1 / 9

Mali

Mali. Almoravids convert & conquer Ghanian empire 50+ years later, western Sudan breaks into various small kingdoms mid-1200s, Keita ruling clan formed new & lasting empire Mali Mali built on monopoly of north-south gold trade Already controlled gold trade

abdalla
Download Presentation

Mali

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. Mali • Almoravids convert & conquer Ghanian empire • 50+ years later, western Sudan breaks into various small kingdoms • mid-1200s, Keita ruling clan formed new & lasting empire Mali • Mali built on monopoly of north-south gold trade • Already controlled gold trade • Empire was larger than Ghana, extended to Atlantic, south of Niger & west past Timbuktu

  2. Mali • Agriculture & farming primary occupations (rice, beans, yams, fish, cattle, sheep, goats + iron, cotton, gold=lucrative economy) • Malinke core population of new Malian state, lived in walled towns • Keita’s had converted to Islam, brought back military innovations • Mali est. imperial empire under Keita King Sundiata in mid-13th century • Dominated Sahara & Niger trade, capital Niani access to all resources, easy to defend • Empire included several language groups

  3. Mali • Local chiefs largely independent but recognized a supreme “mansa” • Greatest Keita king was Mansa Musa • Pilgrimage to Mecca brought back intellectuals to build the arts & scholarship • Further spread Islam • Timbuktu = center for sub-Saharan Islamic religion & culture • 15th century rivalries for power led to Mali waning, Berbers & Mossi assume land

  4. Songhai • 1375 Sunni or Sonni empire centered around Gao rose • Sonni Ali brought about imperial strength, became “arguably the most powerful state in Africa” (riverboat floatilla & cavalry) • Expansionism continued • Major source of wealth was expansion of caravan trade across the Sahara to North • Rulers varied in their devotion to Islam • Empire divided by civil wars over succession, Moroccan Sa’dis able to defeat with superior gunpowder 1591

  5. Kanem Empire further east, near Lake Chad • Began with nomadic tribes, Zaghawah • Mai Dunama Dibbalemi (mid 1200s) was key leader of subgroup called Kanuri who began military expansion • Dibbalemi embraced Islam & used it to sanction his rule • Said expansion was a means of “jihad” (holy struggle) against polytheists

  6. Kanem to Kanem-Bornu • Kanuri mixed with other tribes • Moved away from nomadic to sedentary kingdom (with rule, tax & tribute) • Civil strife over succession after 1400, Bornu land to SW became new Kanuri stronghold • End 16th century, Kanem & Bornu unite • Ruling dynasty lasted until 1846!

  7. Eastern Sudan • Christian influenced (Maqurra & Alwa) region south of Egyptian empire • Region often called Christian Nubia, battled against increased Muslim influence of traders & tribes • Christianity began to fade, aided by its elite nature & closeness to Egyptian brand of Coptic Christianity (est. 60AD) • Funj state between Blue & White Nile, Islamic cattle nomads

  8. Benin • Kingdom known for its court art • According to Benin tradition, ailing kings who were thought to have lost their power were put to death. After one legendary oba's legs became paralyzed, he claimed his legs had been miraculously transformed into mudfish to avoid execution. • “Mudfish” was a symbol of Benin kings because both were capable of crossing into different environments (land and water); frogs & crocodiles also symbolize kings

More Related