1 / 41

Chapter 10 2013

Chapter 10 2013. objectives. Investigate early African civilizations Analyze the geographical elements and how they influences the early people of Africa. Chapter 10 section 1. Early civilizations in Africa. Geography of Africa. World second largest continent in both population and area.

tareq
Download Presentation

Chapter 10 2013

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. Chapter 10 2013

  2. objectives • Investigate early African civilizations • Analyze the geographical elements and how they influences the early people of Africa.

  3. Chapter 10 section 1 Early civilizations in Africa

  4. Geography of Africa • World second largest continent in both population and area.

  5. The Savanna region • 40% of Africa • Trees, thorn brushes, and tall grasses • Rarely below 50* • Serengeti Plains

  6. The Desert region • 40% of the continent • Sahara in the north • largest • 3.5 million square miles • As big as the united states • Kalahari in the south

  7. The Forest region • Less than 20% • 8% Rain forest • Average temperature of 77* • Never below 68 • 155 inches of rain yearly

  8. Daily Life in Africa • Earliest- hunter/ gathers- nomads • 10,000 B. C. Agriculture • Civilization----Kingdoms • Africa today • People still live in the rainforest and desert as hunter/ gather---nomads

  9. African Society • Most people lived in small villages • Lineage group- several extended families combined to make a community • Patriarchal • Father is head of family • Matriarchal • Mother is head of family

  10. Religion • Most believed in a supreme creator God with lesser gods • Some Kings were considered Gods or that God’s spoke through the Kings • Priests who were also healers • Some believed ancestors were very close to the Gods and were honored • By ritual ceremonies

  11. Many believed that a family’s children were that reborn spirits of their deceased ancestors • Bride price or bride wealth- paid for loss of the daughter labor

  12. Villages had social classes • Elders made up the government • Farmers and craft workers middle class • Captives (slaves) the lowest class

  13. Music • Dances- elaborate, for special occasions such as marriages, even death • Call and response pattern • Leader sang out a short bit of music and people sang it back accompanied by drums or other percussion instruments

  14. Past to Present Music African Thumb Piano Modern day piano

  15. Kora-harp lute Banjo

  16. African Drums

  17. Trumpets

  18. Literature • Folktales-traditional stories handed down from generation to generation • Griots- people who memorized and recited important cultural and historical events • Animals tales and human characters • pitting small animals against larger, stronger animals • The trickster character

  19. Chapter 10 section 1Page 226 Due in 13 minutes • Critical thinking • ( At least 3 sentences) • Write about Geography • ( at least 5 sentences

  20. Section 2 kingdoms of West Africa

  21. Ancient Ghana • First known western African kingdom • Richest kings • Salt and gold at the heart of the trade • Charged a tax to pass through Ghana • The ships of the desert • The camel

  22. Exported to the North Paper Slaves gold Imported from the North Silk Cotton glass beads Horses mirrors dates salt

  23. Berbers- earliest settlers of North Africa charted the first routes across the Sahara more than 2,500 years ago Arab conquerors spread the Islamic religion throughout North Africa

  24. Ghana falls • Muslim Berbers launched a jihad against Ghana • Two empires arose • Mali----1240-1400A.D. • Songhai---1464-1500’s • Both Muslim cities

  25. The Empire of Mali“where the Emperor resides” 1230 - 1468

  26. Socially, politically, and economically similar to Ghana • Control of gold mines = wealth • Emperor changed to Islam

  27. Timbuktu • Mali’s most important city • Major hub • Gold • Slaves • Salt

  28. Center of Islamic learning • Mosques • 150 Islamic schools • Law schools • Book dealers • Cosmopolitan community

  29. Wealthiest ruler ever known Pilgrimage to Mecca 60,000 people 100 elephants Huge amount of gold given away Mansa Musa(1312 – 1337)

  30. The Empire of Songhai(1464 – 1591) • Great traders and warriors • Trade across the Sahara has included African slaves. • Conquered Timbuktu • Allowed African to practice their traditional religion and not have to convert to Islam

  31. Strict Social System • Descendants of the original Songhai people • Traders, merchants and soldiers • Prisoners of war (slaves)

  32. Due in 13 minutespage 231 • Critical thinking • 3 or more sentences • Write about Culture • 5 or more sentences

  33. Section 3 Major Kingdoms of East Africa

  34. Aksum • Located in what is now Ethiopia and Eritrea • Established around 1000B.C. by Arabic people • Christian kingdom • Decline to become The east African kingdom of Ethiopia

  35. Major trading centerFirst African Civilization south of the Sahara to use of coins made of gold, silver and copper Import • Olive oil • silver • Gold Export • Ivory • slaves • raw materials • Copper, brass and glass beads

  36. Stelae • carved pillars- made from granite blocks • Grave markers of rulers tombs • 120 stelae were found

  37. Kingdom of Ethiopia • One of the oldest kingdoms • Connection to Aksum • Trade, Culture and Christian religion • Christian kingdom

  38. Swahili • Both a group of people and a language • A mixture of Arabic and Buntu people • Islamic religion • Many city-states along the coast • Huge trading center on the east coast • Fall- Portuguese

  39. Zimbabwe • 400 years city was completely enclosed. • Walls 16 feet thick---30 feet high. • Not built for defense but as display of power • Control of trade and cattle herds+ wealth • Do not know for sure what happen to them. • Over farmed—drought • Population growth • Shortages in water/ trees for firewood

  40. Page 240 • Answer questions 1-23 for an in-class assignment

More Related