| 300 (to 700) |
Rise of Axum
or Aksum (Ethiopia) and conversion to Christianity. (By 1st century CE,
Rome had conquered Egypt, Carthage, and other North African areas; which became the
granaries of the Roman Empire, and the majority of the population converted to
Christianity). Axum spent its
religious zeal carving out churches from rocks, and writing and
interpreting religious texts. |
| ca. 600 (to 1000) |
Bantu migration extends to southern
Africa; Bantu languages will predominate in central and southern Africa. Emergence
of southeastern African societies, to become the stone city-states of Zimbabwe, Dhlo-Dhlo,
Kilwa, and Sofala, which flourish through 1600. |
610
639-641
700-800
740
|
Beginning of Islam
Khalif Omar conquers Egypt with Islamic troups.
Islam sweeps across North Africa; Islamic
faith eventually extends into many areas of sub-Saharan Africa (to ca. 1500).Islamicized Africans (Moors) invade Spain, and rule it unti1 1492. The
Moors brought agriculture, engineering, mining, industry, manufacturing, architecture, and
scholarship, developing Spain into the center for culture and learning throughout Europe
for almost 800 years until the fall of Granada in 1492. |
800
(to 1100) |
Growth of trans-Sahara gold trade
across the sahel ("sahel" is Arabic for "shore" or
"coast") at southern boundary of the Sahara Desert, which was likened to
a sea. The desert was not an impossible barrier; many trade routes cross it from early
times. The sahel was the intensive point of contact and trade between sub-Saharan
Africa (Africa south of the Sahara Desert), and North Africa and the
world beyond, along with contact and trade along Atlantic and Indian Ocean seacoasts. In
western Africa a number of black kingdoms emerge whose economic base lay in their control
of trans-Saharan trade routes. Gold, kola nuts, and slaves were sent north in exchange for
cloth, utensils, and salt. This trade enabled the rise of the great
empiresGhana, Mali, and Songhai--of the savanna ("savanna"
refers to a treeless or sparsely forested plain.) |
| ca 1000
1076 |
Ghana Empire of
Soninke peoples (in what is now SE Mauritania) at height of power. The earliest of the 3
great West African states (emerging ca. 300 CE), Ghana equipped its armies with iron
weapons and became master of the trade in salt and gold, controlling routes extending from
present-day Morocco in the north, Lake Chad and Nubia/Egypt in the eat, and the coastal
forests of western Africa in the south. By the early 11th century, Muslim advisers were at
the court of Ghana. Berber army from Morocco led
by militant religious reformers called Almoravids attacked Ghana,
and led it into a period of internal conflicts and disorganization. By 1087 the Almoravids lost control of the empire
to the Soninkes, but the empire disintegrated into several smaller states, including
Kangaba out of which the empire of Mali arose. |
| 13th c. |
Rise of the Mali Empire of
the Mande (or Mandinka) peoples in West Africa . The Mali Empire was
strategically located near gold mines and the agriculturally rich interior floodplain of
the Niger River. This region had been under the domination of the Ghana Empire until the
middle of the 11th century. As Ghana declined, several short-lived kingdoms vied for
influence over the western Sudan region |
| Sundjata Keita, Old Mali, and the Griot Tradition: The Mali Empire,
centered on the upper reaches of the
Sénégal and Niger rivers, was the second and most extensive of the three great West
African empires.. The Mali Empire served as a model of statecraft for later kingdoms long
after its decline in the 15th and 16th centuries.. Under Sundjata and his immediate
successors, Mali expanded rapidly west to the Atlantic Ocean, south deep into the forest,
east beyond the Niger River, and north to the salt and copper mines of the Sahara. The
city of Niani may have been the capital. At its height, Mali was a confederation of 3
independent, freely allied states (Mali, Mema, and Wagadou) and 12 garrisoned provinces.
The king reserved the right to dispense justice and to monopolize trade, particularly in
gold. Sundjata Keita is the cultural hero and
ancestor of the Mande (or Mandinka) peoples, founder of the great Mali Empire, and
inspiration of the great oral epic tradition of the griots or professional bards, keepers of tradition and history, trusted
and powerful advisors of kings and clans. These oral artists are specialists of the
spoken/sung word and the great power--called nyama, among the Mande--it releases. They may belong to special castes
(nyamakalaw -
handlers of nyama) and/or inherit their calling through generations of the same family, for
example, in Mande (or Mandinka) West African cultures.
|
| 1260
1260
|
Zimbabwes (meaning
"stone house" or buildings), some massive, constructed in southeastern
Africa by ancestors of the Shona peoples of modern Zimbabwe. Ife-Ife,
Yoruban culture of non-Bantu Kwa-speakers, flourished in western Africa,
producing remarkable terra cotta and bronze portrait heads, continuing
Nok tradition. |
| 1324 -1325 |
Mali Emperor Mansa Musas
sensational pilgrimage to Mecca, spreads Malis fame across Sudan to Egypt, the
Islamic and European worlds. ["Mansa" means
"emperor."] He brought with him hundreds of camels laden with gold.
Under Mansa Musa, diplomatic relations with Tunis and Egypt were opened, and Muslim
scholars and artisans brought into to the empire; and Mali appeared on the maps of Europe.
.Islam penetrated Malis elaborate court life and thrived in commercial sahel centers
such as Jenne and Tombouctou (or Timbuktu - see Lonely Planet's
"Detour" and map of Timbuktu),
on the great bend of the Niger River. Mali's legacy is the enduring cultural
affiliation shared by the Mande peoples (especially Malinke, Bambara, and Soninke
speakers--again see The
World of the Mande.) who today occupy large parts of West Africa |
| After 1400 |
Court intrigue and succession disputes
sapped the strength of the extended Mali Empire, and northern towns and provinces
revolted, making way for the Empire of Songhai to emerge from the vassal state of Gao. One
of the first peoples to become independent, the Songhai, began to spread along the Niger
River. Much of Mali fell to the Songhai Empire in the western Sudan during the 15th
century. |
| 14th c. |
Complex, advanced lake states,
located between Lakes Victoria and Edward, were established, including kingdoms
ruled by the Bachwezi, Luo, Bunyoro, Ankole, Buganda, and Karagwe--but little is known of
their early history. Engaruka, a town of 6,000 stone houses in Tanzania, played a key role
in the emergence of Central African empires. Bunyoro was the most powerful state until the
second half of the 18th century, with an elaborate centralized bureaucracy: most district
and subdistrict chiefs were appointed by the kabaka ("king"). Farther
to the south, in Rwanda, a cattle-raising pastoral aristocracy founded by the Bachwezi
(called Bututsi, or Bahima, in this area) ruled over settled Bantu peoples from
the 16th century onward. |
| ca. 1400 |
Swahili
(Arab-influenced Bantu language and culture) cities flourish on east
African coast of Indian Ocean; trading esp. in ivory, gold, iron, slaves. Indonesian
immigrants reached Madagascar during the 1st millennium CE bringing new foodstuffs,
notably bananas, which soon spread throughout the continent, and Arab settlers colonized
the coast and established trading towns. By the 13th century a number of significant Zenj
city-states had been established, including Mogadishu, Malindi, Lamu, Mombasa, Kilwa,
Pate, and Sofala. An urban Swahili culture developed through mutual
assimilation of Bantu and Arabic speakers. The ruling classes were of
*mixed Arab-African ancestry; the populace was Bantu, many of them slaves. These
mercantile city-states were oriented toward the sea, and their political impact on inland
peoples was virtually nonexistent until the 19th century. |
| 14th - 15th
c. |
Great Zimbabwe,
impressive stone construction of the Karanga-- ancesters of the Shona peoples of southeastern Africa, is the center of Bantu peoples that controlled a large
part of interior southeast Africa. The Karanga also formed the Mwene Mutapa Empire, which
derived its wealth from large-scale gold mining. At its height in the
15th century, its sphere of influence stretched from the Zambezi River, to the Kalahari,
to the Indian Ocean and the Limpopo River. |
| 1439
1441 |
Portugal takes the Azores and
increases expeditions along northwest African coast, eventually reaching the Gold Coast
(modern Ghana). The Portuguese explorations were motivated by a desire for
knowledge, a wish to bring Christianity to what they perceived as pagan peoples, the
search for potential allies against Muslim threats, and the hope of finding new and
lucrative trade routes and sources of wealth. Wherever the Portugueseand the
English, French, and Dutch who followed themwent, they eventually disrupted ongoing
patterns of trade and political life and changed economic and religious systems. Beginning of European slave trade in Africa with first shipment of
African slaves sent directly from Africa to Portugal. The first European
nation to acquire a license for slave-trade was Portugal, who in 1444 proceeded to import
four thousand enslaved Africans annually into Spains American colonies. With the
complicity and blessings of the Catholic church the Portuguese dominated the gold, spice
and slave trade for almost a century before other European nations became greatly
involved. |
| Slavery in
Africa: It is true that
African societies did have various forms of slavery and dependent labor before their
interaction with Arabs and Europeans that invaded Africa, especially in nonegalitarian
centralized African states, but scholars argue that indigenous slavery was relatively a
marginal aspect of traditional African societies. Many forms of servitude and slavery were
relatively benign, an extension of lineage and kinship systems. Slaves and servants were
often well-treated and could rise to respected positions in households and communities.
African social hierarchies and conditions of servitude were mitigated by complex, extended
kinship relationships, based on community, group, clan, and family. Ethnic rivalries and
hostilities did exist, as did ethnocentrism (a belief that one's group and its lifeways
are superior to those of other groups), but the concept of race was a foreign import.
Muslim conquests of North Africa and penetration in the south made slavery a more widely
diffused phenomenon, and the slave trade in Africansespecially women and
children--developed on a new scale. The adoption of Islamic concepts of slavery made it a
legitimate fate for non-believers but an illegal treatment for Muslims. In the forest
states of West Africa, such as Benin and Kongo, slavery was an important institution
before the European arrival, African rulers seeking to enslave other African groups,
rather than their own people, to enhance their wealth, prestige, and control of labor.
However, the Atlantic Slave Trade opened up greatly expanded opportunities for large-scale
economic trade in human beings--chattel slavery--on an unprecedented scale. Expanding,
centralized African states on/near the coast became major suppliers of slaves to the
Europeans, who mobilized commerce in slaves relatively quickly by tapping existing routes
and supplies (adapted from Stearns, Adas, and
Schwartz). |
| 1468 |
Songhai (or Songhay) Empire,
centered at Gao, dominates the central Sudan after Sunni Ali Bers army defeated the
largely Tuareg contingent at Tombouctou (or Timbuktu) and captured the city. An
uncompromising warrior-king, Ali Ber extended the Songhai empire by controlling the Niger
River with a navy of war vessels. He also refused to accept Islam, and instead advanced
African traditions. |
| 1480s
1482
|
First Europeans
(Portuguese) visit Benin (Yoruban-speaking culture) and arrive at east
coast of Africa, increasing trade in gold, ivory, and slaves. El Mina
is founded on the West African "Gold Coast," the most important
of the chain of trading settlements the Portuguese established here. African gold, ivory,
foodstuffs, and slaves were exchanged for ironware, firearms, textiles, and foodstuffs. |
| 1492 |
The death of Sunni Ali Ber created a
power vacuum in the Songhai Empire, and his son was soon deposed by Mamadou Toure who
ascended the throne in 1492 under the name Askia
(meaning "general") Muhammad, another subject of great oral epics. During his reign which ended in 1529, Askia Muhammad made Songhai the
largest empire in the history of west Africa. He restored the previously-discouraged
tradition of Islamic learning to the University of Sankore, and Tombouctou (or Timbuktu -
population 50,000) known as a major center of Islamic learning and book trade. Askia
Muhammads consolidation of Muslim power worked against encroaching Christian forces.
The empire went into decline however after 1528 when the now-blind Askia Muhammad was
deposed by his son. |
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