West African Kingdoms. Understand why gold and salt were important in early Africa. Describe how the rulers of Ghana, Mali, and Songhai built strong kingdoms.

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Presentation transcript:

West African Kingdoms

Understand why gold and salt were important in early Africa. Describe how the rulers of Ghana, Mali, and Songhai built strong kingdoms. Summarize how other West African societies developed. Objectives

surplus – more of something than is needed commodity – valuable product Ghana – a kingdom created around A.D.800 along the Niger and Senegal rivers Sundiata – according to tradition, founder of the empire of Mali by 1235 Terms and People

Mali – an empire in Africa founded in 1235 in the upper Niger River region Mansa Musa – the greatest ruler of the kingdom of Mali, who came to the throne in 1312 and led for 25 years Songhai – a kingdom that developed in the 1460s at the bend in the Niger River Terms and People (continued)

As trade in Africa expanded, cities such as Gao and Timbuktu developed and became wealthy centers of commerce. Between A.D. 800 and A.D. 1600, several kingdoms gained control of prosperous cities such as these. How did the kingdoms of West Africa develop and prosper?

Gold and salt were two of the most traded commodities. The Sahara had an abundance of salt, which people needed in their diet to replace salt lost in perspiration. In the savanna, salt was scarce. A merchant might trade one pound of gold for one pound of salt. When farmers began to produce surpluses, trade expanded from the savanna across the Sahara.

As trade grew, cities developed on the northern edges of the savanna. Monarchs gained control of trade routes and built powerful kingdoms. Trade routes crisscrossed the African continent between 1000 B.C. and A.D. 1600

By A.D. 800, the rulers of the Soninke people united many farming villages to create the kingdom of Ghana. Ghana was located in the fertile area between the Niger and Senegal rivers. Rulers of Ghana controlled gold-salt routes across West Africa. Muslim merchants from North of the Sahara brought Islam to Ghana.

According to tradition, Mali was founded in 1235 by a young man named Sundiata. The kings of Mali, or mansas, took control of gold-mining regions and the gold-salt trade. The greatest ruler of Mali, Mansa Musa, came to power in about He conquered additional territory and converted to Islam. Ghana fell in around In time, the new kingdom of Mali replaced Ghana.

After a pilgrimage to Mecca in 1324, Mansa Musa brought Muslim scholars and architects to Mali. He built a university at Timbuktu that became a great center of learning. This map shows Mansa Musa’s pilgrimage to Mecca.

He formed strong ties to the Muslim world. When he died, the emperor Askia Muhammad expanded Songhai territory, holding court at Gao. The soldier-king Sonni Ali brought trade routes and cities under his control. In the 1400s, Mali weakened and the new West African kingdom of Songhai arose.

In 1591, invaders from Morocco conquered the empire. Though the invaders couldn’t maintain control, the glory of the Songhai kingdom was over. The Songhai kingdom experienced disputes over succession in the late 1500s.

KingdomNotable CitiesYears GhanaKumbi Saleh800–1050 MaliTimbuktu1235–1400s SonghaiGao1464–1591 Great Kingdoms of West Africa