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The African Experience

The African Experience. States and Societies of Sub-Saharan Africa. Migrations and demographics. 1000 C.E Bantu had spread as primary linguistic and ethnic group throughout Sub-Saharan Africa. Mastered Iron and had spread the skill throughout.

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The African Experience

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  1. The African Experience States and Societies of Sub-Saharan Africa

  2. Migrations and demographics • 1000 C.E Bantu had spread as primary linguistic and ethnic group throughout Sub-Saharan Africa. • Mastered Iron and had spread the skill throughout. • Agricultural advancements-Iron, Banana, and Irrigation lead to population boom. 3.5-22 million in just 600 years.

  3. Stateless societies • Africas politics reflects its extraordinary diversity • Stateless societies means: no bureaucracy or hierarchy of officials. • Governed by family and kinships…male family heads and patriarchal leaders acting as “chiefs”. • Confederate in that villages would unite to form “districts”.

  4. Evolution to Empire • Increasing commerce • Increasing populations • Military challenges • Led to more centralized governments and eventually kingdoms which absorbed others to form small empires.

  5. Alternative Governments in Africa • North Africa: Egypt and Nubia saw more formal forms of traditional monarchies • West African Forest peoples saw the evolution of secret societies. • Fragmentation and tribal governments were the most common. • Still constant features in Africa.

  6. Common Elements of African Societies • The migration of Bantu speakers gave a common linguistic base for much of Africa • Animistic religion, a belief in natural forces personified as gods, was common, with well-developed concepts of good and evil.

  7. Common Elements • Priests guided religious practices for community benefit. • African religions provided a cosmology and a guide to ethical behavior. • Many Africans believed in a creator deity whose power was expressed through lesser spirits and ancestors. • Families, lineages, and clans had an important role in dealing with gods. Deceased ancestors were a link to the spiritual world; they retained importance after world religions appeared.

  8. Economics • African economies were extremely diversified. • North Africa was integrated into the world economy, but sub-Saharan regions had varying structures. • Settled agriculture and iron-working were present in many areas before postclassical times, with specialization encouraging regional trade and urbanization. • International trade increased in some regions, mainly toward the Islamic world. Both women and men were important in market life. In general Africans exchanged raw materials for manufactured goods.

  9. Trans-Saharan trade, previously impossible thanks to the Camel changed African History. Unique goods moving across the forbidding continent but also…ideas. Islam. Did you know…Camels can run at a pace of 30 MPH! Trade changes Africa

  10. North Africa was an integral part of the classical Mediterranean civilization. From the mid 7th century Muslim armies pushed westward from Egypt across the regions called Ifriqiya by the Romans and the Maghrib (the west) by the Arabs. By 711 they crossed into Spain. Conversion was rapid, but initial unity soon divided North Africa soon into competing Muslim states. In the 11th century reforming Muslim Berbers, the Almoravids of the western Sahara, controlled lands extending between the southern savanna and into Spain. Islam

  11. Almohads • In the 12th century another group, the Almohads, succeeded them. Islam, with its principle of the equality of believers, won African. • The unity of the political and religious worlds appealed to many rulers. Social disparities continued, between ethnicities and men and women, the former stimulating later reform movements.

  12. Powerful Islamic States: Ghana • Ghana controlled the gold trade across SS Africa. • Capital at Koumbi-Saleh • “Reception” • Extensive use of horses, powerful cavalry.

  13. Began attracting Muslim merchants. Saw the origins in the trade of humans. Led to prominent urban centers such as Koumbi-Saleh Attracted Qadi, such as Ibn Battuta. Gold Trade

  14. Kingdom of Mali • Absorbed Ghana under Sundiata in the 13th century. • Mali, along the Senegal and Niger rivers, was formed among the Malinke peoples who broke away from Ghana in the 13th century. • Ruler authority was strengthened by Islam. • Agriculture, combined with the gold trade, was the economic base of the state. The ruler (mansa) Sundiata (d. 1260) receives credit for Malinke expansion and for a governing system based upon clan structure. • Sundiata's successors in this wealthy state extended Mali's control through most of the Niger valley to near the Atlantic coast.

  15. Peak of Mali’s power Mansa Kankan Musa’s pilgrimage to Mecca during the 14th century became legendary because of the wealth distributed along the way. He returned with an architect, Ishak al-Sahili who created a distinctive Sudanic architecture utilizing beaten clay. Mansa Musa

  16. Mansa’s Hajj • He arrived in Cairo at the head of a huge caravan, which included 60,000 people and 80 camels carrying more than two tons of gold to be distributed among the poor. Of the 12,000 servants who accompanied the caravan, 500 carried staffs of pure gold. Moussa spent lavishly in Egypt, giving away so many gold gifts—and making gold so plentiful—that its value fell in Cairo and did not recover for a number of years

  17. Impacts • In Cairo, the Sultan of Egypt received Moussa with great respect, as a fellow Muslim. The splendor of his caravan caused a sensation and brought Mansa Moussa and the Mali Empire fame throughout the Arab world. Mali had become so famous by the fourteenth century that it began to draw the attention of European mapmakers. • Aftervisiting the holy cities of Mecca and Medina on his pilgrimage, Moussa set out to build great mosques, vast libraries, and madrasas (Islamic universities) throughout his kingdom. Many Arab scholars, including the poet and architect, Abu-Ishaq Ibrahim-es-Saheli, who helped turn Timbuktu into a famous city of Islamic scholarship, returned with him.

  18. Dependent on trade…maritime trade. Saw more urbanization than the interior. Strong presence of Islamic merchants. Cultural diffusion: Persia, China, and India had prominent presences. Ibn Battuta. East Africa

  19. Urban development • As many as 30 towns flourished, their number including Mogadishu, Mombasa, Malindi, Kilwa, Pate, and Zanzibar. From the 13th to the 15th century Kilwa was the most important. All were tied together by coastal commerce and by an inland caravan trade.

  20. Cultural Impacts • The expansion of Islamic influence in the Indian Ocean facilitated commerce. • It built a common bond between rulers and trading families, and allowed them to operate under the cover of a common culture. • Apart from rulers and merchants, most of the population, even in the towns, retained African beliefs. • A dynamic culture developed, using Swahili as its language, and incorporating African and Islamic practices

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