Feb 24, 2017

Part Two >>>>> An Overview of the African Past as Context for the History of African America >>>>> Snippet from My Chapter on African American History in >Fundamentals of an Excellent Liberal Arts Education

A Note to My Readers



In this article you will find another snippet from my chapter on African American History from my nearly complete books, Fundamentals of an Excellent Liberal Arts Education.

 

This installment is the second of two concerning the African context for the history of African America;  PART ONE gave an overview of African prehistory and history to the rise of the great West African empires of Ghana, Mali, and Songhai.

 

This second installment (PART TWO) gives an overview of African history from the rise of those empires to the arrival of Europeans. 



PART TWO

 

The Rise of the Great West African Empires and Overview to the Arrival of Europeans  



Great West African Empires

 

In the 8th century there arose in West Africa the first of three great empires that would for many centuries dominate the Sudan, the region south of the Sahara Desert and north of the tropical forests running from Senegal in the west to the Nile valley in the east.  This first of the three great West African empires was Ghana, which initially consolidated power among their own people, the Soninke, then asserting power over a strong and dynamic trading state stretching between the Senegal and Upper Niger Rivers.  Ghanaian traders bartered for gold with traders who lived intermediately between themselves and the gold miners who lived and labored to the far south.  The Ghanaians then sold the gold to merchants who crossed the desert and gathered in the southernmost oases at the northern edge of the Sudan and served as terminal points for caravans that gained fame for their journeys across the Sahara.

 

During 1076-1077 A. D. (CE) the Almoravids (a fierce Berber nomad configuration that typically guided trade caravans across the desert) broke out of the western Sahara desert to lead a holy war northward through Morocco and all the way to Spain (where they conquered the Umayyad Moors);  and southward to lands that included the Ghanaian empire.  Several smaller kingdoms survived the Almoravid invasion, among which was the well-organized petty kingdom of Mal.  Under the rule of three dynamic rulers---  Sundiata, Mansa Uli, and Mansa Musa---   Mali expanded in the course of 1220-1340 A. D. (CE)  to occupy an area in West Africa larger than had Ghana.  Ghana covered much of the western Sudan and featured one of the world’s most opulent and cultured cities, Timbuktu.   Sundiata, Mansa Ul, and Mansa Musa embraced Islam, which had become such a powerful cultural force throughout West Asia, North Africa, parts of Southeast Asia, and into stretches of West and Central Africa.  In 1324, Mansa Musa made a pilgrimage to Mecca, carrying with him and spending so much gold in route that he upset the money market in Cairo and caused an inflationary period to ensue in the trade of the Mediterranean area that lasted for decades thereafter.

 

Mali continued strong until about 1450, at which time Songhai, the wealthiest and most powerful of these great West African empires, established rule over the region.  For at least a century and a half, Songhai featured one of the world’s greatest civilizations.  The heart of the empire nwas at about the midpoint alog the Niger River, where the kind of trade that had made Ghana and Mali such formidable forces in West Africa continued to flourish.  Songhai reached its height during the rule of Sonny Ali (r. 1464-1492) and Askia the Great (r. 1493-1528).  Urban life thrived on the basis of the region’s commercial vitality and on the elements of high civilization found in Islamic law, medicine, math, science, literature, architecture, art, and theology.  Djenne was on great city of Songhai.  Timbuktu was even greater.  To this latter scholars came from all over western Asia and Africa to exchange ideas, just as merchants exchanged goods and services.  Songhai’s great mosque of Sankore provided a fertile meeting ground for Muslim thinkers and people of all faith endeavoring to visit one of the world’s most important urban centers.  The mosque of Sankore represented a cultural continuity between the empires of Mali and Songhai, having been designed in the 14th century by As-Saheli, one of the Egyptians brought back to Mali by Mansa Musa after his pilgrimage to Mecca in 1324.

 

Other Kingdoms and Societies of Africa



To the east of Songhai lay the Hausa states, including the notable Kano and Katsina, the development of which seems to have extended back into the 11th century.  Bu the 14th century, powerful kings ruled these domains, which feature substantial urban centers where craftspeople and merchants built prosperous livelihoods connected to the regional and trans-desert trade.  The Hausa states were particularly famous for their leatherwork, which yielded much sought-after items from the North;  European traders obtained these leather goods in the journeys to North African and came to them collectively as Moroccan leather.

 

In the central Sudan, around Lake Chad, lay another great state, Kanem-Bornu, the rulers of which had been Muslin from as early as the 11th century.  One of the oldest and largest of the African states, Kanem-Bornu retained its independent existence until the latter years of the 19th century, when European traders finally succeeded in bringing it under control. 

 

In the mountains toward the eastern end of the Sudanic belt lay Ethiopia, a Christian empire that was the successor state to Axum.   Monarchical states made a later appearance south of the Sudan, but empies such as the Benin and the Oro in Yorubaland (Nigeria), whose people produced some of the world’s great sculptures, flourished well before the arrival of the Europeans in the 15th century.  African peoples in other part of the continent also established kingdoms and empoires, especially in the expansive territory south of the equator into which the Bantu language had spread  

Over several millennia, a cluster of kingdoms flourished between the great lakes of East Africa, including Rwanda and Buganda.  South of the Congo (Zaire) forests lived the peoples of the Luba-Lunda group of kingdoms, and the monarchical state of Kongo emerged as a dominant force south of the river estuary that in colonial times (from the late 19th century) would bear its name.

 

Much farther to the South, on the Zimbabwe-Rhodesian plateau, was the empire of Monomotapa, the wealth of which was derived from a lucrative trade in gold on the East African coast at sofala, a coastal outpost of the rich trading city of Kilwa.  Associated with this kingdom of Monomotapa was the Great Zimbabwe, a walled enclosure built mainly in  the 14th and 15th centuries n a site that ahd been used for ritual purpose since 1000 A. D. (CE).

 

General Characteristics of African Societies



Throughout these magnificent kingdoms and in those areas where a more decentralized style of

governance prevailed, a wide variety of cultural styles described the lives of Africans.  West African were known for their skill as farmers and Artists.  They excelled in cultivating rice, building boats, and navigating along coasts.  Many were experts in producing textiles and baskets.  Others fashioned clothing from skins and fur.  Some became expert in producing weapons, utensils, and ceremonial objects from iron, copper, and precious stones.  Heights of artistry were reached by many West Africans who used these same materials to produce jewelry, metalwork, and sculpture.

 

The topography of Africa was and is enormously varied, featuring tropical forests, expansive deserts, and broad grassland.  Many African societies are matrilineal, with inheritance and property rights descended from the mother.  Many are also matrilocal, meaning that it is the groom who leaves his own family t live with or near the family of the bride.  Kinship was very important in traditional African society.  Ancestors are considered the links to the past, and descendants were considered the bridge to the future.  Both were part of the family broadly construed.  Typically hundreds of family members, including people of several generations, gathered together in clan associations to conduct common business and to maintain religious rituals preserving the lint to those who had lived before.

 

People in West African traditionally worshiped their ancestors, seen as the vital link between the supreme creator and the people of humankind and nature.  The indigenous religions of West Africa are animistic:  worshipers devote their ceremonies and ritual observations to spirits believed to dwell in animals, forests, rivers, and rocks.  Nature was and is seen as a thing worthy of respect, awe, care and caution.

 

The Enduring Legacy of Africa for African-Americans

 

The arrival of Europeans in the 15th century would eventually alter the course of African history in ways that would be important not only to the people of the vast continent, but for the entire world, as well.  Later, in the 19th and 20th centuries, almost all of Africa would come under the control of

European colonial powers which exerted a might based on superior military hardware and oceangoing prowess.  More immediately important to the history of people of African origin in the Americas would be the slave trade that developed from the fifteenth century, following a pattern of commercial  interaction that included participants of four continents:  Africa, South America, North America, and Europe. 

 

Those people of African descent who were torn from their homeland came with a rich store of cultural treasure that people of European descent could not wrench from their brains, no matter how disrespectfully the slave traders abused African bodies.  The cultures of Africa, alive in the brains and bodies of those people brought to American from Africa as slaves, would be one of the major cultural streams enriching the lives of people from the Western Hemisphere, including the United States.

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