1 / 30

Chapter Eight: African Civilizations and the Spread of Islam

Chapter Eight: African Civilizations and the Spread of Islam. Mr. Toma AP World History Midwest City High School. Background: African Civilizations and the Spread of Islam. Extremely diverse Wide variety of societies developed Political unity was difficult

zahir-best
Télécharger la présentation

Chapter Eight: African Civilizations and the Spread of Islam

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. Chapter Eight: African Civilizations and the Spread of Islam Mr. Toma AP World History Midwest City High School

  2. Background: African Civilizations and the Spread of Islam • Extremely diverse • Wide variety of societies developed • Political unity was difficult • Universal states and religions do not develop in Africa • Universal religions from elsewhere impact region • Christianity and Islam sometimes influenced political and cultural development.

  3. Background: African Civilizations and the Spread of Islam • 800 -1500 C.E.: Increasing contact between Africa (esp. lower) and Mediterranean and Asian civilizations. • State building in Africa influenced by a variety of things • West Africa: mix cultural influence from Islam with indigenous culture • Mali and Songhay = depend on military power and dynastic alliances more than cultural unity • Parts of Africa south of the Sahara entered into expanding world network • Western and Eastern Africa connected by coasts • Still, many remained in isolation.

  4. African Societies: Diversity and Similarities • Political forms • Hierarchical states • Rulers who exercised control through a hierarchy of officials in states • “Stateless" societies • organized on lineage or kinship principles • lacking concentration of power and authority • Authority and power normally exercised by a ruler and court is held by a council or families or community

  5. African Societies: Diversity and Similarities • Weakness of stateless societies • No tax collection so no military • Difficult to resist external pressures • Hard to mobilize for war • No undertaking of large building projects • Hard to create stability for long-distance trade • Still, many stateless societies thrived • Internal social pressures could be resolved by allowing dissidents to leave and establish new villages

  6. African Societies: Diversity and Similarities • Bantu = common language • Animistic religion was common. • Belief in natural forces personified as gods • Concepts of good and evil • African economies vary by region • N. Africa was already integrated into the world economy via Islamic trade routes • Settled agriculture and ironworking • W and E Africa are becoming more involved in regional trade and urbanization. • Africans exchanged raw materials for manufactured goods.

  7. African Societies: Diversity and Similarities • Mid-7th c. = Muslim armies moved west from Egypt across N. Africa • Spreads Islamic influence; rapid conversions • Berbers (people of the Sahara) begin conversion • 11th century = reforming Muslim Berbers called Almoravids from western Sahara grow • launch jihad (war to spread and protect faith) • move south against African kingdoms and west into Spain. • 12th century = the Almohadis defeat Almoravids • Almoravids and Almohadis are essential to penetration of Islam into sub-Saharan Africa

  8. Almoravids 1040-1147

  9. African Societies: Diversity and Similarities • Christian states are present in North Africa, Egypt, and Ethiopia before the arrival of Islam • Egyptian Christians, the Copts, had a rich and independent tradition (Coptic Christianity) • Oppression by Byzantine Christians caused them to welcome Muslim invaders • The Nubians resisted Muslim incursions from 9th until 13th century. • Ethiopia continues to retain Christianity

  10. Kingdoms of the Grasslands Sahel Grasslands: zone of transition between Sahara Desert and Sudanic savannahs to the south Point of exchange between North and South; important regions of trade

  11. Kingdoms of the Grasslands Ghana: - Rose to power by taxing salt and gold - Almoravid armies invaded Ghana in 1076 - By 13th c., new states would rise to take place

  12. Kingdoms of the Grasslands • Sudanic States • Often led by a patriarch or council of elders from a family or lineage. • Control of subordinate societies • Arrival of Islam after the 10th century reinforced ideas of kingship and ruling power: “royal cult” • Majority of pop. never converted • Mali, Ghana and Songhay • Combine Islamic religion/culture with local practices

  13. Kingdoms of the Grasslands • Mali was formed by Malinke peoples • broke away from Ghana in 13th c. • Economy: agriculture and gold trade • Traders spread beyond W Africa • Islamicized state • The ruler/mansa: Sundiata (Sunjata) • Credited with Malinke expansion and unified state • a governing system based on clan structure • Died 1260; Mansa Musa is successor

  14. Kingdoms of the Grasslands • Jenne and Timbuktu, cities of W Sudan • residents = scholars, craft specialists, and foreign merchants • Timbuktu was famous for its library and university; book trade • Cities of commercial exchange • Military expansion of Mali and Songhay contributed to their strength. • Mali's population lived in villages and were agriculturists (80%) • Poor soils, primitive technology, droughts, insect pests, and storage problems

  15. Kingdoms of the Grasslands • The Songhay Kingdom • Became an independent state in the 7th century. • Capital city at Gao. • Prospered as a trading state. • Dominated by Mali, then in 1370s independent • Empire founded by Sunni Ali (1464-1492) • great military leader • extended rule over the entire middle Niger valley. • Sunni Ali’s successors were Muslim military rulers, askia • Muhammad the Great extends borders • Songhay remained dominant until defeated by Moroccans in 1591.

  16. Kingdoms of the Grasslands • Islam provided universal faith and fixed law. • Rulers reinforced authority through Muslim ideology. • Many Sudanic societies were matrilineal and did not seclude women. • Slavery and slave trade was prevalent from Muslim influence • Viewed as stage in conversion process • Development of unified states/empires provided structure that allowed various groups and communities to coexist

  17. The Swahili Coast of East Africa • Islamicized trading ports along Africa’s Indian Ocean coast • Increases contact with other regions • Bantu speaking migrants • Bantu Swahili language emerged in a string of urbanized trading ports • Immigrants from Southeast Asia • Exported raw materials in return for Indian, Islamic and Chinese luxuries • 30 coastal trading towns flourished • 13th-15th Century= Kilwa was the most important.

  18. The Swahili Coast of East Africa • Islam built a common bond between rulers and trading families. • Allowed them to operate under common culture. • Rulers and merchants were often Muslim. • Most of the population retained African beliefs. • Culture = Swahili as language and incorporated African and Islamic practices. • Fused Islam and Swahili culture

  19. Peoples of the Forest and Plains • Across central Africa, agrarian societies thrived and kingdoms developed • The Yoruba city-states • Non Bantu speaking peoples • Highly urbanized agriculturalists • Ile-Ife was the holiest Yoruba city; “place of their birth” • Remarkable terra-cotta and bronze portrait heads produced of rulers • Also work in ivory and wood

  20. Peoples of the Forest and Plains

  21. Peoples of the Forest and Plains • Benin • Forms in 14th century under ruler/oba Ewuare the Great • Ruled from the Niger River to the coast near Lagos • Peoples of east Yoruba • Artists worked in ivory and cast bronze to produce art celebrating royal authority

  22. People of the Forest and Plains • 13th century, Bantu speakers approached the southern tip of Africa • The Luba peoples, in Katanga, created a form of divine kingship • Divine kingship; ruler has power to ensure fertility of people and crops • Hereditary bureaucracy formed to administer the state • Allowed the integration of many people into one political unit

  23. People of the Forest and Plains • Kingdom of Kongo (lower Congo River, 13th c.) • Agricultural society, flourishes by 15th • Gender division of labor and family-based villages • Mbanza Kongo = 60,000-100,000 people • Zimbabwe, 15th c. - the east, in central Africa • Shona-speaking peoples • Great Zimbabwe, largest site • Ruler = Mwene Mutapa • Dominated gold sources and trade with coastal ports • Internal divisions split Zimbabwe during the 16th century

  24. Global Connections: Internal Development and External Contacts • The spread of Islam had brought large areas of Africa into the global community. • The most pronounced contacts • south of the Sahara were in the Sudanic states and • East Africa • Most of Africa evolved in regions free of Islamic contact. • Many other Africans organized their lives in stateless societies.

  25. Chapter 8 Homework Questions • What is the difference between a state and stateless society? Where did stateless and state societies develop in Africa? • In what ways did Islam influence sub-Saharan African culture? • Who are the Almoravids and Almohadis? Why are they important? • Where did Islamicized African ports develop? Why? What are the items traded? • Describe the process of developing kingdoms in Central Africa.

More Related