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African Civilizations

African Civilizations. West. South. East. Ghana, Mali Songhai. Great Zimbabwe. Axum. African Empires. East : Egypt, Kush, Axum North : Carthage West : Ghana, Mali, Songhai South : Great Zimbabwe (area of Monomotapa). Axum. Also spelled Aksum.

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African Civilizations

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  1. African Civilizations West South East Ghana, Mali Songhai Great Zimbabwe Axum

  2. African Empires • East: Egypt, Kush, Axum • North: Carthage • West: Ghana, Mali, Songhai • South: Great Zimbabwe (area of Monomotapa)

  3. Axum Also spelled Aksum • Axum was located in sub-SaharanEast Africa (south of Kush and Egypt) • Located in the Ethiopian highlands • Present-day Ethiopia and Eritrea

  4. Trade in Axum • Axum’s location on the Nile and Red Sea enabled it to become an international trading center • Trade brought economic, cultural, and religious influences to Axum.

  5. Christianity in Axum • Axum became a Christian Kingdom under King Ezana • When the Muslims invaded North Africa, Axum moved to the highlands and remained Christian.

  6. Axumite Architecture • Stelae: Huge stone pillars carved out of granite • Christian Rock Churches: carved out of existing rock.

  7. The Small green building on the right supposedly holds the Ark of the Covenant

  8. West African Kingdoms Arose in the area of present-day Mali • Ghana – 11th century • Mali – 14th century • Songhai – 15th century

  9. Western Empires • These kingdoms arose on the Niger River, just south of the Sahara Desert in the savannah region (Sahel). • They grew strong by controlling the gold-salt trade.

  10. Salt • necessary for survival in Africa’s hot climate, so it was as valuable as gold. • lost through sweat in hot climates and must be replaced. • used to preserve foods.

  11. Gold- Salt Trade • Salt was plentiful in the Sahara desert, but the Sahel and forests to the south lacked salt. • Gold was plentiful in the Sahel and the forest regions.

  12. Gold-Salt Trade • North and South were interdependent on each other for these natural resources, so they traded.

  13. Trans-Sahara Trade • The Niger River and the Sahara desert were the highways of this gold-salt trade. • Ghana, Mali, and then Songhai prospered because they lay on trade routes located between these resources.

  14. Ghana The Land of Gold • Ghana grew rich by taxing traders that carried goods through their territory • Traders would have to pay the king of Ghana (in gold or salt) whenever they exchanged goods.

  15. Animism • Animisim: belief that there are spirits present in animals, plants, and other natural forces which play an important part in daily life.

  16. Spread of Islam • Islam spread to West Africa through trade. • Ghana’s rulers converted to Islam, but many people remained animists. • Some people observed Islam, but also kept their former beliefs.

  17. West African Religions • Islam continued to spread through trade and conquest. • Islam and Animism continue to coexist in West Africa today.

  18. Mali • As Ghana declined, Mali seized power and grew into an Empire

  19. Sundiata • Restablished the gold-salt trade • Known as “The Lion King”

  20. Mansa Musa • King who made Timbuktu into a great center of learning • Went on a Hajj across Africa to Mecca.

  21. Timbuktu • Largest tradingcity in Mali. • Located where the desert met the Niger River.

  22. Timbuktu • Became a great Muslim learning center • Had three universities and a library with Greek and Roman writings.

  23. Islam comes to Timbuktu

  24. Songhai • As Mali declined, Songhai grew into an empire • Songhai was the last and largest of the powerful empires which ruled central West Africa.

  25. Great Zimbabwe • Capital of a trading empire that thrived in southeastern Africa from 1200-1450

  26. Located on a plateau between the Zambezi and Limpopo Rivers in modern Zimbabwe.

  27. This location had many advantages. • It had fertile land. • It was close to trade routes linking inland gold fields with Sofala, a trading city located on the IndianOcean.

  28. Trading Empire • Great Zimbabwe took control of these trade routes. • In Sofala gold was traded for goods from North Africa, India, and China

  29. Ruins of Great Zimbabwe • Great Zimbabwe means “great stone buildings”

  30. Most of what we know about Great Zimbabwe comes from these ruins.

  31. The city was the political, economic, and religious center of its empire.

  32. Great Zimbabwe

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