Maritime East Africa (964 – 1107 CE): …

Years: 964 - 1107

Maritime East Africa (964 – 1107 CE): Swahili Urbanization, Madagascar’s Consolidation, and Expanding Trade

Climate and Environmental Shifts

  • Favorable monsoons sustained reliable sailing; rainfall remained supportive of agriculture.

  • Madagascar’s eastern rainforests and western dry zones supported diversified farming.

  • Seychelles and Mascarenes continued uninhabited, though occasionally sighted.

Societies and Political Developments

  • Swahili city-states: Kilwa Kisiwani rose to prominence, expanding influence southward.

  • Mombasa, Pemba, Zanzibar, Mafia: grew into urbanized trading hubs.

  • Madagascar: coastal polities consolidated, while highland settlements developed terracing and irrigation.

  • Comoros: Islamic influence deepened, linked to the Swahili coast.

Economy and Trade

  • Exports: ivory, gold, and slaves through Kilwa and Mombasa.

  • Imports: Indian cottons, Chinese ceramics, and Arabian horses.

  • Madagascar: cattle, rice, and forest products exchanged for beads and cloth.

Belief and Symbolism

  • Islam spread across the Swahili littoral, shaping urban identity.

  • Madagascar: Austronesian–African syncretism persisted in ancestor rituals.

Long-Term Significance

By 1107, the Swahili city-states flourished as urbanized nodes of Islamic trade; Madagascar and Comoros provided agricultural and cultural ballast to this expanding maritime world.

Related Events

Filter results