Top Banner
Early African Civs World Studies March 5
17

Early African Civs

Jan 20, 2016

Download

Documents

dasan

Early African Civs. World Studies February 26. I. General Culture. Environmental factors determined aspects of culture Population size, ability to trade, etc Most communities were small; didn ’ t have formal government Decisions were made by a council Religious beliefs varied greatly - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: Early African Civs

Early African CivsWorld Studies

March 5

Page 2: Early African Civs

I. General Culture• Environmental factors determined

aspects of culture– Population size, ability to trade, etc

• Most communities were small; didn’t have formal government– Decisions were made by a council

• Religious beliefs varied greatly– Both mono- and polytheistic– Will be influenced by Islam and

Christianity

Page 3: Early African Civs

• Family organization– Most were patrilinealpatrilineal (land and

inheritance pass from father to son)– Others were matrilinealmatrilineal (passed

from mother to daughter)

• Very few had written languages– Some used griots, professional

poets who memorized history

Page 4: Early African Civs
Page 5: Early African Civs

II. Gold-Salt Trade• When communities had surplus

(extras) they would trade w/ neighbors for something else

• Eventually a system was established that linked up to the Middle East– People in west Africa had gold– People in north Africa/Sahara had salt

• Where the trade went, cities developed

Page 6: Early African Civs

III. Ghana• Trade routes passed through

Ghana; the king collected taxes on all trade– Became very wealthy & powerful– Had an army of 200,000– Converted to Islam through trade

• When gold mines ran dry, others would be found, which shifted trade routes

Page 7: Early African Civs
Page 8: Early African Civs

IV. Mali• Becomes more powerful as the

trade (& taxes) shift east• Two rivals fought for power; the

winner kills the loser & all of his sons, but one

• That one son (Sundiata) gets revenge & forms the kingdom of Mali by 1235

Page 9: Early African Civs

• One of his descendents was Mansa Musa– In 1324, he travels to Mecca

•4800 miles on the backs of ill-tempered camels

– Traveled through Egypt, giving away enormous hunks of gold like they were nothing

– Got European attention on West Africa

• Mansa Musa sets up a good, fair gov’t that lasts 200 years

Page 10: Early African Civs
Page 11: Early African Civs

V. Songhai• Mali weakens in fights over

succession & the gold shifts again• Sonni Ali takes control, creating

the largest empire ever in W Africa

• Timbuktu becomes a flourishing city

Page 12: Early African Civs

• Moroccans haul guns & cannons across the desert & take control of the gold– But can’t maintain order from so

far away– W Africa becomes many small

groups

Page 13: Early African Civs
Page 14: Early African Civs

VI. Atlantic Slave Trade• Africans practiced slavery

– Conquered enemies, small scale

• At least 10 million Africans were forcibly removed from their homes to be slaves in Europe or the Americas

• Had a very negative impact on communities– The healthiest, strongest were taken

Page 15: Early African Civs
Page 16: Early African Civs

• The voyage across the Atlantic is known as the middle passage– Africans were dehumanized

•Not allowed to wear clothes, fed like animals

– Very unhealthy, filthy conditions•Were packed in very tightly; chained

down•Many died on the trip

Page 17: Early African Civs