01:506:201 Lecture 8: Chapter 8
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Chapter 8
African Civilizations and the Spread of Islam
1. Introduction
1. Mansa Musa – crossed Sahara on hajj
1. wealth symbolized potential of Africa
2. Sub-sahara never totally isolated
1. But…for periods contact was difficult and intermittent
3. Changes came from
1. Arrival of Muhammad followers
1. Commercial and military attributes
2. changed by Islam, but retained individuality
3. African culture not united
4. provided major external contact between sub-
Saharan Africa and world
4. State building
1. Mali, Songhay – created more from military power than
ethnic/cultural unity
2. Merchant city states on west/East coast
3. Portugese in 15th century brought Africans into world
economy more
4. Bantu migration continued
5. Societies don’t build so much on previous civilizations
2. African Societies: Diversities and Similarities
1. Introduction
1. Diverse – large centralized states to stateless societies
1. Differences in geography, language, religion, politics
2. Universalistic faiths penetrated continent
1. but…universal states/religions don’t characterize
history
2. Stateless societies
1. organized around kinship and other forms of obligation
2. council of families
1. or…secret societies of men/women
3. little concentration of authority
1. government – not a full-time job
2. after internal dispute, you can always leave and form
new village
4. Unable to
1. mobilize for war
2. organize large building projects
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3. create stable conditions for long distance trade
3. Common Elements in African Societies
1. Even though different, similarities existed
1. language – Bantu migration
2. thought
3. religion – animistic religion
1. power of natural forces
2. ritual and worship
3. dancing, drumming, divination, and sacrifice
4. witchcraft
5. cosmology – how universe worked
6. belief in creator deity
7. saw selves as first settlers, land meant more
than economic usefulness
8. link of deceased ancestors
2. Economies
1. North Africa – fully involved in Mediterranean trade –
quite different than rest
2. Settled agriculture and skilled metalwork had spread
3. Market life key for men and women
4. Professional merchants controlled trade
3. Population – least known – by 1500 – 30 to 60 million
people
3. Arrival of Islam
1. Land conquered and reconquered by Phoenicians, Greeks,
Romans, Vandals
1. Cyrene and Carthage became huge trading centers
2. 640-700 CE – Muslim followers spread across Africa
1. by 670, controlled Ifriqiya – Tunisia > Africa
1. Arabs called n.east Arica > Ifriqiya and west –
Maghrib
2. When Abbasid dynasty united – many conversions
1. 11th century – Almoravids – ultra-conservative -
reformers
1. launched jihad – holy war to purify, spread,
protect faith
2. Almohadis – also reformers
1. Return to original teachings of
Muhammad
2. Why attractive?
1. Egalitarian teachings – all Muslims are equally
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2. Reinforced African kings authority
3. Equal footing with Arab invaders
4. …but
1. Disparity between law and practice
4. The Christian Kingdoms: Nubia and Ethiopia
1. Islands of Christianity left behind
2. Christian Egyptians – Copts
1. Traded with Byzantine Empire
2. Eventually split with empire – doctrinal and political issues
1. What differences
3. Muslim invaders allowed them to keep religion – tolerance
1. Met resistance in Kush/Nubia – couldn’t push Islam
further
3. Axum > Ethiopia – most important African Christian outpost
1. Cut off, surrounded by pagans, influenced by Jewish/pagan
immigrants
2. Dynasty appeared – build rock sculptures
3. Traced origins to marriage of Solomon and Sheba – Bible
4. Maintained its brand of Christianity – isolated
5. in 1542 Portugese expedition pushed back Muslim invaders
1. But…couldn’t push Catholic faith, remained isolated
5. Kingdoms of the Grasslands
1. Introduction
1. Three coasts – Atlantic, Indian, savanna on edge of Sahara
2. Edge of desert
1. Gold found
2. Camels improved trade
1. Sahel – grassland belt – best place to live –
centers of trade
3. African states emerge as trade intermediaries
4. Location makes them open to droughts and attack
5. 10th century Ghana rose to power through taxing salt,
gold exchange
2. Sudanic States
1. Patriarch or council of elders
1. Power over subordinate communities
1. Collect taxes, tribute, military support
2. States emerge – Ghana, Mali, Songhay
2. Rulers separated from commoners through ritual – think
“mandate of heaven”
3. The Empire of Mali and Sundiata, the “Lion Prince”
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