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Africa. Geographic Regions. North Africa Along the coast Mild and rainy South Desert (Sahara). Sub-Saharan Africa (South of Sahara) Sahel = central plateau covered by savannas Rift Valley. Nubia & Kush. Chapter 4. Nubia 3000B.C. Located Upper Nile River (Sudan)
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Geographic Regions North Africa • Along the coast • Mild and rainy • South • Desert (Sahara) Sub-Saharan Africa (South of Sahara) • Sahel = central plateau covered by savannas • Rift Valley
Nubia & Kush Chapter 4
Nubia 3000B.C. • Located Upper Nile River (Sudan) • First kingdom in Sub-Saharan Africa • Close ties w/ Egypt
Kush 2000B.C. • Nubian Kingdom • Controlled Egypt but pushed out by Assyrians • Established new Kingdom at Meroe • Developed profitable iron trade • Weapons • tools
Axum or Aksum • Located on the Red Sea, Ethiopian Highlands, & Nile Rivers • Trading power because of its location on the Red Sea • 330 AD Became Christian – remain Christian (Still are in Ethiopia) • 350AD conquered Kush • 600s AD lose control of trade to Muslims from Arabia
West Africa Chapter 8
Bantu (language group) Migration • People called the Nok lived in Niger and Benue River Valleys • Skilled farmers = population growth • Eventually not enough arable land • What does arable mean? • Farmable land • People moved in search of more land migrate central, E, & S. Africa
Religion and Oral Traditions • Kinship & clan was important • Matrilineal (mother) • Patrilineal (father) • Religion • One Supreme creator god (sky or heaven) • Nature spirits, Ancestor worship & Magic • Oral traditions • how knowledge, history, morals, and values were passed on.) • Use of songs, proverbs, fables
Ghana 700-1076 AD • Ghana (means king) • Location: W Africa, Upper Niger River • Controlled trade trans-Saharan trade • salt (N) & gold (S) • Salt needed in South for food (preservation & flavor) • Islam introduced through trade • AD 1000 attacked by Almoravids – parts of kingdom began breaking away
Mali 1235-1400AD • Location: West Africa, Atlantic Coast along Niger River • Restored trans-Saharan trade routes • protected them w/ a standing army • Capital Timbuktu -- Mansa Musa • Took a pilgrimage to Makkah • Returned w/ scholars, architects, and legal experts • built mosques in major cities • Built a university at Timbuktu, became a center of learning • Islamic government (many people were not)
Songhai 1400s-1590 AD • Location: West Africa, along most of Niger River • Ruler: Askia Muhammad • Ruled at height AD 1493-1528 • Instituted Islamic Law • Divided land into 5 provinces @ with a governor, tax collector, court, & trade inspector • Timbuktu became a trade center (again) (Europe & Asia, gold, salt, slaves)
East And Southern Africa Chapter 15
East African Trading Centers • By AD 1300 trading centers in East Africa were multicultural (Muslim, Persian, African, & Indian) • Controlled by Arab and Persian Merchants • Swahili – blending of Arabic and Bantu languages
Southern Africa= Great Zimbabwe • AD 1000-1500 • Location: Zambezi and Limpopo Rivers & Indian Ocean • City of “Great Zimbabwe” as capital of prosperous empire • Architecture: huge oval enclosures w/ 30 foot walls, using no mortar • Built on trade between gold in the interior and the sea. • Decline b/c of civil war and European intrusion
Summary • Axum • Location relative to the Ethiopian Highlands and the Nile River • Christian kingdom • Zimbabwe • Location relative to the Zambezi and Limpopo rivers and the Indian Ocean coast • City of “Great Zimbabwe” as capital of a prosperous empire • Swahili – blending of Arabic and Bantu languages • West African kingdoms • Location of Ghana, Mali, and Songhai empires relative to Niger River and the Sahara • Importance of gold and salt to trans-Saharan trade • City of Timbuktu as center of trade and learning • Roles of animism and Islam