Title: West Africa
1West Africa
2West African Kingdoms
3Greatest Extent Ghana kingdom 11th century
4Niger River Uplands and Delta
5W. African Trade routes pre-Atlantic System
6Ghana 4/5th century -1076-1200s
- Little is actually known about Ghana sources
are scarce - Monopoly over notoriously well-concealed gold
mines. - possed sophisticated methods of administration
and taxation, large armies - Kumbi Saleh is capital
- Traders brought Islam with them had a separate
community in the capital with its own mosques and
schools. - Later kings used Muslims as scribes in government
and administration.
7Ghana
- Decline is due to
- drought in the 11th 12th century
- New gold fields mined out of reach of Ghana
- 1054-1076 Almoravids from Morocco attack Ghana to
gain control over Ghanas dominace of
trans-Saharan gold trade .
8Al-Bakri on Ghana 10th C Geographer
The king adorns himself like a woman wearing
necklaces round his neck and bracelets on his
forearms and he puts on a high cap decorated with
gold and wrapped in a turban of fine cotton. He
holds an audience in a domed pavilion around
which stand ten horses covered with
gold-embroidered materials and on his right, are
the sons of the vassal kings of his country,
wearing splendid garments and their hair plaited
with gold.
The city of Ghana consists of two towns situated
on a plain. One of these towns, which is
inhavited by Muslims, is large and possesses
twelve mosques in one of which they assemble for
the Friday prayer. The king has a palace and a
number of domned dwellings all surrounded with an
enclosure like a city wall. Around the kings
town are domed buildings and groves and thickets
where the sorceres of these people men in charge
of the religious cult, live.
9Spread of Islam in Africa
10Mali
- 1235-1390s-1490s
- Founded in 1235 by Sundiata
- Focused on agriculture and control of trade
- Like Ghana all gold nuggets belonged to the king,
but gold dust could be traded - Gained control over the salt trade
- Improved agriculture on the Niger by planting
rice, beans, yams, onions, grain and cotton - A class of professional traders emerged in Mali
- Cowries shells were established as a currency for
trading and taxation in the 14th century.
11Greatest extent of Mali
12Mali and gold
- Greatest source of gold for the west for
centuries - Mansa Musa 14th century king goes on pilgrimage
- 100 camel loads of gold300lbs each
- Value of gold is said to have dropped 20-30 in
Cairo - 500 male slaves each carrying a 5lb gold staff
- 14,000 slave girls
13Culture
- Fine pottery, iron work, jewelry
- Music poetry and art
- Mosques and schools
- The Epic of Sundiata
- Visited by Ibn Battuta during Mansa Musas reign
- He is a miserly king, not much giving is to be
expected from hmi. It happened that I stayed this
period and did not seen him because of my
sickness.
14Mansa Musa a European map
15Djingareyber Mosque Jingarey Mosque - Timbuktu
16Djenne, Mali city founded in 800 ce
17Songhay -1591
- Conquered Mali
- Used the power of the empire to spread Islam in
the area - Timbuktu is the center for learning and education
- Defeated by invaders from Morocco using guns.
18Songhay at its greatest extent
19African Art / Nok Terracotta Head Origin
Northern NigeriaÝDate 500 BC to 200 CE
20African Art / Nok Terracotta Sculpture of a
Horned Head Origin Northern NigeriaDate 500
BCe to 500 ce
21Nok Terracotta Figure Origin NigeriaCirca 300
BCe to 200 ce
22Nok Terra Cotta Sculpture Origin Northern
NigeriaCirca 400 BCe to 200 ce
23Nok Terracotta Seated Male Figure Origin
NigeriaCirca 100 BCe to 300 ce
24African Art / Bura Conical Vessel with a Face
Origin Burkina Faso/NigerDate 3 rd Century ce
to 11 th Century CE
25African Art / Cross Rivers Terracotta
Anthropomorphic Vessel Origin Calabar,
NigeriaDate 10 th Century ce to 11 th Century ce
26African Art / Tenenkun Terracotta Zoomorphic
Sculpture Origin Central MaliDate 12 th
Century AD to 14 th Century CE
27African Art / Komaland Terracotta Sculpture with
Two Heads Origin Northern GhanaDate 12th
Century AD to 16th Century ce
28Ife / Benin Bronze Mask - LO.1313Origin
NigeriaCirca 14 th Century to 17 th Century
29Sources
- www.artofancientafrica.com/
- http//www.metmuseum.org
- http//www.bbc.co.uk/worldservice/africa/features/
storyofafrica/4chapter3.shtml