Kingdoms and Trading states of africa

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Presentation transcript:

Kingdoms and Trading states of africa Chapter 11 Kingdoms and Trading states of africa

Locate the following on pg. 342 Atlas Mountains Sahara Desert Great Rift Valley Mt. Kilamanjaro Nile River Niger River Lake Victoria Kalahari Desert Strait of Gibraltar Atlantic Ocean Indian Ocean Red Sea Shade in: Rain Forest Savannah Desert Mediterranean Dry woodland Mark: Bantu Migrations Gulf of Aden Mediterranean Sea Arabian Peninsula Congo River

Know Your Geography! Savanna: Grassy Plains Sahara: GIANT desert Rain Forest Mediterranean Dry Woodland What do you think happened in early Africa due to so much biological diversity?

Bantu Migrations Look at the Bantu migrations on your map Where did they go? West African farmers and herders who migrated south and east between about 1000 B.C.E. and 1000 C.E. Spoke Bantu language Spread their knowledge about farming, ironworking, domesticating animals Bantu influence is still around

Nubia About 2700 B.C.E., civilization along the Nile was growing Traded with Egypt, incorporated a lot of Egyptian culture, modeled their society on Egyptians Eventually had to leave their region in Egypt and return south when Assyrians took over Egypt

Rise and fall of culture Rich in iron! Powerful tools, lots of wood Once controlled the Nile’s trade routes as well the route from the Red Sea to North Africa This made them rich! Gold, ivory, animal skins, perfumes, slaves were traded with Mediterranean and Southwest Asia Eventually the Kingdom of Axum took over

North Africa gets invaded a lot So close to the Mediterranean—who is nearby? Carthage was a major trading city, until the Punic Wars After Punic Wars, Rome took over North Africa. Built roads, aqueducts, dams, cities Also spread Christianity, used Africans for Roman soldiers Islam spreads into North Africa

Islam in Africa In the 690s, C.E. Muslims conquered and occupied North Africa. By the 700s, they had completely conquered the Berbers, a nomadic people. Gradually replaced Christianity with Islam, and Arabic replaced Latin as the language Cairo, Fez, Marrakesh became famous for their beautiful mosques and huge universities. Muslim traders brought Islam from the North to West Africa

Map trade Routes and Kingdoms of Africa (349) Shade and date: Egypt Nubia Axum Ghana Mali Ethiopia Songhai Draw: 5 major trade routes (pick 5 from map) Mediterranean Sea Niger River Gao Timbuktu Benin City Great Zimbabwe Mogadishu Cairo Mecca Venice Fez Marrakesh

Salt and Gold trade across Sahara Salt was very rare in most of Africa, but was highly valued Need salt to retain water, preserve food Sahara had lots of salt Western Africa (Ghana, Nigeria, Senegal) had almost no salt, but lots of gold

Kingdom of Ghana—800 C.E.-1050 C.E. Had lots of gold, would trade a pound of gold for a pound of salt (until 1350, 60% of the gold in the world came from Ghana) Theocracy Traded with Muslim merchants from North Africa Muslims introduced written language, coins, business methods Some (not all) adopted Islam In 1050, Almoravids (North African Muslims) invaded and weakened Ghana Eventually were taken over by Mali Kingdom

Kingdom of mali Mansa Musa was the strongest ruler of Mali, came to power in 1312 C.E. He spread control of gold and salt regions, and became very wealthy Where trade routes intersected, big cities like Timbuktu arose

Mansa Musa Promoted peace He conquered a lot of regions, and converted eventually to Islam, based much of his law on the Quran Did not force Islam on his people, but promoted religious freedom and tolerance In 1324, made the hajj to Mecca, and started good relationships with other Muslim states

Mansa Musa Devout Muslim Built mosques in Timbuktu Education from all over: Judges Doctors Religious leaders Scholars Proverb: Salt comes from the north, gold from the south, and silver from the country of the white men, but the word of God and the treasures of wisdom are only to be found in Timbuktu.

Songhai By 1400, Mali had grown weak In 1460, the Songhai started to gain power, with a new capital in Gao Developed along the Niger River Did not initially adopt Islam, but later became an Islamic state in 1492 Had very organized government Like Mansa Musa, leaders went to Mecca, formed good relationships and built mosques and schools to study the Quran

Invasions Songhai was invaded by Moroccans who wanted to control the salt and gold trade Songhai had no guns or new technology, and were quickly wiped out by the Moroccans How did Moroccan Muslims get guns? When Songhai fell, it was the end of 1,000 years of powerful kingdoms in West Africa

Moving to East Africa!

Axum Conquered Nubia around 350 C.E. Extended from modern-day Ethiopia to the Red Sea Axum were descendents of African farmers and Jewish traders  very unique culture Extremely good location for trade: Red Sea and city of Axum By 400 C.E., the kingdom controlled trade connecting Africa, India, the Mediterranean world

What did they trade? Enslaved people Ivory, animal hides, gold, for iron, spices, precious stones, cotton Ideas also spread: The king of Axum made Christianity the official religion in the 300s. Eventually Axum became isolated from the rest of the kingdoms around it. Why? Axum eventually declined due to this isolation

Ethiopia People in the region of Axum kept Christianity, and were united Geographic isolation (mountains) helped them stay protected and helped develop a very unique culture Underground churches still in Ethiopia today built into solid rock Did keep ties with Holy Land: pilgrimages to Jerusalem, Christians in Egypt, still a Christian region today

After Axum Many smaller kingdoms grew on the East Coast of Africa, trading with the rest of the Eastern Hemisphere (Arabia, Persia, China, India…) Swahili developed as a need for communication arose between Africans and people from Arabia “Swahili”  “of the coast”

Islamic Influences Muslim traders brought Islam to the East African coast, and many wealthier and more powerful people were Muslim. The majority of the people kept traditional religious beliefs Slavery: Muslim traders exported enslaved people who had been kidnapped to Arabia, Persia and Iraq. Wealthy people bought slaves for domestic work This was NOT like the slave trade into the Americas in the 1700s: only about 1,000 people were sold each year during this time

Southern Africa Gold and Ivory trade helped people in southeast Africa grow wealthy and establish a big city around 1000 C.E. : Great Zimbabwe. It depended on the gold trade Powerful city: economic, political and religious center of its time 1450 C.E., it was abandoned

Mutapa: A man named Mutota left Great Zimbabwe to find more salt, and founded a new city: Mutapa Controlled most of Zimbabwe Rich in gold, forced conquered people to mine for it In the 1500s, Portugal tried to take the empire over, but failed. Then Portugal tried to interfere with the politics to gain control  signals increasing European interference in Africa