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Boundless World History I: Ancient Civilizations-Enlightenment
World History Textbooks Boundless World History I: Ancient Civilizations-Enlightenment
World History Textbooks
World History

Chapter 15

African Civilizations

Book Version 35
By Boundless
Boundless World History I: Ancient Civilizations-Enlightenment
World History
by Boundless
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Section 1
Early Africa
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The Bantu Migration

The Bantu expansion, or a postulated millennia-long series of migrations of speakers of the original proto-Bantu language group, originated from the adjoining regions of Cameroon and Nigeria about 3,000 years ago, eventually reaching South Africa around 300 CE.

Section 2
Northern Africa
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Post-Byzantine Egypt

The Muslim conquest of Egypt took place shortly after Muhammad's death, but it was three centuries later, under the Fatimid Caliphate, that the region became the center of the Islamic world. 

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Islamic Conquest of the Maghreb

The Islamic conquest of the Maghreb region took place largely under the Umayyad Caliphate (661–750), which at the peak of its influence ruled one of the vastest empires ever to exist. 

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Nubia

Nubia, known also as the Kingdom of Kush, was one of the earliest civilizations of ancient Northeastern Africa and home to one of the African empires that, because of its proximity to and relations with Egypt, remains a lesser known chapter of ancient history.  

Section 3
Central African Empires
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Bornu Empire

The Kanem-Bornu Empire was an empire that existed in modern Chad and Nigeria from the 14th to 19th centuries.

Section 4
West African Empires
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The Ghana Empire

The Ghana Empire was located in what is now southeastern Mauritania, western Mali, and eastern Senegal, and derived its power from the control of trans-Saharan trade, particularly gold trade.

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Mali

The Mali Empire was an empire in West Africa that lasted from 1230 to 1600 and profoundly influenced the culture of the region through the spread of its language, laws, and customs along lands adjacent to the Niger River, as well as other areas consisting of numerous vassal kingdoms and provinces.

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Songhai

The Songhai Empire dominated the western Sahel in the 15th and 16th centuries; at its peak, it was one of the largest states in Africa.

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The Yoruba States

While Ile-Ife is considered to be the spiritual homeland of the Yoruba people, numerous Yoruba states were eventually centralized within the modern Oyo Empire, which grew to become one of the largest African states. 

Section 5
East African Empires
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Kingdom of Aksum

The Kingdom of Aksum was a trading nation in the area of northern Ethiopia and Eritrea that existed from approximately 100 to 940 CE.

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The Sultanates of Somalia

From the Middle Ages until when Europeans colonized the territory of today's Somalia, the region was never dominated by a centralized empire, and instead witnessed the development and decline of several powerful trading sultanates whose cultures were deeply rooted in Islam.

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Ethiopia and Eritrea

Following the ancient kingdom of D'mt and the medieval empire of Aksum, some of current Ethiopia's territory was dominated by the Christian Ethiopian Empire established by the Zagwe dynasty in the 12th century, and later ruled by the Solomonic dynasty until the 20th century. 

Section 6
Southern African States
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Namibia

Today's Namibia did not witness the emergence of ancient or medieval kingdoms and empires that would largely dominate its territory, but evidence suggests that a number of diverse peoples settled there as a result of ancient, medieval, and modern migrations.

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Great Zimbabwe

Great Zimbabwe was the capital of the Kingdom of Zimbabwe (13th–15th c.); it flourished as an international gold and ivory trade center and its architecturally unique ruins remain among the oldest and largest structures in Southern Africa.

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The Swahili Culture

Swahili culture originated on the Swahili Coast from the mixture of Perso-Arab and Bantu cultures that is credited for creating Swahili as a distinctive East African culture and language.

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The Kingdoms of Madagascar

Among many fragmented communities that populated Madagascar, the Sakalava, Merina, and Betsimisaraka seized the opportunity to unite disparate groups and establish powerful kingdoms under their rule.

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Boundless World History I: Ancient Civilizations-Enlightenment by Boundless
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Chinese Dynasties
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Chapter 15
African Civilizations
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