1 / 18

Ch. 8 Diverse Societies in Africa

Ch. 8 Diverse Societies in Africa. Ch. 8 section 1 Objectives: 1. Identify the different geographic regions of Africa 2. Explain how early Africans adapted to their environments 3. Summarize the achievements of early West . Early Humans Adapt to Their Environments. Nomadic Lifestyle

winter
Télécharger la présentation

Ch. 8 Diverse Societies 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. Ch. 8 Diverse Societies in Africa

  2. Ch. 8 section 1 Objectives: • 1. Identify the different geographic regions of Africa • 2. Explain how early Africans adapted to their environments • 3. Summarize the achievements of early West

  3. Early Humans Adapt to Their Environments • Nomadic Lifestyle • •Earliest people are nomadic hunter-gatherers • • Herders drive animals to find water, graze pasturesTransition to a Settled Lifestyle • •Agriculture probably develops by 6000 B.C. • •As the Sahara dried up, farmers move to West Africa or Nile Valley • • Agriculture allows permanent settlement, governments to develop, with a village chief or council

  4. Early Societies in Africa • Societies Organized by Family Groups • •Extended families made up of several generations • • Families with common ancestors form groups known as clans • Local Religions • • Early religions usually include elements ofanimism—belief in spirits • Keeping a History • •Few African societies have written languages • •History, literature, culture passed on by storytellers called griots • • Cultures in West Africa are advanced long before outsiders arrive

  5. West African Iron Age • Learning About the Past • •Artifacts reveal how people lived in the past • • Evidence of sub-Saharan cultures producing iron around 500 B.C. The Nok Culture • Nok—West Africa’s earliest known culture—made smelted iron tools, weapons, and excelled • Djenné-Djeno • •From 600–200 B.C., cities begin to develop near rivers, oases • •Djenné-Djeno—Africa’s oldest known city (250B.C.), discovered in 1977 • • Bustling trade center; linked West African towns, camel trade routes

  6. Achievements of Djenne-Djenno-1400 C.E. • *50,000 residents • *Built Mud Brick homes -Fished, cultivated rice, herded cattle -Traded goods for copper, gold and salt

  7. Section 2-The Kingdom of Aksum • Objectives: • 1. Explain how maritime trade led to Aksum’s growth • 2. Give examples of Aksum’s achievements • 3. Explain the effects of the Muslim invasion of Aksum

  8. The Rise… • Aksum’s Geography • •Aksum—kingdom replaces Kush in East Africa;blend of Africans, Arabs • • Located on Horn of Africa, modern day Ethiopia andEritrea • • Trading kingdom linking Africa and Indian Oceantrade routes • The Origins of Aksum • • Land first mentioned in Greek guidebook in A.D. 100 • • Rulers take control of areas around Blue Nile andRed Sea • • Dynasty of Aksum rules until 1975; ends with deathofHaileSelassie

  9. The Rise…cont. • Aksum Controls International Trade • • Aksum is hub for caravan routes to Egypt andMeroë • • Adulis, chief port, has access to Mediterranean Sea, Indian Ocean • A Strong Ruler Expands the Kingdom • • King Ezana—strong ruler of Aksum from A.D. 325 to360 • • He conquers part of Arabian peninsula, now Yemen • • In 350 conquers Kushites and burns Meroëtoground

  10. International Culture… • Aksum Culture • •Blended cultural traditions of Arab peoples andKushites • •Adulispopulation: Egyptian, Arabian, Greek,Roman, Persian, Indian • •Greek is international language • Written language: Ge’ez • AksumiteReligion • • Believe in one god, Mahrem, and that kingdescended from him • • Are animists—worship spirits of nature andancestors • • Exposed to Christianity by traders

  11. International Culture… • Aksum Becomes Christian • Young King Ezana educated by Christian man from Syria • As ruler, Ezana declares Christianity askingdom’s official religion • Aksum, now part of Ethiopia, still home to millions of Christians • Aksumite Innovations • Written language, minted coins, irrigation canals anddams • Aksumitesinvent terrace farming due to hillylocation • Terraces—steplike ridges constructed on mountainslopes

  12. The Fall… • Islam • Aksum kingdom lasts 800 years; witnesses rise ofIslam religion • Followers of prophet Muhammad conquer all ofArabia by 632Islamic Invaders • Between A.D. 632 and 710, Islamic invaders leave Aksum alone • In A.D. 710, they attack port city of Adulis, causingAksum’s declineAksum Isolated • As Islam spreads, Aksum rulers move capital tonorthern Ethiopia • Isolation, soil erosion, deforestation cause loss ofremaining power

  13. Section 3 • Objectives: • 1.Summarize the causes and effects of Human Migration • 2.Describe the Bantu migrations into the southern half of Africa

  14. Migration of Bantu-speaking Peoples • Causes of Migration • Push-pull factors—Conditions that push people out of an area or pull them in • Effects of Migration • Brings diverse cultures into contact; changes life inthe new land • Tracing Migration Through Language • One way to trace migration is to study howlanguages spread • Africa has many complex language families

  15. Bantu-speaking Peoples • Bantu-speaking peoples—early Africans whospread culture and language • Originally lived in savanna south of Sahara; nowsoutheastern Nigeria • The word Bantu means “the people” • Migration Begins • Bantu speakers migrate south and east startingabout 3000 B.C. • Live by slash-and-burn farming, nomadic herding • Share skills, learn new customs, adapt toenvironment

  16. Causes of Migration • Bantu speakers move to find farmland, fleegrowing Sahara • Need iron ore resources and hardwood forests for iron smelting • Within 1,500 years they reach southern tip ofAfrica • Effects of the Migration • Bantu speakers drive out some inhabitants; intermixwith others • Bantu migrations produce a great variety of cultures • Language helps unify the continent

More Related