Chapter 8 Africa

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African Civilizations and the Spread of Islam
CHAPTER 8
Africa
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Rich with gold
Africa south of the Sahara has some connections with Egypt, W.
Asia, the Mediterranean but contacts are difficult and
widespread
Connections with Byzantium and Islamic world
Social, religious, technology, trade changes with the arrival of
Islam
Islam provides a link with the outside world
State Building:
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Islam
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Military Power
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Dynastic Alliances
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Merchant Communities
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Trade Connections
Beginnings
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Geography of Africa
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Large continent but coastline has few ports, harbors, or inlets
Challenging Environments
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Africa has many deserts, including huge Sahara
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The southern edge of the expanding Sahara is called the Sahel
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Rainforests found near central part of continent
Welcoming Lands
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Northern coast and southern tip of Africa have Mediterranean climates
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Savannas, or grasslands, cover almost half of Africa
Nomadic Lifestyle
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Earliest people are nomadic hunter-gatherers
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Herders drive animals to find water, graze pastures
Great Rift Valley
3,000 miles long
Firsts
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Transition to a Settled Lifestyle
– Agriculture probably develops by 6000 B.C.
– As the Sahara dried up, farmers move to West Africa or
Nile Valley
– Agriculture allows permanent settlement, governments
to develop
The Nok Culture
– Nok—West Africa’s earliest known culture—made iron
tools, weapons
Djenné-Djeno
– From 600–200 B.C., cities begin to develop near rivers,
oases
– Djenné-Djeno—Africa’s oldest known city (250 B.C.),
discovered in 1977
– Bustling trade center; linked West African towns, camel
trade routes
Bantu Migrations
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Bantu-speaking Peoples
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Bantu-speaking peoples—early Africans who spread culture and
language
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Originally lived in savanna south of Sahara; now southeastern Nigeria
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The word Bantu means “the people”
Migration Begins
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Bantu speakers migrate south and east starting about 3000 B.C.
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Live by slash-and-burn farming, nomadic herding
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Share skills, learn new customs, adapt to environment
Causes of Migration
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Bantu speakers move to find farmland, flee growing Sahara
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Need iron ore resources and hardwood forests for iron smelting
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Within 1,500 years they reach southern tip of Africa
Effects of the Migration
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Bantu speakers drive out some inhabitants; intermix with others
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Bantu migrations produce a great variety of cultures
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Language helps unify the continent
African Societies
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Africa is a vast and diverse continent
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Geography, languages, religion, politics (lack of political unity)
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No universal state or religion
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Influences: Christianity and Islam
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States: some societies are ruled through hierarchy of officials
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Stateless Societies:
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Kinship rules
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Lack of concentration of power
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Could be larger than states
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Council of Family/Community = Power
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No taxing
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Little government affect on the lives of the people
Secret Societies:
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Men and women who controlled customs and beliefs to limit authority of rulers
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Develop along lineage divisions
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Allegiance to these groups transcend lineage ties
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Settle disputes, maintain stability, provide alternative to state authority
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Dissidents could leave and establish a new village
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Difficulty in avoiding state building (war, building projects, providing stable conditions, trade)
Common Elements in African Society
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Languages
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Even though different languages exist, the Bantu language was the root.
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Religion:
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Animism: power of natural forces personified as spirits or gods
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Rituals and Worship: dancing, drumming, divinations, sacrifice
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Diviners/Priests: Specialists who combat evil and eliminate witches
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Cosmology: view of how universe worked, guides ethics and behavior
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Creator Deity: Power and action are expressed through spirits and lesser gods through
founding ancestor groups
First Settlers = owners of land and resources
Families, Lineage, Clan
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Deceased ancestors provide a link between living relatives and spiritual world
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Veneration of ancestors
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Remains strong in the face of Christianity and Islam
Economics:
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North Africa: Involved in the Mediterranean and Arab economies
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Sub Sahara:
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Lead community and guide religious practices
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Provides for a linguistic base where understandings of other languages can be made
Settle Agriculture, Iron Work, Specialization, Trade- with Islamic world, Markets- run by men
and women
Population: 30-60 Million
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Hunters and Gatherers
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Studying hunting-gathering groups today can give clues to the past
Forest Dwellers
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Efe live in forests of Democratic Republic of Congo
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They live in groups of 10 to 100 related people
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Women gather vegetable foods, men hunt
Social Structure
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An older male leads, but each family makes its own decisions
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Problems within group are settled by discussion; no written laws
Ruling Through Lineage
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Lineages
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Some societies group people in lineages—those with common ancestor
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Members of a lineage have strong loyalties to one another
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In some African societies, lineage groups take the place of rulers
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These stateless societies balance power among lineages
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Stateless societies—no centralized system of power
Tracing Family Descent
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Some societies are patrilineal—trace ancestry through fathers
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Others are matrilineal—trace ancestry through mothers
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Lineage determines how possessions are inherited
Age-Set System
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Age set—group of people born about same time who form close ties
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Age sets go through life stages together, such as warrior or elder
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Ceremonies mark the passage to each new stage
Aksum (First Kingdom --- East Side)
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Aksum’s Geography
• Aksum—kingdom replaces Kush in East Africa; blend of Africans,
Arabs
• Located on Horn of Africa, modern day Ethiopia and Eritrea
• Trading kingdom linking Africa and Indian Ocean trade routes
The Origins of Aksum
• Land first mentioned in Greek guidebook in A.D. 100 Rulers take
control of areas around Blue Nile and Red Sea
• Dynasty of Aksum rules until 1975; ends with death of Haile Selassie
Aksum Controls International Trade
• Aksum is hub for caravan routes to Egypt and Meroë
• Adulis, chief port, has access to Mediterranean Sea, Indian Ocean
A Strong Ruler Expands the Kingdom
• King Ezana—strong ruler of Aksum from A.D. 325 to 360
• He conquers part of Arabian peninsula, now Yemen
• In 350 conquers Kushites and burns Meroë to ground
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Aksum Culture
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Blended cultural traditions of Arab peoples and Kushites
Adulis population: Egyptian, Arabian, Greek, Roman, Persian,
Indian
Greek is international language; Aksumites trade gold to
Rome
Aksumite Religion
– Believe in one god, Mahrem, and that king descended from
him
– Are animists—worship spirits of nature and ancestors
– Exposed to Christianity by traders
Aksum Becomes Christian
– Young King Ezana educated by Christian man from Syria
– As ruler, Ezana declares Christianity as kingdom’s official
religion
– Aksum, now part of Ethiopia, still home to millions of Christians
Aksumite Innovations
– Written language, minted coins, irrigation canals and dams
– Aksumites invent terrace farming due to hilly location
– Terraces—steplike ridges constructed on mountain slopes
Islamic States in Africa
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North Africa
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Starting in 630s, Muslims conquer North Africa
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Western part—Libya, Tunisia, Algeria, and Morocco—called Maghrib
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Many Africans convert to Islam; religious scholars advise rulers
Islamic Law
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Islamic law brings order to Muslim states, especially North Africa
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Original inhabitants of North Africa are the Berbers
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Berbers convert to Islam but maintain their own culture
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The Almoravids and Almohads, two Berber groups, form empires
Almoravid Reformers
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In 1000s, devout Berber Muslims make hajj, pilgrimage, to Mecca
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Muslim scholar founds Almoravids—strict religious group
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Around 1050, Almoravids begin to spread Islam through conquest
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They conquer southern Ghana and Spain, where they are called Moors
Almohads Take Over
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In mid 1100s, Almohads—group of Berber
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Muslims—overthrow Almoravids
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Almohads strictly obey teachings of Qur’an and Islamic law
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By 1148 they control most of Morocco, keep Marrakech as their capital
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Almohad Empire lasts 100 years; unites Maghrib under one rule
The Arrival of Islam
What Stearns Says….
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Mediterranean Africa had been influenced by Christianity because of its connections with the classical civilizations
(Phoenicians, Greeks, Romans)
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640-700 CE: Muslims move across north Africa from Suez to Morocco
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670: Rule Tunisia (Ifriqiya- what the Romans called Africa) Maghrib: Arab word for lands to the west
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Message of Islam spreads among population of North Africa
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Rapid conversions because of political unity from the Abbasids, eventually the unity breaks down causing separate
states and competing groups to form.
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Berbers: The peoples of the desert
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Form own groups opposed to Arab states
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Fez (Morocco), Sijilimasa (City on Saharan caravan trade routes)
Almoravids: Puritanical reformist movement followers
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Jihad- Holy war to purify, spread, protect the faith
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Move against the African kingdoms of the Savannah and into Spain
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Almohadis- group that follows the same pattern
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Essential to the movement of Islam into Sub Saharan Africa.
Attractions:
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All Muslims are equal within the community of believers
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Makes acceptance of conquerors and new rulers easier
Uniting the powers of the state and religion through ruler or Caliph (Appeals to African kings as a way to
reinforce their power)
All member of the Umma were equal (Put groups on equal footing with Arabs)
Differences:
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Social stratification and ethnic divisions divide believers, Equality between men and women, Fine for killing a
man twice that for killing a woman, Disparity between law and practice, Equality before God, inequality in the
world, leads to reform movements.
African Christian Kingdoms
Ethiopia:
Nubia:
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Develop in the land of the Kush
Christian communities thrive
Copts- Christians of Egypt
o Develop relationships with the
Byzantines
o Translate religion into Coptic
As Egypt was conquered by Islam, were
allowed to keep faith
Muslim attempts to take Nubia met with
resistance
Christian descendents are left as
independent Christian kingdoms until
13th century
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Grew from Axum
Most important Christian outpost in the area
Cut off from Byzantine Empire by the Muslim
conquest of Egypt
Surrounded by Jewish and pagan beliefs so they
turn inward
Live in Ethiopian highlands
Terraced agriculture
Christian state emerges in 13th-14th century
King Lalibela builds 11 great Christian churches
from carved stone
Dynasty can be traced back to the biblical marriage
of Solomon and Sheba
Geez- Religious language from the Axum
Ahmaric- common speech
Example of Christianity thriving in isolation
History of region is shaped by struggle between
Christians (Ethiopia) and Muslims (Somalia)
Portuguese help defend Ethiopia from Muslim
invasion of local groups and ally of Ottoman Turks
Common Characteristics of the Sudanic States
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The States:
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Patriarchal, Council of Elders, family groups
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Territorial cores
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Linguistic and ethnic groups
Conquest states
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Taxes, tributes, military
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Control subordinate territories
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Rulers are sacred
Common Characteristics of the Sudanic States
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The Cities:
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Commercial towns
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Craft specialists
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Foreign merchant communities
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State protects traders
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Merchants and scholars live a court life
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“Port” Cities
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Centers of trade
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Timbuktu
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Population: 50,000
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Mosque, library, Muslim university
Jenne
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Book trading was a lucrative industry in the Islamic world/Books were a symbol of civilization
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80% of people living in villages farmed
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It was difficult with sandy, shallow soil
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Hoes were used to work the land instead of plows
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Crops: rice, millet, wheat, fruit, vegetables
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Most farms were about 10 acres with communal clearing of the land
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Polygamy was common = more people to work the land
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Problems: droughts, pests, storage
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Bow and the Hoe: symbols of the people
Common Characteristics of the Sudanic States
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Political and Social Life
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Important aspects of life = village community, clans, ethnic groups
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Unified states allow groups to coexist
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Islam = universal faith
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Common religion = trust for traders
Islam is used to reinforce the rulers right to rule
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Rulers surrounded by Muslim scribes and advisors
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Use the ideas of the Caliph or Emir
Islam fused with existing African beliefs and traditions
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Rulers would intercede with local spirits
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Islam accommodates some pagan beliefs and practices
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Some never convert to Islam or maintain dual beliefs
Women
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Some societies are matrilineal (This sometimes went against traditional Sharia law)
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Muslim visitors to Africa were sometimes shocked at the relationship between men and women
Slavery
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Exists in Africa before Islam
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African enslaved each other
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With Islam, the slave trade to the outside world begins to develop
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Muslims view slavery as a part of the process of conversion
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Conversion did not = freedom
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Used as: servants, laborers, soldiers, administrators, eunuchs, concubines
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Muslim trans-Saharan slave trade = 2-4 million Africans
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The Sudanic States
Ghana
Forms by the 3rd century
Trade: Gold, Salt, Dates
Gain power through taxing the gold and salt
trade that passed through the area
Camels improve trade
Sahel becomes a “port” of trade
By 10th century, rulers convert to Islam
Large population
Weakened by Almoravid invasions
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Mali
Develop in the area between Senegal and
Niger Rivers
Begun as the Malinke people who broke away
from Ghana.
Kingship was reinforced by Islam
Economy: agriculture
Trade: Gold
Juula: merchants who develop trade
partnerships
Sundiata:
o Leader also called the “Lion Prince”
o Stories of him spread through Griots
o Creates a unified state
o His rules and relationships outlive the
government
o Makes social arrangements (16 clans
carry bows, 5 have religious duties, 4
blacksmith and Griots)
o Stations garrisons for protection
o Makes travel and trade secure
o Crime is severely punished
o Dies in 1260, successors expand the
borders
Mansa Musa:
o Famous for pilgrimage to Mecca
o Gave out gold
o Brings back architect to builds famous Mosque at Jenne and other Islamic
influences
Songhay
Develops in the 7th century as an
independent kingdom, possibly under
a Berber dynasty
Dominate middle area of the Niger
valley.
“Master of the Soil” farmers and
herders
“Master of the Water” fishers
Capital- GAO
Rulers- Muslim
Dominated by Mali until gold is found
in nearby forests
Sunni Ali
o Tactical commander and
ruthless leader
o Cavalry expands borders
o Created a provincial
administration
o Muslim rulers who follow him
take the title ASKIA
o Muhammad the Great- expands
boundaries into Central Sudan
Muslim clerics want strict
interpretation of Sharia law
Defeated in 1591 by Muslim army from
Morocco
Hausa- combine Muslim and pagan
traditions
o Cities: Kano and Katsina
o Become centers of Muslim
learning
o Reproduce many of the forms of
the great empires
GHANA
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Growing Trade in Ghana
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In 200s, Berbers begin using camels to cross Sahara for
trade
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Muslims use word ghana “chief” to refer to people of that
land
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By 700, trade is making people rich in the kingdom Ghana
Gold-Salt Trade
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Gold mined in forests south of Sahara; traded to north
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Salt mined from Sahara and carried to West Africa
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Ghana provides protection, taxes trade, and ensures
fairness
Land of Gold
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By 800, king of Ghana rules an empire and taxes
surrounding kings
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Only king can own gold nuggets; this keeps prices high
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King commands army, acts as chief judge and religious
leader
Islamic Influences
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Islam spreads through region south of the Sahara through
trade
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In 1000s, Ghana’s rulers convert to Islam and take Islamic
advisers
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Ghana falls in 1076 to Almoravid conquest and never rises
again
Ghana Empire
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The Ghana Empire or Wagadou Empire (existed c. 750-1076) was located
in what is now southeastern Mauritania, Western Mali, and Eastern
Senegal
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It is believed to be the first of many empires that would rise in that part of
Africa. It first began in the eighth century, when a dramatic shift in the
economy of the Sahel area south of the Sahara allowed more
centralized states to form.
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The introduction of the camel, which preceded Arabs and Islam by
several centuries, brought about a gradual revolution in trade, and for
the first time, the extensive gold, ivory, and salt resources of the region
could be sent north and east to population centers in North Africa, the
Middle East and Europe in exchange for manufactured goods.
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The empire owed much of its prosperity to trans-Saharan trade and a
strategic location near the gold and salt mines. Both gold and salt
seemed to be the dominant sources of revenue, exchanged for various
products such as textiles, ornaments and cloth, among other materials.
Many of the hand-crafted leather goods found in old Morocco also had
their origins in the empire. The main centre of trade was Koumbi Saleh.
The Kingdom of Ghana probably began when several clans of the Soninke
people of West Africa came together under the leadership of a great
king named Dinga Cisse.
Ghana had few natural resources except salt and gold. They were also
very good at making things from iron. Ghanaian warriors used iron tipped
spears to subdue their neighbors, who fought with weapons made of
stone, bone, and wood.
Ghana became a rich and powerful nation, especially
when the camel began to be used as a source of
transport. Ghana relied on trade and trade was
made faster and bigger with the use of the camel.
http://es.encarta.msn.com/media_461532998_761558787_-1_1/Caravana_de_camellos.html
news.nationalgeographic.com/. ../salt/photo6.html
Ghana’s Economy & Decline
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The taxation system imposed by the king (or 'Ghana') required that both
importers and exporters pay a percentage fee, not in currency, but in
the product itself. Tax was also extended to the goldmines.
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In addition to the exerted influence of the king onto local regions, tribute
was also received from various tributary states and chiefdoms to the
empire's peripheral.
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The empire began struggling after reaching its apex in the early 11th
century. By 1059, the population density around the empire's leading
cities was seriously overtaxing the region.
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The Sahara desert was expanding southward, threatening food supplies.
While imported food was sufficient to support the population when
income from trade was high, when trade faltered, this system also broke
down.
Mali
http://www.btsadventures.com/img/mosqu
e.jpg
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Empire of Mali
Rise of Mali
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By 1235, Ghana replaced by Mali—another kingdom
based on gold trade
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Mali becomes wealthy as the gold trade routes shift
eastward
Sundiata Conquers an Empire
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Sundiata becomes emperor of Mali by overthrowing
unpopular ruler
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Conquers Ghana and cities of Kumbi and Walata
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Reestablishes the gold-salt trade and encourages
agriculture
Mansa Musa Expands Mali
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Some later rulers become Muslim
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Most famous is Mansa Musa—rules Mali from 1312–1332
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Mansa Musa was skilled military leader and fair ruler
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After returning from hajj, he builds mosques in Timbuktu
and Gao
Travels of Ibn Battuta
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In 1352, Ibn Battuta—Muslim scholar and traveler—visits
Mali
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By 1400, Mali begins to decline
Ibn Battuta
Trade Routes
Mali Empire
• The Mali Empire or Manding Empire or Manden Kurufa
was a medieval West African state of the Mandinka
from c. 1235 to c. 1610.
• The empire was founded by Sundiata Keita and
became renowned for the wealth of its rulers,
especially Mansa Musa I.
• The Mali Empire had many profound cultural influences
on West Africa allowing the spread of its language,
laws and customs along the Niger River.
Mali Empire
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The Mali Empire flourished because of trade above all else. It contained
three immense gold mines within its borders unlike the Ghana Empire, which
was only a transit point for gold.
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The empire taxed every ounce of gold or salt that entered its borders.
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By the beginning of the 14th century, Mali was the source of almost half the
Old World's gold exported from mines in Bambuk, Boure and Galam.
A powerful king named Sundiata ruled this area from around
1230-1255 AD. He led the people in conquering and expanding his
kingdom to be as great as Ghana had been.
Perhaps the greatest king
of Mali was Mansa Musa
(1312-1337). He
developed the gold and
salt trade of Mali and his
kingdom became very
powerful and rich.
Mansu Musa: Lord of the Negroes of Guinea. (Photo courtesy of History of
Africa)
Mansa Musa was a Muslim. He built many beautiful mosques or
Islamic temples in western Africa (most famous in Jenne)
In 1324, Mansa Musa made a pilgrimage or hajj to Mecca with 60,000
servants and followers and 80 camels carrying more than 4,000 pounds of
gold to be distributed among the poor. Of the 12,000 servants, 500 carried
a staff of pure gold. This showed his power and wealth to the other people
he visited.
Salt, Copper, Gold
When Mansa Musa died, there were no kings as powerful as he was to follow.
The great kingdom of Mali weakened. Eventually a group of people known as
Berbers came into the area and other people came up from the south to claim
territory that was once part of the kingdom. Although Mali fell, another
advanced African kingdom took its place, the Kingdom of Songhay.
Songhay
http://www.exzooberance.
com
Empire of Songhai
•
Songhai
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Sunni Ali, a Conquering
Hero
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Songhai—people east of Mali, control gold
trade moving farther east
In 1464, Sunni Ali begins rule; captures cities of
Timbuktu, Djenné
Askia Muhammad Governs
Well
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Sunni Ali’s son overthrown by Askia
Muhammad, devout Muslim
–
Rules for 37 years; appoints ministers and
governs well
–
Songhai Empire falls in 1591 to Moroccan
invaders with cannons
–
Collapse of empire ends 1,000-year period of
West African empires
Songhay Empire
The Songhai Empire, also known as the Songhay Empire
was a pre-colonial African state centered in eastern
Mali.
 From the early 15th to the late 16th Century, Songhai
was one of the largest African empires in history.
 Its capital was the city of Gao, where a small Songhai
state had existed since the 9th Century. Its base of
power was on the bend of the Niger River in presentday Niger and Burkina Faso.

Songhay Economy

The Songhai economy was based on a traditional caste
system. The clan a person belonged to ultimately decided their
occupation. The most common castes were metalworkers,
fishermen, and carpenters. Lower caste participants consisted
of mostly non-farm working slaves, who at times were provided
special privileges and held high positions in society.

At the top were nobleman and direct descendants of the
original Songhai people, followed by freemen and traders. At
the bottom were war captives and slaves obligated to labor,
especially in farming.

Dogons, Tuareg, and others
This map was
created in 1375.
The same trade
routes were used
by the merchants
of the Songhay
kingdom.
http://www.sfusd.k12.ca.us/schwww/sch618/Travelers/Catal_AtlasAfrica.jpg
Sunni Ali died in 1492 CE. His son
took over the rule of Songhay but he
did not accept Islam as a religion.
Islam was accepted as a religion by
many people in northern Africa. One
of Sunni Ali’s generals, named
Muhammad Ture, overthrew the new
king and made himself king of
Songhay.
Ture was a follower of Islam (Muslim)
and so he made Islam the religion of
his kingdom.
Many mosques were built of
local materials.
http://www.thewoz.ca/ghana/_larabang
a1.jpg
Songhay remained a rich and strong
kingdom under Muhammad Ture’s rule.
It had a complex government centered
in the city of Gao, and great centers
of learning. But later rulers were not
as powerful.
In the late 1500s, Morocco invaded
Songhay to take its rich trade routes.
Moroccans had a new weapon, the gun,
and the army of Songhay did not. This
led to the fall of Songhay.
(Photo courtesy of African Origin of Civilization by Cheikh Anta
Diop)
Songhay Society

Upper classes in society converted to Islam while lower
classes often continued to follow traditional religions.
Sermons emphasized obedience to the king.

Timbuktu was the educational capital. Sunni Ali established
a system of government under the royal court, later to be
expanded by Askia Muhammad, which appointed
governors and mayors to preside over local tributary states,
situated around the Niger valley.

Local chiefs were still granted authority over their respective
domains as long as they did not undermine Songhai policy.

Decline
Following Dauoud's death, a civil war of succession weakened the
Empire, leading Morocco Sultan Ahmad I al-Mansur Saadi to dispatch an
invasion force under the eunuch Judar Pasha.

Judar Pasha was a Spaniard by birth, but had been captured as an
infant and educated at the Moroccan court. After a cross-Saharan
march, Judar's forces razed the salt mines at Taghaza and moved on
Gao; when Askia Ishaq II (r. 1588-1591) met Judar at the 1591 Battle of
Tondibi, Songhai forces were routed by a cattle stampede triggered by
the Moroccans' gunpowder weapons despite vastly superior numbers.

Judar proceeded to sack Gao, Timbuktu, and Djenné, destroying the
Songhai as a regional power.

Governing so vast an empire proved too much for the Moroccans, and
they soon relinquished control of the region, letting it splinter into dozens
of smaller kingdoms.
•
Other Peoples of West Africa
City-States Develop
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•
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As empires fall, city-states grow in West Africa
Hausa City-States Compete
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Hausa—people named for their language—have city-states in Nigeria
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Three powerful city-states are Kano, Katsina, and Zazzau
–
Rulers control their capitals and surrounding farming villages
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City-states trade cloth, salt, grain, and enslaved people
–
Rulers fight so much that none can build an empire
Yoruba Kings and Artists
–
Yoruba—people sharing common language who build city-states
–
Live in Benin and Nigeria, in small farming communities
–
Yoruba communities eventually join together under strong kings
–
Yoruba kings are believed divine and king of Ife is religious leader
–
From 1100, Ife is most powerful; in 1600, Oyo grows stronger
–
Yoruba craftsmen in cities carve in wood and ivory
Kingdom of Benin
–
Another kingdom rises in 1200s in Benin—a kingdom on the Niger
–
In 1400, the oba, or ruler, of Benin raises army; builds city walls
–
Artisans work on palace; make heads and figurines in copper or brass
–
In 1480, Portuguese begin trading with people of Benin
Swahili
Coast
http://www.exzooberance.
com
•
•
•
Trade Builds Cities
–
Seaports thrive on trade from Persia, Arabia, and
India
–
New language arises—Swahili—blending Arabic and
Bantu languages
–
By 1300, over 35 trading seaport cities grow wealthy
The City-State of Kilwa
–
Kilwa controls trade from southern Africa to India due
to location
–
Seizes Sofala, port city that controls gold mines
Portuguese Conquest
–
•
•
Starting in 1488, Portuguese conquer Kilwa,
Mombasa, and Sofala
Islam in East Africa (aka Zanj)
–
Muslim merchants spread Islam as they trade on
eastern coast
–
Most cities governed by a Muslim sultan and officials
–
Most people in the region follow traditional religions
Enslavement of Africans
–
Enslaved Africans sold in Arabia, Persia, and India
–
Trade in slaves fairly small, though steady
–
Increases drastically in the 1700s
Swahili Coast

While the Swahili Coast had kingdoms, it was not
controled by just one kingdom.

The region was a center hub of trade and
commerce in east Africa.

The introduction of various traditions such as Islam
helped to shape the character of the Swahili
Coast.
Swahili Coast



While trans-Saharan caravan traffic linked west Africa
to the larger trading world, merchant mariners sailing
in the sea lanes of the Indian Ocean formed a similar
service for coastal east Africa or the Swahili Coast.
Swahili is an Arabic term meaning “coasters.”
The Swahili dominated the east African coast from
Mogadishu in the north to Kilwa, the Comoro Islands,
and Sofala in the south.
Swahili Coast
By the tenth century, Swahili society attracted
increasing attention from Islamic merchants.
 From the interior regions of east Africa, the Swahili
obtained gold, slaves, ivory, and exotic local
products.
 In exchange, the Swahili city-states received
pottery, glass, and textiles that the Muslim
merchants brought from Persia, India, and China.

The Swahili Coastal Areas

Influenced by the Bantu

Populated by Africans as well as immigrants


Indonesia, Malaya, Madagascar (Bananas and Coconuts), Oman,
Persian Gulf
Small coastal villages

Fishers, Farmers, pottery, iron

Languages: Bantu and Swahili (Arabic influenced, means “coastal)

Towns: Mogadishu, Mombasa, Malindi, Kilwa (rich trading town),
Pate, Zanzibar

Total of about 30 coastal towns

Exports: Ivory, Gold, Iron, Slaves, Exotic animals

China trades with the region around the 13th century
slamic Influence on the Swahili Coast

13th century brings expansion of Islam

Mosques and palaces are build in many coastal towns

Swahili language shows Arabic influences

Living conditions show differences


Muslim: Stone/Coral houses

Non Muslims: Mud and thatch houses
Lineage

Matrilineal- (Traditional African) meant control of land

Patrilineal- Muslim custom
The Forests and Plains of Africa

Interior portions of African continent and forests of West Africa

Agriculture based with herding

Use iron tools and weapons

Small villages

Preliterate (culture without a language)


Rely on oral traditions and direct instruction
Advanced in art, building, statecraft, urban areas
The Yoruba
-
-
Speak non-Bantu languages
Form small cities states (about 50 mile influence)
Urbanized with some farming
Strong, divine, regional kings
Royal Court (wives, musicians, magicians, bodyguards)
Council of States
o Nobles from 7 city districts
o Reviewed King’s decisions
NOK:
Village in forests of central
Nigeria
Make highly stylized
terracotta objects
Shows great artistic skills
Agriculture using iron tools
Mysterious, not much
known about them
Artwork may have influence
other areas
Ile-Ife:
-
Nigeria
Make terracotta and bronze
portrait heads
Have lifelike quality
Artwork seems to relate to
kings
Agricultural society with
peasants dominated by ruling
family
Considered to be original
cultural city
Holiest city of Yoruba
-
Benin:
Large city state
Control area of the Niger
River to Lago
Oba- Ruler
Artwork made of ivory and
bronze
Royal lineage = power and
majesty
Southern
Africa
&
Great
Zimbabwe
• A New City
–
•
•
•
Shona build Great Zimbabwe—southeastern empire based on gold
trade
Great Zimbabwe
–
Shona farm and raise cattle between Zambezi and Limpopo rivers
–
After 1000, Great Zimbabwe controls gold trade routes to Sofala
–
Leaders gain wealth by taxing traders, chiefs
–
Abandoned by 1450 for unknown reasons
–
Ruins of Great Zimbabwe discovered in 1871
Mutota
–
Mutota—Shona who leaves Great Zimbabwe and founds a new state
–
Mutota’s army dominates northern Shona people, who pay him tribute
Mutapa Rulers
–
The northern Shona call their rulers mwene mutapa or “conqueror”
–
Mutapa—name for African empire that conquers Zimbabwe
–
By 1480 Matope, Mutota’s son held large area inland and along coast
–
Gained wealth by mining gold
Central Africa
-
-
-
South of the rain forests to Lake Victoria
This area was beyond the area of Muslim influence
Kinship is replaced with kingship
Rule is based on territory and rituals that reinforce rulers power
Congo:
Agricultural base
Weaving, pottery, blacksmithing, carving
Wood, copper, iron
Divisions of labor:
o Men: clear forests, make palm oil and
wine, build houses, hunt, trade
o Women: cultivation, animals,
household, salt, collect seashells (used
for currency)
Live in family based villages
Kings are hereditary
Confederation
o 8 provinces
-
-
Monomutapa
The Great Zimbabwe
o Zimbabwe’s are royal courts built out of
stone where rulers of sub chiefs live
King’s title- Mwene-Mutapa
Experiences a short period of rapid
expansion
Trade focuses on gold
Split by internal divisions
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