African Kingdoms 10d.

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Presentation transcript:

African Kingdoms 10d

Where? During the Middle Ages, African civilizations developed in Sub-Saharan west and east Africa

Axum Located in modern day Ethiopia and near the Nile River

Axum Religion Aksumites originally believed in one god called Mahrem and they were also animists They often used animals for sacrifice Trade and merchants brought along a new religion

Aksum Religion Christianity became prevalent throughout the Aksum kingdom Ezana converted all the people of the kingdom to Christianity This allowed for Ethiopia (where Aksum was located) to be home to millions of Christians

Zimbabwe Located near the Zambezi and Limpopo rivers and the Indian Ocean The people of Zimbabwe we called Shona Land was great for farming and raising cattle

“Great Zimbabwe” City stood near a major trade route that linked the gold fields with Sofala (major trading city) The people of this city gained control of these trade routes and taxed the traders who traveled these routes This caused “Great Zimbabwe” to become the economic, political, and religious center of its empire

West African kingdoms West African Kingdoms during the Middle Ages include Ghana, Mali, and Songhai They are located near the Niger River and the Sahara

Ghana By 700s A.D Ghana becomes a kingdom in West Africa

Gold and Salt Two most important trade items Gold came from the forest region south of the Savanna (Found in 100s of feet in earth or in rivers) The Sahara contained salt deposits

Mali 1235, Mali emerges as a kingdom Its founders were located south of Ghana, but as Ghana grew weaker and Mali gained power, Ghana is taken over Mali is now in control of the gold and salt trade routes.

Timbuktu An important city of the Mali kingdom Used for trading and it attracted Muslim judges, doctors, religious leaders, and scholars They came because of Timbuktu’s outstanding mosques and universities

Songhai In the 1400s, the Songhai empire came about The Songhai people gradually took over the territory of the previous kingdom Mali Timbuktu and Djenne are in Songhai’s control As a result, Songhai gains control of the gold and salt trade

Religion Islam spread south of the Sahara due to trade Most rulers converted to Islam (Ghana) Even though the rulers are Muslim, most people did not convert, but maintained their animistic beliefs. Islam’s growth encouraged the spread of literacy.