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African Civilizations. 1500 BCE – CE 500. Factors that separated most of Africa from Eurasia. Sahara Desert Large desert in North Africa Sahel Strip of land on the southern edge of the Sahara Desert Means “coastline” Acceptable to desertification Steady process of drying of the soil
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African Civilizations 1500 BCE – CE 500
Factors that separated most of Africa from Eurasia • Sahara Desert • Large desert in North Africa • Sahel • Strip of land on the southern edge of the Sahara Desert • Means “coastline” • Acceptable to desertification • Steady process of drying of the soil • Savanna • Grassy plains • Throughout central Africa
Diverse Societies in Africa • Cultural Diversities • Many different environments in Africa • Low population density on a vast continent • Absence of any external conquerors • Shared Characteristics • Religion • Most tribes practiced a form of animism • Religion in which spirits played an important role in regulating daily life • Spirits – animals, plants, or natural forces • Languages • No written languages • Clans • Group of people from a common ancestor • Family is the organizing unit • Griots • Storytellers from West Africa
West Africa • Djenne’-Djeno • People that lived along the Niger River • Nok • Traded with Djenne’-Djeno • Modern-day Nigeria • Farmers • Iron tools & weapons • Terra cotta sculptures & figurines • Terra cotta • Reddish-brown clay
Aksum Kingdom • East Africa • Aksum • Kingdom arose south of Kush (Nubia) on a rugged plateau on the Red Sea • Traded with Egypt, Arabia, Persia, India & Rome • Built stele to show king’s conquests & greatness • King Ezana • Strong ruler of Aksum • Converts to Christianity • Making Christianity popular in East Africa
Bantu-Speaking Peoples, 500 BCE – CE 1500 • Developed in modern day Nigeria • Word “Bantu” means “the people” • Spread south and east • Sahara Desert in north • Populated southern Africa • One-third of Africa • Spread language and culture throughout Sub-Saharan Africa
Bantu Culture • Farmers • Bananas • Other crops • Nomadic herders • Goats • Sheep • Cattle • Ironworking
Migration Through History • Environmental Change • Shift in climate, depletion of natural resources, drought, earthquake • Redistribution of world’s population, blending of cultures • Economic Pressure • Increasing population, famine, unemployment • Shifts in population • Political and Religious Persecution • Slave trade, war, ethnic cleansing, repression • Dislocation and oppression of peoples, spread of ideas and religions • Technological Development • Tools, agriculture, iron smelting, communications and transportation networks • Development of civilizations and empires
Massive Migrations Language = one major element that unites/divides people
Effects of the Migration • Intermarried with new people • Exchanged ideas • Created new culture with unique customs and traditions • Bantu language • Biggest unifying influence on the continent • Great diversity on continent of Africa • 60 million people in Africa speak one of the hundreds of Bantu languages