Unit 1 Notes: Africa Before the Diaspora (AP African American Studies)

0.0(0)
Studied by 0 people
call kaiCall Kai
learnLearn
examPractice Test
spaced repetitionSpaced Repetition
heart puzzleMatch
flashcardsFlashcards
GameKnowt Play
Card Sorting

1/24

Last updated 3:11 PM on 3/12/26
Name
Mastery
Learn
Test
Matching
Spaced
Call with Kai

No analytics yet

Send a link to your students to track their progress

25 Terms

1
New cards

Kin-based societies

Communities organized primarily through family and lineage ties rather than large centralized governments; authority often rests with elders, lineage heads, or local chiefs.

2
New cards

Chiefdoms

Hierarchical political units more centralized than kin-based societies, typically led by recognized chiefs and supported by tribute systems, often limited to a region.

3
New cards

States/Kingdoms/Empires

Large political units with centralized authority, systems of taxation/tribute, military organization, and sometimes formal bureaucracies.

4
New cards

Centralized authority

A political structure in which key decision-making and control (taxation, law, military) are concentrated in a central ruler or governing institution.

5
New cards

Ecological zones (Africa)

Distinct environments (deserts, savannas, rainforests, river valleys, coasts) that strongly influenced which economic strategies and political systems were practical.

6
New cards

River-valley surplus

Agricultural productivity in river valleys (e.g., Nile region) that can support dense populations and the development of powerful states.

7
New cards

Savanna mixed economy

Economic pattern common in savannas combining farming, herding, and trade, supporting both smaller communities and large empires.

8
New cards

Coastal (maritime) trade networks

Sea-based exchange along African coasts that supported urban centers, commercial growth, and cultural interaction.

9
New cards

City-states and trade cities

Urban centers whose power often came from controlling trade routes and taxing goods; authority could be shared by merchant families, councils, or rulers.

10
New cards

Spiritual legitimacy (sacred authority)

Political authority justified through religious or spiritual responsibilities, where rulers may be seen as maintaining harmony between human and spiritual worlds.

11
New cards

Kinship

A society’s system for defining family relationships, obligations, and responsibilities that shape identity and community structure.

12
New cards

Lineage

Extended family network used to organize identity and often determine land rights, inheritance, and political authority.

13
New cards

Matrilineal descent

A lineage system in which descent and inheritance are traced through the mother’s line.

14
New cards

Patrilineal descent

A lineage system in which descent and inheritance are traced through the father’s line.

15
New cards

Age-grade system

Social organization that groups people into cohorts with shared duties and roles as they move through life stages.

16
New cards

Pre-diaspora African slavery (varied forms)

Systems of unfreedom in Africa that differed widely and were not identical to racialized chattel slavery in the Americas; legal status, heredity, and mobility could vary.

17
New cards

Trans-Saharan trade

Long-distance commerce linking West Africa to North Africa and the Mediterranean, crucial to the rise of major West African empires.

18
New cards

Caravan networks

Organized groups of traders and transport crossing the Sahara that moved goods, people, and ideas along trans-Saharan routes.

19
New cards

Taxation of trade routes

A key mechanism of empire-building: securing routes, regulating markets, and collecting taxes/tribute on goods to fund armies and administration.

20
New cards

Ghana (Wagadu) Empire

Early major West African empire that prospered by managing commercial exchange and collecting taxes/tribute connected to gold–salt trade routes (not the same as modern Ghana).

21
New cards

Mali Empire

Powerful West African empire that expanded after Ghana’s decline, gaining wealth through trade-route control and fostering strong Islamic influence among elites and cities.

22
New cards

Mansa Musa

14th-century ruler of Mali whose pilgrimage to Mecca signaled Mali’s wealth and piety, strengthening diplomatic ties and global reputation in the Islamic world.

23
New cards

Timbuktu

West African urban center associated with Islamic scholarship, education, and book/manuscript culture; evidence against the claim that Africa had no writing.

24
New cards

Songhai Empire

Later dominant West African empire known for strong military organization and administration, controlling key commercial cities and benefiting from trade taxation and Islamic institutions.

25
New cards

Oral tradition

Preservation and transmission of history, values, and identity through spoken performance (stories, praise poetry, genealogies, proverbs); a structured and legitimate historical record.

Explore top notes

Explore top flashcards

flashcards
Spanish School Subjects
37
Updated 1226d ago
0.0(0)
flashcards
Phrasal verbs - Put
24
Updated 143d ago
0.0(0)
flashcards
Science 10 - Chemistry - Part 1
52
Updated 644d ago
0.0(0)
flashcards
ATRN - EXAM 2
46
Updated 743d ago
0.0(0)
flashcards
MICROBIO B2 U3
52
Updated 688d ago
0.0(0)
flashcards
Japanese (Hirigana)
46
Updated 974d ago
0.0(0)
flashcards
Spanish School Subjects
37
Updated 1226d ago
0.0(0)
flashcards
Phrasal verbs - Put
24
Updated 143d ago
0.0(0)
flashcards
Science 10 - Chemistry - Part 1
52
Updated 644d ago
0.0(0)
flashcards
ATRN - EXAM 2
46
Updated 743d ago
0.0(0)
flashcards
MICROBIO B2 U3
52
Updated 688d ago
0.0(0)
flashcards
Japanese (Hirigana)
46
Updated 974d ago
0.0(0)