Take A Look 2

Table of Contents

4,000 Years of African American History

Introduction 

  • The dark continent?
  • Hollywood and the classroom
  • The surprising number of existing sources

Ancient Africa

  • The Great Sahara Desert as a sea and its southern coast

Western African Origins

  • What we will cover

PART 1: The Empires of Gold

(present-day countries of Senegal, Gambia, Mali, Ghana, Ivory Coast, Liberia, Guinea, Mauritania, Sierra Leone, and Guinea Bissau). 

Tichitt and Walata (2000 BC-500 BC) 

  • What we know and what we don’t know

Mema (500 BC – 800 AD)

  • Mande society, the first Niger Valley cities, and iron technology
  • Mande traditional religion 

Djenne-Jeno (250 BC – 1100 AD)

  • City of Iron and blacksmiths 

Ghana Empire (300 AD – 1200 AD)

  • The Mande build an empire. 
  • Gold for salt and riches
  • Mande government structure
  • Islam as a balance
  • Takrur: Fulani’s first Islamic West African kingdom
  • An Arabs’ detailed description of Ghana
  • The griots and the power of the orator

Mali Empire (1200 AD -1670 AD)

  • Collapse of Ghana
  • Susu conquest
  • Rise of Sundiata Keita (A Lion King)
  • Battle of Kirina in 1235 AD. 
  • The Manden Charter (a constitution)
  • Mali expansion and security
  • Food and industry
  • Imports and Exports
  • Rise of an international West African economy
  • Mansa Musa
  • Written first hand accounts of Mali

CITIES OF THE NIGER RIVER

-Timbuktu 

  • Books, Universities, and the intellectual class (like Boston)
  • First hand accounts

-Djenne

  • Manufacturing and trade center (like Detroit)

-Gao 

  • The Songhai people
  • Military and Administrative center (like Wash DC)
  • First hand accounts

Songhai Empire (1375 – 1591 AD)

  • Decline of Mali
  • Sonni Ali the Great and Terrible
  • Military and naval conquests  
  • Askia the Great
  • Infrastructure, taxes, and trade
  • The Mossi

THE AKAN KINGDOMS OF THE IVORY AND GOLD COASTS

Bono Kingdom (1000 AD)

  • An economy connected to Ghana, Mali and Songhai 
  • Akan societal structure
  • Matrilineal patriarchy
  • Akan royal structure
  • Akan religion
  • Other Akan kingdoms

Birth of Asante (1650-1701 AD)

  • Legend of Osei Kofi Tutu I

PART 2: Ancient Nigeria and Lake Chad Kingdoms

(present day countries of Nigeria, Benin, Chad, northern Cameroon and eastern Niger)

ANCIENT NORTHERN NIGERIA 

-What about Egypt and Nubia (The Afro-Asiatic)

  • Legends, linguistics, and DNA; what we know and what we don’t

Gajiganna – Zilum (1800 BC to 400 BC)

  • What we know

Sao Civilization (500 BC-1500 AD)

  • Afro-Asiatic City-states

Kanem-Bornu Empire (700 AD)

  • Old nomadic religion
  • New Islamic kingdom
  • Conquerors of Fezzan
  • Trade with Ghana and Egypt
  • From enslavers to enslaved
  • Invaders of Sao and influencer of Hausa 

Hausa Kingdoms – Kano (700 AD)

  • Afro-Asiatic city-states evolve
  • Part of the Mali West african trade network 
  • Between Songhai and Bornu 
  • Specialized city state economies
  • Migrations in and out
  • Enter the Fulani
  • Southward to Yorubaland

CENTRAL AND SOUTHERN NIGERIA

Ancient Nok of Central Nigeria (1000 BC)

  • Civilization of iron and terracotta

YORUBA KINGDOMS

Ile-Ife (City of the Gods) (800 AD)

  • Legends and God’s
  • Yoruba urban development systems 
  • Paved streets and courtyards 
  • Surplus agriculture economy 
  • Food production 
  • Glass manufacturing
  • Trade within the West African economy 
  • Government and Royal structure 

Benin Kingdom (1180 AD)

  • Sons of Ile-Ife 
  • Edo urban development
  • First hand account 

Oyo Empire (1400 AD)

  • Hausa, Europe, and the economy  
  • Oyo Government structure
  • Oyo Military
  • Expansion
  • Sin against Ile-Ife

DEMOCRACIES OF THE IGBO

Igbo-Ukwu (850 AD)

  • Archeological ties to Ife or nok

Nri Kingdom (948 AD)

  • Kingdom without an army 
  • Theocratic but Kingless
  • Igbo Religion
  • Government structure and the power of the orator
  • Economic, social, and gender mobility
  • Freedom to choose 
  • Life, liberty, and pursuit of happiness.
  • Igbo’s place in the West African economy

PART 3: The End of the Golden Age: Europe comes to West Africa.

The fall of Constantinople

  • The scramble to get to India and China 
  • Pope gives power to conquer and enslave 
  • Portugal lands in Senegal
  • Battle of Tondibi and the end of Songhai 

Slavery in Western Africa

  • Slavery, or servitude, or both
  • What changed when European needs shifted

West African trade with Europeans

  • European kingdoms fight each other for access to Africa 
  • African kingdoms fight each other for access to Europe

Bambara Empire (1712 AD)

  • Mande traditional religion prevails
  • Invasion of the Niger Valley
  • First hand account
  • Bambarans on slave ships

Wolof and Futa Jallon Kingdoms

  • Theocracy, Jihad, and slave ships

Asante Empire (1701 AD)

  • Consolation of the Akan
  • End of the gold trade
  • Guns for captives
  • War with Everyone

The Kong Empire (1710 AD)

  • Diverse Empire at war

Dahomey (1600 AD)

  • War with Oyo and others
  • Male king, female soldiers
  • Slaves for guns

Aro Confederacy

  • Democracy falls, fear prevails
  • Slaves for guns, guns for slaves

Part 4: Congo-Angola Kingdoms

(present day Democratic Republic of Congo, Angola, Congo, and Gabon)

Ancient Congo Basin

  • The Bantu Migration 

The Kongo Kingdom (1400 AD-

  • Kongo goes Christian 
  • King Alfonso I
  • Angola a threat 
  • Divide and conquer 
  • Vita Kempa Joan of Arc

Kingdoms NDongo and Matamba (1600 AD-

  • Queen Zinga
  • Portuguese need more slaves

PART 5: Trans-Atlantic Slave Trade (1500 to 1820 AD)

FROM AFRICA TO NORTH AMERICA

  • Senegambian Coast
  • Windward Coast
  • Gold Coast
  • Bight of Benin
  • Bight of Biafra
  • Congo/ Angola

ARRIVAL IN NORTH AMERICA

Georgia/ South Carolina

  • Mande, Wolof, Fulani 
  • Why they hate the Igbo 
  • The Gullah

Virginia/ Maryland

  • Why they love the Igbo

Southern Louisiana

  • Bambara, Yoruba, and Congo

PART 6: U.S. Domestic Slavery

1776 Slave Economy under the US Constitution

The making of an American slave

  • Africa and Africans surviving in America
  • Africans in the American slave economy
  • Work songs, shout songs, call and response, and the orator
  • The planter-class elites and the “American Dream”

Slavery Expands 

  • New slave states
  • Cotton becomes king
  • Planter-class elites create a slave confederacy 
  • Texas causes of secession
  • BLACK CIVIL WAR SOLDIERS. Fighting for their own independence

PART 7: Emancipation and the Great Migration 

Reconstruction Era 1865 until 1877

  • Freedman’s Bureau
  • Radical Black Republicans 
  • Gospel music, and the blues. The new Groits
  • The new African Kingdoms: The Church 1865-1895
  • Sharecropping and economic options
  • Jazz: African-Americans fuse African and European classical music 1912

Black Settlements

  • Mound Bayou, Mississippi 1887
  • Oklahoma Black towns from 1865 to 1920
  • Harlem, New York 1867-1917) and the Afro-American Realty Company

First Great Migration 

  • The Klansman as the new American Hero
  • WWI – jobs and Black soldiers 
  • RED SUMMER
  • Chicago
  • Atlanta 

New Black immigrants

  • Caribbean 

PART 8: The Second Great Migration 1941 to 1970

Migrating North

  • After the Great Depression, 
  • WWII creates job opportunities and housing shortage 
  • Government subsidized suburban White patriarchy
  • Redlined out of wealth 

Moving West: Los Angeles

  • Hollywood and self-identity 

The Civil Rights Era

  • MLK the Griot and orator 
  • War on Poverty
  • Vietnam War and the other Opium crisis (Heroine)
  • White Flight. 
  • Economic integration and the death of a Black owned economy. 
  • Government subsidized urban Black matriarchy  

PART 9: The NEW Great Migration 1970 to 2000

Black Poverty

  • HIP HOP: the new griots
  • Crack-cocaine epidemic and war on drugs 
  • Welfare state, Incarceration, and the reduction of the Black Patriarch 
  • The “Inner-city”: get out, or get lost in it!

Growing Black Middle – Class

  • Black Flight and suburban integration 
  • Growth of majority Black suburbs 
  • Back to the South and Sunbelt

After 2000

The Great Recession

  • Near collapse of the Black middle class
  • Gentrification comes for the “Inner-city”
  • Black political power fades with population shifts. 

Rise in Activism

  • Black Lives Matter
  • Buy Black owned 

Conclusion

African America – A Powerful Nation