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CH. 13 TROPICAL AFRICA AND ASIA

CH. 13 TROPICAL AFRICA AND ASIA. Tropical Lands and Peoples. Afro-Asian tropics have cycle of rainy & dry seasons = caused by winds Africa: west coast rainfall, except in Dec/Jan Indian Ocean Monsoons: Dec-March is southern Asia’s dry season; April-Aug is wet season

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CH. 13 TROPICAL AFRICA AND ASIA

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  1. CH. 13 TROPICAL AFRICA AND ASIA

  2. Tropical Lands and Peoples Afro-Asian tropics have cycle of rainy & dry seasons = caused by winds Africa: west coast rainfall, except in Dec/Jan Indian Ocean Monsoons: Dec-March is southern Asia’s dry season; April-Aug is wet season Environmental variations from wind, rain, altitude Rivers redistribute rainfall

  3. Adaptation essential Hunting (C. Africa/Himalyas), fishing (E. Africa/SE Asia), pastoralism (NE Africa/Arabia) Farming dominant way of life b/t 1200-1500 Bananas, yams, coffee to the tropics Extensive vs. intensive agriculture: ext = soil exhaustion moved farmers; slash and burn Water Systems & Irrigation Uneven distribution of rainfall Farmers moved water to crops via conservation Terraced hillsides; water storage & irrigation Largest irrigation systems were gov’t public works Crops grown throughout year Delhi, Ceylon, Angkor Disruption when gov’ts faltered Village-based vs. gov’t systems Iron most abundant; copper/gold in Africa; Human Ecosystems

  4. Ibn Battuta • Moroccan Muslim scholar (1304-1369) • Visited Islamic lands: Dar al Islam from China to Spain and Western Sudan • Traveled 73,000 miles; Islam provided safe passage • Details of the cosmopolitan nature of 14th century Islam

  5. NEW ISLAMIC EMPIRES Mali and the Delhi Sultanate

  6. Mali • Islam not forced into western Africa • Islam in Sub-Saharan Africa thru gradual & peaceful conversion; commercial contacts • Sundiata established Mali empire 1230s • Based on agriculture and trans-Sahara trade, fostered by Islam • Gold & Copper trade controlled; prosperity and power for rulers

  7. Mansa Kankan Musa • Ruled from 1312-1337 • Pilgrimage to Mecca showed Mali’s wealth • Traveled with huge entourage:  Wife and “other ladies” and slaves  60,000 porters and tons of gold So much gold to Cairo that it depressed its value there for years

  8. The Delhi Sultanate of India Compare Islam in India vs. Islam in West Africa… • Turkish dynasty from Central Asia captured Lahore and Delhi • Hindu gods/temples replaced w/ Muslim mosques • 1206-1236: northern India controlled by Muslim invaders; looting, enslavement, destruction of Hindus • Brutal conquest turned into benign rulership • Hindus protected if paid a tax

  9. The Sultans of Delhi • Iltutmish: 1211-1236; recognized by caliph of Baghdad; consolidated northern India • Raziya: Iltut’s daughter; 1236-1240; killed for being a woman, though more able than anyone to rule • Ala-ud-din Khalji: 1296-1316; frontier raids & high taxes; seized Gujarat, extended to south India • ibn Tughluq: 1325-1351 expansion; religious toleration to win loyalty of Hindus; • Firuz Shah: 1351-1388; taxed Brahmins and alienated Hindus Sultanate ruled thru terror & high taxes; conflicts b/t Muslims & with Hindus led to its downfall

  10. INDIAN OCEAN TRADE

  11. The Swahili Coast Sawahil al-sudan; East African portion of Indian Ocean trade network Mogadishu-Kilwa Commercial expansion w/ arrival of Arab & Iranian merchants Gold in Kilwa passed thru Great Zimbabwe Great Zimbabwe 1250-1450 peak Mixed farming & cattle herding Gold trade brought great wealth = had to pass thru GZ to get to Swahili coast and beyond Depletion of nearby forests & overgrazing led to decline Africa

  12. Location ideal for monsoons and trade w/ India, Persian Gulf, East Africa, Egypt Merchants very wealthy Generally good relations among diff’t religions and cultures Commercial interests above all else Goods from… India: cotton cloth, beads Southeast Asia: spices Arabia/Ethiopia: horses, slaves, gold,ivory Red Sea: pearls Cairo: luxury manufactures Hinterland: grain, opium, dyes Arabia: Aden and the Red Sea

  13. India Gujarat: Cambay • Increased trade after land trade disrupted • Export of cotton textiles/indigo; gold/silver in return • Spread Islam to Malacca • Manufacturing: large markets in Eur, Africa, ME Malabar Coast: Calicut • Rulers tolerant; location key to trade prosperity • Clearing-houses in long distance trade; locally grown grains and spices

  14. Southeast Asia: the Rise of Malacca Geography: eastern end of Indian Ocean & main passage to South China Sea • Commercial Choke Point!!! Meeting point for traders Political: Malacca became important thru alliances • Subject to Siam (Thailand) and China • Conversion from H to I promoted trade w/ Muslim merchants • Emporium for SE Asian trade • Cosmopolitan residents; 1500 peak

  15. SOCIAL AND CULTURAL CHANGE TIMBUKTU

  16. Architecture, Learning, & Religion • Islam the major force for change in tropics; most change noticed in urban areas • Islam blended w/ local styles and resources for mosques • Mosques, churches, temples centers of education; Sub-Saharan Africa: Islam & literacy together • Timbuktu and Malacca: 1500s major centers of Islamic learning • Spread of Islam thru example & persuasion; Long-distance trade/markets • Marriage: merchants were single men who married local women, thus conversions increased • Rural conversions: some saw forced inequalities of Hinduism as hopeless; variations in diff’t areas

  17. Slavery India: product of wars of expansion (Hindus) Africa: wars of expansion & export of slaves Most slaves trained in skilled trades & military Slaves as servants for wealthy Women Hindu Sati optional Status based on male master- dad, husband, owner Not active in commerce, admin, religion Food preparation key; brewing for rituals Much of farm work; pottery; spinning; selling work in local markets Social and Gender Distinctions

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