The Ghana Empire or Wagadou Empire, located…
988 CE
The Ghana Empire or Wagadou Empire, located in what is now southeastern Mauritania, Western Mali, is believed to be first of many empires that will rise in this part of Africa.
It had first begun in the eighth century, when a dramatic shift in the economy of the Sahel area south of the Sahara allowed more centralized states to form.
The introduction of the camel, which preceded Muslims and Islam by several centuries, had brought about a gradual revolution in trade, and for the first time, the extensive gold, ivory, and salt resources of the region could be sent north and east to population centers in North Africa, the Middle East and Europe in exchange for manufactured goods.
The empire of Ghana governs peoples living as far south and east as the middle reaches of the Senegal River and the great bend of the Niger River.
Ghana’s powerful monarch administers his extensive empire with the assistance of viceroys and counselors with oracular power.
Because the empire controls the major sources of Africa's alluvial gold, contemporary Arabic writings call the king of Ghana the richest person in the world.
In the markets of the Ghanaian capital (located in the southeastern corner of present Mauritania, not far from the Senegal River), local entrepreneurs trade the gold, ivory, and enslaved people of sub-Saharan Africa for the Sahara salt—worth its weight in gold—and for the books, swords, horses, and textiles of North Africa and Europe.
In addition to the major export of gold, which is taxed, the Ghanaians also trade honey, kola nuts, dried fruit, and cowry shells within the empire.
In 990, Ghana’s cavalry regiment conquers the state of Sanhaja (now part of Morocco), one of the largest Berber tribal confederations of the Maghreb, along with the Zenata and Masmuda.