Tropical Africa & Asia - Miami Beach Senior High School
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Transcript Tropical Africa & Asia - Miami Beach Senior High School
Tropical Africa
and Asia,
1200-1500
John Ermer
AP World History
Miami Beach Senior High
The Tropics
Muslim
world stretched from Spain to India and
to southeast Asia, and southern Eurasia to SubSaharan Africa
Sub-Saharan Africa and Southern Asia share
religious and geographic similarities
Arabic, Islam, tropical weather, monsoons
Ibn-Battuta travels through Muslim world
Tropical
climates present difficulties, and many
different cultures emerge throughout the tropics
Hunting and gathering
Biological changes among population (Pygmys)
Animal domestication
Water control & irrigation
Delhi
Mineral
Sultinate (1206-1526) canal system/dry season
wealth
Monsoons
Tropical Islam
Mali (Bilad al-sudan)
Founded by Africans who earlier converted to Islam
Mostly learned of Islam through trade, not force
Islam appealed to poor (alms) and leaders (military, admin)
Grew rich through Sub-Saharan trade/gold
Sundiata leads Malinke people to victory, founds Mali
Mansa Musa’s pilgrimage to Mecca, gold & edu.
Mansa Suleiman & Ibn-Battuta’s travels
Sultanate of Delhi (India)
Turkish Muslims easily defeat small Indian states
Eventually recognized as official by caliph, pacified
Some sultans tolerant, most used terror to control land
Muslim infighting and Hindu challenges end Delhi Sultanate
Bahmani Empire (Muslim)
Vijayanager Empire (Hindu)
Ibn Battuta
Timbuktu
African Christianity
Early
Christian communities established in N. Africa
c. 350: Kingdom of Axum converts to Christianity
Ethiopian kingdom, Bible translated
Solomonic dynasty claims ties to David and Solomon
Ethiopia remains Christian island, surrounded by Islam
Ethiopian
Christianity takes on unique qualities
Indian Ocean
1200: Indian Ocean=world’s richest trade zone
Western trade made on dhows (Indian ships)
Eastern trade made on junks (Chinese ships)
Swahili Africa & Zimbabwe (Sawahil al-sudan)
Arab and Iranian merchants establish trade on Swahili
Coast looking for gold
Trading towns and economies emerge on east coast
Gold came from Great Zimbabwe
Inland kingdom on plateau south of Zambezi River
Declined due to ecological disaster
Aden
The Malabar Coast and Gujarat
Rich and tolerant trading post in South Arabia
Grows rich from exporting cotton and indigo West
Large textile manufacturing center
Malacca
Main port city between Indian Ocean & South China Sea
Cosmopolitan city
Cultural Changes
Growth
of noble and slave populations
Swahili mosques combine local materials with
Middle Eastern architectural styles
Hindu architecture influences mosque designs
Islam spreads literacy in Africa & Asia
Urdu Persian influenced Hindi literature
Arabic speaking Quarnic schools in Timbuktu
Status
of Hindu women rise, but harems abound
Tropical women produce most of the farm work
Converting to Islam gave women more rights
Not all Arab social norms followed Islam, some nonArab Muslim women had more rights than Arab
women