==Mansa Musa – crossed Sahara on hajj==
==Sub-sahara never totally isolated==
==Changes came from==
The arrival of Muhammad followers
==State building==
==Introduction==
Diverse – large centralized states to stateless societies
Universalistic faiths penetrated continent
==Stateless societies==
organized around kinship and other forms of obligation
council of families
little concentration of authority
Unable to
==Common Elements in African Societies==
Even though different, similarities existed
language – Bantu migration
thought
religion – animistic religion
Economies
Population – least known – by 1500 – 30 to 60 million people
==Land conquered and reconquered by Phoenicians, Greeks, Romans, Vandals==
==640-700 CE – Muslim followers spread across Africa==
by 670, controlled Ifriqiya – Tunisia > Africa
When Abbasid dynasty united – many conversions
11th century – Almoravids – ultra-conservative - reformers
launched jihad – holy war to purify, spread, protect faith
Almohadis – also reformers
Return to original teachings of Muhammad
Why attractive?
==Islands of Christianity left behind==
==Christian Egyptians – Copts==
Traded with Byzantine Empire
Eventually split with empire – doctrinal and political issues
Muslim invaders allowed them to keep religion – tolerance
==Axum > Ethiopia – most important African Christian outpost==
Cut off, surrounded by pagans, influenced by Jewish/pagan immigrants
Dynasty appeared – build rock sculptures
Traced origins to marriage of Solomon and Sheba – Bible
Maintained its brand of Christianity – isolated
in 1542 Portugese expedition pushed back Muslim invaders
==Introduction==
Three coasts – Atlantic, Indian, savanna on edge of Sahara
Edge of desert
Gold found
Camels improved trade
African states emerge as trade intermediaries
Location makes them open to droughts and attack
10th century Ghana rose to power through taxing salt, gold exchange
==Sudanic States==
Patriarch or council of elders
Power over subordinate communities
States emerge – Ghana, Mali, Songhay
Rulers separated from commoners through ritual – think “mandate of heaven”
==The Empire of Mali and Sundiata, the “Lion Prince”==
Mali – 13th century – Malinke broke away from Ghana
Rulers supported Islam – encouraged obedience to ruler
juula – traders
Sundiata – Sunjata – brilliant leader
Lion Prince – expaned Mali
Originator of social arrangements – divided into clans – castelike
16 free to bear arms, 5 religious, 4 blacksmiths
Created peace through loyalty, severely punished crimes
Security of traders key to survival
Ibn Batuta – Arab traveler – noted impressive security
Mansa Musa – 1324 trip to Mecca – awesome, impressive
==City Dwellers and Villagers==
Cities flourished – Timbuktu and Jenne
Mosque, library, university
Book trade
Difficult life – soil sandy and shallow
irrigation in Timbuktu
==The Songhay Kingdom – middle Niger Valley==
“masters of the soil” and “masters of the waters”
1370, Songhay broke from Mali – gold trade
Sunni Ali – ruthless, tactical commander
Mid-16th century Songhay dominated Sudan
Familiar pattern – created unique brand of Islam
pagan/Muslim beliefs both believed
local interpretation of Muslim law
woman mixed freely in public, no veil
Downfall when Muslim army from Morocco came down > this led to revolts
Muslim role in city
Came as merchants – joined communities
Though minorities, became elite
Intermarriage took place
==Political and Social Life==
Large states represented goals of elite family/group
Islam served many groups
Adjustment
^^Women^^
Many societies matrilineal
But…Sharia…Islamic law says it must be patrilineal
Many visitors shocked at African women’s equality
Impact of slavery –
8 > 7 million traded
Always existed, Muslims brought it to new heights
Used as servants, laborers, soldiers, administrators, eunuchs, concubines
Led to desire to enslave women and children
Children of slave mothers freed
==Introduction==
Indian Ocean coast – center for Islamic influence
string of Islamicized trading cities – why?
Compromise between indigenous ways and new faith
==The Coastal Trading Port==
Founding – Bantu people from 1st century to 10th century
13th century – urbanized trading ports – at least 30 port towns
Shared Swahili language
Contained mosques, tombs, palaces cut of stone and coral
Exported ivory, gold, iron, slaves, exotic animals
Imported silks – Persia, porcelain – China
Sofala – beautiful coastal city, gold access, furthers south to catch monsoon
link to coastal commerce and caravan trade
Chinese sailing expeditions – 1417 > 1431 – big boats – National Geographic
==Mixture of Cultures – Islam fused with local religions – not entirely accepted==
13th century – great Islamic expansion
Trust and law to facilitate trade
Ruling families built mosques and palaces
Claimed to be descendants of Persian ruling familes
Rulers and merchants Muslim, but others retained beliefs
Swahili language – Bantu + Arabic words
Islam didn’t penetrate internally
Women – some still were matrilineal, some patrilineal
1500 Portuges arrive
==Introduction==
Internally – following own trajectories independently
Most preliterate – knowledge, skills, traditions through oral methods
==Artists and Kings: Yoruba and Benin==
Nigeria, Nok
Terra cotta/bronze realistic/stylized art
Long gap in history
Yoruba
Benin – Edo peoples
Ivory/bronze art – sculptures
Ruler in large royal compound
==Central African Kingdoms==
South of rain forest near Lake Victoria
State formation replaced kinship based societies
==The Kingdom of Kongo and Mwene Mutapa==
Kongo
Farther east – Bantu confederation – built royal courts of stone
zimbabwes – stone houses – Great Zimbabwe most famous
Mwene Mutapa
%%Reality – more written records in Sudanic states and Swahili coast – Islam%%
%%Synthesis of African/Islamic values changed some Africans lives%%
%%Portugese arrived in 15th century%%
%%Muslims and Portugese intensified trade of ivory, slaves and gold%%