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1 min read•june 18, 2024
📖 AMSCO p.43 - p.49
Term | Definition + Significance |
Kin-based networks | Decentralized social structures in Sub-Saharan Africa organized around family ties and led by a chief. |
Swahili | Language formed by blending Bantu and Arabic in the East African coastal region. |
Zanj rebellion | Successful slave revolt (869-883) by enslaved East Africans against Arab rulers in Basra. |
Trans-Saharan Trade | Network of trading routes across the Sahara, facilitating trade between North and West Africa. |
Indian Ocean Trade | Maritime trade connecting East Africa, the Middle East, South Asia, and East Asia. |
Indian Ocean Slave Trade | Slave trade route between East Africa and the Middle East, persisting into the 20th century. |
Great Zimbabwe | Powerful East African kingdom (12th-15th centuries) known for its stone architecture and wealth from gold trade. |
Chief | Leader of a kin-based network in Sub-Saharan Africa. |
Hausa Kingdoms | Ethnic group in West Africa that formed seven states known as the Hausa Kingdoms. |
Ghana | West African kingdom known for selling gold and ivory to Muslim traders during the 8th to 11th centuries. |
Mali | Successor to the Ghanaian state, Mali became a powerful trading society in West Africa during the 12th century. |
Zimbabwe | East African kingdom that built its prosperity on agriculture, grazing, trade, and gold, with a powerful capital. |
Ethiopia | Christian-led kingdom in Ethiopia that developed independently, blending traditional faith with Christianity. |
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