Chapter 2 First Civilizations: Africa and Asia Africa and Asia (3200 B.C.–500 B.C.)
Trading states in Africa Chapter 11. Early civilizations of Africa Section 1.
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Transcript of Trading states in Africa Chapter 11. Early civilizations of Africa Section 1.
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Trading states in Africa
Chapter 11
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Early civilizations of Africa
Section 1
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Sahara
• Who: Africans• What: the largest desert in the world, a
geographic feature in the great variety of African landscapes
• Where: Northern Africa• When: 730 BC- present• Why: this desert plays a major role in the
development of Africa & it’s trading kingdoms that develop
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Sahara (6)
• Who: Africans• What: the largest desert in the world; just one
geographic feature in the great variety of African land
• Where: North Africa• When: 730 BC- present• Why: the geographic features of this area
played a major role in the development of Africa
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Sahara (7)
• Who: Africans• What: largest desert in the world; just one of
the many geographic features of Africa• Where: Northern Africa• When: 730 BC- present• Why: this desert played a major role in the
development of N. Africa = desert = not a lot of vegetation = lower population; trade routes went through here
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Savannahs (6)
• Who: Africans• What: grassy plains, make up the continent’s
largest & most populated regions • Where: Central & South Africa• When: 730 BC- present• Why: this area had the most vegetation = food
= larger population; this geographic region affected how/where ppl lived
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Savannas (7)
• Who: Africans• What: grassy plains, the continent’s largest &
most populated regions• Where: Central & South Africa• When: 730 BC- present• Why: these grassy plains had a lot of
vegetation = food = people = most populous regions of Africa
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Cataracts (6)
• Who: Africans• What: waterfalls on high plateaues• Where: Africa• When: 730 BC- present• Why: these hindered easy movement from
place to place in Africa, acted as barriers = travel from place to place was hard
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Cataracts (7)
• Who: Africans• What: waterfalls that hindered movement
throughout Africa• Where: high plateaus of Africa• When: 730 BC- present• Why: these served as barriers to trade= they
hindered easy movement of ppls from place to place
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Workbook pg 98
• I. – A. • 1. Sahara- largest desert in the world, shapes
Africa = not as many ppl live here b.c. of desert• 2. Savannahs- grassy plains w. vegetation =
most populous region• 3. Cataracts- hindered movement throughout
Africa, acted as barriers
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• I. – B. • 1. Minerals (salt, gold, copper ,iron) showed wealth &
power = trade increased• 2. Camels could travel long distances w.o water & could
carry heavy loads = trade increased
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Savannah
• Who: Africans• What: grassy plains, Africa’s largest & most
populated region• Where: Central & South Africa• When: 730 BC- present• Why: moving north & south throughout
Africa, this is the continent’s most populated region b.c. of all the vegetation
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Cataracts
• Who: Africans• What: waterfalls on high plateaus• Where: Africa• When: 730 BC- present• Why: these hindered easy movement
throughout the continent b.c. they were difficult to cross = limits travel
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Workbook pg 98• I. • A. Geographic patterns– Sahara- desert region in the North (not a lot of ppl live
here); Savannahs- most populated due to a lot of vegetation = food
– Cataracts, (waterfalls)- restrict people from moving about the continent
B. Resources spur trade- Salt, gold, iron & copper were valuable = great wealth & power = trade throughout Africa- Camels allowed more trade through the desert b.c. they were able to carry heavy loads & go long times w.o water= trade increased through the Sahara
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Desertification• Who: Africans• What: a climate change that slowly dried out the
Sahara, cropland & pastureland are devoured/destroyed
• Where: Northern Africa, Sahara desert• When: 2500 BC• Why: as the land became parched, the desert
spread; the desertification led to migration b.c. ppl had to find new areas to live in that maintained their way of life
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II. Part A.
• 1) Hunters & gatherers settled down & learned to cultivate the Nile Valley & domesticate animals
• 2)Sahara used to be covered with rich grasslands & savannah = ppl lived here
• 3)Desertification- dried out vegetation = ppl migrated (leave)
• 4) Ppl leave to find new areas that maintain their ways of life
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II. Part B
• 1. People migrated all throughout Africa = diverse cultures/languages- root language = Bantu
• 2. The Bantu spread their skills/language & merge with other groups; still there today
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Bantu• Who: Africans• What: the root language of the African languages• Where: Africa, W. Africa• When: 1000BC- present• Why: gives the movement “Bantu migrations” its’
name; Bantu-speakers spread their skills of farming, iron working, & domesticating animals; other existing cultures merged w. Bantu; their influence is still in the languages of that region today
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Nubia
• Who: Egyptians, Nubian, Northeast Africans• What: ancient kingdom called Kush • Where: Egypt, northeast Africa, on the Nile• When: 2700 BC• Why: this kingdom was flourishing, trade led
to contact b/n Nubia & Egypt; Nubia was under Egyptian control & remained that way for about 500 years = Nubia adopted several Egyptian traditions
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Meroe
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Kingdoms of West Africa
Section 2
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Surplus
• Who: African Farming Villagers• What: Extra Resources for more than was
needed• Where: Africa• When: 100 A.D.• Why: Development of trade allowed the
villages to keep more resources. They began to trade their food surplus for products from other villages. This led to an increase in trade.
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Commodity• Who: Africans• What: Valuable products• Where: Africa• When: 730 B.C.-1591 A.D.• Why: People needed salt in their diet, especially
in hot tropical areas to replace the salt lost from perspiration. Salt was important for the use of food and preservation. The Sahara had an abundance of salt. The Savannah didn’t have enough salt=commodity for them=Trade.
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WK sheet #2
• Cause=Salt is needed for diet and food preservation.
• Salt is a commodity esp. for the Savannah.• Effect=Trade, the Savannah doesn’t have
enough=willing to trade gold for salt.
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Ghana
• Who: Africans, Soninke people• What: It’s a kingdom from many united
farming villages.• Where: West Africa• When: 800 A.D.
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Sundiata
• Who: Sundiata, ruler of Mali• What: sickly boy regarded as too weak to be a
threat, crushed his enemies & created the kingdom of Mali
• Where: Egypt/Mali• When: 1235-1255• Why: he crushed his enemies, ran control of
the gold trade routes in Africa, & founded the empire of Mali
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Mali
• Who: Sundiata• What: empire, gold trade route was here• Where: W. Africa• When: 1235-1450• Why: Gold trade routes & salt supplies
expanded here; caravan routes made small towns into great trading cities = many people wanted to live here = freedom of religion & tolerance
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Mansa Musa• Who: greatest ruler of the kingdom of Mali• What: greatest ruler of Mali who improved it;
converted to Islam• Where: Mali, West Africa• When: 1312-1337• Why: expanded Mali’s borders west to Atlantic ocean
& north; ensured peace & order in his empire; converted to Islam = based system of justice on Quran; promoted religious freedom & tolerance; created alliances w. other Muslim states; brought back Muslim scholars to promote Islamic education in Mali = a lot of West Africa is Islamic today
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Songhai• Who: Sunni Ali, Askia Muhammad• What: a new Muslim kingdom in West Africa as Mali was
weakening, capital= Goa• Where: present-day Mali & Niger, W. Africa• When: 1464-• Why: – Sunni Ali (at the height) made trade routes (gold & salt) &
wealthy cities; professional army protected the empire; provincial governors presided over local states;
– Askia: efficient bureaucracy w. separate departments for farming, military, & treasury; disputes over Askia’s leadership after he died = changes in leadership = civil war & unrest
– Moroccan invaders used gunpowder to take over
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Kingdoms & trading states of EastAfrica
Section 3
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Axum
• Who: African farmers• What: a kingdom in present day Eritrea,
center of goods & ideas (trade) • Where: East Africa• When: 100BC-600s AD• Why: the merging of culture and peoples of
Axum gave way to the language of Geez; this kingdom gained control of the Red Sea; trade here led the kingdom to profiting
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Adulis
• Who: Axumites• What: capital city of Axum, port city • Where: Axum, near the Red Sea• When: 400 AD• Why: this capital commanded triangular trade
that connected Africa, India, & the Mediterranean world; a lot of goods passed through here- from the center of Africa out, and from out of Africa into Africa; trade = wealth
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Wksheet- Axum
• Christianity brought to region• Adulis becomes wealthy• Merging of cultures led to a new language
called Geez
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Ethiopia• Who: Axumite kings, Ethiopians• What: a kingdom that was a portion of Axum’s
empire, protected by rugged mountains• Where: Red Sea, East Africa, • When: 400 AD- present• Why: Ethiopia was known for it’s large Christian
church population; they absorbed many local customs like traditional music; their influence is still in Ethiopian church services today & they are still said in Geez
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Ethiopia- Worksheet
• Ethiopia had a distinct Christian culture w. Christian churches, traditional music, & language Geez; unified their sense of identity
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King Lalibela
• Who: King of Ethiopia• What: he directed the building of 11 remarkable
churches in Ethiopia during his reign• Where: Ethiopia, East Africa• When:1200s• Why: these 11 churches still exist there today &
they illustrate the architectural and artistic skill of the Ethiopian craftsmen of the time; he helped to create Ethiopia’s distinct culture of the time
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Coastal City States- Wksheet
• 1. Swahili language is developed• 2. Asian traders and immigrants as far away as
Indonesia traveled here and added to the mix of peoples here
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Swahili
• Who: • What: a new vibrant culture and language• Where: East Africa• When: 1000s• Why: international trade system = many ppl
mixing & trading = adopt each other’s culture & language = mixing = Swahili (new language)
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Great Zimbabwe
• Who: Bantu peoples, ,Portuguese• What: ruins of Bantu peoples, a great inland empire;
means “stone houses”• Where: East Africa• When:• Why: built by Bantus in 900-1500 Zimbabwe was a great
trade city and in decline when Portuguese traders pushed through to find more gold mines; the capital reached its’ height around 1300 b.c. of the trade network that reached across the Indian Ocean; there was an effective bureaucracy under a God-king; in 1500, Zim fell b.c. there was too high a population &civil war