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Explore the factors that separated Africa from Eurasia, the diverse societies and cultural diversities, and the impact of Bantu-speaking peoples on the continent. Learn about the Aksum Kingdom, migration through history, and the effects of massive migrations.
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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