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CA Standards. WH7.4.1 Study the Niger River and the relationship of vegetation zones of forest, savannah, and desert to trade in gold, salt, food, and slaves; and the growth of Ghana and Mali empires.. Objectives. Describe Africa's varied landscapes.Explain how West African empires grew rich from t
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1. The Rise of African Civilizations Cornell Notes
3-1
Pages 207-214
2. CA Standards WH7.4.1 Study the Niger River and the relationship of vegetation zones of forest, savannah, and desert to trade in gold, salt, food, and slaves; and the growth of Ghana and Mali empires.
3. Objectives Describe Africas varied landscapes.
Explain how West African empires grew rich from trade.
Discuss how Africas rain forests protected it from invaders and provided resources.
Explain how East African kingdoms became the centers for trade and ideas.
4. 3-1 The Rise of African Civilizations p. 207 Africas Geography Death Road is a trade route that connects western Africa to Mediterranean Sea.
Vischers life depended on finding oases.
6. 3-1 The Rise of African Civilizations p. 208 A Vast and Diverse Continent 2nd largest continent
Equator
Runs through the middle
Rain forest on each side of it
Tropics
Savanna: tropical grasslands
High temperatures and uneven rain
Deserts
North: Sahara
South: Kalahari
Mild climate areas
found along the Mediterranean Sea in northwest Africa and in the South
8. 3-1 The Rise of African Civilizations p. 208 What is the African Plateau Plateau: an area of high flat land
Great Rift Valley
Rivers
Niger River: very important
Rich soil
Rise to civilizations
Unite the region as merchants and travelers spread goods and ideas up the river
Flooded areas leaving rich soil behind
9. 3-1 African Trading Empires p. 209 Bantu Meaning The people
3000 BC groups around the Benue River began moving throughout Africa
Unsure why they left: crowded? Wore out soil?
Traveled
Slowly, some through the Congo River
Settled in the grasslands, spread south of the Sahara
Sahara kept them from migrating to North Africa
AD 400s Bantu settled most of Africa
Culture
Spread skills: pottery, mining, iron working
Language: 120 million + Africans speak Bantu languages
Migrations
Reason many in Africa have common ideas and traditions
11. 3-1 African Trading Empires p. 209 Trade Caravans begin Sahara kept North Africa isolated
400 BC: North African people known as Berber found a way to cross Sahara to West Africa and trade began
Berbers
Transported goods on horses and donkeys
Died in hot Sahara
Romans conquered North Africa, they introduced camels from Central Asia
Camels revolutionized trade
Broad feet didnt sink in the sand, humps stored fat for food
Could travel many days without water
12. 3-1 African Trading Empires p. 210 Rise of Ghana Rise of empires
Thousands of traders led to growth of cities in western Africa
Cities became Empires
Ghana
First empire to rise to power AD 400s
where several trade routes came together
Passage through Ghana required a tax
Taxes
Made the rulers of Ghana rich
Provided money to make weapons, army, needed salt to flavor and preserve food
Berber merchants wanted gold so they could buy goods from Europe and the Arabs
13. 3-1 African Trading Empires p. 210 How did Mali Begin? Ghanas power declined
New gold outside Ghanas mines reduced taxes
Heavy farming, constant warfare
North African Muslims captured the capital of Ghana in 1076
Mali
1200s: conquered what was left of Ghana
Griots, storytellers credit Sundiata Keita, the Lion Prince
Ruled from 1230 to 1255 and seized Ghana in 1240
Put Mali in control of gold mining area, rebuilding salt and gold trade
14. 3-1 African Trading Empires p. 211 Rise of Songhai Mansa Musa: last strong king who died in 1337
1468: Sunni Ali, leader of Songhai, drove Berbers out of Timbuktu
Built largest empire in West Africa
Use location on river
Fleet of war canoes to control trade
Armies swept into the Sahara and seized the Berber salt mines
By 1492 Sunni Ali had built the largest empire in West Africa
1591: a small army from the Arab kingdom of Morocco crossed the Sahara
Soldiers with guns, cannons took over the empire
16. 3-1 African Trading Empires p. 212 Kingdoms of the Rain Forest Benin, the Niger delta and Kongo, the Congo River basin
Griots
Tell stories of King Ewuare, founded the empire
Kept the villages oral history alive
Farmers
Natural advantages, soil and warm, wet climate
Food Surpluses
Extra supplies supported rulers and a class of artisans
Bordered
Savannas: traded surplus
17. 3-1 African Trading Empires p. 212 East Africa 1005 BC: Queen Makeda rose to the throne of the great empire called Saba or Sheba
Traveled to meet with King Solomon
Makeda introduced Israels religion to her empire
Eastern Africa would feel the impact of two other religions- Christianity and Islam
18. 3-1 African Trading Empires p. 213 What Was Axum? Saba declined
Axum, a city-state: strength attributed to location on Red Sea
Fought Kush for control of trade routes
In the early 300s, King Ezana converted to Christianity and brought the religion to his people
Later, Islam brought changed to Axum
19. 3-1 African Trading Empires p. 213 Coastal City-States Arab traders used triangular sail to travel to eastern Africa
Sails were attached to dhows
Indian Ocean trading network
Trading ports on eastern coast
Traded with places in East Asia, including China
20. 3-1 African Trading Empires p. 214 What was the Great Zimbabwe? Great trading center in southeastern Africa
Founded by Shona people AD 700
Supplied gold, copper, and ivory to East African coast
Zimbabwe became a great empire under Mutota and Matope
Ruins of the Great Zimbabwe depict the power it once had