Chapter 8 - African Civilizations and the Spread of Islam
Mansa Musa – crossed Sahara on hajj
wealth symbolized potential of Africa
Sub-sahara never totally isolated
But…for periods, contact was difficult and intermittent
Changes came from
The arrival of Muhammad followers
Commercial and military attributes
changed by Islam, but retained individuality
African culture not united
provided major external contact between sub-Saharan Africa and world
State building
Mali, Songhay – created more from military power than ethnic/cultural unity
Merchant city states on west/East coast
Portugese in 15th century brought Africans into world economy more
Bantu migration continued
Societies don’t build so much on previous civilizations
Introduction
Diverse – large centralized states to stateless societies
Differences in geography, language, religion, politics
Universalistic faiths penetrated continent
but…universal states/religions don’t characterize history
Stateless societies
organized around kinship and other forms of obligation
council of families
or…secret societies of men/women
little concentration of authority
government – not a full-time job
after internal dispute, you can always leave and form new village
Unable to
mobilize for war
organize large building projects
create stable conditions for long distance trade
Common Elements in African Societies
Even though different, similarities existed
language – Bantu migration
thought
religion – animistic religion
power of natural forces
ritual and worship
dancing, drumming, divination, and sacrifice
witchcraft
cosmology – how universe worked
belief in creator deity
saw selves as first settlers, land meant more than economic usefulness
link of deceased ancestors
Economies
North Africa – fully involved in Mediterranean trade – quite different than rest
Settled agriculture and skilled metalwork had spread
Market life key for men and women
Professional merchants controlled trade
Population – least known – by 1500 – 30 to 60 million people
Land conquered and reconquered by Phoenicians, Greeks, Romans, Vandals
Cyrene and Carthage became huge trading centers
640-700 CE – Muslim followers spread across Africa
by 670, controlled Ifriqiya – Tunisia > Africa
Arabs called n.east Arica > Ifriqiya and west – Maghrib
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?
Egalitarian teachings – all Muslims are equally
Reinforced African kings authority
Equal footing with Arab invaders
…but disparity between law and practice
Islands of Christianity left behind
Christian Egyptians – Copts
Traded with Byzantine Empire
Eventually split with empire – doctrinal and political issues
What differences
Muslim invaders allowed them to keep religion – tolerance
Met resistance in Kush/Nubia – couldn’t push Islam further
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
But…couldn’t push Catholic faith, remained isolated
Introduction
Three coasts – Atlantic, Indian, savanna on edge of Sahara
Edge of desert
Gold found
Camels improved trade
Sahel – grassland belt – best place to live – centers of 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
Collect taxes, tribute, military support
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
built mosques
attended public prayers
supported preachers
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
passed out gold – devalued
brought back Ishak al-Sahili architect – great Mosque of Jenne
City Dwellers and Villagers
Cities flourished – Timbuktu and Jenne
Mosque, library, university
Book trade
Difficult life – soil sandy and shallow
Clearing land done communally
Polygamy for the purpose of having more labor
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
Expanded borders, created administration
Mid-16th century Songhay dominated Sudan
Familiar pattern – created unique brand of Islam
pagan/Muslim beliefs both believed
fusion, priests still need to work with local spirits
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
Located throughout west Africa, but no Islamicized state
Intermarriage took place
Political and Social Life
Large states represented goals of elite family/group
Islam served many groups
Common religion/law united
Trust to merchants
leaders took names emir/caliph to reinforce authority
as advisors/scribes – Muslims helped with administration
maintained theocracy – spiritual and political leader
with new states came increased social differences
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
Muslims saw slavery as process in conversion
Used as servants, laborers, soldiers, administrators, eunuchs, concubines
Led to desire to enslave women and children
Children of slave mothers freed
Need for more slaves
Introduction
Indian Ocean coast – center for Islamic influence
string of Islamicized trading cities – why?
universal set of ethics
maritime contacts easier
Compromise between indigenous ways and new faith
The Coastal Trading Port
Founding – Bantu people from 1st century to 10th century
Even Indonesia and Malay in 2nd century- bananas/coconuts on Madagascar
Fishers, farmers made rough pottery & iron
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
Riding the monsoon season key to trading in Indian Ocean]
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
Gave rule legitimacy
Rulers and merchants Muslim, but others retained beliefs
Swahili language – Bantu + Arabic words
Arabic script used
Islam didn’t penetrate internally
Class based
Women – some still were matrilineal, some patrilineal
1500 Portuges arrive
Wanted to control gold trade
Established Fort Jesus, but couldn’t control trade
Introduction
Internally – following own trajectories independently
Some herding, some agricultural
Some small villages, some larger states
Most preliterate – knowledge, skills, traditions through oral methods
But…could still make strides in arts, building and statecraft
Artists and Kings: Yoruba and Benin
Nigeria, Nok
Terra cotta/bronze realistic/stylized art
portrait heads of rulers
Long gap in history
Yoruba
Agricultural society led by ruling family/aristocracy
City Ile-Ife
Spoke non-Bantu language
Small city-states, regional kings
Urbanized nature similar to city-states of Italy/Germany
Benin – Edo peoples
Ivory/bronze art – sculptures
Some even included Portugese soldiers
Ruler in large royal compound
Central African Kingdoms
South of rain forest near Lake Victoria
State formation replaced kinship based societies
Rituals reinforced ruler’s power
Luba peoples - believed leaders controlled fertility of humans/agricult.
The Kingdom of Kongo and Mwene Mutapa
Kongo
Art – weaving, pottery, blacksmithing
Sharp division of labor
Farther east – Bantu confederation – built royal courts of stone
zimbabwes – stone houses – Great Zimbabwe most famous
Some even believed Phoenicians – prejudices
Mwene Mutapa
Controlled gold, glass beads, porcelain trade
Iron weapons
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
Widened trade and global relations
Mansa Musa – crossed Sahara on hajj
wealth symbolized potential of Africa
Sub-sahara never totally isolated
But…for periods, contact was difficult and intermittent
Changes came from
The arrival of Muhammad followers
Commercial and military attributes
changed by Islam, but retained individuality
African culture not united
provided major external contact between sub-Saharan Africa and world
State building
Mali, Songhay – created more from military power than ethnic/cultural unity
Merchant city states on west/East coast
Portugese in 15th century brought Africans into world economy more
Bantu migration continued
Societies don’t build so much on previous civilizations
Introduction
Diverse – large centralized states to stateless societies
Differences in geography, language, religion, politics
Universalistic faiths penetrated continent
but…universal states/religions don’t characterize history
Stateless societies
organized around kinship and other forms of obligation
council of families
or…secret societies of men/women
little concentration of authority
government – not a full-time job
after internal dispute, you can always leave and form new village
Unable to
mobilize for war
organize large building projects
create stable conditions for long distance trade
Common Elements in African Societies
Even though different, similarities existed
language – Bantu migration
thought
religion – animistic religion
power of natural forces
ritual and worship
dancing, drumming, divination, and sacrifice
witchcraft
cosmology – how universe worked
belief in creator deity
saw selves as first settlers, land meant more than economic usefulness
link of deceased ancestors
Economies
North Africa – fully involved in Mediterranean trade – quite different than rest
Settled agriculture and skilled metalwork had spread
Market life key for men and women
Professional merchants controlled trade
Population – least known – by 1500 – 30 to 60 million people
Land conquered and reconquered by Phoenicians, Greeks, Romans, Vandals
Cyrene and Carthage became huge trading centers
640-700 CE – Muslim followers spread across Africa
by 670, controlled Ifriqiya – Tunisia > Africa
Arabs called n.east Arica > Ifriqiya and west – Maghrib
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?
Egalitarian teachings – all Muslims are equally
Reinforced African kings authority
Equal footing with Arab invaders
…but disparity between law and practice
Islands of Christianity left behind
Christian Egyptians – Copts
Traded with Byzantine Empire
Eventually split with empire – doctrinal and political issues
What differences
Muslim invaders allowed them to keep religion – tolerance
Met resistance in Kush/Nubia – couldn’t push Islam further
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
But…couldn’t push Catholic faith, remained isolated
Introduction
Three coasts – Atlantic, Indian, savanna on edge of Sahara
Edge of desert
Gold found
Camels improved trade
Sahel – grassland belt – best place to live – centers of 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
Collect taxes, tribute, military support
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
built mosques
attended public prayers
supported preachers
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
passed out gold – devalued
brought back Ishak al-Sahili architect – great Mosque of Jenne
City Dwellers and Villagers
Cities flourished – Timbuktu and Jenne
Mosque, library, university
Book trade
Difficult life – soil sandy and shallow
Clearing land done communally
Polygamy for the purpose of having more labor
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
Expanded borders, created administration
Mid-16th century Songhay dominated Sudan
Familiar pattern – created unique brand of Islam
pagan/Muslim beliefs both believed
fusion, priests still need to work with local spirits
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
Located throughout west Africa, but no Islamicized state
Intermarriage took place
Political and Social Life
Large states represented goals of elite family/group
Islam served many groups
Common religion/law united
Trust to merchants
leaders took names emir/caliph to reinforce authority
as advisors/scribes – Muslims helped with administration
maintained theocracy – spiritual and political leader
with new states came increased social differences
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
Muslims saw slavery as process in conversion
Used as servants, laborers, soldiers, administrators, eunuchs, concubines
Led to desire to enslave women and children
Children of slave mothers freed
Need for more slaves
Introduction
Indian Ocean coast – center for Islamic influence
string of Islamicized trading cities – why?
universal set of ethics
maritime contacts easier
Compromise between indigenous ways and new faith
The Coastal Trading Port
Founding – Bantu people from 1st century to 10th century
Even Indonesia and Malay in 2nd century- bananas/coconuts on Madagascar
Fishers, farmers made rough pottery & iron
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
Riding the monsoon season key to trading in Indian Ocean]
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
Gave rule legitimacy
Rulers and merchants Muslim, but others retained beliefs
Swahili language – Bantu + Arabic words
Arabic script used
Islam didn’t penetrate internally
Class based
Women – some still were matrilineal, some patrilineal
1500 Portuges arrive
Wanted to control gold trade
Established Fort Jesus, but couldn’t control trade
Introduction
Internally – following own trajectories independently
Some herding, some agricultural
Some small villages, some larger states
Most preliterate – knowledge, skills, traditions through oral methods
But…could still make strides in arts, building and statecraft
Artists and Kings: Yoruba and Benin
Nigeria, Nok
Terra cotta/bronze realistic/stylized art
portrait heads of rulers
Long gap in history
Yoruba
Agricultural society led by ruling family/aristocracy
City Ile-Ife
Spoke non-Bantu language
Small city-states, regional kings
Urbanized nature similar to city-states of Italy/Germany
Benin – Edo peoples
Ivory/bronze art – sculptures
Some even included Portugese soldiers
Ruler in large royal compound
Central African Kingdoms
South of rain forest near Lake Victoria
State formation replaced kinship based societies
Rituals reinforced ruler’s power
Luba peoples - believed leaders controlled fertility of humans/agricult.
The Kingdom of Kongo and Mwene Mutapa
Kongo
Art – weaving, pottery, blacksmithing
Sharp division of labor
Farther east – Bantu confederation – built royal courts of stone
zimbabwes – stone houses – Great Zimbabwe most famous
Some even believed Phoenicians – prejudices
Mwene Mutapa
Controlled gold, glass beads, porcelain trade
Iron weapons
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
Widened trade and global relations