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Early History Early History of Africa, of Africa, South of the South of the Sahara Sahara Ch. 21.2
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Early History of Africa, South of the Sahara

Jan 15, 2016

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Early History of Africa, South of the Sahara. Ch. 21.2. Basic Run-down. Nomadic Groups (Berber, Bushmen) Southern Nile River civilization Trans-Saharan Trade (Ghana, Mali, Songhai) East African Trade (Swahili) Exploration of Africa Slave Trade Expands European Colonialism Independence - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Page 1: Early History of Africa, South of the Sahara

Early History Early History of Africa, of Africa,

South of the South of the SaharaSahara

Ch. 21.2

Page 2: Early History of Africa, South of the Sahara

1. Nomadic Groups (Berber, Bushmen)

2. Southern Nile River civilization

3. Trans-Saharan Trade (Ghana, Mali, Songhai)

4. East African Trade (Swahili)

5. Exploration of Africa

6. Slave Trade Expands

7. European Colonialism

8. Independence

9. Present-Day: Problems & Successes

Page 3: Early History of Africa, South of the Sahara

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Page 4: Early History of Africa, South of the Sahara

Ghana: The Kingdom of Gold• 1st great W. Afn trading empires

• Practiced trad. Afn religions, but very tolerant of Muslim traders

CAMEL CARAVANS!

Page 5: Early History of Africa, South of the Sahara

• Power came from ability to use iron weapons to control gold and salt trade– Taxed all trade

– Collected harvest portions

• Weakened w/ Berber attacks enter Islam

Page 6: Early History of Africa, South of the Sahara

The Kingdom of Mali• Rose to power after

Ghana (about twice the size)

• Most powerful under rule of Mansa Musa

– Encouraged Islam (officials had to read/write in Arabic)

– Made the hajj

Page 7: Early History of Africa, South of the Sahara

Songhai Empire• Replaced Mali gradually

• Islam became official religion

• Built university in Timbuktu (keeping city @ center)

Page 8: Early History of Africa, South of the Sahara

Timbuktu and Major Trade Routes

Page 9: Early History of Africa, South of the Sahara

Bantu Migrations• Absorbed other ppl

into their society– 60 to 150 million ppl

speak a Bantu lang.

• Iron tools allowed more efficient work

• Est. colony-like states

• CULTURAL DIFFUSION

Page 11: Early History of Africa, South of the Sahara

Swahili Trading States

• Swahili is a Bantu lang.

• Traded gold, slaves, ivory, leopard skins, etc. with Persia, India, & China

• City development

Another Bantu grp. (Shona)

Page 12: Early History of Africa, South of the Sahara

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Page 14: Early History of Africa, South of the Sahara

The Slave Trade

Page 16: Early History of Africa, South of the Sahara

The Atlantic Slave Trade

Page 17: Early History of Africa, South of the Sahara

Berlin Conference- 1884• How did the Industrial Rev. impact colonialism in

Africa?– Need cheap labor, raw materials, new markets, and

competition b/w countries

• Why was the Berlin Conf. called?– Settle territorial disputes, controlling slave trade,

humanitarian work promotion– Really just to divvy up continent

• What was the doctrine of “effective occupation”?– To own coastal land, had to prove you were capable of

protecting freedom of trade & transit (wealthy and powerful enough to handle it). “Sphere of Influence”

Page 18: Early History of Africa, South of the Sahara

Berlin Conference Summary–

-14 powers divided up Africa without consideration of cultures

-Result of boundaries:

1. African peoples divided

2. Hostile societies thrown together

3. Migration routes cut off

Page 19: Early History of Africa, South of the Sahara

Which two

European

powers ruled

much of

Africa south

of the Sahara?

Page 20: Early History of Africa, South of the Sahara
Page 21: Early History of Africa, South of the Sahara

African Independence

• Really took off after WWII – weakening of Europeans

• Used Africans for military- How might have African participation in this war have aided freedom movements?

• Larger grp. of educated Afns

Page 22: Early History of Africa, South of the Sahara

Colonial Legacy- Set Up for Failure• Weakened African traditions – imposed own culture

(“civilizing”)• Antagonism between tribes• Low level of development

*most rely on a single crop or mineral – plantations, mines, etc.

• Authoritarian governments

*Europeans did not allow opportunities for Africans to participate in government, never knew democratic rule.

- political corruption, lack of respect for rule of law

Page 24: Early History of Africa, South of the Sahara

List 3 examples in which political boundaries divide an ethnic group. What problems might result from the political divisions created by colonial powers?

Page 25: Early History of Africa, South of the Sahara

Colonial Economies

Page 26: Early History of Africa, South of the Sahara

Present Day

Page 27: Early History of Africa, South of the Sahara
Page 28: Early History of Africa, South of the Sahara
Page 29: Early History of Africa, South of the Sahara

Ethnic Groups in Nigeria

Page 30: Early History of Africa, South of the Sahara

In what ways did colonialism affect the region’s development and set the stage for current conflicts in Sub-

Saharan Africa?

Page 31: Early History of Africa, South of the Sahara

List some major migrations that occurred in Sub Saharan Africa. Then

choose one migration, and write a paragraph about the motivation for

and the effects of the migration.