1 / 18

Islam in Africa

Islam in Africa. Ch 8. I. Introduction. Africa is a very fragmented No concentration of power Stateless societies (tribal) Diverse languages, religion and geography Sub-Saharan society had periods of isolation Africa was a symbol of wealth Gold, diamonds and land. I. Introduction.

jens
Télécharger la présentation

Islam in Africa

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. Islam in Africa Ch 8

  2. I. Introduction • Africa is a very fragmented • No concentration of power • Stateless societies (tribal) • Diverse languages, religion and geography • Sub-Saharan society had periods of isolation • Africa was a symbol of wealth • Gold, diamonds and land

  3. I. Introduction Trade with Sub-Sahara was difficult until 100 AD when camels were brought along

  4. II. Arrival of Islam • North Africa had contact with the Phoenicians, Greeks, Romans and Vandals • Christianity had spread to Ethiopia and Nubia (Coptics) • Islam spread to 640-700 AD across Northern Africa • 670 AD conquered Tunisia • Romans called Africa Ifriqiya (Arab for North East) • Maghrib for North West • Used Africa as a stepping stone into Spain

  5. II. Arrival of Islam • Islam had brought temporary unity with conversion • Almoravids 1100 AD & Almohadis 1130 AD • Reformist group that waged jihad • Led to spread south of the Sahara • Attractiveness of Islam • Equality • Broke down on local level

  6. II. Arrival of Islam • Spread to Sub-Sahara initially through trade • Sahel- divided Sahara and Sub-Sahara/ trade region • Ghana became prominent taxing gold and salt trade

  7. III. Grassland Kingdoms • Sudan States • Patriarchal rule (elders) • Rulers are sacred • Collect taxes and military support • Territory based on linguistic and ethnic divisions • Ghana, Mali and Songhay • Rulers were one of the few who converted to Islam

  8. III. Grassland Kingdoms • Mali • Between Niger and Senegal River • Malinke people • Symbol for Islam in sub-Sahara • Merchants were called Juula • Borders expanded by Sundiata • Lion Prince • Mansa • Stories told by griots • Divided clans into classes (warriors, religious and laborers)

  9. III. Grassland Kingdoms • IbnBatuta • Arab who traveled around Africa writing of the cultures he observed • Mansa Kankan Musa (1312-1337 • Pilgrimage to Mecca • Showed the wealth of Africa • Built the mosque in Jenne • Port City like Timbuktu

  10. III. Grassland Kingdoms • Songhay Kingdom • Middle region of Niger Valley • Capital in Gao • Farming, herding and fishing society • Became an empire under Sunni Ali (1464-1492) • Expanded territory into Mali • Muslim leader of pagan region • Succeeded by military leaders askia

  11. III. Grassland Kingdoms • Muhammad the Great • Expanded borders to cover central Sudan • Muslim rulers had a hard time dealing with the peoples failure to follow Shari law • Lasted until 16th century • Defeated by Moroccan army • muskets

  12. III. Grassland Kingdoms • Hasua people • Nigeria • Kano and Katsina • Muslim leaders and pagan people • Traded salt, grains and clothes

  13. III. Grassland Kingdoms • Sudan politics • Rulers took title of emir or caliph • Surrounded by Muslim advisors • Matrilineal which went against Sharia law • Slave trade exploded with invasion of Islam • Muslims viewed slavery as a way to prepare pagans for conversion

  14. IV. East Coast • Referred to in Arabic as Zenj • Swahili • Bantu and Arabic • Trade cities • Mogadishu, Mombasa, Malindi, Kilwa, Pate and Zanzibar • Border Indian Ocean and Arabian Sea • Followed pattern of Islamic rulers • Blended cultures • Oman and Persians • 13th century is Islamic expansion

  15. V. Central & West Africa • Central Africa • Agricultural society • Sometimes united under a single ruler to solve conflicts • Oral traditions • Very artistic • Nok • Central Nigeria • Spoke Yoruba • Lifelike terra-cotta and bronze sculptures

  16. V. Central & West Africa • Yoruba • Language spoken in the central states • Highly urbanized region • City-states ruled by regional kings • Ruled by alafin • Benin • Large city-state • Ruled by Oba

  17. V. Central & West Africa • Kongo • Formed around the Congo River • Skilled in weaving, blacksmithing and carving • Harvested salt from the coast • Traded shells as currency • Shona • Zimbabwe- Stone settlement with walls (Great Zimbabwe) • Worshipped a god symbolized by an eagle • Confederation of farmers and herders- developed trade • Later ruled by a king called MweneMutapa • Broke up due to interior strife but stayed wealthy

More Related