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Early African Societies and the Bantu Migrations Chapter 3
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Early African Societies and the Bantu Migrations Chapter 3.

Dec 23, 2015

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Malcolm James
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Page 1: Early African Societies and the Bantu Migrations Chapter 3.

Early African Societies and the Bantu Migrations

Chapter 3

Page 2: Early African Societies and the Bantu Migrations Chapter 3.

Early Agricultural Society in Africa• c. 10,000 BCE: N. Africa was grassy steppe, with

lakes and rivers– Domesticated cattle, farming, permanent settlements,

small scale states (Sudanic culture)• c. 5,000 BCE: became hotter and drier (Sahara

Desert)– People moved south, east

Page 3: Early African Societies and the Bantu Migrations Chapter 3.

Egypt and Nubia: “Gifts of the Nile”• Nile River Valley – fertile floodplain• High productivity -> big pop. -> irrigation • Needed organization -> small kingdoms• 3100 BCE: unified by Menes = centralized state

with pharaoh (early = gods, later = sons of Amon)

Page 4: Early African Societies and the Bantu Migrations Chapter 3.

Old Kingdom and Nubia• Pharaohs built pyramids for burial• Close connections with Nubia (trade, wars)– Est’d Kingdom of Kush (less powerful, but wealthy)

• Egypt declined as areas ignored pharaoh

Page 5: Early African Societies and the Bantu Migrations Chapter 3.

Middle Kingdoms• Pharaohs stabilized Egypt• Hyksos invaded (horse-riding nomads with bronze

weapons and chariots)• Egyptians copied their technology and pushed

them out => New Kingdom

Page 6: Early African Societies and the Bantu Migrations Chapter 3.

New Kingdom• Army, bureaucracy, population supported surplus

– built temples, palaces• Tuthmosis III expanded into E. Med., Nubia, N. Afr.• Decline -> loss of new land and invasions by

Kushite and Assyrian armies

Page 7: Early African Societies and the Bantu Migrations Chapter 3.

Formation of Complex Societies and Sophisticated Cultural Traditions

• Not many big cities • Wealth -> social distinctions and hierarchies– Pharaoh, prof. mil. forces and bureaucracy,

commoners, slaves• Patriarchal (but women could be

regents, priestesses, and scribes)

Page 8: Early African Societies and the Bantu Migrations Chapter 3.

Economic Specialization and Trade• Metallurgy: bronze (from Hyksos), iron (indep.)• Transportation: sailing ships, wheeled carts• Trade Networks: Long-distance – for natural

resources and Regional – for ivory, ebony, etc.

Page 9: Early African Societies and the Bantu Migrations Chapter 3.

Early Writing in the Nile Valley• By 3200 BCE, pictographs (from Mesopot??)• Added symbols -> hieroglyphics, plus simpler

version (Hieratic)• buildings and papyrus• Nubia: used hieroglyphics, later developed own

Page 10: Early African Societies and the Bantu Migrations Chapter 3.

The Development of Organized Religious Tradition

• Amon-Re, but polytheistic• Akhenaten tried to make religion monotheistic

(Aten)• Life after death -> mummification, grave goods,

retainers (cult of Osiris)

Page 11: Early African Societies and the Bantu Migrations Chapter 3.

Bantu Migrations• West Africa: Sudanic agriculture– Clan-based villages with chiefs– Interacted with hunter/gatherers

• Migrations began c. 3000 BCE: south and east, prob. due to pop. pressure

• Absorbed peoples, some settled, language differentiated

• Increased c. 1000 BCE with iron tools and weapons

Page 12: Early African Societies and the Bantu Migrations Chapter 3.

Early Agricultural Societies of Sub-Saharan Africa

• Distinctive societies and cultural traditions• Chiefs, age grades, gender roles • Monotheistic – impersonal divine force, source of

good and evil, plus ancestor and territorial spirits