1 / 46

Kingdoms and Trading States of Africa 750 B.C. – A.D. 1586

Kingdoms and Trading States of Africa 750 B.C. – A.D. 1586. Rachel Farrell, Victoria Perez, Allea Frasier, SIENNA OLIVER, Adam Green. Section 1 – Early Civilizations of Africa Geography of Africa. Africa is the 2 nd largest continent after Asia, covers a fifth of the Earth’s surface

mauli
Download Presentation

Kingdoms and Trading States of Africa 750 B.C. – A.D. 1586

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. Kingdoms and Trading States of Africa 750 B.C. – A.D. 1586 Rachel Farrell, Victoria Perez, AlleaFrasier, SIENNA OLIVER, Adam Green

  2. Section 1 – Early Civilizations of Africa Geography of Africa • Africa is the 2nd largest continent after Asia, covers a fifth of the Earth’s surface • Rainforests cover 5% it, thick trees and roots it unsuitable for farming • The largest and most populate climate zone is the savanna, or grassy plain Christian

  3. Geography Cont’d • The savanna stretches north and south of the forests • Good soil but irregular rainfall patterns which leads to drought • Cattle herding is common in other parts of Africa • In parts of the savanna, flies infect people and cattle • The savanna belts trail off into dry steppe zones and two major deserts – the Sahara and the Kalahari Christian

  4. Geography Cont’d • Fertile farmland lies along the North and Southern tips • Geographic barriers hindered the movement of people – mountains, water • Africa has a huge coastline but few harbors Christian

  5. Geography Cont’d • Much of inner Africa is a plateau • Rivers approach the coast and dissolve into rapids that hinder travel between the coast and interior • Red Sea and Indian Ocean linked East Africa to the Middle East, North Africa was part of the Mediterranean world Christian

  6. Geography: Resources and Trade • Various regions offer resources such as salt, gold, iron, copper, diamonds and oil • Mineral resources led to trade among regions • Salt, gold, iron and copper were important earlier • Diamonds and oil were important later Christian

  7. The Sahara and Migration • Great Rift Valley of East Africa was the home of the earliest people • The Sahara was also fertile and well watered • By 5,550 BC, Neolithic farmers cultivated the Nile Valley and domesticated animals • Villages appeared in the Sahara and North Africa • Desertification hit the Sahara slowly in 2500 BC • Migration started as people sought fertile land Christian

  8. The Bantu Migrations • Migration contributed to diversity and culture over thousands of years • West African farmers and herders migrated to the south and east between 1,000 BC and 1,000 AD • The West Africans spoke a variety of languages derived from a common root language • This common root language is called Bantu Christian

  9. The Rise of Nubia • Nubia (also known as Kush) took shape in present day Sudan while Egypt was still developing • Egyptian pharaohs subdued Nubia from time to time but the Nubians always regained independence • Nubian rulers adopted many Egyptian traditions including the pyramid and palace designs Christian

  10. The Rise and Fall of Nubian Egypt • During 750 BC, the Nubian King Piankhi conquered Egypt and Nubian kings ruled Egypt for a century • The Nubians retreated as the Assyrians invaded with superior weapons Christian

  11. The Furnaces of Meroe • By 500 BC, Nubian rulers moved their capital to Meroe • Meroe commanded the north-south and east-west Nile routes from the Red Sea to the savanna and North Africa • Nubia sent gold, ivory, animal skins, perfumes and slaves along this trade network • Nubia traded to the Mediterranean and Middle Eastern peoples • Meroe was also rich in iron ore Adam

  12. Splendor and Decline • Nubians worshipped their own gods • Artistic styles reflected a greater sense of freedom than Egypt’s styles • They created their own writing system that used an alphabet • Nubia’s golden age dimmed after the join reign of King Natakamani and Queen Amanitere in the 1st century AD • Armies from the Kingdom of Axum on the Red Sea conquered Nubia in 350 AD Adam

  13. North Africa • Early African civilizations had strong ties to the Mediterranean world • Carthage, founded by the Phoenicians, rose as a great North African power • Wealth came from trade, which it dominated • Carthage forged an empire between 800 BC and 146 BC that stretched from present-day Tunisia to Spain and Sicily. • Cathage also had outposts, or distant military stations, in England and France Adam

  14. Rome and North Africa • As Rome expanded, territorial and trade rivalries caused the Punic Wars • Rome destroyed Carthage, but trade to the region continued • The Romans built roads, dams, aqueducts and cities across North Africa • Also developed farmland, imported goods and used soldiers for the Roman Army • Christianity was also spread to African cities Adam

  15. Camels • By 200 AD, camels were brought to North Africa from Asia • “Ships of the desert” • Revolutionized trade & created networks • Camels could carry up to 500 pounds and cover 20 to 30 miles a day without water Adam

  16. The Spread of Islam • Arab armies carried Islam into North Africa in the 600s • The Arabs occupied cities and battled Berbers in the desert • Islam replaced Christianity as the dominant religion • Arabic replaced Latin as the dominant language • North Africa benefited from Muslim traditions in architecture in trade Adam

  17. Section 2 – Kingdoms of West AfricaTrading Gold and Salt • Farmers in West Africa grew beans, melons and grain • By 100 AD, settled farming villages expanded • Many created surplus, or excess, food • Gold and salt dominated Sahara trade and werecommodities, or valuable product • Strong monarchs gained control of the trade routes and built powerful kingdoms Adam

  18. Gold Wealth of Ghana • Ghana was a large kingdom created by uniting many farming villages • Located in the broad “V” created by the Niger and Senegal rivers • The king controlled gold-salt trade routes across West Africa, meeting in the marketplaces of Ghana • Called the “land of gold” Adam

  19. Ghana’s Capital and King • The capital of Ghana was KumbiSaleh • The capital was made up of two separate walled towns some six miles apart • The king of Ghana presided over elaborate ceremonies • He was seen as a semi-divine figure Adam

  20. Influence of Islam • Islam spread into Ghana slowly at first • The king employed Muslims as counselors and officials • Muslims introduced their language, coinage, business methods, and architecture • The Almoravids launched a campaign to spread their form of Islam and overwhelmed Ghana Allea

  21. The Kingdom of Mali • After Ghana was destroyed, the Kingdom of Mali was soon founded • Kings were called mansas • They expanded their influence over both the gold-mining regions to the south and salt supplies of Taghaza • Mansa Musa was the greatest emperor • Came to the throne around 1312 • Expanded Mali’s borders westward and pushed Northward to conquer cities Allea

  22. Mali cont’d • Kings worked to ensure peace and order • Kingdom converted to Islam and based system of justice off of the Quran (Islamic holy book) • Fulfilled one of the five pillars of Islam by going on a pilgrimage to Mecca • Forged ties with other Muslim states • Timbuktu became center for learning Allea

  23. A New Empire in Songhai • Disputes over succession weakened Mali • The empire shriveled and by 1450, the wealthy trading city of Gao had emerged as the capital of a new West African kingdom, Songhai • Two great leaders: Sonni Ali and AskiaMuhammed • Sonni Ali forged a large state with a powerful army, brought trade routes and cities under his control • Askia Muhammad set up Muslim dynasty and expanded territory Allea

  24. Invaders from the North • The empire prospered until 1586 when civil war broke out • Morocco’s armies defeated Songhai with gunpowder weapons • Moroccans were not able to rule the entire empire • Split it into many small kingdoms Allea

  25. Walled City-States of the Hausa • Hausa had built a number of clay-walled cities • Independent of one another • Commercial centers • Had cotton weavers, dryers, leatherworkers, artisan goods • Featured Kano, the most prosperous city-state • Ruled by women Allea

  26. Forest Kingdom of Benin • Organized in the 1300s in the rain forests of Guinea • Ruled by an oba, or king • Farming villages traded pepper, ivory and slaves • Had palaces, decorated with brass plaques and sculptures Allea

  27. Section 3 – Trade Routes of East AfricaAxum • King Ezana of Axum conquered and absorbed Nubia • Kingdom extended from the mountains of Ethiopia to the Red Sea • Peoples of Axum descended from African farmers and traders Rachel

  28. Axum’s Trade Network • Largest trade came from its main cities • Adulis in the Red Sea • Capital city of Axum • Axum had ivory, gold, animal skin, rhino horns • Adulis had iron, spices, precious stones and cotton cloth Rachel

  29. Axum and Christianity • King Ezana converted to Christianity in the late 300s • Christianity strengthened ties between North Africa, Axum, and the Mediterranean world • Islam started to spread across Africa in the 600s • It was hard to trade with the Islam countries • Decline of trade let to civil war, declining culture Rachel

  30. Ethiopia as a Christian Outpost • Religion did not leave the people even as power faded • In the 1200s monks created stone chapels and rock churches • Was said to be done with divine help • Many visited the Holy Land Rachel

  31. East African City-States • Decline of Axum gave rise to city-states on the coast • Very diverse • Muslim communities arose in the 600s • Later, Bantu people migrated and adopted Islam • Created more diversity, rich culture Rachel

  32. East African Trade • Learned how trade with India overseas due to monsoon winds • Winds pushed towards India in the summer, Africa in the winter • Traded ivory, leopard skin, iron, copper, gold from Africa • Imported cotton, silk, spices, porcelain, glass, swords from India and China • Both shared slaves Rachel

  33. A Blend of Cultures • Trade made these city-states powerful • Also diversified culture • Bantu-Arab mixture led to creation of Swahili language Rachel

  34. Zimbabwe • Land of Zimbabwe settled between 900 to 1500 • New inhabitants brought improved farming skills, iron, mining methods • Produced enough food to support a growing population Victoria

  35. Zimbabwe’s Economy and Government • Wealth swelled and economy grew with trade with India and China • Allowed them to become regional power • Masters of metal – created gold and iron works • Little is known about their government • Believed they had a god-king, nine queens, lower courts and governors Victoria

  36. Zimbabwe’s Decline • In decline by 1500s • Over-farming exhausted the soil • Trade faded and civil war started, breaking Zimbabwe in to small states Victoria

  37. Section 4 – Many Peoples, Many TraditionsPeople and the Environment • Over thousands of years, Bantu-speaking people migrated across Africa • Carried farming and ironworking skills • People adopted culture of people they met • Culture of African societies varied greatly from place to place Victoria

  38. Hunting and Food Gathering • Bantu migrations pushed hunting and food-gathering people to outcast areas • Food was scarce, so people lived in small groups • Their knowledge of the natural world was unmatched by city dwellers or villagers Victoria

  39. Herding, Fishing, and Settlements • People raised cattle in the savanna • They were nomadic, land was limited • Defended against invaders • Fish was the basic food for people along water • Traded any surplus fish for grain and other goods • Communities settled temporarily and practiced slash-and-burn agriculture • Land lost fertility so they were forced to move Victoria

  40. Villages and Government • Farming villages lived in tightknit communities • Everyone planted but people were responsible for different crops • Power was shared among many people – a chief or a group of elders • Women took the dominant role in some villages • Decisions often made by consensus, or general agreement – elders had greatest voice • Note: Villages within Songhai also obeyed the empire’s rules, paid taxes and provided soldiers Victoria

  41. The Kingdom of Kongo • Kingdom of Kongo flourished in about 1500 AD in central Africa • Consisted of many villages grouped into districts and provinces • Governed by officials appointed by the king • Each village had its own chief, chosen by matrilineal descent • King had limited power – appointed by electors and governed according to laws Sienna

  42. Families • Family was the basic unit of society • Nuclear families were typical • Parents and children worked and lived together as a unit • In other communities, people lived in join families Sienna

  43. Lines of Descent • Families were either patrilineal or matrilineal • Inheritance, family ties passed through side of either father or mother • Example: patrilineal marriage’s bride would move to the husband’s village and vice versa • Matrilineal cultures forged stronger ties between sibilings Sienna

  44. Wider Ties • Religious beliefs were varied and complex across Africa • Village Africans were polytheistic, saw natural forces as spirits, believed in a single chief being above all gods who was the creator • As Christians call on saints, Africans called on their ancestors • Converts to Christianity and Islam associated their God as their traditional creator Sienna

  45. Artistic Traditions • African artists have worked with ivory, wood bronze • Cloth weaving and dying, pottery, jewelry common • Closely tied to religion, often served social and religious purposes Sienna

  46. Literary Tradition • History and values passed through oral and written literature • Oral traditions date back many centuries • Griots, or professional poets, recited ancient stories • Arabic was dominant language • Documents in Arabic give insight to law, religion and history • Histories often praised ancestors or kings, folk tales taught lessons Sienna

More Related