1 / 13

African Kingdoms

African Kingdoms. Africa: Guided Questions…. Common Elements in Africa? How did Islam Enter Africa? What powerful states existed? How did Islam impact Africa? Where did Islam NOT spread?. Africa:At a Glance. No single language (vast continent and peoples).

dori
Télécharger la présentation

African Kingdoms

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. African Kingdoms

  2. Africa: Guided Questions… • Common Elements in Africa? • How did Islam Enter Africa? • What powerful states existed? • How did Islam impact Africa? • Where did Islam NOT spread?

  3. Africa:At a Glance • No single language (vast continent and peoples). • Africa south of the Sahara had limited contact with civilizations of the Mediterranean and Asia • Spread of Islam linked Africa to the outside world through Trade, religion and politics. • 3 regions: North (Sahara), Middle (Rainforest), South (Grasslands) • 2nd Largest Continent, 10% of world’s population • Resources: Oil, Gold, Diamonds, Cocoa, Coffee

  4. African Societies • Stateless Societies were controlled by age-sets or lineages. They lacked central authority. The weakness of stateless societies was their delayed response and inability to engage in large building projects • Kingdoms flourished and remained the large urban centers of Africa (Ethiopia, Ghana, Songhai, Mali, Nubia)

  5. Africa: Common Elements • Bantu (migrating people): provided a common language for trade routes. Spread iron-making [important skill] • Animism: Belief in natural forces, spirits in animals and plants, natural forces personified as gods • Many African believed in a Creator God • Women and Men were integral to market life and social life (not equal)

  6. Africa: Islam's Arrival (7th century) • North Africa already part of Islamic Empire by 8th cent. • As Islam pushed westward, Berbers (indigenous people to the region) were integral to the process of spreading Islam • Spread of Islam followed Trade Routes (peaceful) • Islam spread to Kings, Merchants and other Elite classes and spread from their (urban to rural) • Almoravid(1040-1147)and Almohadi(1121-1269)reform movements (pro-islamic) in North Africa and Southern Spain. Wanted to return to more strict Islamic rule

  7. Africa: Kingdom of Ghana(300-1200c.e.) • 1st great African Grasslands civilization by 700s kingdom is well established • S: Converted to Islam through traders; • P: King ruled and succeeded by son • I: resources from nearby rainforests and mined gold; many converted to Islam when it arrives • C: Trade merchants bring Islam by 8th century (peaceful conversion) • E: traded gold (abundance of gold) • Falls because of dwindling gold resources

  8. Africa: Empire of Mali and Sundiata(1235-1500c.e.) • S: Clans hold sway, women participate (not equal) • P: Sundiata (ruler) credited with spreading Mali through clan structure • Ruler (Mansa Musa) performed Hajj, helped spread Islam during the 14th century (returns with architect that built Arab Mosques) • I: Along Niger and Senegal river • C: Islam strengthened trade and local power • E: Traded gold & salt and farmed for food, Legendary wealth in Mali • Falls because of dwindling gold resources

  9. Africa: Songhai Kingdom(1400-1600c.e.) • 3rd Great GrasslandsKingdom • S: Ruled by Islamic laws [oppressive to women] • P: Askia Muhammad divides kingdom into 5 districts (each has tax collector, court and trade inspector) • I: constant challenges by local tribes and Moroccans • C: Timbuktu: famous university and cultural center • E: Replaces Mali in Gold & Salt trade • Falls because of attacks by Moroccans who had cannons and gunpowder

  10. Africa: Swahili Coast (East Africa) • Series of trading posts provided easy access for Islamic traders and Sufi missionaries • Many local people remain tied to traditional practices • By 13th century as many as 30 trade ports existed on the East coast, speaking a mix of Bantu, Swahili and Arabic • By 15th century, a dynamic culture of Swahili language and Afro-Islamic practices shaped the coastal region • Very little penetration of Islam into central Africa

  11. Africa: People and Place • IbnBatuta: Muslim traveler who wrote about travels in Africa (very important to Muslim history) • Great Zimbabwe central power in the Congo-region around 11th century; controlled gold trade in the area by16th century fell due to internal conflicts

  12. Africa: The Christian Strongholds • ETHIOPIA: Coptic Christians were present in Ethiopia due to oppression from Byzantine Empire • Muslim opposition to Byzantium caused Ethiopians to welcome Muslims into the nation. Ethiopia remained Christian • Nubia resisted Muslim incursions until the 13th century.

  13. Africa: To Sum Up • Common Elements in Africa? • How did Islam Enter Africa? • What powerful states existed? • How did Islam impact Africa? • Where did Islam NOT spread?

More Related