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History of People in Africa

History of People in Africa. Pre-Historic Africa

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Page 1: History of People in Africa. Pre-Historic Africa

History of People in Africa

Page 2: History of People in Africa. Pre-Historic Africa

Pre-Historic Africa

Page 3: History of People in Africa. Pre-Historic Africa

Where Civilization Began

• Olduvai Gorge – located on the edge of the Great Rift Valley in Tanzania

• Archaeologists – Mary and Louis Leakey discovered bone over 2 million years old

• This has led some scientists to believe that the first people were from Africa

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Early Humans Adapt to their Environments

• Nomadic Lifestyle– Earliest peoples are nomadic hunter-gatherers.– Herders drive animals to find waters and graze

pastures.

• Transition to a Settled Lifestyle– Agriculture probably develops by 6,000 B.C.– As the Sahara dried up farmers move to West Africa

or Nile Valley.– Agriculture allows permanent settlements and

governments to develop

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Western Desert of Egypt

• Domesticated cattle, 8000 BC• Domestication of wheat and storage of

grains, 7000 BC• Storage pits, 6000 BC• Domestication of sheep and goats, 5000

BC• Once you have storage of grains, you

have social hierarchy.

Page 12: History of People in Africa. Pre-Historic Africa

Early Societies in Africa• Societies organized by Family Groups

– Extended families made up several generations– Families with common ancestors form groups known as

clans• Local Religions

– Early religions usually include elements of animism-belief in spirits inhabiting objects

• Keeping a History– Few African societies have written languages– History, literature, culture passed on by story tellers called

griots.– Cultures in West Africa are advanced long before outsiders

arrive.

Page 13: History of People in Africa. Pre-Historic Africa

On your Left Side:

• Diagram or draw a visual for the characteristics of Early Societies in Africa.

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Human Family Tree

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Civilizations on the Nile

Egyptian Civilization Nubian Civilization

• The Nile used to flood each summer leaving fertile silt deposits

• Egyptians began farming along the Nile about 5000 B.C.

• Ancient Egypt was ruled by Pharaohs and Queens

• Hieroglyphs- picture writing symbols

• Nubia

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Nubia was a great civilization that developed along the Nile River south of Egypt.

They shared many of the same cultural traits as Egypt such as religion, architecture and art.

http://www.digitalegypt.ucl.ac.uk/maps/egypt.html

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African Empires

• Kushites ("Nubians")

–Beginning c.2000 BC.

–Location: Sudan / Ethiopia

–Many similarities with neighboring Egyptians

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The Emergence of Civilization• The Land

– 5,000 miles long – Sahara is the great divide

• Kush– Agriculture may have first appeared in Nubia rather than

the lower Nile valley– Perhaps the site of the first true African kingdom– Nubia became an Egyptian tributary– Disintegration of the Egyptian New Kingdom (end of second

millennium B.C.E.) resulted in the independent state of Kush

• Kush became a major trading state• Little known about the society of Kush• Seems to have been widespread material prosperity

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Kingdom of Kush (Nubia)

• Approximately 2000 B.C. – 200 A.D.

• Kush and Nubia are the same place

• It developed along the Nile River in present day Sudan

• Fought with Egypt over control of the Nile River

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Kingdom of Kush (Nubia)• Black Africans

• Kush produced many resources like gold, ivory, copper, frankincense and ebony.

• Important center of trade---Kush traded with all civilization along the Nile River.

• Cultural Diffusion is a direct result from this.

Page 24: History of People in Africa. Pre-Historic Africa

Kushite in Egypt, 23 BCE

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These are the pyramid of Ancient Nubia. They were used as tombs. Although they are similar to those of Ancient Egypt, they have some differences. Compare these pyramids with those of Ancient Egypt.

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Pyramids of Kush at Meroë

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Nubian Pyramids

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Meroe Pyramids, Nubia (Sudan)

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For many centuries, the people and culture of Ancient Nubia were a mystery to the world. Even the Ancient Greeks wrote about an advanced culture that was mostly unknown to other civilizations of the time.

http://www.hp.uab.edu/image_archive/um/ume.html

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Nubian Hieroglyphs

Cursive Version

Nubian Hieroglyphs

Cursive Version

I

K

W

T

N

D

One reason little was known about the

culture was that they did not

write down their history until late in ancient times. Another reason is that they were

isolated geographically. Outside people would need to

cross harsh desert or many

waterfalls, called cataracts, to reach Nubia.

Nubian writing was similar to Egyptian writing but developed into a completely separate language later in time.

Page 31: History of People in Africa. Pre-Historic Africa

Kingdom of Kush[295 BCE – 320 CE]

Nubia[modern-day

Sudan]

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On your Left Side:

• Write an acrostic poem for the Kushites identifying the key characteristics they should be remembered for.

Page 33: History of People in Africa. Pre-Historic Africa

Ancient Nubia was a great kingdom that produced many resources like gold, ivory, copper, frankincense and ebony.

Nubia was also known as Kush and The Land of the Bow. Nubian archers (warriors who used a bow and arrow) were feared by all who saw them in battle.

Nubia had a long line of powerful kings. They were often at war with Egypt, to the North. From about 2,000 to 1,000 BC, Egypt controlled Nubia but when Egypt weakened, Nubia came north and conquered Egypt (800-700 BC.)

A frankincense tree. The resin was used to make good smelling incense.

www.webzone.dk/oman/ oman/dyr-og-planter.htm

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Aksum or Axum Kingdom

• Aksum- African kingdom located in what is now Ethiopia and Eritrea

• African & Arab traders began to settle along the Red Sea and over time Aksum controlled the Red Sea area

• Ideas and goods were shared along these trade routes– People became Christians– Early Ethiopian Christian Church started here

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Axum, Son of Saba• Conquered Kush in first millennium C.E.• Axum founded as a colony of the kingdom of

Saba (Sheba) in first millennium B.C.E.– Saba a trading state, goods from South Asia

to the Mediterranean• Axum continued the trade after Saba declined

– Location on trade routes responsible for prosperity

– Competed for control of ivory trade• Followed Egyptian Christianity (Coptic)

– Would be renamed Ethiopia– Called the “hermit kingdom” by Europeans

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Kingdom of Axum

• Black Africans

• Approximately 300 A.D. – 900 A.D.

• Important center of trade

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Kingdom of Axum• Axum and Ethiopia are the same place

• They were a Naval Trading power

• Traded with Kingdoms on the Nile river and East Coast of Africa

• Cultural Diffusion is a result of this

• Christianity was the dominate religion

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Kingdom of Axum [300-700]

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Stele, Ezana’s Royal Tomb,Aksum (4c)

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AXUM’SACHIEVEMENTS

AXUM’SACHIEVEMENTS

Controlled NE African

Trade

Controlled NE African

Trade

WrittenLanguageWritten

Language

Spread Christianityin No. & E.

Africa

Spread Christianityin No. & E.

Africa

TerraceFarmingTerraceFarming

BuiltStelaeBuilt

Stelae

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Christian Church, Lalibela[Ethiopia]

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Christian Church, Lalibela[Ethiopia]

Coptic Christian Priest

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On your Left Side with your partner:

• Compare and contrast the Kingdoms of the Kushites and Axum in a T-Chart.

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West African Iron Age• Learning about the past

–Artifacts reveal how people lived in the past.

–Evidence of sub-Saharan cultures producing iron around 500 B.C.

• Nok Culture–Nok—West Africa’s earliest known

culture—made iron tools and weapons

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West African Iron Age

• Djenne-Djeno

–From 600-200 B.C., cities began to develop near rivers and oases

–Djenne-Djeno, Africa’s oldest known city, was discovered in 1977.

–It was a bustling trade center that was linked to other West African towns through camel trade routes.

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The Sahara and Its Environs• From 8000 to 4000 B.C.E. a warm, humid climate

that created lakes, ponds, grasslands, and game• Desiccation began in 6th and 5th millennium B.C.E.• After 3000 B.C.E. and farming spread to the

savannas to the south; Berbers were intermediaries

• Carthage became focal point of trans-Saharan trade

• Ironworking by the people along the Niger River in the middle of the first millennium B.C.E., Nok culture

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Cities of Trade• Used seasonal winds to plan trading

– Brought Muslim religion of Islam to Africa

– African traders took, ivory, gold, other metals & animal skins

– Traders brought back cotton, silk, and porcelain

• Swahili language- combined African & Arab languages

– Most widely spoken Bantu language

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North African Trade• The Sahara Desert and the Mediterranean

Coastline are the boundries

• Carthage (Tunisia) became rich with the trade of textiles, metals, slaves and food products

–May have been the wealthiest city in the world at that time

–Carthage fell to the Roman Empire in 146 B.C.

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West African Kingdoms• West Africa

Kingdoms–Ghana–Mali–Songhai

• West needed salt in hot climates

• Had plenty of gold

• North Africa

–Plenty of salt in the Sahara

–No other resources to trade

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The Gold – Salt Trade

• Traveling caravans crossed the vast Sahara desert to the Middle East

• Travelers looked to profit from the desert crossing with large trades

• The savanna lands of West Africa lacked salt, which is essential to survival

• In West Africa, salt was more valuable than gold

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Berbers

GOLDGOLD

SALTSALT

Gold-Salt Trade

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Why was Salt Important?• Mali often traded its gold

for salt• Salt was sometimes more

valuable than gold!• People’s bodies need salt

to live– In the desert heat, salt

is lost through perspiration

• Salt was used to preserve food

• Salt was brought in large slabs (coins)

MiniFactMiniFact: The picture : The picture behind these words is behind these words is also a slab of SALT!also a slab of SALT!

The man is holding a slab of salt mined recently near Timbuktu

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Salt

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Ghana developed in West Africa between the Niger (NI-jhur) and the Gambia Rivers.

It was an important kingdom there from about AD300 to about 1100.

The rivers helped Ghana to grow rich because they were used to transport goods and develop trade.

Ghana also collected taxes from traders who passed through the kingdom.

The people called their nation Wagadu; we know it as Ghana --that was the word for war chief.

http://www.nevadasurveyor.com/africa/web/pages/niger_river.htm

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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.

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• 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. http://www.imf.org/external/np/exr/center/mm/eng/mm_rs_01.htm

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African Empires

• Ghana Empire –10th - 13th Century–Location: West Africa–Trans-Saharan Trade with

Arabs.• Traded salt, ivory, and gold.

–Taken over by Mali Empire.

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What else did they trade?

• Salt• Copper• Ivory• Cloth

• Kola Nuts• Slaves• Books• Shells

Camels, the ships of the desert, traveled in caravans Camels, the ships of the desert, traveled in caravans bringing to Mali:bringing to Mali:

MiniFactMiniFact: This was before Columbus even sailed to : This was before Columbus even sailed to the New World!the New World!

Page 61: History of People in Africa. Pre-Historic Africa

Empire of Ghana• 300A.D. to 1100A.D. • Ghana developed in West Africa between

the Niger and the Gambia Rivers.• The rivers helped Ghana to grow rich

because they were used to transport goods and develop trade.

• Ghana collected taxes from traders who passed through the kingdom.

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Empire of Ghana

• Ghana had few natural resources except gold.

• They were also very good at making things from iron.

• Ghanaian warriors used iron tipped spears to subdue their neighbors.

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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

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Gold “Money”, Ghana/Ivory Coast

Ghana Empire [4c-11c]

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The Empire of Ghana

• First powerful West African Kingdom

• The emperors power rested in his gold trade

• $ = power to buy goods and weapons

• Each trading caravan that entered or left Ghana had to pay a tax

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• After 700 AD, the religion of Islam began to spread over northern Africa. Followers of this religion are called Muslims.

• Muslim warriors came into Ghana and fought with the non-Islamic people there. This weakened the great civilization of Ghana.

• Local warriors then decided to break away from the power of Ghana and form their own local kingdoms.

• This ended many of the trade networks. This eventually weakened the civilization of Ancient Ghana.

Islamic Mosque in Ghana

blankbluesky.com/ travel/ghana/

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Primary Source: Respond to on your Left Side

• The king adorns himself…wearing necklaces and bracelets…The court of appeal Is held in a domed pavilion around which stand ten horses with gold embroidered trappings. Behind the king stand ten pages holding shields and swords decorated with god, and on his right are the sons of the subordinate kings of his country, all wearing splendid garments and with their hair mixed with gold. – Al-Bakri

• What does this quote tell us about life in Ghana?

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Empire of Ghana Falls

• Conflicts from the north began to hurt Ghana

• Group of Berbers called Almoravids attacked

• 1076 they seized the capital of Ghana

• This broke the empire of Ghana into several small states

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Ghana’s decline was caused by attacking invaders, overgrazing, and the loss of trade.

• Invasion– A Muslim group called the Almoravids cut off many trade routes,

without which Ghana could not support its empire.• Overgrazing

– When the Almoravids moved, they brought herds of animals with them.

– These animals ate all the grass, leaving the land worthless for farming.

• Internal rebellion– The people Ghana conquered rose up in rebellion and took over

the entire empire.

Page 70: History of People in Africa. Pre-Historic Africa

On your Left Side with your partner:

• Create a T-Chart that examines the causes and effects relationship with the characteristics and events of the Ghana Kingdom.

Page 71: History of People in Africa. Pre-Historic Africa

Mali Empire [13c-15c]

GOLDGOLD

SALTSALT

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The empire of Mali reached its height under the ruler Mansa Musa, but the empire fell to invaders in the 1400s.

• Mali was located along the upper Niger River. The fertile soil helped Mali grow and control river trade.

• Sundiata, Mali’s first strong leader, built up a strong army and won back his country’s independence.

• He conquered Ghana and took over the salt and gold trades.

• He had new farmlands cleared for crops of beans, onions, and rice. He also introduced cotton as a new crop.

• To protect his authority, he took power away from others and adopted the title mansa.

Page 73: History of People in Africa. Pre-Historic Africa

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)

Page 74: History of People in Africa. Pre-Historic Africa

Mansa Musa was a Muslim, meaning he followed the religion of Islam. He built many beautiful mosques or Islamic temples in western Africa.

http://travel.u.nu/pic/ml/djenne.jpg

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Mansa

• Mansas had both political and religious roles in society.

• The religious role of the mansa grew out of traditional Malian beliefs.

–According to the beliefs, people’s ancestors had made an agreement with the spirits of the land that would ensure the lands provided plenty of food.

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The Empire of Mali is Born

Page 77: History of People in Africa. Pre-Historic Africa

The Empire of Mali

• 1200 A.D. – 1450 A.D.

• Strongest and most powerful during the rule of Mansa Musa.

• Mansa Musa – Greatest leader of Mali

• Ruled for 30 years 1307 – 1337 when he died

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African Empires

• Mali Empire –14th - 17th Century

–Ancient Islamic empire –Mansa Musa = ruler /

cultural hero

• Famous hajj to Mecca

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Timbuktu-”Heavenly Clay”

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African Empires

–Tombouctou (Timbuktu) = Mali capital

–At its peak it was the size of Western Europe and controlled 1/2 the world's gold supply

Page 82: History of People in Africa. Pre-Historic Africa

Timbuktu

• A very important city in Mali– Center of learning

for Muslims– Universities and

schools– Largest trading

center in Mali– On the Niger River

• Trade• Food• Washing

Timbuktu

19th century traders in Timbuktu

Page 83: History of People in Africa. Pre-Historic Africa

The Griots• Storytellers were

called Griots or djeli• They were important

people in Mali• They told the land’s

history• Most of what we know

about ancient Mali came from the storytellers

• They were advisors to the kings

This is a 19th century griot of Mali with his instrument

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Mansa Musa [r. 1312-1337]

Page 86: History of People in Africa. Pre-Historic Africa

• He was Mali’s most famous leader, and he ruled from 1312 to 1337.

• Mali reached the height of its wealth, power, and fame in the 1300s.

• He added important trade cities to its empire, including Timbuktu.

• Islam was important to Musa, so he made a pilgrimage to Mecca.

• He influenced the spread of Islam through a large part of West Africa and had mosques built throughout his empire.

Mansa Musa

• He stressed the importance of education and learning to read the Arabic language.

• He sent scholars to study in Morocco. They came back and set up schools in Mali.

Page 87: History of People in Africa. Pre-Historic Africa

Influence of Islam• Muslim traders carried religion across

West Africa• Mansa Musa adopted a new faith and

Mandingos or farmers under Ghana’s rule also converted

• As a faithful Muslim he made a pilgrimage or hajj to Mecca

• He built many mosques in Mali

Page 88: History of People in Africa. Pre-Historic Africa

On your Left Side:

• How are the mosques of the Mali Empire different from the Middle Eastern mosques we saw in the last unit?

Page 89: History of People in Africa. Pre-Historic Africa

Perhaps the greatest king of Mali was Mansa Musa (1307-1337). He developed the gold and salt trade of Mali and his kingdom became very powerful and rich.

In 1324 Mansa Musa made a pilgrimage to Mecca, with 60,000 followers and 80 camels carrying more than 4,000 pounds of gold to be distributed among the poor.

Page 90: History of People in Africa. Pre-Historic Africa

In 1324 Mansa Musa made a pilgrimage ( a journey to a holy place) to Mecca, which is a holy city in Arabia, 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.http://bseleck.bei.t-online.de/timbuktu/img_tim/mansamusag.gif

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Timbuktu Rooftop, Mosque

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Mosque in Gao

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Great Mosque at Djenne, Mali

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Distant Mosque at Djenne, Mali

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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.

Returnhttp://www.uchicago.edu/docs/mp-site/plaisanceplan/graphics/berbers.jpg

The Berbers still live in North Africa. This picture, taken in 1893, shows a Berber group.

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Tuaregs

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Marketplace near the Niger River

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European Map

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The Fall of Mali

Weak rulers such as Maghan could not stop raiders, leading to the empire’s gradual decline.

Raiders from the southeast poured into Mali and set fire to Timbuktu’s great schools and mosques.

Invaders took almost all the lands of the Mali Empire by 1500.

Page 100: History of People in Africa. Pre-Historic Africa

On your Left Side:

• If we were going to create a Hero Poster for Mansa Musa, what would be included in the list of his achievements?

Page 101: History of People in Africa. Pre-Historic Africa

Now that you know a lot about the kingdoms of Africa, use the web in your packet to write an essay. Click on the picture of Africa in the center.

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Page 103: History of People in Africa. Pre-Historic Africa

The Songhai built a new Islamic empire in West Africa, conquering many of the lands that were once part of Mali.

• Once a part of Mali, Songhai rose up against it and regained its freedom.

• Songhai grew in many ways, mostly due to the work of Sunni Ali.

– He worked constantly to unify, strengthen, and enlarge the empire.

• He participated in both Islam and local religions and brought peace and stability as a result.

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Songhai Empire [15c-16c]

GOLDGOLD

SALTSALT

Page 105: History of People in Africa. Pre-Historic Africa

http://www.sfusd.k12.ca.us/schwww/sch618/Travelers/Catal_AtlasAfrica.jpg

This map was created in 1375. The same trade routes were used by the merchants of the Songhay kingdom. What kinds of pictures do you see on the map and why do you think the mapmaker put them there?

Page 106: History of People in Africa. Pre-Historic Africa

Kingdom of Songhay (Songhai)

• 1450A.D. – 1600A.D.• The Golden Age of Africa• The people of Songhay were farmers and

fisherman who lived along the Niger River of West Africa.

Page 107: History of People in Africa. Pre-Historic Africa

The picture above is one artist’s idea of what the great Songhay leader, Sunni Ali might have looked like. Sunni Ali saw that the kingdom of Mali was weakening and he led his soldiers to conquer the area. He began the kingdom of Songhay. He also set up a complex government to rule all the lands he had conquered.

http://www.abcorpaffairs.com/gallery/

Page 108: History of People in Africa. Pre-Historic Africa

Sunni Ali• By 1464 – Sunni Ali,

gained power in Gao• Because of the fall of

Mali traders could not travel safely

• Sunni Ali was looking to restore order

• Sunni Ali based his military on a cavalry that conquered Timbuktu, and the other major cities of the Mali.

Page 109: History of People in Africa. Pre-Historic Africa

Sunni Ali [r.1464-1492]

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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.

This is a photo of a mosque, or place of

worship for Muslims, in western Africa. Many mosques were built of

local materials.

http://www.thewoz.ca/ghana/_larabanga1.jpg

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On your Left Side:

• What do you consider to be the greatest achievement of Sunni Ali?

• Explain why.

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Askia Muhammad

• Askia Muhammad (1493-1528)

• Askia Muhammad continued Sunni Ali's imperial expansion

• In order to maintain his large empire Muhammad further centralized the government.

• At it’s height, Songhay was larger than all of the European states combined.

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Askia Mohammed [r.1493-1529]

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Why was this the Golden Age?

• Under the leadership of Askia Mohammed, Timbuktu once again became a prosperous commercial city, reaching a population of 100,000 people.

• Merchants and traders traveled from Asia, the Middle East and Europe to exchange their exotic wares for the gold of Songhay.

• Timbuktu gained fame as an intellectual center rivaling many others in the Muslim world.

• Students from various parts of the world came to Timbuktu's famous University of Sankore to study Law and Medicine.

• Medieval Europeans came the Kingdom to study from mathematicians, astronomers, physicians, and jurists whose intellectual endeavors were said to be paid for out of the king's own treasury.

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• Askia the Great worked to support education and especially supported learning about medicine.

– Thousands of people came to Timbuktu to use the universities, libraries, and mosques.

– Djenné also became a city of great learning.

– Songhai’s traders were Muslims and spread Islam.

• To help maintain order, Askia set up five provinces within Songhai.

– He removed local leaders and appointed new governors who were loyal to him.

– He created special departments to oversee certain tasks.

– He created a standing professional army.

Education and Government

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Kingdom of Songhai• Askia Muhammad was also the first to standardize

weights, measures, and currency, so culture throughout the Songhay began to unify.

• Askia Muhammad created an Islamic Songhay society.

• The urban centers were dominated by Islam• The non-urban areas were not Islamic • The vast majority of the Songhay people, around

97%, followed traditional African religions.

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Askia Mohammed’s Tomb [1443-1538]

Gao, Mali

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The Fall of Songhay• Songhai fell in 1591 to invaders from Morocco• They were attracted to Mali’s wealth• The Morocco soldiers won because they had guns

and cannons

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Songhai fell to Morocco.

• Because Morocco wanted to control the Saharan salt mines, it invaded Songhai.

• The Moroccans brought with them a terrible new weapon, the arquebus, an early form of gun.

• The Moroccans’ guns and cannons brought disaster to Songhai.

• Changes in trade patterns completed Songhai’s fall.

–Overland trade declined as Atlantic ports became more important.

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On your Left Side:

• Diagram a flowchart to show the rise and fall of the Songhai Empire.

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All three kingdoms of West Africa relied on trade for their strength and wealth.

Timbuktu Gao

Jenne

Gold, Ivory, Wood, Slaves

Silk, Ceramics, Beads, Islam from Europe and Asia

Coming into West Africa

Coming from Africa and going to Europe and Asia

Salt

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Benin Empire [15c-19c]

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The Forest Kingdom of Benin

• Arose in a thickly forested area near the equator

• Developed in the delta region of the Niger River

• Ruler – set up a centralized government

• Had intersecting streets, workers produced brass, wood, ivory, and woven goods

• Best known for their Bronze art

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On your Left Side:

• As we look at each slide of artwork from the Forest Kingdom of Benin, what are the main characteristics that stand out to you?

• What are the key identifying characteristics?

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Bronze Heads from Benin (16c)

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The Forest Kingdom of Benin

(Bronze Art)

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Benin Bronze Leopard

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African Trade Routes

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Swahili-Speaking Areas of E. Africa

SWAHILI [“the coast’] = Bantu + some Arabic

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Arab Dow off the coast of Zanzibar

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Great Zimbabwe was a powerful state that developed in southern Africa.

• Great Zimbabwe was a powerful kingdom in southern Africa.

• It was founded as a small trading and herding center in the 1100s.

• Gold mining and farming expanded, and the kingdom’s population grew to become the center of a large trading network.

–Trade made rulers wealthy and powerful.

• In the 1400s gold trade declined, and Great Zimbabwe weakened. By 1500 it was no longer a political and trading center.

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African Empires• Zimbabwe takes its name from

“Great Zimbabwe”–Capital city of the Munhumutapa

Empire

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Great Zimbabwe [1200-1450]

“Zimbabwe” = “stone enclosure”

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Great Zimbabwe Street

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Great Enclosure, Zimbabwe

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Ruins of “Great Zimbabwe”

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Manamotopa Empire [1450-1630]

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African Empires

• Other African Peoples–Bushmen (“San People”)

• “San” means “outsiders”

–Bantu Tribes• Zulu

• Ashanti

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African Empires

• Bushmen (San people) - first inhabitants of South Africa–Kalahari = ancestral homeland

–Ancient ways of life threatened by Botswana’s government• Legal battle to stay on Central

Kalahari Game Reserve

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SAHARA DESERT

One of the largest and most significant migrations in the history of mankind.

THE BANTU MIGRATIONHOME AREA 2000 BC

SPREAD BY 1000 BC

SPREAD BY 500 BC

CAUSES OF MIGRATION?

SAVANNA

DESERT

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Bantu Migrations

• One of the largest migrations that has ever taken place

• Migrate-to move from one place to settle in another

• Bantu migrations mainly spread across Central and South Africa

• As Bantu speaking Africans spread across the region their language also spread

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Bantu• Migration: a permanent move from one

country or region to another.• Push-pull factors: These factors can push

people out of an area or pull them to move to a different place.

• Bantu-speaking people: Small groups of people who for about 1500 years moved southward to different places in Africa. They spread their language and culture.

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Bantu Migration

• Cultural Interaction

–Relocation of large numbers of Bantu-speaking people brings cultural diffusion and change to southern Africa

–Migration continues to shape the modern world

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Causes of Bantu Migration

• Population increased because of farming

• They went south because to the north was the Sahara

• They needed more land for farming.

• They brought the technology of iron making, woodworking

• They were able to migrate as far as South Africa.

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BantuMigration

s:

1000 BCE

To

500 CE

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Bantu Migration• Today, close to 100 million people across the

southern half of Africa speak related languages, collectively known as Bantu languages.

• Linguistic evidence shows that the root Bantu language emerged in what is now Nigeria and Cameroon by 2000 BC.

• By 1000 BC, in a series of migrations, Bantu speakers had spread south to the lands of Angola and east to Lake Victoria.

• Over the next 1500 years they scattered throughout central and southern Africa, interacting with and absorbing indigenous populations as they spread.

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Effects of Bantu Migration• The Bantu interacted with other

people they met spreading their culture, language and technology.

• The intermarried with other tribes• They exchanged culture and ideas• The Bantu migration was a unifying

force for the continent of Africa.

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Aim: What are the causes and effects of African migration?

Do Now: Why would you move to another city?

Movement of People

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African Empires

• Bantu: refers to many native groups (categorized by language).–Zulu tribe organized in 1800's

• Fought British colonists for land in South Africa

• Forced into segregation as part of Apartheid

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Anglo – Zulu Wars

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Overland & Sea Trade Routes by 16c

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African Trade [15c-17c]

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Early African Culture

Africa Unit

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Major themesin pre-colonial African life

• Environmental conditions of scarce population and fragile environment

• Migration and mobility• Wealth in people• Enduring and distinctive family structures• High flexibility of social and political institutions• Pragmatism• Eclecticism• Ideals of prosperity and harmony• Generational conflict and gerontocracy

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Family Ties• Farming and herding

societies consisted of extended families

• Kinships created strong bonds and a sense of community

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Stateless Societies• Function of mobile population,

underpopulation, and land as resource• Even when dense population, there was no

state• Hunters valued over warriors• Ideal was the large complex household with Big

Man surrounded by 10-40 people• Control happened laterally, not hierarchically

(secret societies, age-grade societies, ritual experts as mediators)

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On your Left Side:

• Draw the following pyramid on the next slide and add the information to the diagram.

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Structure of African Society

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Inheritance and Descent

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Status of Women

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Roles of Women• An African woman's roles are as life

bearer, nurturer, and source of generations.

• For an African woman in a traditional rural community, the chief measure of success in life is her ability to bear many children.

• The very existence of the family and clan depends on women's ability to bear children, who will provide security for their parents in old age and who will continue to nourish the spirits of the ancestors through sacrificial offerings.

• As a result, much African art is directed toward encouraging the fertility of women.

• Many shrines are devoted to spirits that provide the blessings of fertility, and these frequently contain sculpture and other objects devoted to the concept of fertility.

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Little Girl’s Dolls-Preparing for Role of Adult Woman

• Like children everywhere, African children play with toys that help them visualize their roles as adults and teach them the skills of parenting, hunting, and farming.

• At the end of a day of trading and shopping a parent may stop at the blacksmith's stall in the market to buy a small carved doll with which his daughter can play.

• She may dress the doll in new clothes she has made, feed it, and tuck it to bed under a tiny blanket in the corner of her room at night.

• The carved figure is called biiga ("child"), but it represents a mature women with developed breasts, an elaborate hairstyle, and the scarification patterns that mark passages in life.

• The doll represents the child, as she hopes one day to be.

• In the same way American girls play with dolls such as "Barbie" that represent an ideal or a stereotype to which the child hopes to conform.

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Initiation into Adulthood• Both young men and young women pass through

initiation. • For Mende women, this life passage prepares them

for life as adult women in Mende society, teaching them the skills of child rearing, cooking, trading, sex education, and much more.

• It is especially important as a means of communicating knowledge of healing medicines and the spirit world from one generation of women to the next.

• At the end of the initiation period the young women are ritually bathed, their bodies are oiled with cosmetics, they are dressed in their best clothing and are presented to the community, ready to receive the gifts of potential suitors.

• Their reintegration into community life is accompanied by the appearance of masks such as this one, worn by the middle aged women who supervise the initiation, and which represent the ideals of feminine beauty among the Mende.

• The Mende are very conscious of personal appearance and value a glossy black skin, beautiful hairstyles, and a well-fed and prosperous physical condition.

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Marriage• Marriage is a key moment that follows

immediately after initiation among many peoples because both events serve to break the bonds of the individual with childhood and the unmarried state and to reintegrate the individual into the adult community.

• Among the Woyo people a young woman is given a set of carved pot lids by her mother when she marries and moves to her husband's home.

• Each of the lids is carved with images that illustrate proverbs about relations between husband and wife.

• If a husband abuses his wife in some way or if the wife is unhappy, she serves the husband's supper in a bowl that is covered with a lid decorated with the appropriate proverb.

• She can make her complaints public by using such a lid when her husband brings his friends home for dinner.

• The carved figure on this lid represents a cooking hearth with a pot on three stones.

• Divorce requires only the scattering of the stones, and it takes three to support the pot.

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Bride Wealth• It has been argued that such a system

commodifies the bride and thus dehumanizes her, but others also make the argument that the system defines her value to the marriage in a concrete way and that it contributes to the stability of the marriage, because were the marriage to end in divorce the "bride-wealth" must be returned to the groom's family, and if it has already been invested in "bride-wealth" for the bride's own brothers this can be difficult indeed.

• The "bride-wealth" creates a bond between the families which forces them to invest in the success of the marriage.

• When there is trouble between husband and wife the relatives on both sides intervene to find a solution.

• The male-female couple from the Dogon people of Mali represents the ideal of pairing that is necessary for procreation.

• The linking of the male arm around the woman's neck emphasizes the bond that is created by marriage.

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Becoming a Parent• For an adult in Africa success in a traditional community

is measured by his or her ability to find a partner, raise a family, and provide for the children that guarantee that the family will survive through the generations.

• Every adult is beset by concerns about the health of her children, his ability to secure and hold a means to earn a living, about his own health and that of his partner, and about the many uncertainties that we must confront throughout our lives.

• For a Baule man or woman to fail to marry, bear numerous children, and provide for his family is considered a serious problem.

• She may visit a diviner who may prescribe the carving of a figure that represents the spouse s/he had in the spirit world before birth.

• The spirit spouse takes possession of the figure, and care and attention as well as prayers and offerings are lavished on it to please it, so that it will permit its real-world spouse to fulfill his gender role.

• This figure pair represents the female larger than the male, and so it may have belonged to a Baule man.

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On your Left Side:

• What is the following primary source saying about women in traditional African society?

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“No marry’d Women, after they are brought to Bed, lie with their Husbands till three Years are expired, if the

Child lives so long, at which Time they wean their Children, and go to Bed to their Husbands. They say

that if a Woman lies with her Husband during the Time she has a Child sucking at her Breast, it spoils the Child’s Milk, and makes it liable to a great many

Distempers. Nevertheless, I believe, not one Woman in twenty stays till they wean their Children before they lie with a Man; and indeed I have very often seen Women

much censur’d, and judged to be false to their Husbands Bed, upon Account only of their suckling

Child being ill.”--F. Moore (European trader) on the River Gambia in

the 1730s, Travels into the Inland Parts of Africa (London, 1738), pp. 132-3.

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Becoming an Elder• The respect that is accorded both men and

women who have attained positions of authority and honor is made visible among the Dan people (Liberia) by the large wooden ladles known as wunkirmian.

• The spoon bears an idealized portrait of the owner as a young woman, at the moment she began her role as mother and wife.

• The spoons are carved for women who are recognized by other women of a town as the most hospitable persons in a community.

• The spoons serve as symbol of that status and are used as a kind of dance wand when the honored women dances through the town accompanied by her own entourage of

women.

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Patterns of Government

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Economic Organization• Most villagers were subsistence farmers

– They produced only enough food for their own needs with little or no surplus

• Fallow – allowing the land to regenerate important minerals needed to grow crops

• Land was community property

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The Age Grade System

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African Culture• Painting and Sculpture

– Rock paintings, wood carving, pottery, metalwork

• Music and Dance– Often served religious purposes– Wide variety of instruments– Integration of voice and instrument– Music produced for social rituals and educational purposes

• Architecture– Pyramid– Stone pillars– Stone buildings – Sometimes reflected Moorish styles

• Literature– Written works did not exist in the early traditional period– Professional storytellers, bards– Importance of women in passing down oral traditions

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West Africans have preserved their history through storytelling and the written accounts of visitors.

Some of the griot poems are epics that are collected in the Dausi and the Sundiata.

Writing was not common in West Africa. People passed along information through oral histories, a spoken record of past events.

West African storytellers were called griots. They helped keep the history of their ancestors alive for each new generation.

In addition to stories, they recited proverbs. These were short sayings of wisdom or truth. They were used to teach lessons to the people.

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Visitors’ Written Accounts

• The people of West Africa left no written histories of their own.

• Much of what we know about early West Africa comes from the writings of travelers and scholars from Muslim lands such as Spain and Arabia.

• Ibn Battutah was the most famous Muslim visitor to write about West Africa.

• His accounts describe the political and cultural lives of West Africans in great detail.

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• Of all the visual forms, the sculpture of West Africa is probably the best known.

– The sculpture is mostly of people.

– It was made for religious rituals.

– Artists were deeply respected.

• Artists carved elaborate masks, which were used mostly for rituals as they danced around fires.

• They wove cloth such as kente, a handwoven, brightly colored fabric.

Through art, music, and dance, West Africans have expressed their creativity and kept alive their cultural

traditions.

•Music and dancing were important.

•These activities helped people honor their history and were central to many celebrations.

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On your Left Side:

• In a T-Chart, compare and contrast the role of the arts in traditional African society to that of American society.

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African Religions

• Supreme being had created everything

• Supreme being was a distant figure• Many are monotheistic• Oral traditions and myths• Ancestors could help or harm them• Every object on earth was filled with a

living spirit (Animism)

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Animism• The term animism is derived from the Latin word

anima meaning breath or soul. • The belief of animism is probably one of man's oldest

beliefs, with its origin most likely dating to the Paleolithic age.

• From its earliest beginnings it was a belief that a soul or spirit existed in every object, even if it was inanimate.

• In a future state this soul or spirit would exist as part of an immaterial soul.

• The spirit, therefore, was thought to be universal.

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Loyalty to families and age sets helped the people of a village work together.

• Everyone had specific duties.

• Men hunted and farmed.

• Women farmed and cared for the children.

• Elders taught traditions to the children.

• Children started working as soon as they were able.

Loyalties and Religion

• Many West Africans believed that spirits of their ancestors stayed nearby.

• Families shared problems and news with the spirits.

• Another common belief was animism, the belief that bodies of water, animals, trees, and other natural objects have spirits.

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Diviners and Healers

• Rooted in Tradition• Their purpose was to

explain the cause of misfortune

• Experts in herbal medicine• Today, doctors study the

roots and herbs used in traditional African healing

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The Coming of Islam

• African Religious Beliefs before Islam– Common beliefs

• Single creator god– Sometimes accompanied by a pantheon of lesser

gods• Most believed in an afterlife in which ancestral souls

floated in the atmosphere through eternity• Closely connected to importance of ancestors and

lineage• Rituals very important

– Challenge by Islam but not always replaced; synthesized

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The Coming of Islam (cont.’d)

• North Africa–Arab forces seized the Nile delta of Egypt in 641–New capital at Cairo–Arabs welcome due to high taxes and periodic persecution of Coptic Christians by Byzantines–Arabs seize Carthage in 690, called Al Maghrib–Berbers resisted for many years

• The Kingdom of Ethiopia: A Christian Island in a Muslim Sea–Axum began to decline–Shift in trade routes and overexploited agriculture–Muslim trading states on the African coast of the Red Sea transforming Axum into an isolated agricultural society

• Source of ivory, resins, and slaves–Attacked by Muslim state of Adal in early 14th century–Became a Christian state in mid-twelfth century

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Islamic

Invasions