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Civilizations and Trade in Eastern Hemisphere

Explore the civilizations and empires of the Eastern Hemisphere, including the Axum and Zimbabwe kingdoms in East Africa, and the Ghana, Mali, and Songhai empires in West Africa. Learn about their geography, society, economy, and religion, and how they interacted through regional trade patterns.

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Civilizations and Trade in Eastern Hemisphere

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  1. Objectives • Student will demonstrate knowledge of civilizations and empires of the Eastern Hemisphere and their interactions through regional trade patterns by: • Describing the east African kingdoms of Axum and Zimbabwe and west African kingdoms of Ghana, Mali, and Songhai in terms of geography, society, economy, and religion • Questions • What were the characteristics of civilization in sub-Saharan Africa during the medieval period

  2. East Africa Notes Axum and Zimbabwe Kingdoms

  3. Axum (Aksum) • Existed from 1000 B.C.E. – 700 C.E. • Located in Northeast Africa by source of Nile River and Red Sea • Came into power after the fall of Kush • Legend traces founding of Axsum to Queen Sheeba

  4. Axum – Accomplishments • Mainly Farmers • Only kingdom to develop a written language, Ge’ez • Center of trade • Seaport Adulis • Caravan trade routes • Traded gold, salt, rhinoceros horns, tortoise shells, ivory, and emeralds. • Imported cloth, glass, copper, olive oil, wine, and iron • Diverse heritage • Blend of traditions • Arab people and Kushites • King Ezana converted to Christianity in 300s C.E. • Dispute with Egypt over the nature of Christ • Impressive stone architecture, including stelae • (huge stone pillars)

  5. Decline of Axum • Empire lasted over 800 years • Muslim invaders destroyed Adulis in 710 • Cut of from trade, the kingdom declined • Aksumites fled to Christian lands in Ethiopia • Ethiopian highlands • In Ethiopia depletion of forests and soil erosion led to its final decline

  6. Great Zimbabwe • Existed from 1000 – 1450 C.E. • Located between Zambezi and Limpopo Rivers • Close to Indian Ocean • Established by the Shona people • Empire built on gold trade

  7. Zimbabwe – Accomplish. • Great Zimbabwe was a major trading center for over 350 years • Located near an important trade route • Leaders taxed traders who traveled along their trade routes • City of Great Zimbabwe was the economic, political, and religious center of its empire

  8. Ruins of Great Zimbabwe • Over 60 acres of ruins discovered in 1871 C.E. • Word zimbabwe means “stone enclosure” • Ruins consisted of two complexes of stone buildings that housed royal family • Great enclosure is a massive curving wall up to 36 ft high and 15 ft thick • Construction of Great Zimbabwe may have taken 400 years

  9. Decline of Zimbabwe • In 1450 C.E. the city was abandoned for unknown reasons • Possible theories are: • the cattle overate their grasslands • farming wore out the soil • people used up the salt and timber

  10. West Africa Notes • Ghana, Mali, and Songhai Empires • Empires arose in the Sahel • The savanna region just below the Sahara desert • All three played an important role in trans-Saharan trade • Gold/Salt • All three empires “converted” to Islam

  11. Ghana • Began with the Soninke people • Ghana was their word for “ruler” • Muslim traders gave the area its name • Empire existed from 800 – 1076 C.E. • Located in West Africa near Senegal River

  12. Ghana- Characteristics • The Gold-Salt trade is what led to the empire becoming wealthy and powerful • Gold came from the region between the Senegal and Niger rivers • Salt came from the Sahara desert • King was the religious leader, chief judge, and military commander • Controlled trade and army • Controlled surrounding lands as tribute states • Islam spread through trade in sub-Saharan Africa • Rulers converted • Not the entire population • Many still practiced animistic beliefs • Conversion of Islam did lead to spread of Arabic • Encouraged literacy

  13. Decline of Ghana • Muslims attacked from North Africa • Muslims retreated, but the gold-salt trade was badly disrupted • Ghana never regained its power

  14. Mali • Existed from 1235 – 1400 C.E. • Consisted of much of Ghana’s former territory • Empire extended as far east as the Niger River • New gold deposits led to the rise of the Mali empire

  15. Mali - Leaders • Mali’s 1st great leader- Sundiata • Crushed a cruel, unpopular leader • Became emperor • Used military conquest to enlarge empire • Period of peace and prosperity followed • Created an efficient government • Promoted agriculture and re-established the gold-salt trade • Most famous leader- Mansa Musa • Possible grandnephew of Sundiata • Skilled military leader • Expanded empire to twice the size of Ghana • Divided empire into provinces to manage more efficiently • Was a devout Muslim • went on Hajj in 1324 C.E. • Ordered building of mosque in Timbuktu

  16. Timbuktu • Capital of Mali Empire • Center of learning and Islam • Attracted Muslim judges, doctors, religious leaders, and scholars to its mosques and universities

  17. Decline of Mali • Decline occurred in 1400s • Gold trade shifted eastward again • New gold fields were discovered • Series of weak leaders after Mansa Musa • People under empire’s control began to break away • Ibn Battuta • Traveler and historian • Native of North Africa • Traveled for 27 years throughout Islamic world • Wrote observations of the African empires

  18. Songhai • Existed from 1464 – 1591 C.E. • Near the large bend in the Niger River • Near Gao, capital • Broke away from Mali Empire • Gained control of trade routes

  19. Songhai – Accomplish. • Two extraordinary rulers • Sunni Ali • Expanded empire through military conquest • Captured Timbuktu • Built professional army • Askia Muhammad • Led revolt to remove Sunni Ali’s son from power • Excellent administrator • Set up efficient tax system

  20. Decline of Songhai • Despite wealth, empire lacked modern weapons • Defeated by a Moroccan army in 1591 C.E. with gunpowder and cannons • Ended 1000 year period of African empires

  21. Objectives • Student will demonstrate knowledge of civilizations and empires of the Eastern Hemisphere and their interactions through regional trade patterns by: • Describing the east African kingdoms of Axum and Zimbabwe and west African kingdoms of Ghana, Mali, and Songhai in terms of geography, society, economy, and religion • Questions • What were the characteristics of civilization in sub-Saharan Africa during the medieval period

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