1 / 45

African Civilizations and the Spread of Islam

African Civilizations and the Spread of Islam. Chapter 8. African Development. Differences in geography, language, religion, and politics contribute to Africa’s lack of political unity. No universal states, nor universal religions

yered
Download Presentation

African Civilizations and the Spread of Islam

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. African Civilizations and the Spread of Islam Chapter 8

  2. African Development • Differences in geography, language, religion, and politics contribute to Africa’s lack of political unity. • No universal states, nor universal religions • Christianity and Islam do find adherents in Africa, sometimes leading to large empires.

  3. Stateless Societies • Organized around kinship • Lacking the concentration of political power and authority normally associated with the “state” • Little need to tax the people…encouraged people to move to other sparsely populated areas to create their own community. • External pressures make some of them move into state-building i.e. warfare(ex.pressure)

  4. Common Elements… • Bantu migrations offered a linguistic base for Africans • Different dialects • Animism: belief in the power of natural forces personified as spirits or gods or even inanimate objects • Witchcraft/Holy Men

  5. Economics of Africa • North Africa: involved in Mediterranean and Arab Trade system • Sub-Saharan varies from one region to the next

  6. Arrival of Islam • Northern Africa has always been part of the classical world • After the age of the Pharaohs, Egypt was an important part of the Greek Empire, then later in the Roman Empire.

  7. Arrival of Islam • Toward the end of the Roman Empire, Christianity had taken hold in Mediterranean Africa. • Wars between the Vandals and Byzantines disrupt this • Between 640 and 700 CE followers of Muhammad swept across Northern Africa. • Ifriqiya (Africa) for Eastern North Africa and Maghrib for Western North Africa

  8. Arrival of Islam • By 711 CE, Arab and Berber armies had crossed into Spain, defeated in France in 732 CE. • Conversion was fast and easy in North Africa • With Abbasid Empire but eventually breaks into smaller kingdoms (Muslim Kingdoms)

  9. What does Islam offer Africa? • Equality • Islamic tradition of uniting the powers of the state in a ruler reinforces the concept of the African King. • the umma put Africans legally at the same level as the Arabs.

  10. However… • Practices differ considerably at the local level. • Social Stratification(social classes) • Ethnic divisions(tribes) • Gender differences(male/female) • Often led to reformist movements.

  11. North African Christianity • Christian kingdom of Axum, with communities in Nubia and Egypt (Copts). • Copts maintained religious connection with the Byzantine Empire. When Egypt was conquered by the Arabs and converted to Islam, the Copts were able to keep their religion.

  12. North African Christianity • The Ethiopian kingdom that grew from Axum was the most important Christian outpost. • In the 13th and 14th Century, an Ethiopian Christian State emerges. • Constant struggle with Christian Ethiopia and Muslim Somalia

  13. Kingdoms of the Grasslands • Merchants and travelers spread the word of Islam from North Africa across the Sahara towards the Savanna on the southern edge of the Sahara called the Sahel • Camels for transportation • Gold from W. African forests

  14. The Grasslands • The SAHEL was the extensive grassland belt at the southern edge of the Sahara. • TRADE: • Exchange gold from the forests of West Africa for salt from the Sahara (or goods from North Africa) • Camels improved trade

  15. The Grasslands • The SAHEL becomes an active “coast” of trade between the forests to the south and North Africa. • States develop along with trading cities to take advantage of their position as intermediaries in the trade. • Their position in the open plains of the dry Sahel also leaves them open to attack and drought.

  16. Ghana • The “first” of the West African Kingdoms • Rose to power in the 3rd Century CE by taxing the heavy Gold-Salt trade within its borders. • By the 900’s, its rulers converted to Islam and Ghana was at the height of its power. • Almoravid armies invade Ghana in 1076, survives but in declined by 1300’s new states emerge like Mali

  17. Ghana

  18. Common elements in Sudanic States • Patriarch, or council of elders as leaders • areas with peoples of the same linguistic or ethnic background • Subordinates areas were conquered • Rulers were sacred and were surrounded by rituals. • Islam was used to reinforce indigenous ideas of kingship. • Mali and Songhay ex. of Fusion cultures

  19. The West African Kingdoms

  20. Mali • Malinke people • Rulers supported Islam by building mosques, public prayers, and supporting preachers. • In return, sermons would encourage loyalty to the king. • Mali became a model of the Islamicized Sudanic Kingdoms

  21. Mali • Economic base was agriculture • Sundiata: Malinke leader who led towards prosperity as the state of Mali. • The Mansa, or emperor • Crime was severely punished (as evidenced by Ibn Batuta, the Arab traveler). • Security of travelers and trade was a key element to Mali’s success as a state where commerce plays such an important role

  22. Mali • Sundiata dies around 1260 CE. • Of his sucessors, Mansa Musa was the most famous (r. 1312-1337) • Made pilgrimage to Mecca in 1324

  23. Mali • Towns were like N. Africa but with W. African flavor • “Port” cities flourish like Jenne and Timbuktu/ • By the 14th century Timbuktu had a population of 50,000. • Contained a library and university. • 80% of the villagers lived by the agricultural lifestyle.

  24. Songhay • Songhay begins to form around the 7th century. By 1010, a capital had been established at Geo on the Niger River. • Rulers became Muslim • Dominated by Mali for a while • By 1370’s, had established themselves as an independent state • Under the leadership of Sunni Ali (1464-1492) the Empire of Songhay began. • Tactical commander • Ruthless leader. • Successors known as askia’s. • Muhammad the Great expanded the borders of the empire. • By the 1600’s, Songhay dominated the central Sudan

  25. Songhay • Remained the dominant power in the region until the end of the 16th century. • In 1591, a Muslim army with muskets crossed the Sahara and defeated the larger forces of Songhay. • Songhay split up, but other groups experienced success in the Western Sudan

  26. Political Life in the Sudan • Unified states allowed the various communities, clans, and ethnic groups to coexist. • Movement and fusion of populations was constant in the Sudan • Common religion and law provided solidarity and trust to the merchants. • Organized under Muslim concept of a ruler who united civil and religious authority.

  27. Political Life in the Sudan • Formation of large state heightened social differences and made societies more hierarchical. • Islam tended to accommodate pagan practices and beliefs. Large populations of Mali and Songhay never converted. • Many Sudanic states were matrilineal, which is contrary to patrilineal lines of kinship in the Sharia, or Islamic law.

  28. Slavery • Slave trade between Africa and the Islamic World predated the arrival of Islam • Muslims viewed slavery as a stage in the process of conversion. • Slaves were used as domestic servants, laborers, soldiers, eunuchs, concubines. • Concentration on women and children across the Sahel to the East African coast.

  29. The Swahili Coast of East Africa • From the Horn of Africa to modern-day Mozambique lay a string of Islamicized trading cities with contacts from Arabia, Persia, India, and China. • As in the Savanna Kingdoms of West Africa, Islam was slow to reach the general population in East Africa, and when it did, it was a fusion of indigenous beliefs and the new Islamic faith.

  30. East Africa • Coastal cities developed from the mixture of Bantu migrants, as well as with Indonesian seaborne migrants. • Settled on the island of Madagascar, introducing bananas and coconuts. • Coastal villages of fishers, farmers dotted the coast

  31. East Africa • Zanj: Arabic for the East African Coast. • 13th Century: urbanized East African trading ports develop. • Shared Bantu-based and Arabic Influenced Swahili (coastal) language. • Different Muslim ruling families, but similar language united them in trade. • Towns such as Mogadishu, Mombasa, Malindi, Kilwa, and Zanzibar.

  32. East Africa • Kilwa was wealthy because of its control over Sofala • Access to the Gold produced in the interior • Farthest point south in which Indian ships could reach in one monsoon season • Many port towns were tied to each other in an active trade network. • 1300s-1400s: large state sponsored sailing expeditions stopped at the East African coast for ivory, and gold. • After 1431, only the Arabs and Indians continued this trade.

  33. Central/Southern Africa • While the impact of trade and Islam radically altered the West/North/East African “coasts”, Central and Southern Africa was developing on its own trajectory. • By 1000 CE, still small agricultural societies, preliterate, but with great strides in arts, building, and statecraft…without writing.

  34. Artists… • Terra Cotta objects discovered in Nok, in the forests of Central Nigeria dating to 500-200 BCE. • Terra Cotta and bronze portrait heads were found among the Yoruba people of Nigeria

  35. The Yoruba • Agricultural society supported by a peasantry and dominated by a ruling family and aristocracy. • Spoke a non-Bantu language and recognized a relationship with the Hausa, who spoke Afro-Asian language. • Small city-states, each controlling about 50 miles. • Highly urbanized.

  36. Benin • Similar settlement patterns as the Yoruba can be found among Edo people who formed the state of Benin. • Ewuare the Great (r. 1440-1473) extended Benin’s control from the Niger River to the Coast. • The Oba, or ruler, lived in a huge royal compound.

  37. Central African Kingdoms • By the 5th Century CE, Bantu farmers and fishers reach beyond the Zambezi • 13th Century, they were approaching the southern end of the continent. • Beyond the scope of Islam • By 1000 CE, many of these groups were forming states.

  38. Kongo • Late 15th Century, the Kongo was forming along the lower Congo River. • Agricultural base, with skills of weaving, pottery, blacksmithing, and carving. • Men: • Clearing the forest, producing palm oil and palm wine, building houses, hunting, long-distance trade. • Women: • Cultivation, care of animals, household duties, made salt from seawater, collected seashells which were used as currency.

  39. Kongo

  40. Great Zimbabwe • Farther to the east, among the farming and cattle-herding Shona-speaking peoples. • Creation of GREAT stone enclaves to serve as the capital town area. • By the 15th century, a centralized state had begun to form controlling central Africa to the Indian Ocean.

  41. Great Zimbabwe

  42. Vocabulary Chapter 8 • Almoravids • Bantu Migration • Hausa States • Kingdom of Kongo • Yoruba • Stateless Societies • Almohadis • Sharia • Sundiata • Sunni Ali • Benin • Axum • Zanj • Griots • Nok • Askia Muhammad

More Related