Transcript Chapter 15

Chapter 15
Northern Africa
Northern Africa
•Has more in common with the
Middle East than the rest of Africa
•Main concerns:
•
search for water
•
Islamic faith
•Dominated by Sahara desert- largest
desert in the world
•Closed to Christian missions
I. The Sahel







Transitional region between jungles and
Sahara
Grass covered plains
300 miles wide
Mauritania, Mali, Niger, Chad
Very poor region, Children rarely attend
school, Lowest literacy rates in Africa
Transitional for religion and cultures too
Desertification:
◦ Read pg. 382
Mauritania






TODAY:
Only country of the Sahel to have a seacoast
Only natural resource- iron ore
Nomadic people in the north called Moors
Only fertile plain- along the Senegal River
◦ Drought, overgrazing and deforestation have taken a
toll though
◦ Many farmers living in capital, Nouakchott, off of
foreign aid
History
Not always so poor, Ghana Empire was in the SE
corner
Controlled the trade routes, kept all gold pieces, allowed
gold dust to continue on
Ancient capital now lies in ruins
Mali







Today
One of the poorest
countries in the world
Mostly desert and
landlocked
90% of population lives in
the Sahel
Main export: cotton–
fluctuating prices make the
economy vulnerable
Niger River – most
important in the Sahel, flows
through Mali- most cities lie
on the river
Capital: Bamako- largest in
the Sahel
•History
•Center of the glorious Mali Empire
•Rose to power in 1200 when they
conquered Ghana
•Took control of gold trade, wealth increased
greatly
•Mansa Musa- leading king of Malireputation as the richest man in the world
•brought Muslim scholars into Mali
•Set up Timbuktu as his capital- became key
university city in all of Northern Africa
•No European laid eyes on Timbuktu until
1826
Niger
Today
 Covered almost entirely by the Sahara
 One break in the desert- the Air Mountains

◦ Switzerland of the desert
◦ Largest uranium reserves in Africa- provides mining jobs





Niger River in the southwest is most populous area, although temperatures reach 100*F on
average
Capital: Niamey
2005 brought drought and locust infestation- food shortage for 2.5 million
Living conditions worse than Mali, lowest per capita GDP and lowest life expectancy
of the Sahel
Has to rely on foreign aid for everything
Niger






History
Tuaregs- white desert nomads- took control of ancient
trade routes (today 8% of Nigerians are Tuareg)
Largest African empire- Songhai- was born along the
Niger River in 8th century
Great ruler: Sunni Ali took over the Mali empire in 1464
Invaded in 1591 by Morocco who blamed Songhai for
economic decline
Morocco easily won- first to use firearms in a battle on
African soil
Chad
One of the most primitive countries in the Sahel
 Lake Chad- most important body of water in the Sahel,
has a lot of fish, capital (N’Djamena) located here
 Civil War for 3 decades
 Christian population is largest in the Sahel, due to
missionaries who came in the colonial days

II. The Maghreb

Atlas Mountains lie along the northwest coast of
Africa
◦ Arabs call them Djezirea el-Maghreb
◦ Major impact on weather and culture
Coast along the Mediterranean is pleasant climate
 Arabs call 3 countries the Maghreb—meaning
west
◦ Algeria,Tunisia, Morocco
 Berbers first settled the region- traded with Romans,
Greeks, etc.

Morocco
 Has coasts on Mediterranean and Atlantic





Narrow peninsula almost touches Europe- 8 miles across the Strait of
Gibraltar
Border town= Tangier
Two other major ports: Casablanca and Rabat (capital) lie on the
Atlantic
Has a constitutional monarchy since 1956- royal family claims direct
descent from the prophet Mohammed
Controls regions in Western Sahara
Algeria
Was the second largest country in Africa (size of Texas and
Alaska combined) until Sudan split
 Most of the country is desert, 91% of pop. Lives along the
Mediterranean coast
 Mild climate, makes wine and citrus fruits the main exports
 Shaped by history of foreign invaders- Arab, French






The Sahara
Not just wide open sandy areas– called Ergs
More common- Regs- flat desert area covered with pebbles
Ahaggar Mountains- rise in the middle of the Sahara
Chotts- shallow salt lakes, contain very little water
Wadis (dry stream beds) and Oases- grass and palm trees can
survive, usually only big enough to support one or two
families, but some are large enough to support entire cities
Tunisia
Several geographic advantages over neighbors
pleasant climate, water supply, productive land
Has twice the population of Libya, large neighbor to the East
Most people live in the North, near the Atlas mountains
Prominent peninsula juts out into the Mediterranean
Tunis- Capital city- located for trade (ancient city of
Carthage)
III. Libya and Egypt
Serve as transitional area between
Africa and the Middle East
 Are the two most influential N.
African countries
 Both have played important roles in world
politics

Libya








Desert covers 90%
capital of Tripoli – largest manufacturing center today
Highest temperature ever measured was in the Sahara of Libya- 136*F
Independent from Italy in 1951, but Muammar Qaddafi overthrew the newly
placed government in 1969- removed all signs of Italian culture, hoped to create a
new empire
Oil deposits give Libya highest per capita GDP in Africa
Highest life expectancy in Africa
Man-Made River Project- bringing water underground from the Sahara up to
farms in the North, largest engineering project in the world
In 2011 protests against Gaddafi's rule began. These escalated into an uprising
that spread across the country. Qaddafi was captured alive,but then killed by the
liberation army.
Egypt







Today
Largest population in the Arab world
Monarchy replaced with republic in 1952
Nile is the livelihood of Egypt- nearly all the population lives along the river
Cairo- capital- largest city in Africa, major tourist spot due to Giza
pyramids across the river
Alexandria- Alexander the Great established this city near the delta,
home to the largest library ever compiled in the ancient world
Strong Muslim population
Egypt- continued
Aswan High Dam- largest dam in Egypt, created Lake Nasserbefore farmers had to wait for river to flood to irrigate crops,
now farm year round, but have to use fertilizer
 Sinai Peninsula- part of Asia, divided from African Egypt by
Isthmus of Sinai

◦ Gulf of Suez connect to the Mediterranean by the Suez Canal—read
pg. 395 in textbook
◦ Gets its name from Mount Sinai, located on the peninsula, where
Moses received the Ten Commandments

Upper Egypt and Lower Egypt
◦ Northern area – Nile Delta, lower elevation= Lower Egypt
◦ Southern area- between Aswan High Dam and the Nile Delta =
Upper Egypt– where most ruins are located
Egypt

History

As early as 2700 BC, Egypt was united as a state under one ruler
Long succession of dynasties and pharaohs- who built famous
monuments
Thebes- great capital of Egyptian kings for 1500 years, now is the
city of Luxor
Valley of the Kings- near Luxor, more than 60 tombs of pharaohs –
many robbed before archeologists arrived, but King Tut’s was intact
Read pg. 393 in textbook



