Transcript Chapter 13

SECTION 12
CHAPTER 13
African Societies &
The Impact of Islam
Mosque in Timbuktu
RESOURCES
Timeline from BBC
 Africa 500-1000 CE – Map Links
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 Islamic
Sourcebook – Fordham University
Link through CPCC Library, “Empire of Faith” –
Islam Part 1 and 2
 BBC Link for Africa & Islam
 Art of Umayyad Period
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AFRICA BEFORE ISLAM
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Diversity of peoples and regions
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Difficult to traverse
Difficult climate, seasonal rainfall
Large deserts
Adaptation of people to different environments
Many different cultures & languages
Valleys of Nile & Niger prosper
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Highly-developed agricultural societies
Political and social hierarchies
Trade
Art and craftsmanship
ENVIRONMENTAL
AND
GEOGRAPHICAL
VARIETY
CLANS & KINGDOMS
Varieties of political organization within Africa:
Location
Makeup of Kingdom
Sub-Saharan Africa
Large groups of villages under a
regional ruler
South Africa
Stateless – ruled by local chiefs
& councils
East Africa
City-states emerge with
independent rulers
Central rain forest & eastern
plans
Foraging societies – nomadic
clans
AFRICA BEFORE ISLAM: BANTU
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Bantu Migrations
 500
BC – 1000 CE
Bantu tribes migrate
from West Africa
 Organized into
families/clans
 Patriarchal
People or
Language?
 Provided unity
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AFRICA BEFORE ISLAM: BANTU
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The Bantu Toolkit:
 People
adopted Bantu language and culture b/c it
was useful in adapting to different environments
 Patriarchal rule, polygamy, ancestor worship =
stability and connections
 Many Bantu became cattle herders = means for
survival, way of life, wealth and status
 Adaptability to different and changing
circumstances
AFRICAN TRADITIONAL RELIGIONS
Polytheistic
 Animism (belief that spirits existed that could
either help or harm human beings)
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 Like
San Rock Art people we studied earlier
Priests & prophets performed rituals
 Sometimes King alone could contact gods
 Ancestor worship
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RITUAL MASKS
1. Côte d'Ivoire, Mali, or Burkina Faso; 2. Côte d'Ivoire
KONO OR KOMO MASKS OF MALI
Kono or Komo are male
associations to ward off evil,
protect individual or village,
project individual’s power and
knowledge
Men construct masks as
symbols of power – they
become experts in nyama, a
vital force that can bring good
or evil
Just possessing a mask gives
the individual power, but it is
also used in rituals
For more info., follow link
IFE WEST AFRICAN BRONZES
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12th-15th-century CE
Symbols of power and
religion
Connection with spirit
world
Power of kings
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To reach spirits
Over people
Link to images
Link to videos
Links to Websites on African Religions
http://www.afrikaworld.net/afrel/
 http://wwwsul.stanford.edu/depts/ssrg/africa/religion.ht
ml
 http://www.africa.upenn.edu/About_African/w
w_relig.html
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RELIGIOUS DIVERSITY IN AFRICA
Animists, Christians, Muslims
 Christian Kingdoms, such as Axum
 Variety of Islamic practice
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 Orthodox
and non-orthodox monotheists
 People who mixed Islam and other beliefs
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Variety of political entities overlapping with
religious practice – diff. rulers w/ diff. interests
and religious views
ETHIOPIA’S CHRISTIAN KINGDOM (P. 315-316 TEXT)
320-340 CE - Ethiopian King Ezana made Christianity Official
State Religion
http://www.pbs.org/wonders/fr_e4.htm
http://www.metmuseum.org/toah/hd/acet/hd_acet.htm
African Christianity in Ethiopia
During the reign of Ethiopia's Emperor
Lalibela (c. 1200-1250), the monks of the
region built a remarkable series of
churches hewn out of solid rock that
remain unique to this day. The churches
stand as a testament to the strength and
fervor of the Ethiopian Christian Church.
The church shown here, the Church of St.
George, was carved out of red volcanic
rock in the shape of a Greek cross.
Workers first chipped away the stone until
they reached a depth of 40 feet.
Afterwards, they molded the exterior of
the church and hollowed out its interior.
Photo credit: Georg Gerster/ Photo
Researchers, Inc.
St. George’s – the Rock Church
Link to
GoogleMap
Link to photos
Procession
Priest
Pilgrim
Paintings
AKSUMITE STELAE
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Aksum or Axum was ancient
Ethiopian kingdom
AKSUMITE STELAE
Link to GoogleMap of
Aksum Stelae Site
ISLAMIC AFRICA & SPAIN
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Muslims and Islamic religion spread into:
 North
Africa (639-642 CE)
 Created Umayyad Spain (711 CE)
 Created Fatimid Egypt (909-969 CE)
 Led
by Isma’ilis – Shi’ite Islam – Orthodox
 Moved capital from Alexandria to
 New city – Cairo
 Defeated by Crusaders in 1099
SPREAD OF ISLAM IN AFRICA
EAST AFRICAN COAST: SWAHILI CULTURE
East African culture created from combo of
African and Arab influences
 “Swahili” = “coasters,” people living along
coast
 Swahili language a combination of Bantu and
Arabic
 Muslims migrated down coast from north
 Development of trade ports and city-states
along coast
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EAST AFRICA – SWAHILI COAST
SWAHILI MERCHANTS – INDIAN OCEAN TRADE
EAST AFRICAN COAST: SWAHILI CULTURE
Indian Ocean trade united them
 Class of merchants developed along coast
 Trade to India, Indonesia, Arabic peninsula
 Development of plantation economies on
islands of Zanzibar and Pemba (similar to what
happened in Atlantic) – cloves & spices
 Use and trade of slaves by Swahili and Arab
elites
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EAST AFRICAN COAST: ZANZIBAR
Photos from Zanzibar
Malindi Mosque, Zanzibar
ISLAM & SLAVE TRADE
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Muslim demand for slaves of all races: not religious,
for political power and wealth
Variety of uses for African slaves: for household,
military, and labor
Different than Atlantic slave trade which was raciallyand plantation-based
Slave caravans from west Africa across Sahara
Muslims also traded in slaves from east Africa –
coastal ports on Red Sea and Indian Ocean carried
slaves from African interior
TRADE ACROSS THE SAHARA
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Trade brought west African societies
into contact with Berbers, Arabs, other
African tribes
The importance of camels –
necessary to cross desert
Huge camel caravans to west Africa
West African rulers and kingdoms
converted to Islam: used Islamic law,
institutions, and writing
Link to Trade and Spread of Islam in
Africa (Art)
EFFECTS OF TRADE ON WEST AFRICA
Connections to other cultures
 Spread of Islam
 Slave trade
 Growth of African merchant class and cities
 Consolidation of kingdoms to control trade
 Power used to control trade and people:
enslaved non-Muslims and unprotected
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 Example,
Ife bronzes: show kings AND captives
WEST AFRICAN KINGDOMS: GHANA
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Ghana – “land of gold”
 Strong
kingdom before Islam
 Controlled trade of gold & salt
 Berber traders converted elite to Islam
 Then Berbers adopted militant form of Islam –
followers were called Almoravids
 Conquered Spain, converted Ghanaians
Art of the Almoravid Period
 Trans-Saharan Gold Trade
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EMPIRES OF MEDIEVAL AFRICA
EMPIRE OF MALI (1200-1450 CE)
WEST AFRICAN KINGDOMS: MALI
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Mali (1200-1450 CE)
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Mandinke People
Successor to state of Ghana
Upper Niger River
Good agriculture & lots of rainfall
Strong Rulers: Sundiata, Mansa Uli,
Mansa Musa
MM Pilgrimage to Mecca 1324 CE
Very rich & powerful – visited
kings of other nations
Timbuktu became center of
learning & culture (p. 134)
Mosque in Djenne (Mali)
Djenne Mosque, Mali (20th century)