which usually involved economic and military aid, educational and health exchange programs, and promises to engage in future planning exercises. USAD Social Science Resource Guide • 2017–2018 SKT, IASD - International, NA Shanghai Foreign Language School Affiliated to SISU - Shanghai, China The Rise of Independent West Africa Ghana was the first black African country to become independent in 1957. It reached independence thanks to the efforts of many, but the main figure was Kwame Nkrumah, a U.S.-educated teacher who became the leader of the independence movement. Nkrumah was born near the coast in the western part of what was then called the Gold Coast and attended college in the capital (Accra) before earning three more degrees at Lincoln University and the University of Pennsylvania. There, he met students from other African colonies and became interested not only in independence, but also in uniting Africans. As a consequence, he attended the Fifth Pan-Africanist Conference in England at the end of the Second World War. There he met members of the United Gold Coast Convention, which represented the interests of African lawyers and businessmen in discussions with the British colonial authorities over the future of the colony. Nkrumah returned home to work for them in 1948, but became dissatisfied with their failure to represent the interests of ordinary Africans. In 1949, he and his allies formed their own party, the Convention People’s Party, and after several years of demonstrations, strikes, and even a term in jail, his party defeated the older party in an election, and Nkrumah became president of independent Ghana on March 6, 1957.151 For Nkrumah, the struggle against colonialism did not end there. He supported other independence movements and became a founder of the NonAligned Nations movement, a group that tried to avoid alliances with either side in the Cold War.152 Nkrumah believed that the newly independent African countries had to join together to prevent a return to colonialism and to negotiate with the superpowers. In 1965, Nkrumah wrote: In 1945 Africa largely comprised the colonial territories of European powers, and the idea that the greater part of the continent would be independent within twenty years would have seemed impossible to any political observer in the immediate post- U.S.-educated Kwame Nkrumah became the leader of the independence movement in Gold Coast and became independent Ghana’s first president. He was also a strong advocate for panAfricanism. war period. Yet, not only has independence been achieved but considerable progress has been made towards the establishment of African unity. To this unity there are still powerful obstacles but they are no greater than the obstacles already overcome and, if their nature is understood, they are clearly surmountable. … No country can be completely self-sufficient or afford to ignore political events outside its borders. Africa is clearly fragmented into too many small, uneconomic and nonviable States, many of whom are having a very hard struggle to survive.153 USAD Social Science Resource Guide • 2017–2018 85 SKT, IASD - International, NA Shanghai Foreign Language School Affiliated to SISU - Shanghai, China Ghana, Pan-Africanism, and Kwame Nkrumah Senegal’s first president, Léopold Senghor, built a party so strong that he won reelection from 1960 to 1981. The Problems of Independence Although winning independence was a success, Nkrumah’s warnings were justified. Within a decade, many of the new governments had lost much of their support, and even the concept of national unity was in doubt. There were several reasons for this, starting with the use of colonial borders to define the new nations. Those borders were the result of agreements made in Europe and had nothing to do with the allegiances of the people they regulated. Thus, members of a single ethnic group found themselves spread across several countries, like the Tuareg of Algeria, Mali, Niger, and Mauritania, while a single country could contain members of several ethnic groups who had been opponents prior to the conquest. The struggle for independence obscured those divisions, but the reality of independence brought them into the open. At the heart of the problem was economics. As colonies, African nations provided raw materials to industrialized countries but received few opportunities to develop industries themselves. The result was a transfer of wealth overseas that left the new countries independent but impoverished. Foreign aid was intended to overcome that, but it was not 86 The result was a series of military revolts that replaced democratic governments with one-party states. Although there were exceptions—like Senegal whose first president, Léopold Senghor, built a party so strong that he served as president from 1960 until December 1980—in many countries the citizens welcomed military rule. They reasoned that the army was the only truly national organization in the country, and its command structure provided stability that arguing politicians could not. Between 1963 and 1968 there were sixty-four military revolts in countries that included Togo, Algeria, Libya, Mali, Nigeria, Burkina Faso, and Congo-Kinshasa. In the case of Nigeria, West Africa’s most populous country, the result was a civil war.155 Nigeria and the Nigerian-Biafran War Nigeria became independent in 1960, but remained divided by ethnicity, religion, and colonial practice. A large northern region of Nigeria was dominated by Muslim Hausa people, a smaller west- Colonel Chukwuemeka Odumegwu-Ojukwu led the secession of southeastern Nigeria, which declared its independence as the Republic of Biafra. USAD Social Science Resource Guide • 2017–2018 SKT, IASD - International, NA Shanghai Foreign Language School Affiliated to SISU - Shanghai, China enough to tackle all of the development problems at the same time. So opponents who had formed alliances in order to gain independence became jealous and distrustful when some projects moved forward while others were told to wait. Government became the biggest source of wealth in many countries, and those without connections viewed “insiders” as corrupt. These problems were aggravated by the Cold War powers whose promises and gifts seemed to encourage leaders to ignore their people.154 ern region was predominantly Yoruba and Christian, and the southeastern region was mainly populated with Christian Igbo and other smaller groups. The initial three-state solution proved unstable, and in early 1966, Igbo officers led a military coup. That raised fears that produced a second coup in July and the division of the army along regional lines. Figure 7.1 After 1970, a succession of military leaders presided over the reunification of Nigeria with some success and even held an election that returned con- SKT, IASD - International, NA Shanghai Foreign Language School Affiliated to SISU - Shanghai, China Colonel Chukwuemeka Odumegwu-Ojukwu led the secession of southeastern Nigeria, which declared its independence as the Republic of Biafra. General Yakubu Gowon took control of the rest of Nigeria and began a campaign to reunify the country.156 Although the Biafrans won some early victories, they ran short of supplies and attracted only limited foreign support. The war turned into a stalemate that ended after two years of blockade and mass starvation in Biafra. Map indicating the secession of Biafra during the Nigerian civil war. USAD Social Science Resource Guide • 2017–2018 87 After the secession of southeastern Nigeria, General Yakubu Gowon took control of the rest of Nigeria and began a campaign to reunify the country. trol of the government to civilians in 1979. But the new democracy barely lasted four years until, in response to new charges of corruption, the army took over again. Power returned to civilians after the 1999 elections, but many Nigerians continued to accuse the winners of rigging subsequent elections.157 Democracy in Independent Africa The challenges of establishing a democracy in Nigeria were not unique. In addition to the conflict that resulted every time two or more political parties faced off, critics argued that political campaigns were costly, they promoted party loyalties that interfered with national unity, and they depended on an idea that Africans inherited from colonialism. During the 1970s, African democracy faced further challenges. Some African nations became single-party socialist states supported by the USA’s Cold War opponents. Another challenge was that democracy was associated with the countries that supported South Africa, whose racist apartheid government was condemned by nearly all other African countries. Further distrust developed in oil-producing countries like Nigeria and Angola, where the enormous wealth generated by the world’s oil crises 88 But then something happened that revived interest in democracy—the fall of the Berlin Wall in 1989. Coming in the same year as the 200th anniversary of the French Revolution, the fall of communism restored confidence in the ability of mass movements to overcome powerful governments. The final outcome still lies in the future, but after the fall of communism in Europe, longtime rulers were overthrown or resigned in countries such as Senegal, Mali, Liberia, Sierra Leone, Cote d’Ivoire, and more. The results have not always been clean or efficient, but they have reinforced the hope that political change is possible. Globalization and Africa Another change is also underway whose effects are more complicated—globalization. Globalization is the creation of systems that overcome distance, enabling things to move farther, faster, and at lower cost. Those “things” include more than just raw materials and industrial products; they also include money, ideas, and people. For Africa, globalization has not only changed the economics of world trade, it has also led to greater opportunities for Africans to go elsewhere, for Africans and non-Africans to learn about each other, and for foreign ideas to influence how Africans think and behave. For example, the globalization of the resistance to Israel and its allies by al-Qaeda inspired rebels in the Sahara to redefine their opposition to national African governments. The use of new media by the Roman Catholic Church has made Africa the fastest growing region for new converts. The Internet has enabled cyber-criminals who claim to be Nigerian to reach potential victims all over the world. Changes in airfares and the construction costs of hotels allowed The Gambia to become a tourist destination for Europeans as well as other Africans. Televised soccer tournaments have made African athletes like N’Golo Kante (French-born Malian) and Jerome Boateng (Ghana) into international celebrities, and television provided a worldwide audience when the 2010 FIFA World Cup Finals were held in South Africa. By making it easier to move people and money, globalization has increased the flow of African USAD Social Science Resource Guide • 2017–2018 SKT, IASD - International, NA Shanghai Foreign Language School Affiliated to SISU - Shanghai, China in 1972–3 and 1978–9 increased the temptation for corruption. SKT, IASD - International, NA Shanghai Foreign Language School Affiliated to SISU - Shanghai, China Figure 7.2 Map of Mali USAD Social Science Resource Guide • 2017–2018 89 Malian President Ibrahim Boubacar Keita (center), photographed after addressing the press following the 2015 terrorist attack on a hotel in Mali’s capital Bamako. migrants toward Europe, where higher wages offset the risk of the hazardous journey and Internet banking provides the means to send money to relatives back home. Challenges to National Unity in Mali The 2012 revolution in Mali showed many of these forces at work. Mali is a large country (nearly as large as Alaska) on the southern edge of the Sahara Desert. Two-thirds of it is virtually empty and barely inhabitable, while the southern third contains most of the population who depend on farms near the Niger River or live in forested mountains. After winning independence peacefully from France in 1960, the government was taken over by a military officer who ruled from 1968 to 1991. Since then there have been five presidential elections with three won by civilians, including the current president, Ibrahim Boubacar Keita. All of Mali’s presidents have come from the southern part of the country, leaving the northern minority distrustful of the government. To maintain national unity, the government provided northerners with extra autonomy—the right to make local laws that differed from those in the rest of the country—but offered little in the form of economic development because Mali is poor and the region is vast. Even so, that was enough to maintain order for decades, although northerners often left 90 Their initial success triggered a mutiny in Mali’s army and led to the rapid withdrawal of its forces from the northern part of the country. This alarmed Mali’s neighbors, especially those whose territory extended into the Sahara, and many responded to a call by ECOWAS (the Economic Organization of West African States) for troops to aid Mali and to oppose the mutineers. Fearing that al-Qaeda would establish a foothold in West Africa, France dispatched troops and aircraft to fight the rebels in early 2013, aided by Germany, the U.S., Canada, and other Western countries. After a six-month campaign, the rebels were driven out of the major northern towns, and in July 2013 Mali held an election that had been delayed for a year. But sporadic attacks in the north continued, and highly visible attacks on a restaurant and hotel in the capital city in 2015 showed that national unity has not yet been secured.159 Challenges to Economic Independence in Ghana In the decades after independence, Ghana was known as an “African success story.” The construction of the Akosombo Dam on the Volta River provided electricity to process aluminum for export, while also supplying electricity to homes and businesses as far away as the capital in Accra. Ghana succeeded it diversifying its colonial-era economy by adding light manufacturing, crude oil, and electricity to its exports of cocoa and gold. But the other side of the story is imports, and that is where the effects of globalization have been most evident. Ghana is known for a type of locally made high-quality cloth called Kente, which is a symbol of traditional Africa in many places. Woven from local fibers into long strips that are then cut, joined together, and tailored into clothing, Kente cloth has long been a staple of Ghanaian fashion and an ex- USAD Social Science Resource Guide • 2017–2018 SKT, IASD - International, NA Shanghai Foreign Language School Affiliated to SISU - Shanghai, China Mali to find work. National unity began to unravel after a series of droughts destroyed animal herds and forced northerners to become refugees in the south or in oil-wealthy countries like Algeria and Libya. The 2011 revolution in Libya led to an exodus of contract workers who returned home across the desert to Mali, where they joined longtime opponents of the government plus newcomers affiliated with al-Qaeda in attacks on northern army bases in January 2012.158 SKT, IASD - International, NA Shanghai Foreign Language School Affiliated to SISU - Shanghai, China Figure 7.3 Map of Ghana USAD Social Science Resource Guide • 2017–2018 91 Since globalization makes the price of transport irrelevant, it allows manufacturers to locate wherever they want. Their choice is then subject to the price of other costs like workers’ wages, raw materials, bank interest, and so on, with production located to take advantage of whichever factor saves textile production, Chinese labor costs are less than those in Africa, and neither the cost of cotton nor the cost of shipping cloth to overseas markets is enough to cancel the savings. If the government wanted to revive the textile industry in Ghana, the solution would be to make Ghana’s workers produce more for lower wages. Even if that were possible, they would face competition from the next country that decided it needed to increase its share of textile manufacturing. So, in a globalizing world, Africans begin at a disadvantage with low levels of industrialization and small consumer markets. Other Issues in Twenty-First Century Africa Although huge advances have been made in life expectancy and other health measures, tropical Africa remains a source of diseases like malaria and Ebola. With increased human mobility, the risk of epidemics also increases, making Africa’s health care a part of the problem of world health care. The world generally tends to ignore Africa until a disaster strikes (like Ebola), but there are high-profile efforts to prevent disease, like those funded by the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation to combat malaria and 92 Weavers of Kente cloth in Ghana. By 2007 only about one-quarter of Ghana’s Kente cloth was actually manufactured in Ghana—the majority came from China. polio through measures that include not only more doctors and medicine, but also better food.161 Critics rebel at the idea that Africans need to accept “aid” from outsiders and argue instead that Africans are entitled to reparations for the damage done by the slave trade and colonialism, citing payments made to Native Americans and Japanese-Americans as precedents. In June 1992, the Organization of African Unity established a group to look into the question, and they cited statistics that showed the average annual income of people south of the Sahara was about $571, compared to $24,090 in the USA, $20,000 in Great Britain, and $24,010 in France.162 Statistics for life expectancy also showed an enormous gap—life expectancy was found to be about fifty years in Africa south of the Sahara compared to seventy-five in the U.S., and seventy-six and seventy-seven in Great Britain and France respectively.163 The argument for reparations gained USAD Social Science Resource Guide • 2017–2018 SKT, IASD - International, NA Shanghai Foreign Language School Affiliated to SISU - Shanghai, China port to neighboring African countries. Even during the centuries when cheap European textiles arrived by ship, local cloth producers managed to keep their customers. But that has changed in recent years as cheaper substitutes invaded the Ghanaian market. By 2007 only about one-quarter of Ghana’s Kente cloth was actually manufactured in Ghana. The majority came from China, which duplicated traditional designs using less expensive (but less durable) fabric. The consequences of this were many. On the one hand, it led to a decline in the demand for cotton grown in Ghana, the closing of textile factories—, and the loss of both highly skilled and factory jobs associated with cloth design and production. On the other hand, cloth traders seem unaffected, and poor people gained access to styles once reserved for wealthy people.160 One approach that has gained some acceptance has been the forgiveness of debts that have accumulated since the original foreign aid payments that followed independence. Organized by the International Monetary Fund, the Heavily Indebted Poor Countries Initiative and the Multilateral Debt Relief Initiative have obtained debt relief worth about $100 billion for thirty of Africa’s poorest countries.165 Figure 7.4 Section VII Conclusion Although Africans obtained political independence in the second half of the twentieth century, they remained economically dependent on a global economy that kept them at a disadvantage in trade. Despite offers of assistance from wealthier nations, the problems left behind by colonialism were enormous, and Africans had no leverage beyond raw materials, military bases, and UN votes. As the situation became clear within new African countries, it aggravated internal dissatisfaction that led to revolution. Military rule seemed to offer a way to resolve those disputes, but after almost two decades of trying, it became clear that such challenges had not been resolved. Although the demise of communism at the end of the 1980s removed one source of SKT, IASD - International, NA Shanghai Foreign Language School Affiliated to SISU - Shanghai, China support in 2001 when the World Conference against Racism, Racial Discrimination, Xenophobia and Related Intolerance held in South Africa declared the transatlantic slave trade a crime against humanity.164 Independent Africa166 USAD Social Science Resource Guide • 2017–2018 93  Section VII Summary Shanghai Foreign Language School Affiliated to SISU - Shanghai, China   94 he desire for African independence existT ed ever since the European conquest, but the conditions that made it possible did not come together until the end of the Second World War. The strain of rebuilding after the war, coupled with an increase in the number of Africans who understood how to manipulate European institutions, enabled the growth of mass movements that became strong enough to obtain independence. espite European efforts to control the D outcome, once independence was obtained, African leaders essentially did what they wanted. These new leaders were, however, handicapped by what they inherited from colonialism—borders that divided people, a set of ideas about how to govern, personal relationships that affected their alliances, and most of all, an economic arrangement that put Africans at a disadvantage. Within a few years, African leaders understood that political independence was not enough to insure true independence, but that under-  standing did not make them more effective. Besides establishing a new relationship with their former colonial powers, African leaders had to negotiate their relationships with two superpowers—the U.S.A. and the U.S.S.R.—engaged in a worldwide Cold War. Both sides sought African raw materials, military bases, and UN votes, but neither viewed Africans as equals or as threats. As a result, the only leverage that Africans had came from playing one side against the other, while the superpowers did the same with factions within each African country. Few of Africa’s first elected leaders were able to manage competing political demands, so military officers took over. They used their authority (and control of guns) to push internal divisions out of view, but they could not make them go away entirely. Thus, when Communism collapsed at the end of the 1980s, revived interest in democracy also removed some military governments in Africa. But the economic problems remained, and globalization has reinforced the power of economic advantage. Africans remain in a situation that resembles their colonial past, where they consume foreign goods produced with African raw materials, depend on foreigners for loans to finance development, and compete to sell their labor more cheaply than anybody else in order to survive. This is “neo-colonialism”—the “new” colonialism that has outlasted colonial empires and political independence. USAD Social Science Resource Guide • 2017–2018 SKT, IASD - International, NA division, the economic realities and social divisions remained unaffected. The process of globalization has enabled new leaders to bring together the elements for new kinds of power, although it remains to be seen whether the current leadership of African nations will be any more effective than the leaders that won independence. This resource guide on Africa, and West Africa in particular, has taken you on the longest of human journeys—from our human origins to our global present. The history of Africa has exemplified the best and worst of humanity. It has given us heroic stories and human creativity. It has also featured examples of great cruelty and prejudice. Consider the multitude of African experiences we have learned about: treks across the Sahara in camel caravans from Timbuktu to Sijilmasa; the creation of great empires based on gold, strong will, and religion; the pathos generated by African and chattel slavery and the brutality of the Middle Passage; the imported economic promises rooted in capitalism, socialism, and the Dual Mandate; independence movements and discussions about Pan-Africanism; and the struggle to achieve the best partnership between ethnic identities and a sense of nationalism. In the twenty-first century, African nations continue to nurture relationships with their former colonial rulers, much the same way the U.S. values its partnership with Great Britain, but they have also moved beyond them to form new partnerships with nonwestern countries. All humans were connected to Africa in the past; those connections have persisted in our modern globalized world, and new connections continue to develop in the present-day. USAD Social Science Resource Guide • 2017–2018 95 SKT, IASD - International, NA Shanghai Foreign Language School Affiliated to SISU - Shanghai, China Conclusion Timeline of Events Note to Students: Dates are designated by bce and ce, which are abbreviations for “Before the Common Era and “In the Common Era.” All bce and some ce dates are approximate and may vary depending on the source consulted. bce (Before the Common Era) The earliest hominid fossils appear in Africa. 4.2 million – Australopithecines evolve in Africa. 3.3 million – Approximate creation date for oldest stone tools, found in Kenya, East Africa 2.4-1.4 million – The time period for Homo habilis, the first member of the genus Homo 1.89 million– 143,000 – The time period for Homo erectus 1.8 million – H. erectus migrates out of Africa to Europe and Asia. 200,000 – 10,000 – The oldest fossils of humans who look like us, Homo sapiens, appear in Africa. Afro-Eurasian agriculture begins. 10,000–2,500 – Africa’s New Stone Age or Neolithic period 5300–3000 – 3000 – Pre-dynastic Egypt; smaller states unify. Improved irrigation agriculture begins in Egypt. 3000–332 – The vast time period for Pharaonic Egypt 2686–2160 – The Old Kingdom of Pharaonic Egypt 2600–2500 – The Old Kingdom’s period of monument building; Egyptians construct the pyramids of Giza. 2500–800 – The Bronze Age in Africa; advances in irrigation create surplus crops and larger populations barter. 96 USAD Social Science Resource Guide • 2017–2018 SKT, IASD - International, NA Shanghai Foreign Language School Affiliated to SISU - Shanghai, China 6 million – The First Intermediate Period; a period of disorder in Pharaonic Egypt 2055–1650 – The Middle Kingdom of Pharaonic Egypt 1650–1550 – The Second Intermediate Period of Pharaonic Egypt and the invasion of the Hyksos 1550–1069 – The New Kingdom of Pharaonic Egypt 1069–30 – The Post Empire Period of Pharaonic Egypt 1000 bce– 300 ce – The population explosion of Bantu speakers takes place where Nigeria and Cameroon meet today; they begin to move east and reach northern South Africa by about 300 ce. 700s bce– 1500 ce – A period when ancient Greek traditions hold Africa in high regard 600s – 332–30 – The Iron Age begins in Africa. SKT, IASD - International, NA Shanghai Foreign Language School Affiliated to SISU - Shanghai, China 2160–2055 – Ptolemaic Egypt ce (In the Common Era) 42 – St. Mark introduces Christianity to Egypt. 100 – The first West African camel caravans travel across the Sahara. 325 – The Council of Nicaea establishes central Christian beliefs in the Nicaean Creed. 400–1100 – The first great West African empire of Ghana is established in the upper Niger River valley between the Sahara to the north and tropical forests on the coast. 451 – The Council of Chalcedon defines the relationship between the divine and human natures of Jesus. 570–632 – The lifetime of Muhammad ibn Abdallah, the Prophet of Islam 613 – Abyssinian Negus (Ethiopian king) gives sanctuary to Muslims fleeing Meccan persecution. 622 – Muslim migration from Mecca to Yathrib-Medina; year one of the Hijra calendar 640 – Muslims capture Egypt from Byzantium’s Orthodox Christians. USAD Social Science Resource Guide • 2017–2018 97 The Umayyad Caliphate, the first of two great Muslim Caliphates during Islam’s Golden Age 750–1258 – The Abbasid Caliphate, the second of two great Muslim Caliphates during Islam’s Golden Age 800 – Spanish Muslims enslave ethnic slavs, the origin of the word “slave.” 941 – The end of the Imam leadership of the Shia, the minority sect within Islam 1042 – Muslim Tuareg, also known as the Almoravids, conquer ancient Ghana. 1203 – Ancient Ghana is completely defeated by Sosso. 1235 – The Battle of Krina; Sundiata Keïta defeats the conquerors of ancient Ghana, the Sosso, and creates the second great West African empire of Mali. 1235–55 – 1324 – Mansa Musa’s hajj caravan of 60,000 porters visits Cairo and Mecca. 1329 – Ibn Battuta visits the Swahili coast. 1352–53 – 1441 – 1450–1500 – 1450 – 1450–1591 – 1454 and 1456 – 1492 – c.1509–1517 – 1518 – 98 Sundiata Keïta rules Mali. Ibn Battuta visits Mali. The Portuguese deliver their first cargo of slaves to Lisbon. The Portuguese import about eight hundred slaves a year into Portugal. The plantation slavery model is carried out in Madeira. Time period of Songhay, the third great West African empire. The pope approves the slave trade by the Portuguese on the condition that it advance Christianity. The arrival of Christopher Columbus in the Americas Leo Africanus visits Songhay. Leo Africanus is captured by pirates and given to Pope Leo X. USAD Social Science Resource Guide • 2017–2018 SKT, IASD - International, NA Shanghai Foreign Language School Affiliated to SISU - Shanghai, China 644–750 – The Spanish transport West African slaves to the Caribbean, initiating the transatlantic slave trade. 1550s – Slaves accompany conquistadores in the New World. 1550s – Slave-based sugar plantations peak on São Tomé. 1600 – The Portuguese become the largest sugar producers due to thriving plantation slavery in Bahia, Brazil. 1619 – The first slaves arrive in North America at Port Comfort, Virginia, on the James River. 1625 – The English, Dutch, French, and Danes begin to challenge Spanish and Portuguese dominance of the transatlantic slave trade and the production of sugar. 1637 – The Dutch take Elmina Castle from the Portuguese. 1640s – The Portuguese expand the slave trade with Kongo in present-day Angola. c. 1695 – Osei Tutu and Anokye create the Golden Stool myth and unite the Asante people. 1700s – The transatlantic slave trade peaks. 1712 – Slaves attempt to burn New York City. 1723 – Slaves attempt to burn Boston. 1783 – The Quakers found the first British anti-slavery society. 1788 – Olaudah Equiano appears before Parliament to argue for the abolition of the transatlantic slave trade. 1789 – Olaudah Equiano publishes his influential autobiography that is critical of the slave trade. 1807 – Britain and the U.S. outlaw the importation of slaves into territories that they control. The law took effect in the U.S. in 1808. 1814 – The Asante defeat the Fante and bring them under their rule. 1820 – Asantehene Osei Bonsu opposes the British ban on the Atlantic slave trade. 1824 – The Asante defeat the British and behead Sir Charles McCarthy. USAD Social Science Resource Guide • 2017–2018 SKT, IASD - International, NA Shanghai Foreign Language School Affiliated to SISU - Shanghai, China 1518 – 99 1826 – The British defeat the Asante. 1838 – Britain bans slave ownership throughout the British Empire. 1844 – The British sign agreements with the Fante to establish a coastal protectorate in the Gold Coast. 1863 – The Asante and the British resume hostilities; neither gains a significant advantage. 1870–1914 – 1872 – 1873–74 – 1875 – 1884–85 – Period of the New Imperialism in which Europe expands colonial holdings in Africa and Asia The ceremony of Dutch transfer of Elmina to the British takes place in April. The Asante and the British resume warfare; Sir Garnet Wolseley defeats the Asante in early 1874. Britain bans slavery in the Gold Coast. The Berlin Conference establishes the rules for European imperialism in Africa. 1896 – The British reoccupy Kumasi in the Gold Coast. 1900 – The British defeat the Asante and proclaim a protectorate. 1910 – Amadou Bamba collaborates with the French in colonial Senegal. 1957 – The British grant the Gold Coast independence as Ghana under the leadership of Kwame Nkrumah. 1957–66 – Kwame Nkrumah leads independent Ghana. 1958 – France’s African colonies are offered the choice between complete independence or French federation. 1960 – Nigeria gains independence from Great Britain; Ghana becomes a republic. 1967 – Biafran Igbo leaders declare independence from Nigeria on May 30. 1967–70 – 100 Period of five wars between the Asante and the British in Gold Coast The Nigerian Civil War with Biafra; more than a million people die. USAD Social Science Resource Guide • 2017–2018 SKT, IASD - International, NA Shanghai Foreign Language School Affiliated to SISU - Shanghai, China 1823–1900 – 1950–60 – 2012 – 2014–16 – Scientists in South Africa discover the oldest evidence of human creativity in tools dating from 70,000 bce. The Ebola virus outbreak takes place in West Africa. Scientists publish environmental models that support the fossil and archaeological record of the migration of Homo sapiens from Africa. SKT, IASD - International, NA Shanghai Foreign Language School Affiliated to SISU - Shanghai, China 2016 – The rise of significant nationalist and independence movements in Africa USAD Social Science Resource Guide • 2017–2018 101 Abbasids (750–1258) – one of two great caliphates during Islam’s Golden Age; named after one of Muhammad’s uncles; overthrew the Umayyads, the first great caliphate Abolition – movement to end slavery and the transatlantic slave trade Abolitionists – African, European, and U.S. activists who opposed slavery in all forms and since at least the 1500s worked to end it Abraham – the patriarch from Ur who allegedly founded Judaism, Christianity, and Islam; assuming Abraham lived during the Jewish Age of the Patriarchs, he would have been born sometime after 2000 bce, perhaps as late as 1800 bce or even later, and would have left Ur for Canaan after reaching manhood Abu Talib (?–619) – the uncle who raised Muhammad, the Prophet of Islam Abyssinia – the ancient name for Ethiopia Acropolis – in southern Africa, part of Great Zimbabwe Adinkra – symbols created by the Asante to represent concepts; Gye Nyame is the most famous African slavery – bondage within African societies in which slaves had rights to marry and raise families; their children were often born free; they provided functions of servitude and reproduction; see chattel slavery Leo (al-Hasan ibn Muhammad al-Wazzan al-Fasi) (1485–1554) – a Moor who in 1518 was captured by pirates and given to Pope Leo X as a present; he was freed by the pope and took his name at baptism; later published Description of Africa, which described Songhay; family name was al-Hasan ibn Muhammad al-Wazzan al-Fasi 102 Afro-Asiatic – one of five major language groups of Africa Afrocentrism – the perception of life through African eyes inside African culture and environments Afro-Pessimists – those who believe Africa has so many problems that the foreseeable future is grim Agades – city in Niger some 720 due east of Timbuktu; also Agadez Akan – one of three West African gold fields located in the forest and savanna of present-day Ghana; the other two are Bambuk and Bure; also a language group Akosombo Dam – the Ghanaian hydroelectric dam on the Volta River that opened in 1966 Al-Azhar University – a university founded in 970 in Cairo; Al-Azhar is Sunni Islam’s most important university in Africa and arguably the Muslim world Ali (601–661) – Muhammad’s cousin, son-in-law, and fourth caliph; revered by both Sunni and Shia Muslims Allah – Arabic word for the one god Almoravids – northern Muslim Berbers who in 1042 invaded and conquered ancient Ghana Anglo-Asante Wars (1824–1900) – the series of five wars between Great Britain and the Asante Anokye – the priest who with Osei Tutu created the legend of the Golden Stool and unified the Asante ethnic group under Osei Tutu in c. 1695 Ardrah – the center of the slave trade of the Aja ethnic group in southwestern Nigeria Aristotle (384–322 bce) – a Greek philosopher who thought highly of Egypt and Abyssinia (Ethiopia) USAD Social Science Resource Guide • 2017–2018 SKT, IASD - International, NA Shanghai Foreign Language School Affiliated to SISU - Shanghai, China Glossary Arquebus – a forerunner of the rifle used against the defenders of Songhay in 1590 Asante – a major West African ethnic group in the southern half of present-day Ghana who participated in the slave trade; capital is Kumasi; engaged in five wars against the British Shanghai Foreign Language School Affiliated to SISU - Shanghai, China Asantehene – the title of a ruling Asante leader Asiento – the asiento or transferable contract originated in the fifteenth-century whereby the papacy awarded Portugal the monopoly of European trade with Africa; by 1518 the Spanish began issuing asientos to entrepreneurs, companies, or other governments to supply African slaves to Spanish colonies in America Askia, Mohammed (?–1537) – the West African leader of Songhay who expanded its territory, improved the structure of government, and reformed Islam Asma’u, Nana (1793–1864) – the important West African Muslim woman, teacher, and Sufi who provided female leadership for the Sokoto Caliphate in present-day northwest Nigeria Assimilation – in French Africa the process by which Africans adopted French culture; was a component of direct rule Atlantic slave trade – the maritime trade in Africans as a commodity to the Americas or Europe Augustine of Hippo (354–430) – born in what is now Algeria, he was the Christian church father who advocated for the concept of predestination and provided many of the basic ideas of modern Roman Catholicism Austronesian – one of five major language groups of Africa Awdughast – a transshipment center in the Sahel on the northern border of ancient Ghana Axum – the ancient capital of Abyssinia (Ethiopia) Ayatollah – a Muslim Shia leader who rules in the place of the “hidden” Imam until his return; means “sign of Allah” Bahia, Brazil – an important region for Portuguese plantation slavery for sugar production Bamba, Amadou (1850–1927) – the founder of the Murids, a Sufi order in Senegal Bambuk – one of three West African gold fields; located between the Senegal and Faleme Rivers; the other two are Bure and Akan Bantu – refers to about 535 languages in the NigerCongo language family that spread across Africa eastward and southward beginning around 1000 bce; today about 180 million Africans are Bantu speakers at some level Baobab – African trees from the genus Adansonia; major symbol of the West African Sahel Bedouins – the nomadic Arab ethnic group of the desert Berbers – North African ethnic group from the Sanhaja region that conquered ancient Ghana Berlin Conference (1884–85) – the meeting of fourteen Western powers who agreed on thirty-eight articles to settle their trade and colonial disputes in Africa; no Africans were present Bernal, Martin Gardiner (1937–2013) – argued in Black Athena that ancient Greek civilization was partly based on Pharaonic Egyptian and Phoenician civilizations; stated that Eurocentric scholars had severed that link because of nineteenth-century notions of European imperial supremacy and pseudoscientific racism Biafra – the southeastern Igbo region of Nigeria that seceded in 1967; it was forced to rejoin Nigeria in 1970 after losing the Nigerian Civil War; at least one million Igbos lost their lives, many to starvation Bilma – the famous salt source for Tuareg caravans headed south to trade with the Hausa in northern Nigeria Blue Nile – one of two major tributaries of the Nile River; originates in Lake Tana, Ethiopia, and joins the White Nile at Khartoum, Sudan Bonsu, Osei (1779–1824) – the Asantehene who in 1820 voiced his opposition to the 1807 British ban on the Atlantic slave trade Book of the Dead – Egyptian sacred literature dating from c. 1500 bce that laid out the path to eternal afterlife after death Bori – traditional African religion led by Hausa women during the Sokoto Caliphate Brookes – the notorious slave ship whose illustrations of decks and shackled prone slaves were used by USAD Social Science Resource Guide • 2017–2018 103 SKT, IASD - International, NA Ark of the Covenant – the Old Testament belief of a sacred Jewish wooden chest carried by poles in which two stone tablets of the Ten Commandments are stored Bure – one of three West African gold fields located near the upper Niger River; the other two are Bambuk and Akan Caliph – a spiritual successor to Muhammad, the Prophet of Islam Shanghai Foreign Language School Affiliated to SISU - Shanghai, China Caliphates – the Umayyid and Abbasid empires of the Muslims Calvinism – the Protestant sect named for John Calvin (1509–64); it holds that God has selected a few people to share heaven and damned all others; this concept, often called predestination, was first put forward by the African Augustine of Hippo (354–430); some European racism toward Africans has its origins in the idea of predestination Canary Islands – an early location for Portuguese and Spanish plantation slavery Cann, Rebecca (b.1951) – with Mark Stoneking and Alan Wilson, she carried out the mtDNA study in 1987 that placed human origins in Africa Cape Coast Castle – a major slave trading fort in the Central Region of modern Ghana just east of Elmina; it has the infamous “door of no return,” through which thousands of Africans were shipped to the New World; it is now a UNESCO World Heritage Site. Capitalism – an economic system emphasizing private ownership of the means of production and the selling of goods for a profit Cataract – obstructions to navigation; on the Nile River the first cataract is at Aswan Centering – the adjustment of physical, intellectual, and spiritual characteristics to one’s environment Cercles – the administrative districts of a colony under French rule Chad – the modern name for the former colony of French Equatorial Africa Chapel of the Tablet at the Church of Our Lady Mary of Zion – the church in Axum, Ethiopia where the Ark of the Covenant is allegedly stored who in 1785 wrote an influential essay at Cambridge University condemning slavery and later helped lead the abolitionist movement in England and the U.S. Colonialism – describes subservient relationships between imperial powers and societies in which the dominant group remains alien Convention People’s Party – the anti-colonial political party established by Kwame Nkrumah in 1949 Coptic Christians – also called Monophysites; the largest populations are in Egypt and Ethiopia; differ from orthodox Christians in that they believe Jesus had a single fully united divine and human nature, not mixed or blended; declared heretics at the Council of Chalcedon in 451; Coptic is also an Egyptian language Council of Chalcedon – the Christian council in 451 which determined the relationship between the human and divine natures of Jesus Council of Nicaea – in 325 it determined the nature of the Trinity and the Nicaean Creed important to Orthodox Christians Cowries – shells from Persia used in West Africa for small amounts of money and jewelry Cugoano, Ottobah (1757–91) – the former slave and abolitionist friend of Olaudah Equiano Dahomey – a major center of the slave trade and a kingdom of the Fon ethnic group Darwin, Charles (1809–82) – the first advocate of natural selection to explain the evolution of life Davidson, Basil (1914–2010) – the first European writer who asserted Africans had histories and civilizations Denkyira – a Gold Coast ethnic group whose slave trade contract at Elmina with the Dutch preceded that of the Asante Description of Africa – the book by Leo Africanus that describes Songhay in the early 1500s Dhow – a Swahili boat designed with a triangular sail to transport goods along the East African coast by taking advantage of the Indian Ocean’s currents and seasonal winds called monsoons Chattel slavery – European form of economic bondage in which humans are considered property with no rights; see African slavery Diop, Cheikh Anta (1923–86) – the Senegalese Afrocentric scholar who argued that West Africans significantly contributed to Pharaonic Egyptian civilization Clarkson, Thomas (1760–1846) – the student abolitionist Direct Rule – an approach to colonial rule usually 104 USAD Social Science Resource Guide • 2017–2018 SKT, IASD - International, NA abolitionists to generate awareness of the cruelty of the transatlantic slave trade and slavery in general Divination – rituals in Traditional African Religion that attempt to communicate with the spirit world Shanghai Foreign Language School Affiliated to SISU - Shanghai, China Dromedaries – single-humped camels used to carry loads in the Sahara Desert as early as the 100s ce Dual Mandate – Frederick Lugard’s application of indirect rule; African chiefs enforced colonial laws in return for British protection; the British gained access to natural resources and African labor while the Africans acquired British products and Western knowledge Ebola virus – a viral infection with more than an 80 percent mortality rate that travels through body fluids; ravaged Guinea, Liberia, and Sierra Leone from 2014–16 Ebony – a hard black wood traded in Saharan caravan commerce Egyptologists – academics who study ancient Egypt Elmina Castle – the slave fortress in what is now the coastal central region of Ghana built by the Portuguese and later occupied by the Dutch and English; now a UNESCO World Heritage Site Enlightenment – the advancement of rational thought and human dignity in Europe during the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries; accelerated the cause of abolitionism Equiano, Olaudah (1745–97) – the Igbo slave and freedman who wrote an autobiography that described capture, African slavery, Middle Passage, chattel slavery, life as a freedman, and the abolition movement Ethnicity – the category with which people may be identified that is based on similarities of culture, language, and ancestry Eurocentrism – the perception of life through Western eyes inside Western cultures and environments Évolués – Africans who assimilated into French civilization both in French colonies and in France Evolution – change in species over generations due to natural selection and the environment Falconbridge, Alexander (1760–92) – the slave ship doctor who lobbied for abolition and wrote of the horrors of the slave ship; participated in the Sierra Leone settlement for freedmen Fante – an Akan ethnic group that founded city-states along the central half of the Gold Coast; one of their famous towns, Oguaa (Cape Coast), served as the seat of early British power in the Gold Coast; the Fante in the vicinity of Cape Coast Castle were sometimes in partnership with or under the sovereignty of both the Asante and the British Fatimah (604–632) – a daughter of Muhammad and wife of Ali Fatimids – a Shia group who created the Fatimid Caliphate (c.909–1171) across North Africa and the Fertile Crescent, overthrew Sunni rule in Fustat, and built Al-Azhar and Cairo; named themselves after Fatimah, daughter of Muhammad Female infanticide – the practice of killing infant girls Fertile Crescent – land that included the Tigris and Euphrates Rivers, Phoenicia, and Palestine Fiqh – the regulation of religious conduct; Islamic jurisprudence Fodiyo, Usman dan (1754–1817) – the founder of the Sokoto Caliphate in northeastern Nigeria Fon – the major African slave trading ethnic group in Benin, southwest Nigeria Fossils – preserved remnants of life, often bones Freedmen – people freed from chattel slavery Free trade – often associated with capitalism; an economic policy that does not restrict imports or exports in global markets; assumes the absence of interference from anyone not party to the transaction, especially governments French Equatorial Africa – the group of French African colonies from the Congo River north of Central Africa to the southern border of present-day Libya; at its height FEA included the French Congo, Gabon, Oubangui-Chari, Chad, and French Cameroon Fula – the major ethnic group and language of West Africa Fustat – an early Muslim city founded in 640 by Amr ibn al-Asi; now part of Cairo Futanke – a West African language group; participants USAD Social Science Resource Guide • 2017–2018 105 SKT, IASD - International, NA associated with the French that sought to place Europeans in direct contact with the African population by assigning them to posts in local districts; its alternative was “indirect rule,” often associated with the British, which relied on compliant Africans to fulfill local-level administrative posts Gabon – a former colony in French Equatorial Africa Gallagher, John (1919–80) – the British historian of imperialism who teamed up with Ronald Robinson to write the influential Africa and the Victorians and “The Imperialism of Free Trade” Shanghai Foreign Language School Affiliated to SISU - Shanghai, China Gambia River – West African river about 700 miles long that empties at Banjul, The Gambia Gao – the location of one of Africa’s Great Mosques; capital of Songhay about 300 miles east of Timbuktu on the east bank of the Niger River Garvey, Marcus (1887–1940) – an advocate for emigration of freedmen to Liberia; promoted an “Africa for the Africans” anti-colonial project under the auspices of the Universal Negro Improvement and Conservation Association Genetics – the study of genes and heredity that has provided convincing evidence for human origins in Africa Ghana – the first of three great West African empires (400–1100); was centered in the upper Niger River valley between the Sahara to the north and tropical forests on the coast; present-day Ghana took its name from ancient Ghana Gibbons, Ann (born c.1959) – an author who argued in 1987 that genetic traits of Y chromosomal DNA supported the African origins of men Giza – the location of Egypt’s great pyramids built in 2600–2500 bce during the Old Kingdom’s period of monument building Gold Coast – the European name given to preindependence Ghana due to the proximate Akan gold fields Golden Stool – the legendary symbol of the spirit of the Asante; created by Osei Tutu and the priest Anokye in c. 1695 Gowon, Yakubu (b.1934) – the general who seized control of Nigeria and fought the Nigerian Civil War to force Biafra back into the country Great Enclosure – a part of Great Zimbabwe Great Zimbabwe – literally “house of stone”; a southern African empire contemporaneous with the West African empire of Mali whose economy was also 106 based on gold Griots – West African oral historians who inherit their vocations and give performances often accompanied by drums and koras Guinea – a former French colony north of Sierra Leone that achieved independence in 1958 under the leadership of Sékou Touré, who later gave sanctuary to Kwame Nkrumah after the Ghanaian coup of 1966 Gye Nyame – the Adinkra symbol that means God’s omnipotence or literally “except for God”; also associated with Asante hegemony Hadith – Muhammad’s words whose guidance forms part of Muslim law Haiti – a Caribbean French colony and the site of slave revolt from 1791–1804 Hajj – the annual pilgrimage all able Muslims must make to Mecca once in one’s lifetime Hashim – Muhammad’s clan within the Quraysh in Mecca Hausa – the largest West African Muslim ethnic group; live across the Sahel from Ghana to Sudan Heavily Indebted Poor Countries Initiative – an international effort to relieve the debt of Africa’s poorest countries Hegel, Georg Wilhelm Friedrich (1770–1831) – wrote in his Philosophy of History that Africa was not a historical continent and showed neither change nor development, and that its peoples were not capable of progress or education Hieroglyphs – the picture writing technique of the Pharaonic Egyptians Hominid – originally meant all human ancestors; now sometimes also includes all great apes Homo erectus (1.9 million–143,000 bce) – the earliest human genus and species; abbreviated as h. erectus Homo sapiens (200,000 bce–present) – our human genus and species; abbreviated as h. sapiens Horus – in Egyptian religion, god of the sky, way, and hunting; pharaohs of the Old Kingdom were incarnations of Horus Hulks – old ships in the Nigerian delta where Europeans lived and carried out trade in slaves and goods Hyksos – the chariot-riding warriors who conquered USAD Social Science Resource Guide • 2017–2018 SKT, IASD - International, NA in the trans-Saharan gold trade during the ancient empire of Mali Lower Egypt in 1650 bce and who likely assimilated into the Egyptian population; they brought musical instruments, olive trees, and new breeds of cattle Jihad – the struggle experienced by individual Muslims to obey God; sometimes “holy war” against enemies of Islam Ibn al-Asi, Amr (585–664) – an early opponent of Muhammad; later converted and conquered Egypt in 640; created Fustat, which is now part of Cairo Jim Crow – the name given to U.S. laws designed to deny African Americans their civil rights Shanghai Foreign Language School Affiliated to SISU - Shanghai, China Ibn Khaldun (1332–1406) – famous Muslim historian; teacher at Al-Azhar University; wrote the first world history from a Muslim perspective called Muqaddimah Ibn Rabah, Bilal (580–640) – former African slave in Mecca; one of Muhammad’s first converts and as the initial muezzin gave first call to prayer in Medina; Bilal’s descendants allegedly established the Mandinka clan of Keïta, from which Sundiata derives Idowu, Bolaji (1913–93) – Nigerian Methodist minister and writer on traditional African religion Ifriqiya – Arab name for Africa from the seventh century Igbo – majority ethnic group in the region that declared independence from Nigeria as the country Biafra Imam – a descendent of Muhammad who led the Shia until about 941 ce; also the prayer leader of a mosque Imperialism – the comprehensive word associated with empire and politics to describe the dominance or sovereignty of one group over another Ka’bah – a shrine of traditional religion in Mecca that was incorporated into the Great Mosque of Mecca Kanem-Bornu – a trans-Saharan embarkation point Kassonke – a language group of West Africans; participants in the trans-Saharan gold trade during the ancient empire of Mali Katsina – a major city in the far central north of Nigeria Kaw (1300) – the Mansa of Mali who may have sent a fleet of 2,000 ships west; Mansa Musa’s predecessor Kebra Nagast – sacred literature of the Coptics; also called The Book of Kings Keïtas – the clan name for the rulers of Mali Kente – Akan cloth made by Asante men; originally for royalty Khoisan – the term used to describe the San and Khoi Khoi peoples who preceded Bantu-speakers in southern Africa; the mitochondria of the San is the oldest on earth; also one of five major language groups of Africa Kilwa – an ancient seaport and sultanate important to Swahili mercantile trade; located in coastal Tanzania Imperialism: Cultural – the imposition of values, language, and beliefs by rulers in an imperial setting King, Martin Luther (1929–68) – a leader of the U.S. civil rights movement Indirect Rule – the British system described by Frederick Lugard as the Dual Mandate; carried out with the collaboration of local chiefs Kongo – the ethnic group in the vicinity of Luanda, Angola, who provided slaves to the Portuguese to work on sugar plantations on São Tomé and in Brazil Industrial Revolution (1760–1840) – the time period when the West gained worldwide communications and weapons advantages and used them to create empires across much of the world; contributed to the obsolescence of chattel slavery Krina, Battle of (1235) – the battle in which Sundiata defeated the conquerors of the Ghanaians, the Sosso, and established Mali Islam – the world monotheistic Abrahamic religion followed by about 40 percent of all Africans; the word means act of submission to the will of God; about half of West Africa’s population is Muslim Jajis – itinerant female students and teachers of Nana Asma’u Kumasi – the capital of the Asante people; regional capital in modern Ghana Lake Victoria-Nyanza – the source of the White Nile River Lake Tana – the source of the Blue Nile River Lat Joor Joop (1842–86) – the anti-colonial Wolof king (Dammel) who was killed by the French; a contemporary of Bamba and an inspiration to USAD Social Science Resource Guide • 2017–2018 107 SKT, IASD - International, NA Ibn Battuta (1304–69) – the Moroccan world traveler who visited Mali and the Swahili coast; wrote a major travelogue called the Rihla Senegalese nationalists during their struggle for independence opposing apartheid; first president of post-apartheid South Africa; received the Nobel Peace Prize in 1993 Lenin, Vladimir (1870–1924) – the Russian communist revolutionary who wrote Imperialism, the Highest Stage of Capitalism to explain how imperialism was a stage in the development of global capitalism Mansa – the title for king or emperor of the medieval West African empire of Mali Shanghai Foreign Language School Affiliated to SISU - Shanghai, China Levant – the eastern part of the Mediterranean world Liberia – the modern country on the western coast of Africa that in 1822 became a haven for slaves seized from slave ships and U.S. freed slaves; a resettlement project was first promoted by the American Colonization Society Liberalism – Enlightenment belief that promoted progress, liberty, and equality; contributed to the abolitionist movement Lincoln University – founded in 1854, it was the first degree-granting historically black university in the U.S. Linguistics – the study of languages; in Africa, used to determine the origins of Bantu, the largest indigenous language sub-group in Africa Lugard, Frederick (1858–1945) – the colonial administrator in Nigeria who articulated the idea of the “Dual Mandate” which justified British imperialism in terms of an exchange of African labor and resources for British technology and civilization, to the benefit of both sides Ma’at – a concept representing truth, justice, order, and harmony personified by the Pharaoh Madeira – Portuguese islands in the Atlantic that were early locations for the plantation slavery model Malaria – a disease caused by single-celled parasites transmitted to humans by mosquitoes; causes flu-like symptoms that can recur; endemic in tropical Africa Mali – the second great West African empire during the thirteenth through the sixteenth centuries Mande – the language group of about 30 million people spread across thirteen West African countries Mandela, Nelson (1918–2013) – a Xhosa leader of the anti-apartheid African National Congress in South Africa; spent twenty-seven years in prison for 108 Maxim Gun – an early example of a fully automatic machine gun; invented by American-born British engineer Sir Hiram Maxim around 1884; enabled small colonial armies to overcome more numerous African armies Mbiti, John (b.1931) – the Kenyan-born Anglican minister and writer of traditional African religion McCarthy, Sir Charles (1764–1824) – the British military commander and Governor of Gold Coast whom the Asante defeated and beheaded in 1824 Mecca – the Arabian trading town, birthplace of Muhammad, home to the Ka’bah, and holiest city in Islam; pilgrimage destination Medina – formerly Yathrib, the city where Muhammad and his followers sought sanctuary in 622 Memphis – the capital of the Egyptian Old Kingdom on the Nile River Menelik – the Abyssinian leader who allegedly brought the Ark of the Covenant to Axum; the ark now supposedly resides in the Chapel of the Tablet at the Church of Our Lady Mary of Zion Mercantilism – the economic system during the sixteenth to the eighteenth centuries that sought a positive balance of trade and the accumulation of gold and silver as a means to strengthen a kingdom against its opponents Middle Kingdom (c. 2055–1650 bce) – the second of three kingdoms of Pharaonic Egypt Middle Passage – a portion of the journey from Africa to the Americas that took place on transatlantic voyages Millet – a grain plant from which cereal is made Mitochondria DNA (mtDNA) – the cellular structures whose content proved that Khoisan women contained the oldest genetic mutations of women on Earth; only mothers pass this genetic code to their offspring Mogadishu – an ancient seaport important to Swahili mercantile trade; located in coastal Somalia USAD Social Science Resource Guide • 2017–2018 SKT, IASD - International, NA Leo X (1475–1521) – the pope who baptized Leo Africanus, gave him a pension, and encouraged him to write his Description of Africa Masai – a language and ethnic group in southern Kenya and northern Tanzania of East Africa Muhammad al-Mahdi (c.868–c.941) – the Twelfth and “hidden” Imam of the Shia; a descendant of Muhammad of the Greyhound in 1748; published a tract in 1788 renouncing slavery; wrote the lyrics to the hymn “Amazing Grace” Muhammad ibn Abdallah (c.570–632) – the prophet of Islam to whom the Qur’an was revealed Nicene Creed – the orthodox view of the relationship between Jesus the human and Jesus the God approved by Christian leaders at the Council of Nicaea in 325 Shanghai Foreign Language School Affiliated to SISU - Shanghai, China Monotheistic – denotes belief in a single god Monsoons – seasonal winds and currents in the Indian Ocean that propel dhows toward Arabia and India from November and March then reverse to the south and west from April to September to return dhows to the Swahili coast Niger-Congo – one of five major language groups of Africa; includes Bantu-speakers Niger River – the major river of West Africa, which is about 2,600 miles long Mosque – a house of prayer for Muslims Nile River – about 4,200 miles in length, the Nile is the world’s longest river; tributaries begin in Ethiopia and the Great Lakes region and join at Khartoum, Sudan; flows through Egypt before emptying into the Mediterranean Sea Muezzin – one who gives the call to prayer five times a day in traditional Muslim societies Nilo-Saharan – one of five major language groups of Africa Multilateral Debt Relief Initiative – an effort to reduce the debt of Africa’s and the world’s poorest countries Nkrumah, Kwame (1909–72) – U.S.-educated Ghanaian and Pan-Africanist leader; organized the construction of the Akosombo Dam; overthrown via coup in 1966 Moor – a Muslim born in Spain Muqaddimah – the cyclic interpretation of world history from a Muslim perspective written by Ibn Khaldun Murids – the followers of Amadou Bamba Musa (1280–1337) – a Muslim ruler (Mansa) of Mali noted for his hajj, piety, and generosity; financed the construction of the Great Mosques of Gao and Timbuktu and transcription of Qur’ans Muslim – a follower of Islam; means “one who submits to the will of God” Natural selection – the mechanism that drives change in species over time Negus – the ancient title of kings of Abyssinia (Ethiopia) Neo-colonialism – despite the formal end of colonial empires, the continued sovereignty of the former imperial rulers by other means, usually through economic loans and policies that keep newly independent African countries dependent on European banks and global capitalism New Imperialism (1870–1914) – the European material and religious expansion in Africa that coincided with advances in hygiene, weapons, and medicine New Kingdom (1550–1069 bce) – the third of three kingdoms of Pharaonic Egypt Newton, John (1725–1807) – the slave ship captain Nubia – the African civilization that shared its northern border with southern Egypt and was influenced by Egypt Odumegwu-Ojukwu, Chukwuemeka (1933–2011) – the military officer who led the Igbo secession of southeastern Nigeria; leader of the Republic of Biafra until it lost the Nigerian Civil War and reunited with Nigeria Old Kingdom (c.2686–2160 bce) – the first of three kingdoms of Pharaonic Egypt Organization of African Unity (1963–2002) – the Africanist organization, somewhat like the UN, created to oppose colonialism, promote human rights, and defend sovereignty; replaced by the African Union Orthodox Christians – includes Catholics, Protestants, and Greek and Russian Orthodox who adhere to the creed created at the Council of Nicaea in 325 that explains the nature of Jesus and the Trinity Osei Tutu – the leader who in c. 1695 created the legend of the Golden Stool with the priest Anokye that united the Asante ethnic group Osiris – in Pharaonic Egypt the God-Ruler of the underworld Oyo – the powerful slave trading empire of the Yoruba USAD Social Science Resource Guide • 2017–2018 109 SKT, IASD - International, NA Monophysites – same as Coptic Christians Pan-Africanism – the political and economic movement to unite African countries to give them a voice in world affairs; promoted in different ways since the nineteenth century by W.E.B. Du Bois, George Padmore, C.L.R. James, and Kwame Nkrumah, among others Shanghai Foreign Language School Affiliated to SISU - Shanghai, China Pharaoh – the god-king of ancient Egypt’s dynasties; protector of Ma’at, which symbolized truth, justice, order, and harmony; translates as “great house” or “palace” Plato (c.428–c.348) – the Athenian philosopher and student of Socrates who used Egyptian knowledge to create his program for education and teaching Polo, Marco (1254–1324) – the Venetian traveler and merchant who spent about twenty-four years traveling in Asia a generation before Ibn Battuta Predestination – the belief that God has chosen a few to share heaven; those not chosen can do nothing to enter heaven Prejudice – a strong belief not based on reason Ptolemaic Egypt (332–30) – the dynasty established by Ptolemy, which lasted for three centuries Ptolemy (367–283) – Alexander the Great’s general who took over Egypt and Palestine after Alexander’s death Qadiriyya – the Sufi order of Usman dan Fodiyo and Nana Asma’u Quakers – the Protestant Christian religious group that began the abolitionist movement in Great Britain in the 1600s; founded the first abolitionist society in England in 1783 Qur’an – the sacred literature of Islam; contains God’s revelations to Muhammad via the Archangel Gabriel in both Mecca and Medina; divided into 114 chapters called surahs Quraysh – Muhammad’s tribe, which controlled Mecca Ra (also spelled Re) – the sun god of ancient Egyptians; sometimes identified with the Pharaoh Reparations Movement – efforts to get Western countries to pay African countries to account to some extent for slavery and colonialism; also the effort to have the U.S. pay reparations to the descendants of African slaves in the U.S. for chattel slavery and Jim Crow 110 Robinson, Ronald (1920–99) – the historian who with Jack Gallagher argued that collaboration with indigenous populations was the key to understanding the success of colonialism in Africa Sahara Desert – the largest hot desert in the world, it covers most of North Africa and measures about 3,000 miles from east to west and about 800 to 1,200 miles from north to south Sahel – the semi-arid transitional zone that stretches from west to east and connects West Africa to the Sahara Desert San – hunter-gatherers who preceded Bantu-speakers; absorbed or conquered by the Bantu-speakers as they migrated southward; sometimes paired with the Khoi-Khoi into the Khoisan grouping; mitochondrial DNA and Y chromosomes of the San are some of the oldest on earth; also one of five major language groups of Africa Sanhaja Berbers – the Muslim ethnic group called the Almoravids from the Sanhaja region of Morocco who conquered ancient Ghana Sáo Joáo Bautista – the Portuguese ship thought to have transported the first African slaves to North America, taken to Virginia’s Port Comfort colony in August 1619 São Tomé and Príncipe – the equatorial islands off the coast of Gabon where the Portuguese created an early example of plantation slavery Senegal – a former French colony in West Africa; home of Amadou Bamba, the Murids, Cheikh Anta Diop, and Touba Senghor, Léopold (1906–2001) – the French-educated Senegalese political leader and intellectual who led Senegal to independence; advocate of négritude, which was a Pan-Africanist anti-colonial philosophy; opposed assimilation because of its advocacy of the inferiority of African civilizations Sheba, Queen of – the queen associated with Solomon in the Old Testament Shehu – the Hausa word for “sheik” meaning ruler; Usman dan Fodiyo was a shehu Shia – a minority sect in Islam followed by about 13 percent of Muslims worldwide; called followers of Ali, who was the cousin and son-in-law of Muhammad; the Shia claim that one has to descend directly from Ali and Muhammad’s daughter Fatimah to lead USAD Social Science Resource Guide • 2017–2018 SKT, IASD - International, NA ethnic group in west and north central Nigeria Shirazi – the ethnic group from Persia that contributed to the formation of the Swahili maritime network Shona – the ethnic group that built Great Zimbabwe Shanghai Foreign Language School Affiliated to SISU - Shanghai, China Sierra Leone – the modern country which served as a haven for slaves taken from seized slave ships and Africans who fought for the British against the Americans in the Revolutionary War Sijilmasa – the ancient city located in southeastern Morocco one thousand miles north of Timbuktu in the Sahara Desert; destination via Taghaza for West African camel caravans laden with gold, salt, and other items Slav – the word from which the word “slavery” originated; referred to an Eastern European ethnic group Slavery – the social or legal system in which people are involuntarily held as property with no rights (Western chattel slavery) or in which they have the somewhat flexible status of extended family members (African slavery); the word originated from the Muslim enslavement of ethnic Slavs of the Black Sea region in the 800s Slave Trade Act of 1807 – the Parliamentary act in Great Britain that abolished the Atlantic slave trade Social Darwinists – those who attempted to apply Charles Darwin’s biological ideas about the evolution of species based on natural selection to imperial and colonial expansion on a global scale Socrates (469–399 bce) – the Athenian teacher of Plato; promoted ethics by engaging in dialogues described by Plato; executed for believing in false gods and corrupting the youth of Athens Sokoto Caliphate – the Muslim empire founded in the early nineteenth century in present-day northeastern Nigeria; created by Usman dan Fodiyo to imitate Muhammad’s early community at Medina Songhay (1450–1591) – the third of three great West African Sahelian empires; sometimes spelled Songhai Soninke – the major ethnic group and rulers of ancient Ghana Sonni Ali (? –1492) – the founder of the Songhay empire Sorghum – an edible grain plant from which molasses is derived Sosso – the empire that brought an end to the great West African empire of Ghana in 1203; ancient Ghana had been in decline after its losses to the Almoravids in 1042 St. Domingue – a Caribbean French colony and the site of a slave revolt in 1791 Stoneking, Mark (b.1956) – with Rebecca Cann and Alan Wilson carried out the mtDNA study in 1987 that placed human origins in Africa Sudan – the region where the Blue and White Nile Rivers meet at Khartoum; region of northern Nubia; contested region between French and British imperialists; shared a border with French Equatorial Africa Sufi – a part of the Sunni tradition that developed as a mystical alternative to more worldly Muslim practices; also a mystical Muslim who helps other Muslims attain spiritual understanding Sundiata Keïta – established the West African Malinke empire of Mali that succeeded ancient Ghana; ruled from 1235–55; the most famous West African epic is about Sundiata’s life and is still told today Sunna – Muhammad’s actions whose guidance forms part of Muslim law Sunni – the largest Muslim sect containing about 85 percent of Muslims; “people of the tradition;” in contrast to the Shi’a, who insisted that Muslim leaders had to descend from Muhammad, Sunnis argued that any rightly guided Muslim could be a caliph Swahili – an East African maritime language and culture made up predominantly of Muslims and Bantuspeakers; extends from southern Somalia to northern Mozambique; means “coast” and is influenced by Arabic; some Swahili claim an ancestral connection to Shirazi, a city in southwestern Iran Taghaza – a location of great quantities of salt deposited during the evaporation of an ancient Saharan sea; approximate midway point on the Timbuktu-Sijilmasa caravan trade route Tamahaq – the language of the Tuareg who often transported goods across the Sahara between ancient Ghana and Sijilmasa Tangier – a major port city of Morocco and the home to Ibn Battuta Tawhid – oneness of God in Islam; Islamic dogma USAD Social Science Resource Guide • 2017–2018 111 SKT, IASD - International, NA Muslims; their defunct leaders were called Imams; those who lead them today are called Ayatollahs Tools – in the context of human origins in Africa, stones and bones honed to achieve a sharp edge to function in ways that extended natural human abilities; prehistoric tools provide valuable evidence about the lives of the humans who used them Shanghai Foreign Language School Affiliated to SISU - Shanghai, China Touba – the center of Murid Islam in Senegal; home of Murid’s Great Mosque and annual pilgrimage Toynbee, Arnold (1889–1975) – the British historian who believed in the cyclic interpretation of history Traditional African religion – spiritual practices whose rituals promote bonds with ancestors, help from nature and spirits, and seek knowledge of the near future; there is no sacred literature, no afterlife, no apocalypse, and no separation between the spiritual and secular world Transatlantic slave trade – often called the Middle Passage in which about 12.5 million enslaved Africans were brought to the New World by Europeans as chattel slaves for labor between the sixteenth and nineteenth centuries Triangular trade pattern – the transatlantic slave trade pattern of traffic of humans and goods between Africa, the Americas, and Europe Tripoli – the northern destination of the eastern part of the West African trans-Saharan trade from KanemBornu Tuareg – the nomadic pastoralists of the Sahara; also called Berbers Umayyads (661–750) – the descendants of Muhammad’s powerful Meccan enemies who took control of Islam about a generation after the death of Muhammad; the first of the two caliphates of the Golden Age of Islam; the second was the Abbasid Caliphate 112 Ummah – the Arabic word for the entire worldwide Muslim community; first established at Medina Wangara – Bambuk sellers of gold to Ghanaian merchants who transported it to Sijilmasa White Nile – one of two major tributaries of the Nile; originates in Lake Victoria-Nyanza on the western border of Kenya and joins the Blue Nile at Khartoum, Sudan Whydah – the major slave trading center conquered by Dahomey in 1727 Wilberforce, William (1759–1833) – the member of Parliament who led the political campaign to abolish the transatlantic slave trade; resulted in the Slave Trade Act of 1807 Wilson, Allan (1934–91) – with Rebecca Cann and Mark Stoneking carried out the mtDNA study in 1987 that placed human origins in Africa Wolseley, Garnet (1833–1913) – the British officer whose forces defeated the Asante in the Anglo-Asante War of 1874 Xhosa – the major ethnic group and language of Bantuspeakers in South Africa Y chromosomal DNA – the part of DNA that showed African men to have the oldest genetic markers; only fathers pass this genetic code to their offspring Yathrib – the city some 270 miles north of Mecca where Muhammad and his followers migrated in 622; soon after their arrival Yathrib was renamed Medina Yellow fever – a viral infection transmitted by mosquito; impeded the European conquest of tropical Africa Yoruba – the major Nigerian ethnic group that participated in the transatlantic slave trade; created the Oyo kingdom in southwestern Nigeria Zimbabwe – the southern African country in which Great Zimbabwe is located; means “house of stone” USAD Social Science Resource Guide • 2017–2018 SKT, IASD - International, NA Timbuktu – a major embarkation port for caravans traveling north across the Sahara Desert to Taghaza and Sijilmasa and the site of an important school of Islamic scholarship Appendix: Maps AFRICA 20 0 20 Minsk U.K. Amsterdam BELARUS Berlin Warsaw London NETH. GERMANY POLAND Kyiv Brussels BEL. LUX. Prague UKRAINE CZ. REP. SLOV. Paris Vienna MOL. AUS. Budapest SWITZ. HUNG. FRANCE ROM. SLO. CRO. Belgrade Bucharest IRE. North Atlantic Ocean 40 ITALY AND. Corsica PORTUGAL AZORES (PORTUGAL) Lisbon SPAIN Alexandria Amman Cairo JORDAN KUWAIT EGYPT MALI r Nige Nig er GHANA TOGO Lomé Yamoussoukro Accra LIBERIA Abidjan EQUATORIAL GUINEA 0 Equator SAO TOME AND PRINCIPE São Tomé Annobón Moundou ue Ben CAMEROON Douala GABON Kampala Kisangani BURUNDI Lake Tanganyika Kinshasa ANGOLA (Cabinda) Mbuji-Mayi ANGOLA St. Helena Kitwe Zambe zi Lilongwe Harare Walvis Bay Tropic of Capricorn Windhoek NAMIBIA Saint Helena, Ascension, and Tristan da Cunha BOTSWANA Gaborone Pretoria Johannesburg SOUTH (U.K.) e ng Or a AFRICA Cape Town Victoria SEYCHELLES Glorioso Islands (FRANCE) COMOROS Moroni Cidade de Nacala Blantyre Mayotte (admin. by France, claimed by Comoros) Juan de Nova Island (FRANCE) Mozambique Beira Channel Tromelin Island (FRANCE) Mahajanga Toamasina MOZAMBIQUE ZIMBABWE 20 Dar es Salaam MALAWI ZAMBIA Lusaka Lubango 0 Zanzibar Lake Nyasa Lubumbashi Namibe Indian Ocean Mombasa Dodoma TANZANIA Luanda South SOMALIA Mogadishu KENYA Nairobi Kigali Pointe-Noire Atlantic Prov. admin. line ETHIOPIA RWANDA DEM. REP. Bukavu Lake Victoria OF THE CONGO Bujumbura Brazzaville Ascension Hargeysa UGANDA Congo REP. OF THE CONGO Libreville Addis Ababa Socotra (YEMEN) Juba Bangui Yaoundé Arabian Sea Gulf of Djibouti Aden DJIBOUTI SOUTH SUDAN CENTRAL AFRICAN REPUBLIC (EQUA. GUI.) Ocean 20 Ni le N'Djamena NIGERIA Abuja Ogbomoso Ibadan Lagos PortoNovo Malabo Gulf of Guinea SUDAN Zinder Kano Asmara Khartoum le Ni CÔTE D'IVOIRE CHAD Niamey BURKINA FASO Ouagadougou BENIN GUINEA SIERRA LEONE Monrovia OMAN YEMEN Sanaa ERITREA Omdurman Agadez Wh ite Nile Bamako Muscat U.A.E SAUDI ARABIA Admin. boundary NIGER Timbuktu Dakar GUINEA-BISSAU Conakry Freetown Abu Dhabi Port Red Sudan Sea Nouakchott SENEGAL Banjul THE GAMBIA Bissau Persian Gulf BAHR. QATAR Riyadh Aswan Al Jawf IRAN Baghdad Jerusalem ISRAEL Al Jizah LIBYA LEB. SYRIA Eu IRAQ Damascus phrates Beirut MAURITANIA Praia AFG. is Tigr CYPRUS e Blu Shanghai Foreign Language School Affiliated to SISU - Shanghai, China ARM. Tehran Benghazi Tropic of Cancer TURKMENISTAN Ashgabat AZER. TURKEY Nouadhibou CAPE VERDE Caspian Sea GEO. Ankara Mediterranean Sea Western Sahara 20 UZBEKISTAN MACE. ALGERIA Laayoune Tashkent Sea of Azov Athens Tripoli (SPAIN) Aral Sea Volg a GREECE TUNISIA MOROCCO KAZAKHSTAN BULG. MALTA Marrakech CANARY ISLANDS ALB. 60 RUSSIA Black Sea Sofia KOS. MONT. Sicily Constantine Fès Casablanca Danube SER. Sardinia Tunis Algiers Oran Rabat (PORTUGAL) Rome Madrid Strait of Gibraltar MADEIRA ISLANDS BOS.& HER. 40 Antananarivo Bassas da India (FRANCE) Europa Island (FRANCE) MADAGASCAR 20 MAURITIUS Reunion (FRANCE) Maputo Mbabane SWAZILAND Maseru Durban LESOTHO Indian Ocean Port Elizabeth Scale 1:51,400,000 TRISTAN DA CUNHA Azimuthal Equal-Area Projection 0 800 Kilometers 0 Gough Island 40 800 Miles Boundary representation is not necessarily authoritative. 20 Port Louis St. Denis 0 20 40 Political Map of Africa, 2012. USAD Social Science Resource Guide • 2017–2018 40 60 803535AI (G00392) 6-12 113 SKT, IASD - International, NA 40 AFRICA 0 20 Minsk U.K. Amsterdam BELARUS Berlin Warsaw London NETH. GERMANY POLAND Kyiv Brussels BEL. LUX. Prague UKRAINE CZ. REP. SLOV. Paris Vienna MOL. AUS. Budapest SWITZ. HUNG. FRANCE ROM. SLO. CRO. Belgrade Bucharest BOS.& HER. ITALY Madrid SPAIN Rabat (PORTUGAL) Oran Fès Casablanca Tunis Constantine Marrakech CANARY ISLANDS LIBYA S MAURITANIA Aswan A Nouakchott BURKINA FASO CÔTE D'IVOIRE SIERRA LEONE Monrovia Lomé Yamoussoukro Accra LIBERIA Abidjan NIGERIA Abuja Nig er GHANA Vo TOGO l ta N'Djamena Kano SAO TOME AND PRINCIPE Equator CONGO GABON Annobón Kampala Kisangani BASIN Brazzaville Pointe-Noire BURUNDI Lake Tanganyika Mbuji-Mayi Kitwe Saint Helena Zambe zi M G E IB ID R NAMIBIA IS LV Pretoria SOUTH A Or a ng e AFRICA Cape Town TR EN CH Moroni Glorioso Islands (FRANCE) Mayotte (admin. by France, claimed by Comoros) Juan de Nova Island (FRANCE) Mozambique Beira Channel Tromelin Island (FRANCE) Mahajanga Toamasina Antananarivo Bassas da India (FRANCE) Europa Island (FRANCE) Port Louis St. Denis MADAGASCAR 20 MAURITIUS Reunion (FRANCE) Maputo Mbabane SWAZILAND Maseru Durban LESOTHO Indian Ocean Port Elizabeth Scale 1:51,400,000 Azimuthal Equal-Area Projection TRISTAN DA CUNHA 0 Gough Island 40 C 20 Victoria SEYCHELLES COMOROS Cidade de Nacala KALAHARI DESERT Gaborone Dar es Salaam MOZAMBIQUE BOTSWANA Johannesburg ERT (U.K.) Windhoek DES G E R I D Ocean Saint Helena, Ascension, and Tristan da Cunha Walvis Bay W Tropic of Capricorn A 20 Mombasa Blantyre ZIMBABWE Indian Ocean Zanzibar MALAWI Harare N South Atlantic 0 Kilimanjaro Dodoma Lilongwe ZAMBIA Lusaka Lubango Namibe SOMALIA Mogadishu Lake Nyasa Lubumbashi ANGOLA Prov. admin. line (highest point in Africa, 5895 m) TANZANIA Luanda Socotra (YEMEN) E NT AMIRA (Cabinda) Arabian Sea Hargeysa KENYA Nairobi Kigali Kinshasa ANGOLA L EY ETHIOPIA RWANDA DEM. REP. Bukavu Lake Victoria OF THE CONGO Bujumbura (EQUA. GUI.) Ascension Addis Ababa UGANDA Congo REP. OF THE CONGO Libreville São Tomé 20 Gulf of Djibouti Aden DJIBOUTI (lowest point in Africa, -155 m) SOUTH SUDAN Juba Bangui Yaoundé EQUATORIAL GUINEA Lac'Assal W CENTRAL AFRICAN REPUBLIC CAMEROON Douala Gulf of Guinea 0 Moundou ue Ben Ogbomoso Ibadan Lagos PortoNovo Malabo Asmara SUDAN Zinder Ouagadougou BENIN GUINEA OMAN YEMEN Sanaa ERITREA Omdurman Khartoum le Ni GUINEA-BISSAU Conakry Freetown Bamako Muscat U.A.E Red Sea Port Sudan CHAD Niamey Abu Dhabi SAUDI ARABIA Admin. boundary A Agadez MALI r Nige R e Blu SENEGAL Banjul THE GAMBIA Bissau A NIGER Timbuktu Dakar H BAHR. QATAR Riyadh ile Praia KUWAIT Persian Gulf hit eN CAPE VERDE JORDAN Ni le Nouadhibou 20 Amman Cairo EGYPT Tropic of Cancer IRAN Baghdad Jerusalem ISRAEL Al Jizah Western Sahara I C A N T - AT L M I D Shanghai Foreign Language School Affiliated to SISU - Shanghai, China Alexandria Benghazi ALGERIA Laayoune AFG. LEB. SYRIA CYPRUS Eu IRAQ Damascus phrates Beirut Mediterranean Sea Tripoli (SPAIN) Tehran MALTA TUNISIA MOROCCO TURKEY GREECE Athens Sicily L MADEIRA ISLANDS Sardinia Algiers TURKMENISTAN Ashgabat AZER. ARM. Ankara ALB. Caspian Sea GEO. BULG. MACE. is Tigr Strait of Gibraltar Black Sea Sofia KOS. UZBEKISTAN A Lisbon Rome Danube SER. MONT. Tashkent Sea of Azov V AZORES (PORTUGAL) Corsica Aral Sea 0 E AP RI SE 800 Kilometers 0 800 Miles Boundary representation is not necessarily authoritative. 20 40 60 40 803510AI (G00392) 6-12 Map of Africa with National Boundaries and Some Topographical Features, 2012. 114 USAD Social Science Resource Guide • 2017–2018 SKT, IASD - International, NA AND. PORTUGAL KAZAKHSTAN Volg a FT 40 60 RUSSIA RI Nor t h Atlantic Ocean 40 T IRE. EA 20 GR 40 1. F or more detail about climate, see Paul Bohannan and Philip Curtin, Africa and Africans (Prospect Heights, Illinois: Waveland Press, 1995), 19-23. 2. Paul Sereno, Skeletons of the Sahara, 55 minutes, National Geographic, 2013, DVD. 3. See especially Susan Keech McIntosh, “Changing Perceptions of West Africa’s Past: Archaeological Research Since 1988” in Journal of Archaeological Research 2, no. 2 (June 1994): 165-198. 4. K ai Krause, “The True Size of Africa,” <http://kai.sub.blue/images/TrueSize-of-Africa-kk-v3.pdf>, accessed 6 August 2016. 5. S ee especially John Parker and Richard Rathbone, African History: A Very Short Introduction (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2007), 4 – 5. 6. For an explanation on the use of Bantu words to reach conclusions about prehistoric Africans, see Funso Afolayan, “Bantu Expansion and Its Consequences,” in Toyin Falola, ed., Africa 1, African History Before 1885 113-136 (Durham, NC: Carolina Academic Press, 2000 & 2003): 113-126. For the origin of proto-Bantu see Joseph Greenberg, “The Languages of Africa” in International Journal of American Linguistics XXIX, n.1, (Chicago: Chicago University Press, 1963): 6-38. 7. F or more on this topic, see Frederick Cooper, “Conflict and Connection: Rethinking Colonial African History,” in The American Historical Review 99, no. 5 (December 1994): 1516-1545. 8. T his quote is derived from several paragraphs within J. Sibree’s English translation of G.W.F. Hegel, The Philosophy of History (New York: Wiley and Sons, 1900), 98-99. 9. D erived from Hugh Trevor-Roper, “The Rise of Christian Europe,” The Listener, LXX: 1809 (Nov. 28, 1963), 871-5. 10. S ee “Preface” in Erik Gilbert and Jonathan T. Reynolds, Africa in World History: From Prehistory to the Present. Second Edition (Upper Saddle River, NJ: Pearson, 2008). 11. T o remove religious bias from dating systems when discussing secular global topics such as human origins, bce and ce replaces divine status inherent in bc and ad. The life of Jesus of Nazareth is still used as the marker between bce and ce, but only his human life is recognized here. bc means “Before Christ,” which implies divinity. ad in English means in the year of our Lord, which is also intimately connected to the Christian faith. 12 . F or more on this generally, see C.E. Carrington, The British Overseas: Exploits of a Nation of Shopkeepers (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1950) and Frederick Lugard, “Memo No. 1” in Political Memoranda: Revision of Instructions to Political Officers on Subjects Chiefly Political and Administrative, 1913-1918 (London: Waterlow and Sons, 1919, 2nd ed.), reprinted in William H. Worger, Nancy L. Clark and Edward A. Alpers, Africa and the West: A Documentary History. Volume 2 from Colonialism to Independence, 1875 to the Present (Oxford University Press, 2010), 22. forces which had already taken North Africa and the Iberian Peninsula. Martel’s descendant Charlemagne pushed the “border” south of the Pyrenees Mountains, but Muslims continued to control most of the Iberian Peninsula and all of North Africa. Meanwhile the Eastern Roman Empire (a.k.a. Byzantine Empire) continued to compete with Muslims in Asia for influence in the Black Sea and Mediterranean regions. Then the First Crusade got underway in 1095, and relations deteriorated. The last big stage in this conflict occurred as the Ottoman Empire expanded its control in southwestern Europe in the early sixteenth century. 15. O n the role of Catholicism in 15th century Spanish government, see Philip D. Curtin, The Rise and Fall of the Plantation Complex: Essays in Atlantic History, 2nd ed. (New York: Cambridge University Press, 1998), 60-62. On the accommodation between Catholic clergy and commercial slaving interests, see John W. Blassingame, The Slave Community: Plantation Life in the Antebellum South (New York: Oxford University Press, 1979), 65-67. 16. For more on this, see Andre Gunder Frank, “Development and Underdevelopment in the New World: Smith and Marx vs. the Weberians,” Theory and Society 2, no. 4 (Winter, 1975): 431-466. 17 . F or more details on the transatlantic slave trade, see J.E. Inikori, “Africa and the Trans-Atlantic Slave Trade,” in Africa 1, African History Before 1885, ed. Toyin Falola (Durham: Carolina Academic Press, 2000 & 2003), 289411. 18. T he use of Afrocentric in an academic sense is often associated with sources contaminated by Western prejudices used to justify the Atlantic slave trade and colonialism. For that perspective, see Molefi Kete Asante and Abu S. Abarry, eds., African Intellectual Heritage: A Book of Sources (Philadelphia: Temple University Press, 1996) and Stephen Howe, Afrocentrism: Mythical Pasts and Imagined Homes (New York: Verso, 1998). 19. T his topic is well developed in Jan Vansina, Living with Africa (Madison: University of Wisconsin Press, 1994). 20. C heikh Anta Diop, “Origin of the Ancient Egyptians.” In General History of Africa, II, ed. G. Mokhtar (London: UNESCO and Heinemann: London, 1981), 27 - 83. Perhaps his most widely read book is The African Origin of Civilization—Myth or Reality (Chicago: Lawrence Hill Books, 1974). 21. M artin Gardiner Bernal, Black Athena: The Afroasiatic Roots of Classical Civilization, I-III (New Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers University Press, 1987, 1991, and 2006). avid W. Phillipson, African Archaeology, 2nd ed. (Cambridge University 22. D Press, 1993), 25-29. 13 . Djeliba Kouyaté, Keïta: The Heritage of the Griot, DVD, directed by Dani Kouyaté. San Francisco: California Newsreel, 1994. 23. For two illustrations demonstrating the origins of humanity, see “Phylogenetic Relationships of Humans and Other Primates,” The Center for Academic Research and Training in Anthropogeny, https:// carta.anthropogeny.org/ resources/phylogeny (accessed 30 October 2016) and “The Human Lineage Through Time,” Becoming Human, The Institute of Human Origins, http://www.becominghuman.org/node/ human-lineage-through-time (accessed 30 October 2016). 14. The competition began with the Battle of Tours in 732 ce when a Frankish army led by Charles Martel stopped the advance of Muslim 24. R ebecca L. Cann, Mark Stoneking, and Alan C. Wilson, “Mitochondrial DNA and human evolution,” Nature, 325 (1 January 1987): 32-36. USAD Social Science Resource Guide • 2017–2018 115 SKT, IASD - International, NA Shanghai Foreign Language School Affiliated to SISU - Shanghai, China Notes 26. A nn Gibbons, “Y Chromosome Shows That Adam was an African,” Science 237 (31 October 1997): 804-805. 27. W illiam C. Barnett, “The Geography of Africa” in in Africa, vol. 1. African History Before 1885, ed. Toyin Falola (Durham, NC: Carolina Academic Press, 2000 and 2003), 36-38. See also David W. Phillipson, African Archaeology, 2nd ed. (Cambridge University Press, 1993), 117-121. 28. H erodotus, The Histories (New York, NY: Penguin, 1985), 143. 29. M anfred B. Steger, Globalization: A Very Short Introduction (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2003), 20-25. 30. F or more on Egyptian religion, see Funso Afolayan, “Civilizations of the Upper Nile and North Africa,” in Africa, vol. 1. African History Before 1885, ed. Toyin Falola (Durham, NC: Carolina Academic Press, 2000 and 2003): 73-108 and Constance B. Hilliard, ed., Intellectual Traditions of Pre-Colonial Africa (Boston: McGraw-Hill, 1998), 14-20. Shanghai Foreign Language School Affiliated to SISU - Shanghai, China 31. The Egyptian Book of the Dead, translation and commentary by Wallace Budge and introduction by John Romer (New York, Penguin Press, 2008). 32. Ibn Battuta, Travels in Asia and Africa, 1325-1354, ed. and trans., H. A. R. Gibb (London: Broadway House, 1929; Medieval Sourcebook, Fordham University, 2001), http://sourcebooks.fordham.edu/source/1354ibnbattuta.asp (accessed 12 August 2016). See also Leo Africanus, The History and Description of Africa, I - III, ed. Robert Brown, trans. John Pory (London: Hakluyt Society, 1896; Google Books, 2009), https:// archive.org/stream/worksissuedbyha01unkngoog#page/n7/mode/2up (accessed 12 August 2016). Ibn means “son of.” 33. F or more information, see Edward William Bovill, The Golden Trade of the Moors (Princeton, NJ: Markus Wiener Publishers, 1995). 34. Basil Davidson, West Africa before the Colonial Era, A History to 1850 (London: Longman, 1988), 25-34 and A. G. Hopkins, An Economic History of West Africa (Harlow: Longman Group Ltd., 1993), 71-73 and 78-87. 35. F or more information on the Mali Empire, see Nana Yaw Sapong, “Mali Empire,” in The Encyclopedia of Empire, ed. by John MacKenzie (Hoboken, NJ: Wiley Blackwell, 2016). Adas, ed., 31-32 (Philadelphia: Temple University Press, 1993). 44. F or another view of Ibn Battuta in Africa, see Said Hamdun and Noël King, Ibn Battuta in Black Africa (Princeton, NJ: Markus-Wiener Publishing, Inc., 1994), 30 and 74. 45. H amdun and King, Ibn Battuta, xxvi. See also Dunn, The Adventures of Ibn Battuta, 296-309. Dunn recounts in engaging detail Ibn Battuta’s visit to Mali. 46. D unn using Ibn Battuta’s words in Dunn, The Adventures of Ibn Battuta, 296-297. 47. D unn, The Adventures of Ibn Battuta, 307 and 290-309 more generally. See also Ibn Battuta, Ibn Battuta in Black Africa, Noel King and Said Hamdun, ed. (Princeton, NJ: Marcus Weiner Publishers, 1994). 48. L eo Africanus, History and Description of Africa, in Alfred Andrea and James Overfield, eds. The Human Record: Sources in Global History, Volume II, 3rd Edition (Boston: Houghton Mifflin Co., 1998): 46-49. 49. “Leo Africanus describes Timbuktu,” extracted from Leo Africanus, History and Description of Africa, translated by John Pory (London: Hakluyt Society, 1896, originally 1600 and put online by Learn NC, UNC), http://www.learnnc.org/lp/editions/nchist-colonial/1982 (accessed 21 August 2016). 50. A bd-al-Rahman al-Sadi, “The Coming of Judar Pasha to the Sudan” (extract from Tarikh al-Sudan) in Robert O. Collins, Western African History Text and Readings, vol. 1 (New York: Markus Wiener Publishing, 1990), 3638 and Bovill, The Golden Trade of the Moors, 174. 51. A thorough description of the West African sahelian empires can be found in J. I. Dibua, “Sudanese Kingdoms of West Africa” in Toyin Falola, editor, Africa, vol. 1. African History Before 1885 (Durham, NC: Carolina Academic Press, 2000 & 2003), 137-158. 52. F or information on the Shona, see D. N. Beach, The Shona and Zimbabwe, 900-1850: An Outline of Shona History (New York: Holmes & Meiers Publishers, 1980). 53. John S. Mbiti, African Religions and Philosophy, African Writers Series (London: Heinemann Publishers, 1969), 8-10. 36. D jibril Tamsir Niane, Sundiata: An Epic of Old Mali, translated by G.D. Pickett, Longman African Writers Series, rev. ed. (London: Longman Group Ltd., 2006). For more about the history of ancient Mali and Sundiata, see Bamba Suso and Banna Kanute, Sunjata, translated by Gordon Innes with Bakari Sidibe and edited by Lucy Duran and Graham Furniss (New York: Penguin Putnam Inc., 1999) and Fa-Digi Sissoko. The Epic of Son-Jara. A West African Tradition, translated and annotated by John William Johnson (Bloomington, Indiana: Indiana University Press, 1992). 54. In addition to Mbiti’s African Religions and Philosophy, see John S. Mbiti, Introduction to African Religion, African Writers Series (London: Heinemann Publishers, 1975). Generally, also see Bolaji E. Idowu, African Traditional Religion: A Definition (New York: Orbis Books, Maryknoll, 1973). eïta: The Heritage of the Griot (1995), DVD, directed by Dani Kouyaté (San 37. K Francisco: California Newsreel, 1995). 58. A mong outstanding web sites about African art and traditional African religion, as well as other components of African life is “Art and Life in Africa,” Museum of Art, University of Iowa, https://africa.uima.uiowa. edu/ (accessed 17 August 2016), especially “Topic Essays,” https://africa. uima.uiowa.edu/topic-essays/ (accessed 17 August 2016). Wonderful images of Africans and their culture enthrall this deeply educational web site. oss Dunn, The Adventures of Ibn Battuta. A Muslim traveler of the 14th 38. R Century (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1986), 292. For other helpful sources, see Edward William Bovill, The Golden Trade of the Moors (Princeton, NJ: Markus Wiener Publishers, 1995); David C. Conrad, Empires of Medieval West Africa: Ghana, Mali and Songhay (New York: Facts on File, Inc., 2005); and A.G. Hopkins, The Economic History of West Africa (New York: Columbia University Press, 1973). 55. Mbiti, African Religions, 2-5. 56. A dinkra symbols were created by Akan peoples like the Asante to represent concepts. 57. Mbiti, African Religions, 3-4. 39. S ee especially D.T. Niane, “Mali and the Second Mandingo Expansion,” in UNESCO General History of Africa, Africa from the Twelfth to the Sixteenth Century, Vol. IV (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1984), 117-171. uch of this is demonstrated in the respectful film about Muhammad 59. M and the early years of Islam, The Message, VHS, directed by Moustapha Akkad, Filmco International Productions, 1977. An updated DVD is available as The Message (30th Anniversary Edition), 2005 in English and Arabic. 40. D avidson, West Africa before the Colonial Era, 42-43. See also Niane, “Mali,” UNESCO General History of Africa, Vol. IV, 146-151. 60. D o not confuse one of the twelve Shia with the leader of a mosque today, also called an imam. 41. Dunn, The Adventures of Ibn Battuta, 290. 61. T he flight to Axum was sudden, but the migration to Yathrib/Medina was planned and carried out in small groups and quietly over months. Thus, the hegira to Yathrib/Medina is best translated as a migration. 42. A provocative book not accepted by all academics that examines the evidence supporting African influences in Latin American civilizations is Ivan Van Sertima, They Came Before Columbus: The African Presence in Ancient America, Journal of African Civilizations Series (New York: Random House, 1976). 43. F or a critical discussion of the Marco Polo comparison, see Richard Eaton, “Islamic Essay as Global History,” In Islamic & European Expansion, Michael 116 62. F or more on this, see David C. Conrad, “Maurice Delafosse and the PreSunjata Trône du Mande,” in Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies, 46, no. 2 (1983): 1983. 63. M ore information on Al-Azhar may be found in Nasser Eabbat, “Al-Azhar Mosque: An Architectural Chronicle of Cairo’s History,” in Muqarnus 13 (1996): 45-67. USAD Social Science Resource Guide • 2017–2018 SKT, IASD - International, NA 25. https://genographic.nationalgeographic.com/human-journey/ 65. O ne way that Muslim jihad paved the way for European conquest was by giving West Africa a reputation for warfare and turmoil that European imperialists used to justify colonialism—the “civilizing mission” that required Europeans to bring peace to Africans. The jihads also disrupted trans-Saharan trade routes, leading states south of the Sahara to turn increasingly to traders along the coast for imported goods, and thereby increasing the political influence of Europeans along the coast (because they could offer “deals” to their allies and withhold them from Africans who resisted). By the mid-nineteenth century, most Europeans considered the slave trade to be evil and Muslims to be the main reason why it continued, so the expansion of Muslim states in West Africa was also viewed as a threat to anti-slavery efforts. 66. B everly Mack and Jean Boyd, One Woman’s Jihad, Nana Asma’u, Scholar and Scribe (Bloomington, Indiana: Indiana University Press, 2000), 2-8. 67. F or more on West African jihads, see A.S. Kanya-Forstner, The Conquest of the Western Sudan (Cambridge University Press, 1969), 15-20 and Julius O. Adekunle, “The Jihads in West Africa,” in Toyin Falola, ed. Africa, Vol. 1. African History Before 1885 (Durham, NC: Carolina Academic Press, 2000 & 2003): 299-319. 68. Mack and Boyd, One Woman’s Jihad, 3. 69. Mack and Boyd, One Woman’s Jihad, 7. 84. A ristotle, Politics, Book One, Benjamin Jowett, trans. (Kitchener, Canada: Batoche Books, 1999), 9. 85. U sing African and American settings, Jared Diamond effectively explores this in Guns, Germs, and Steel (2005), DVD, directed by Tim Lambert (Washington: National Geographic Society, 2005). 86. Inikori, “Africa in World History,” 94. 87. J ohn Thornton, Africa and Africans in the Making of the Atlantic World (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1992), 78. 88. Thornton, Africa and Africans, 92-97. 89. P .E.H. Hair, “The Enslavement of Koelle’s Informants,” The Journal of African History Vol. 6, No. 2 (1965): 196-201. 90. L isa Lindsey, Captives as Commodities, The Transatlantic Slave Trade (Upper Saddle River, NJ: Pearson Prentice Hall, 2008, 59-60. 91. T hornton, Africa and Africans, 105. 92. T hornton, Africa and Africans, 122-123. 93. J .E. Harris, “The African Diaspora in the Old and New Worlds,” in UNESCO General History of Africa, vol. V, Africa from the Sixteenth to the Eighteenth Century, ed. B.A. Ogot (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1992), 113. 94. B asil Davidson, West Africa before the Colonial Era, A History to 1850 (New York: Longman, 1998), 196-197. 95. H arris, “African Diaspora,” 118 and John Thornton, “The African Experience of the ’20 and Odd Negroes’ Arriving in Virginia in 1619,” William and Mary Quarterly, 55, 3 (1998): 421-434. 96. Harris, “African Diaspora,” 121. 97. The relationship between slavery, sugar, and European demand is explored in Erik Gilbert and Jonathan Reynolds, Trading Tastes, Commodity and Cultural Exchange to 1750 (Upper Saddle River, NJ: Pearson Prentice Hall, 2006), 84-102. 70. Ibid., 9. 98. Gilbert and Reynolds, Trading Tastes, 87-88. 71. Ibid., 11. 99. Gilbert and Reynolds, Trading Tastes, 90. 72. S ee Nana Asma’u, The Collected Works of Nana Asma’u, 1793-1864, edited by Jean Boyd and Beverly Mack (Ann Arbor: Michigan State University Press, 1997). 100. Gilbert and Reynolds, Trading Tastes, 91-94. 73. Mack and Boyd, One Woman’s Jihad, 41. 74. Mack and Boyd, One Woman’s Jihad, 91. 75. F or a good discussion and a photo of the dhow see Ross Dunn, “The Arabian Sea,” in The Adventures of Ibn Battuta. A Muslim traveler of the 14th Century, (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1986), 118-122. 76. M ark Horton and John Middleton, The Swahili, The Social Landscape of a Mercantile Society (Oxford: Blackwell Publishers, 2000), 5-25. 77. D unn, Adventures of Ibn Battuta, 122-128. 78. F or more on the Copts, see Joseph E. Harris, Africans and their History (New York: New American Library, 1987), 45-51. 79. Information on the Ark of the Covenant and lineage of Ethiopian kings back to Menelik I can be found in Miguel F. Brooks, compiler, editor and translator, A Modern Translation of the Kebra Nagast (The Glory of Kings) (Lawrenceville, NJ: The Red Sea Press, 1995). For an older translation with thirty-two plates, see E.A. Wallis Budge, Kebra Nagast, The Queen of Sheba and Her Only Son Menyelek (Oxford and London: Oxford University Press, 1932), especially chapters 21-33, available online at http://www.sacredtexts.com/chr/kn/kn000-0.htm (accessed 11 November 2016). 80. V iera Pawliková-Vilhanová, “Christian Missions in Africa and Their Role in the Transformation of African Societies,” Asian and African Studies 16, no. 2 (2007): 252-255. 81. Pawliková-Vilhanová, “Christian Missions,” 258. 82. J .E. Inikori, “Africa in World History: the Export Slave Trade from Africa and the Emergence of the Atlantic Economic Order, ” in UNESCO General History of Africa, vol. V, Africa from the Sixteenth to the Eighteenth Century, ed. B.A. Ogot (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1992), 74-75. 83. A .H.M. Jones, “The Economic Basis of the Athenian Democracy,” Past & Present No. 1 (Feb., 1952): 18-31. ilbert and Reynolds, Trading Tastes, 99-100 and Davidson, West Africa, 101. G 196-197. 102. Davidson, West Africa, 188. 103. Davidson, West Africa, 190. 104. D avidson, West Africa, 199-205. 105. D avidson, West Africa, 205. 106. F or more detail on the series of wars between the Asante and British, see Albert Adu Boahen, Ghana: Evolution and Change in the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries (London: Longman, 1975). 107. J oseph Dupuis, Journal of a Residence in Ashantee (London: Henry Colburn, 1824), Google Books, 162-164, https://books.google.com/ books?id=YpIoAAAAYAAJ&printsec=frontcover&source=gbs_ge_ summary_r&cad=0#v=onepage&q&f=false (accessed 2 September 2016). 108. Olaudah Equiano, The Interesting Narrative of the Life of Olaudah Equiano Written by Himself With Related Documents, ed. Robert J. Allison (Boston: Bedford/St. Martin’s Press, 2007). 109. L indsey, Captives as Commodities, 120. 110. The original spelling, style, punctuation, and grammar have been retained. 111. Equiano, Narrative, vol. 1, chap. 2, in ed. Allison, 64-65. 112. Equiano, Narrative, vol. 1, chap. 2, in ed. Allison, 65-66. 113. Equiano, Narrative, vol. 1, chap. 2, in ed. Allison, 66. 114. Equiano, Narrative, vol. 1, chap. 2, in ed. Allison, 66-67. 115. Equiano, Narrative, vol. 1, chap. 2, in ed. Allison, 67-68. 116. Equiano, Narrative, vol. 1, chap. 2, in ed. Allison, 68-69. 117. Equiano, Narrative, vol. 1, chap. 2, in ed. Allison, 69. 118. Equiano, Narrative, vol. 1, chap. 2, in ed. Allison, 24-27; Vincent Carretta, USAD Social Science Resource Guide • 2017–2018 117 SKT, IASD - International, NA Shanghai Foreign Language School Affiliated to SISU - Shanghai, China 64. I bn Khaldûn, The Muqaddimah: An Introduction to History, edited, translated and introduced by N. J. Dawood, Franz Rosenthal, and Bruce Lawrence respectively (Princeton: Princeton University, 2015). The comparable work of Arnold Toynbee is A Study of History, 2 vols. (Oxford: Oxford University Press, abridged edition, 1963). Another perspective can be found in Mohammed Umer Chapra, “Ibn Khaldun’s Theory of Development: Does It Help Explain the Low Performance of the PresentDay Muslim World?” in The Journal of Socio-Economics 37, Issue 2 (April 2008): 836–863, http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/ S1053535707000960 (accessed 8 November 2016). 119. See especially Eric Williams, Capitalism and Slavery, (Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 1944); David Eltis, Economic Growth and the Ending of the Transatlantic Slave Trade (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1987); and J.E. Inikori, Africans and the Industrial Revolution in England: A Study in International Trade and Economic Development, (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2002). Shanghai Foreign Language School Affiliated to SISU - Shanghai, China 120. Lindsey, Captives as Commodities, 118. 121. In addition to Equiano’s Narrative, their major works include Thomas Clarkson and Ottobah Cugoano: Essays on the Slavery and Commerce of the Human Species, ed. Mary-Antoinette Smith (Ontario: Broadview Editions, 2010); Quobna Ottobah Cugoano, Thoughts and Sentiments on the Evil of Slavery and Other Writings, ed. Vincent Carretta (New York: Penguin, 1999); Alexander Falconbridge, An Account of the Slave Trade on the Coast of Africa (London: J. Phillips, 1788; Google Books, 2007), https://books.google.com/books?id=DccNAAAAQAAJ&printsec= frontcover&dq=Falconbridge,+Alexander&hl=en&sa=X&ved=wiH55n tkfvOAhXC7SYKHcSSCrEQ6AEIJjAB#v=onepage&q=Falconbridge %2C%20Alexander&f=false (Accessed 1 September 2016); John Newton, Thoughts Upon the African Slave Trade (Charleston: BiblioBazaar, 2010); and Robert and Samuel Wilberforce, ed., The Correspondence of William Wilberforce, vols 1-2 (London: John Murray, 1840). The film Amazing Grace (2007) recreates the abolitionist movement through the life of Wilberforce (2007). Youssou N’Dour, considered in the next section on Sufi Islam in Senegal, starred as Olaudah Equiano. See Amazing Grace (2007), DVD, directed by Michael Apted (London: Ingenious Film Partners 2 LLP, 2007). 122. Lindsey, Captives and Commodities, 128-132. 123. O n the end of the slave trade to Brazil in 1850, see Leslie Bethell, The Abolition of the Brazilian Slave Trade (London: Cambridge University Press, 1970). 124. For the discussion of the relationship between the abolitionist movement and the rise of European imperialism in Africa, see Adam Hochschild, King Leopold’s Ghost (New York: Mariner Books, 1998). 125. S ee Daniel R. Headrick, The Tools of Empire (Oxford University Press, New York, 1981). 126. V . I. Lenin, Imperialism, The Highest Stage of Capitalism (New York: International Publishers, 1939). On the development of Marxist interpretations, see Anthony Brewer, Marxist Interpretations of Imperialism: A Critical Survey (London: Routledge & Kegan Paul, 1980). On the influence of settlers on decolonization, see Henry S. Wilson, African Decolonization (London, Great Britain: Edward Arnold, 1994), 126-127. onald Robinson & John Gallagher, “The Imperialism of Free Trade” in 127. R The Economic History Review, vol. 6, no. 1 (1953), 1-15. 128. R onald Robinson & John Gallagher developed their thesis more fully in Africa and the Victorians: The Official Mind of Imperialism (New York: St. Martin’s Press, 1967). For examples of the responses, see William Roger Louis, Imperialism: The Robinson and Gallagher Controversy (New York: New Viewpoints -- Franklin Watts, 1967). Africa (London: William Blackwood and Sons, 1922). For Lugard’s ideas in summary see also Bruce Fetter, ed., “Lord F.D. Lugard, The Dual Mandate in British Africa,” Colonial Rule in Africa, Readings from Primary Sources, (Madison: The University of Wisconsin Press, 1979), 96–98. 134. O n political activity by African veterans in the period of decolonization in French West Africa, see chapter 9 in Myron Echenberg, Colonial Conscripts: The Tirailleurs Sénégalais in French West Africa, 1857–1960 (Portsmouth NH: Heinemann, 1991). On veterans in the Gold Coast, see David Killingray, “Soldiers, Ex-Servicemen, and Politics in the Gold Coast, 1939–50” in The Journal of Modern African Studies 21, No. 3 (Sept., 1983), 523–534. 135. F or more details, see Raymond Dumett’s El Dorado in West Africa: The Gold-Mining Frontier, African Labor, and Colonial Capitalism in the Gold Coast, 1875 – 1900 (Athens, OH: Ohio University Press, 1998). 136. A . Adu Boahen, African Perspectives on Colonialism (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1987), 62. 137. D avid Robinson, Muslim Societies in African History, New Approaches in African History, Martin Klein, ed. (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2004), 191. 138. Robinson, Muslim Societies in African History, 186. 139. F or an account of the war in 1873 between the British and the Asante, see Bruce Vandervort, Wars of Imperial Conquest in Africa, 1830–1914 (Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1998), 84–101. 140. R obert O. Collins and James M. Burns, A History of Sub-Saharan Africa (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2007), 138. 141. O n Africans who fought in France, see Myron Echenberg, “`Morts pour la France’: the Tirailleurs Sénégalais and the Second World War” in Journal of African History, vol. 26, no. 4 (1985), 373-380. 142. F or an overview of the impact of the First World War in Africa, see Basil Davidson, Modern Africa: A Social and Political History, 3rd edition (New York, Longmann, 1994), 6-10. For details about the war on African soil, see Byron Farwell, The Great War in Africa (1914-1918) (New York: W. W. Norton & Co., 1986). 143. J ean Suret-Canale, French Colonialism in Tropical Africa: 1900-1945, translated by Till Gottheiner (New York: Pica Press, 1971), 83-86. 144. J . M. Roberts, The Penguin History of the Twentieth Century. The History of the World, 1901 to the Present (Penguin, 2004), 343. 145. F or more detail on the interwar period, see the chapter on “Forces of Change in the 1930s” in John Hargreaves, Decolonization in Africa (London & New York: Longman, 1988), 32-48. 146. S ee the chapter on “War and the African Empires 1939-45” in Hargreaves, Decolonization in Africa, 49-67. 147. Hilaire Belloc, The Modern Traveller (London: Edward Arnold, 1898), 41. 148. O n the influence of settlers on decolonization, see Henry S. Wilson, African Decolonization (London, Great Britain: Edward Arnold, 1994), 126-127. 149. F or a brief overview of Belgium’s decolonization see Wilson, African Decolonization, 173-174. For more detail, see Georges Nzongola-Ntalaja, The Congo from Leopold to Kabila: a people’s history (London: Zed Books Ltd., 2003), 94-120. obert O. Collins, James McDonald Burns, and Erik Kristofer Ching, eds., 129. R Historical Problems of Imperial Africa (Princeton: Markus Wiener, 1994), 6B. 150. W ilson, African Decolonization, 179-189. For detail on one example, see Joseph Hanlon, Mozambique: The Revolution Under Fire (London: Zed Books, 1984), 37-51. 130. A n online version of the original text of the Berlin Conference can be found at Jim Jones, “General Act of the 1885 Conference of Berlin,” History 312, West Chester University, http://courses.wcupa.edu/jones/ his312/misc/berlin.htm (accessed 12 September 2016). avid Birmingham, Kwame Nkrumah: The Father of African Nationalism 151. D (Athens, Ohio: Ohio University Press, 1990), 1-35. 131. Kevin Shillington, History of Africa (New York: Macmillan, 2005), 306. 132. R obert July, A History of the African People (Prospects Heights, Ill.: Waveland Press, 1998), 307. An online interpretation of this map in color can be viewed at Michigan State University, Habari Za Ndugu, http:// reginaldtz.tumblr.com/post/32085143345/map-colonial-partition-ofafrica-1914-source (accessed 15 September 2016). 152. O n the foundation of the Non-Aligned Nations movement, see “History and Evolution of Non-Aligned Movement” (New Delhi: Goverment of India Ministry of External Affairs, August 22, 2012) downloaded from https://mea.gov.in/in-focus-article.htm?20349/ History+and+Evolution+of+NonAligned+Movement on December 18, 2016. 153. Excerpt from Kwame Nkrumah, Neo-Colonialism, the Last Stage of Imperialism (London: Thomas Nelson & Sons, 1965). 133. See generally Frederick Lugard, The Dual Mandate in British Tropical 118 USAD Social Science Resource Guide • 2017–2018 SKT, IASD - International, NA Equiano, the African: Biography of a Self-Made Man, (Athens: University of Georgia, 2005); and Catherine Obianju Acholonu, The Igbo Roots of Olaudah Equiano (Owerri, Nigeria: Afa Publications, 1989). 77-80. 155. G eorge B. N. Ayittey, Africa Betrayed (New York: St. Martin’s Press, Inc., 1992), 135-139. 161. A vaneesh Pandey, “Bill Gates’ Foundation To Invest $5 Billion In Africa Over The Next 5 Years” in International Business Times (July 18, 2016), downloaded from http://www.ibtimes.com/bill-gates-foundationinvest-5-billion-africa-over-next-5-years-2392306 on December 16, 2016. 156. C . Odumegwu Ojukwu, Biafra: Selected Speeches with Journals of Events, vol. 1 (New York: Harper & Row Perennial Library, 1969), 8-34. 162. “ GNI per capita, Atlas Method,” The World Bank, http://data.worldbank. org/indicator/NY.GNP.PCAP.CD (accessed 19 November 2016). 157. Festus Iyayi, “The Conduct Of Elections And Electoral Practices In Nigeria” (paper delivered at the Nigerian Bar Association Conference in Abuja on 24th August, 2004), downloaded September 29, 2013 from http://www.dawodu.com/iyayi1.htm. 163. S ee the assessment of Rhoda E. Howard-Hassmann, “Reparations to Africa and the Group of Eminent Persons,” Cahiers d’études africaines (2004): 81–97, http://etudesafricaines.revues.org/4543 (accessed 27 Sept. 2016). 158. H annah Armstrong, “Crisis in Mali: Root Causes & Long-Term Solutions” (US Institute for Peace Brief 149 , May 31, 2014), downloaded from https:// www.usip.org/sites/default/files/PB149-Crisis%20in%20Mali-Root%20 Causes%20and%20Long-Term%20Solutions.pdf on December 16, 2016. See also Andrew Morgan, “The Causes of the Uprising in Northern Mali” in ThinkAfricaPress (February 6, 2012), downloaded from https:// afrique-europe-interact.net/693-0-ursachen-text---engl.html on December 18, 2016. 164. “ Declaration,” World Conference against Racism, Racial Discrimination, Xenophobia and Related Intolerance, Article 13 (31 Aug. –8 Sept. 2001), 6, http://www.un.org/WCAR/durban.pdf (accessed 21 Nov. 2016). 159. T he description of the war is based on newspaper accounts published in 2012 and 2013 in several on-line Malian newspapers including Le Pays, L’Essor, L’Indépendant and Le Républicain which appeared at www.essor. ml and www.malijet.com. Other sources included articles published by The Guardian (Great Britain), Jeune Afrique (France), L’Express (France) and others. All downloaded articles are in the collection of Dr. James Jones (jjones@wcupa.edu). 160. Ian Taylor, China’s New Role in Africa (Boulder CO: Lynn Rienner, 2010), 165. See International Monetary Fund, “Debt Relief Under the Heavily Indebted Poor Countries (HIPC) Initiative,” International Monetary Fund Fact Sheet, 20 Sept. 2016, http://www.imf.org/en/About/Factsheets/ Sheets/2016/08/01/16/11/Debt-Relief-Under-the-Heavily-IndebtedPoor-Countries-initiative (accessed 24 Sept. 2016) and “The Multilateral Debt Relief Initiative,” International Monetary Fund Fact Sheet, 2015, https://www.imf.org/external/np/exr/facts/mdri.htm (accessed 23 Sept. 2016). See also The World Bank, “Heavily Indebted Poor Country (HIPC) Initiative, Relieving the World’s Poorest Countries of Unmanageable Debt Burdens,” 10 Oct. 2014, http://www.worldbank.org/en/topic/ debt/brief/hipc (accessed 24 Sept. 2016). 166. J uly, African People, 503. USAD Social Science Resource Guide • 2017–2018 SKT, IASD - International, NA Shanghai Foreign Language School Affiliated to SISU - Shanghai, China 154. 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