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Tropical Africa and Asia. 1200-1500. Tropical Lands and Peoples. Tropical Environment. Tropical zone between Tropic of Cancer and Tropic of Capricorn. Afro-Asian tropics have a cycle of rainy and dry seasons dictated by winds known as monsoons.
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Tropical Africa and Asia 1200-1500
Tropical Environment • Tropical zone between Tropic of Cancer and Tropic of Capricorn. • Afro-Asian tropics have a cycle of rainy and dry seasons dictated by winds known as monsoons. • Tropical Zones have areas of abundant rainfall as well as arid zones.
Feeding a Population • Human societies adopted different means of surviving in order to fit into the different ecological zones found in the tropics. • Wild food and fish • Herding and grain trade • Farming of rice, wheat, sorghum, and millet • Rice growing
Rainfall • Tropics has an uneven distribution of rainfall during the year. • In order to have year-round access to water, tropical farming societies constructed: • Dams • Irrigation canals • Reservoirs
Managing Water Resources • India, Cambodia, and Sri Lanka – governments used resources to construct and maintain large irrigation and water-control projects. • These were not the smartest use of resources because they were vulnerable to natural disaster and political disruptions. • Village-based irrigation systems were much more stable.
Mineral Resources • Tropical peoples used iron for agricultural implements, weapons, and needles. • Copper was used to make wire and decorative objects. • Africa produced a great deal of gold.
Stability • Metalworking and food-producing systems were very important at this time. • Mobilized the labor of ordinary people in order to produce surpluses. • This helped to support powerful states and profitable commercial systems. • Neither of these elite enterprises would have been possible without the work of ordinary people.
Spread of Islam • Islam spread to sub-Saharan Africa by a gradual process of peaceful conversion. • Conversion was facilitated by commercial contacts.
Sundiata • Muslim leader of the Malinke people • Established the Kingdom of Mali
Kingdom of Mali • Economy rested on agriculture • Supplemented by control of: • regional and trans-Saharan trading routes • Gold mines of the Niger headwaters
Mansa Kankan Musa • Ruled from 1312-1337. • Demonstrated his wealth during a pilgrimage to Mecca. • Upon his return to Mali, he established new Mosques and Quranic schools.
Decline • Kingdom declined and collapsed in the mid to late fifteenth century. • Decline caused by: • Rebellion from within • Attacks from without • Intellectual life and trade moved to other African states like the Hausa states and Kanem-Bornu
Division • Between 1206 and 1236 the divided states of northwest India were defeated by violent Muslim Turkish conquerors. • Led by Sultan Iltutmish • Established Delhi Sultanate as a Muslim state • Muslim elite settled down to rule India peacefully, but Hindu subjects never forgave the violence of the conquest.
Raziya • Iltutmish passed throne to his daughter, Raziya. • Very talented ruler • Driven from office by men who were unwilling to accept a female monarch
Ala-ud-din andMuhammad ibn Tughluq • Carried out a policy of aggressive territorial expansion that was accompanied by a policy of religious toleration towards Hindus. • This policy was later reversed
Delhi Sultans • In general, they ruled by terror and were a burden on their subjects. • In the mid-fourteenth century, internal rivalries and external threats undermined the stability of the Sultanate. • Sultanate was destroyed when Timur sacked Delhi in 1398.
Monsoon Mariners • Indian Ocean trade increased between 1200 and 1500 • Stimulated by the: • prosperity of Latin Europe, Asian, and African states • Collapse of overland trade routes
In the Red and Arabian Seas, trade was carried on dhows. From India on to Southeast Asia, junks dominated the trade routes. Ships
Junks • Technologically advanced vessels • Had watertight compartments • Up to 12 sails • Carried up to 1,000 tons • Developed in China • Later built in Bengal and Southeast Asia
Indian Ocean Trade • Decentralized and cooperative • Various regions were supplying particular goods • In each region a certain port functioned as the major emporium for trade in which good from smaller ports were consolidated and shipped onward.
The Swahili Coast • By 1500, there were 30 or 40 separate city-states along the East Africa coast participating in Indian Ocean trade. • The people of these coastal cities, the “Swahili” people • All spoke an African language enriched with Arabic and Persian vocabulary
Zimbabwe • Swahili cities, including Kilwa, were famous exporters of gold that was mined in or around the inland kingdom • Capital was Great Zimbabwe • Great Zimbabwe’s economy rested on agriculture, cattle herding, and trade. • City declined due to an ecological crisis brought on by deforestation and overgrazing.
Arabia: Aden and the Red Sea • Aden had enough rainfall to produce wheat for export and a location that made it a central transit point for trade in the Middle East. • Aden’s merchants prospered on this trade and built a wealthy and impressive city. • Common interest in trade allowed peoples to live in peace. • Christian Ethiopia fought with Muslims over control of Red Sea Trade
Gujarat • State of Gujarat prospered from the Indian Ocean trade. • Exported cotton textiles and indigo in return for gold and silver. • Gujarat manufactured textiles, leather goods, carpets, silk, and other commodities. • Gujarat’s overseas trade was dominated by Muslims, but Hindus also benefited.
Malabar Coast • Calicut and other cities of the Malabar Coast exported cotton textiles and spices. • Also served as clearing-houses for long-distance trade. • Cities of the Malabar Coast were unified in a loose confederation whose rulers were tolerant of other religious and ethnic groups.
Rise of Malacca • Strait of Malacca is the principal passage from the Indian Ocean to the South China Sea. • In the fourteenth century a gang of Chinese pirates preyed upon the strait • In 1407, the forces of the Ming dynasty crushed the Chinese pirates. • Muslim ruler of Malacca took advantage of this to exert his domination over the strait.
Architecture • Commercial contacts and spread of Islam led to a variety of social and cultural changes in which local cultures incorporated and changed ideas, customs, and architectural styles from other civilizations.
Education • Spread of Islam brought literacy to African peoples who learned Arabic • Then they used Arabic script to write their own languages • Indian literacy was already established, but the spread of Islam brought the development of a new Persian-influenced language (Urdu) and papermaking.
Further Study • As Islam spread to Africa, India, and Southeast Asia, Islam also brought: • Study of Islamic law and administration • Greek science, mathematics, and medicine • Timbuktu, Delhi, and Malacca were new centers of Islamic learning.
Religion • Islam spread peacefully and forced conversions were rare. • Muslim domination of trade contributed to the spread of Islam as merchants converted and traveled. • Islamic destruction of the last center of Buddhism in India contributed to the spread of Islam in India. • Islam brought social and cultural changes to the communities that were converted, but Islam changed as it developed in different societies.
Social Distinctions • Gap between elites and common people widened in tropical societies as the wealthy urban elites prospered from the increased Indian Ocean trade.
Slavery • Slavery increased in both Africa and in India. • An estimated 2.5 million African slaves were exported across the Sahara and the Red Sea between 1200 and 1500, while more were shipped from the cities of the Swahili coast.
Slaves • Most slaves were trained in specific skills • Hereditary military slaves could become rich and powerful • Other slaves worked hard at menial jobs like copper mining. • Many women were employed as household workers and entertainers. • Large number of slaves meant the price was quite low.
Status of Women • Early arranged marriage was the rule for Indian women and they were expected to obey strict rules of fidelity and chastity. • Women’s status was generally determined by the status of their male masters. • Women would cook, brew, spin thread, and work on farms.
Spread of Islam on Women • Difficult to tell what effect the spread of Islam might have had on women. • It is clear in some places, such as Mali, Muslims did not adopt the Arab practice of veiling and secluding women.
Classwork • In your notebook, draw three columns. Compare and contrast junks and dhows. Think about place of origin, area of use, purpose, construction, etc. • How did the collapse of the Mongol Empire in the 14th century affect trade?