Title: Section 2: The Kingdoms of Kush and Aksum
1Section 2 The Kingdoms of Kush and Aksum
- The Story Continues Some Sub-Saharan African
peoples continued to live in small, independent
villages. Others, however, established small
city-states, kingdoms, and even empires. One of
these was the kingdom of Kush. Kush arose along
the upper Nile River in an Egyptian area known as
Nubia. Because of its close connection with
Egypt, Kushs culture resembled that of the
Egyptians in many ways.
2I. Kush Arises
- The African kingdom of Kush arose along the
- upper Nile River in an area called Nubia
3I. Kush Arises
- Kush controlled an important trade corridor
- between the Red Sea and the Nile
4I. Kush Arises
- In the 1500s B.C. Egypt conquered Kush and
- about 710 B.C., Kush conquered Upper
- Egypt
5I. Kush Arises
- The Assyrians invaded Kush and later the
- capital city Napata was captured by Egypt
6I. Kush Arises
- Kush reorganized with a new capital city,
- Meroë, and a period of cultural achievement
- began
7I. Kush Arises
- Kushs civilization reached its height between
- about 250 B.C. and A.D. 150
8II. Aksum
- Aksum lay in the Ethiopian Highlands south of
- Kush and straddled important trade routes
9II. Aksum
- Around A.D. 350, King Ezana of Aksum
- conquered Kush and established a kingdom
King Ezanas stele, Aksum
10II. Aksum
- Ezana converted to Christianity and made it
- the official religion of Aksum
Ethiopian priest (12th century
carving)
Ethiopian Cross
11II. Aksum
- Aksum became a major center of long -
- distance trade throughout coastal East Africa
Africa Trade
12II. Aksum
- The kingdom began to decline and in the A.D.
- 700s, the Islamic Arabs gained control of trade
Aksum's ruins
13Section 3 Trading States of Africa
- The Story Continues Trade kept Africa well
connected to the rest of the world. Ancient Greek
traders were familiar with parts of East Africa,
which they called Azania. One sailors handbook
written by an Egyptian-Greek merchant described
several trading villages along the Azanian
coast. Traders there would swap African items
such as ivory, rhinoceros horns, coconut oil, and
tortoise shells for iron tools, weapons, and
cotton cloth.
14I. East Africa and the Great Zimbabwe
- City-states controlled trade on the East African
coast and trade routes linked ports on the Indian
Ocean
15I. East Africa and the Great Zimbabwe
- The spread of Islam to Africa spurred trade,
drawing settlers from Arabia, Persia, and
Indonesia
16I. East Africa and the Great Zimbabwe
- The Swahili culture developed in East Africa,
combining elements of African, Asian, and Islamic
cultures
17I. East Africa and the Great Zimbabwe
- The Shona people migrated onto the plateau of
Zimbabwe and became wealthy and powerful from
trading gold
18I. East Africa and the Great Zimbabwe
- Great Zimbabwe was the center of the Shona state,
which declined in the AD 1400s
19II. West Africa
- West African cities grew into major commercial
centers based on the trade of salt and gold
20II. West Africa
- The earliest West African kingdom was Ghana,
established by the Soninke people after AD 300
21II. West Africa
- Invasions and loss of the salt trade weakened
Ghana and it was replaced by the kingdom of Mali
around A.D. 1235
22II. West Africa
- Mali reached its peak in the A.D. 1300s under the
ruler Mansa Musa
Mansa Musa was the ruler of the vast Mandingo
kingdom of Mali. From the mines of West Africa he
amassed legendary amounts of gold, which his
subjects traded for salt, weight for weight.
23II. West Africa
- The city of Timbuktu became a center of learning
and its university drew scholars from Egypt and
Arabia
A cultured center of learning and trade for a
thousand years, Timbuktu crowns the bend of the
Niger river in Mali. Its soaring towers, adobe
architecture and plaster reliefs belong to a
cultural style seen from Senegal to Nubia. Legend
says that a woman named Buktu founded the city,
and so it is named "Place of Buktu."
24II. West Africa
- The rebel leader Sonni Ali captured Timbuktu and
established the kingdom of Songhai in A.D. 1468
The shaded portion indicates the greatest extent
of the Songhai empire, ca. sixteenth century
25II. West Africa
- Songhai was centered at the trading city of Gao
on the Niger River
26II. West Africa
- The Songhai empire declined due to internal
fighting and was defeated by Morocco in 1591