Hausa people
Nation | Active
532 CE to 2057 CE
The Hausa are the largest ethnic group in West Africa and one of the largest ethnic groups in Africa.
The Hausa are a racially diverse but culturally homogeneous people based primarily in the Sahelian and Sudanian areas of northern Nigeria and southeastern Niger, with significant numbers also living in parts of Cameroon, Côte d'Ivoire, Chad, Togo, Ghana and Sudan.
The largest population of Hausa are concentrated in Nigeria and Niger, where they constitute the majority.
Predominantly Hausa-speaking communities are scattered throughout West Africa, and on the traditional Hajj route north and east traversing the Sahara Desert, with an especially large population around and in the town of Agadez.
Other Hausa have also moved to large coastal cities in the region such as Lagos, Accra, Abidjan, Banjul and Cotonou, as well as to parts of North Africa such as Libya over the course of the last five hundred years.Most Hausa, however, live in small villages or towns in West Africa, where they grow crops, raise livestock including cattle and engage in trade.
They speak the Hausa language, an Afro-Asiatic language of the Chadic group.
The Hausa aristocracy had historically developed an equestrian based culture.
Still a status symbol of the traditional nobility in Hausa society, the horse still features in the Eid day celebrations, known as Ranar Sallah (in English: the Day of the Prayer).
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West Africa (909 BCE – 819 CE) Antiquity — Sahelian Kingdom Seeds and Gold–Salt Gateways
Geographic and Environmental Context
The Atlantic and inland belt from Senegal and Mauritania east through Mali, Niger, Burkina Faso, and Nigeria (western and central), plus the forest–savanna margins of Guinea, Sierra Leone, Liberia, Côte d’Ivoire, Ghana, Togo, and Benin.
Anchors: Senegal–Gambia valleys, Inland Niger Bend and Inland Delta (Timbuktu, Mopti, Gao), Middle Niger–Kainji basin, Jos Plateau, Hausaland (Kano, Katsina, Zaria), Upper Volta basin, Gold Coast forest margins, Futa Jallon highlands, Dahomey Gap.
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Sahel and forest–savanna margin the economic heart.
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Inland Niger Delta, Senegal Valley, Hausaland rising.
Climate & Environmental Shifts
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Aridity pulses continued, but rivers buffered.
Societies & Political Developments
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Proto-Ghana/Wagadu in western Sahel.
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Takrur (Senegal valley) precursors.
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Hausaland clustered towns.
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Forest–savanna edge (Gold Coast, Côte d’Ivoire) linked via kola–gold trade.
Economy & Trade
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Trans-Saharan salt–gold routes germinated.
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Iron, livestock, grain formed regional staples.
Technology & Material Culture
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Iron smelting widespread; Nok terracottas matured.
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Town ramparts, craft specializations.
Belief & Symbolism
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Ancestor cults; shrines for agriculture/fertility.
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Early divination traditions.
Environmental Adaptation & Resilience
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Salt–gold–grain trade and farming networks hedged against drought.
Transition
By 819 CE, West Africa hosted proto-kingdoms (Wagadu/Ghana, Takrur) and Hausaland towns, setting stage for the great empires of the medieval Sahel.
West Africa (820 – 963 CE): Ghana’s Rise, Sahel–Forest Gateways, and River Towns
Geographic and Environmental Context
West Africa includes Senegal, Mauritania, Mali, Burkina Faso, Niger, Guinea, Sierra Leone, Liberia, Côte d’Ivoire, Ghana, Togo, Benin, and western–central Nigeria (Hausaland).
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Anchors: the Senegal–Gambia valleys, the Niger Bend and Inland Delta, the Volta and Benue corridors, and forest margins from Guinea to Ghana–Benin.
Climate and Environmental Shifts
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The Medieval Warm Period brought generally favorable rains to the Sahel and Sudan belts.
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Flood-recession farming in the Inland Niger Delta and lower Senegal supported cereals, fish, and pastures.
Societies and Political Developments
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Ghana (Wagadu) consolidated between the Senegal and upper Niger, taxing caravans at nodes around Koumbi Saleh.
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Takrur formed in the lower Senegal valley as an early riverine state.
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Towns at Gao on the Niger Bend grew into a commercial polity (Songhay ancestors).
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Forest–savanna margins (Mande and early Akan ancestors) supplied gold, kola, and ivory to Sahelian markets.
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In Hausaland (northwest–central Nigeria), early urban kernels (e.g., Kano, Katsina) emerged as walled towns within a mosaic of farming chieftaincies.
Economy and Trade
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Trans-Saharan caravans linked Ghana to Sijilmassa and Awdaghust (gold for salt, copper, cloth).
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Savanna agriculture (millet, sorghum) and floodplain gardens fueled surplus; cattle herds grazed Sahel pastures.
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Forest exports—gold (Bambuk, Buré), kola, ivory—moved through Mande brokers northward.
Subsistence and Technology
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Dryland grains with iron hoes and ard ploughs; river fisheries and flood-recession plots in the Inland Delta.
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Iron smelting furnished tools and weapons; donkeys and oxen moved farm goods; camels dominated the desert legs.
Movement and Interaction Corridors
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Sahara–Sahel axes: Sijilmassa ⇄ Awdaghust ⇄ Ghana; Air–Azawad ⇄ Gao.
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Niger River tied Gao to Inland Delta fisheries and pasture markets; Senegal River sustained Takrur.
Belief and Symbolism
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Indigenous religions centered on earth shrines, ancestor veneration, and river spirits.
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Early Islamic presence (merchants, scholars) clustered in caravan towns and separate quarters, without displacing local cults.
Adaptation and Resilience
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Ecological complementarity—Sahel grains, river fish, forest gold and kola—buffered shocks.
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Toll-taking states (Ghana, Takrur) maintained caravan security; when one route faltered, traffic shifted to alternatives.
Long-Term Significance
By 963, West Africa was a Sahelian–riverine commonwealth: Ghana dominated gold–salt corridors; Gao and Takrur anchored the Niger and Senegal; forest margins fed northbound trade that would power later state formation.
West Africa (964 – 1107 CE): Ghana’s Zenith, Sahelian Towns, and Forest Gateways
Geographic and Environmental Context
West Africa includes Senegal, Mauritania, Mali, Burkina Faso, Niger, Guinea, Sierra Leone, Liberia, Côte d’Ivoire, Ghana, Togo, Benin, and Nigeria.
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The Sahelian belt (Senegal–Niger valleys) anchored kingdoms like Ghana (Wagadu) and Takrur.
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The Niger Bend and inner Niger delta supported riverine farming, fishing, and trade, with towns such as Gao rising to prominence.
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The forest–savanna frontiers of modern Guinea, Côte d’Ivoire, and Ghana served as entry points for gold, kola, and ivory into Sahelian networks.
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In the east, Hausaland (northern Nigeria) consolidated into a mosaic of town-based polities linked to desert and savanna routes.
Climate and Environmental Shifts
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The Medieval Warm Period (c. 950–1250) brought more stable rainfall to the Sahel, supporting millet, sorghum, and livestock across wide zones.
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Flood-recession agriculture in the inner Niger delta flourished, producing cereals, vegetables, and fish surpluses.
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Periodic dry years still occurred, but ecological diversity across Sahel, savanna, and forest buffered subsistence.
Societies and Political Developments
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Ghana (Wagadu):
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Reached its peak by the late 10th–11th centuries, ruling from Koumbi Saleh, with dual cities for indigenous and Muslim merchant populations.
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Controlled the Awdaghust–Sijilmāsa caravan axis, extracting tribute and tolls on gold, salt, copper, and slaves.
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Kings of Ghana patronized indigenous rituals but hosted Muslim scholars and traders, balancing dual authority.
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Takrur (Senegal valley):
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Consolidated as a kingdom rivaling Ghana; rulers adopted Islam earlier than Ghana’s kings, fostering closer ties with North African merchants.
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Gao (Songhay ancestors):
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Emerged as a rival Sahelian power on the eastern Niger; by the 11th century, Gao was a recognized kingdom with a Muslim ruling elite, noted in Arabic sources.
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Forest–savanna margins:
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Mande-speaking traders and Akan ancestors channeled gold (Bambuk, Bure), kola nuts, and ivory northward.
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Lineages in Upper Guinea and the Gold Coast consolidated towns, creating durable supply networks.
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Hausaland:
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Urban communities at Kano, Katsina, Zaria grew into organized towns, each with ruling dynasties and fortified walls.
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Early Hausa polities integrated farming, craft, and caravan trade.
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Benin region:
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Edo-speaking communities clustered around chiefs; early forms of the Benin polity emerged in the 11th century.
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Economy and Trade
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Gold–salt trade: Ghana mediated the movement of gold from Bambuk/Buré to Sijilmāsa and beyond, while Saharan salt moved south.
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Copper and iron: copper from Takedda and Air supplied smiths; local ironworking thrived in savanna belts.
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Agriculture: millet and sorghum in Sahel; African rice in Upper Guinea; yams and oil palm in forest margins.
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Livestock: cattle, sheep, and goats grazed in the Sahel; horses (imported from the Maghreb) became symbols of elite power.
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Slaves: captured in frontier wars, traded north across the Sahara, and incorporated into Sahelian households.
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Craft production: raffia cloth, iron tools, wooden sculptures, and leatherwork enriched markets.
Subsistence and Technology
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Farming systems: intensive irrigation and flood-recession farming in Senegal and Niger valleys.
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Pastoralism: transhumant cycles linked Sahel pastures with riverside gardens.
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Iron technology: bloomery furnaces supplied hoes, axes, spearheads, and ornaments.
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River transport: dugout canoes on the Senegal, Gambia, and Niger moved goods and people.
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Caravan technology: camels carried gold, salt, ivory, and textiles across the Sahara in organized trains.
Movement and Interaction Corridors
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Awdaghust ⇄ Sijilmāsa ⇄ Koumbi Saleh: Ghana’s critical trans-Saharan axis.
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Niger Bend ⇄ Gao ⇄ Air: eastern routes carrying copper, salt, and slaves.
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Senegal River ⇄ Takrur ⇄ Atlantic littoral: opening Sahelian trade toward the ocean, centuries before European contact.
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Forest tracks ⇄ Sahel towns: Mande and Akan traders linked forest resources to Sahel markets.
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Hausaland ⇄ Air ⇄ Sahara: Hausa towns connected to Saharan gateways for copper and textiles.
Belief and Symbolism
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Indigenous religions: earth shrines, ancestral spirits, and sacred groves legitimized land and kingship.
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Islam:
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Spread among merchants, scholars, and some rulers (notably Takrur and Gao).
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Muslim quarters in Ghana’s Koumbi Saleh flourished, while Ghana’s kings retained indigenous rituals.
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Symbolic economy: horses, gold ornaments, and elaborate burials marked elite power.
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Festivals synchronized agricultural and trading calendars, reinforcing community bonds.
Adaptation and Resilience
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Ecological complementarity: gold from forests, grain from Sahel, salt from Sahara ensured resilience.
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Political dualism: rulers balanced indigenous ritual authority with Muslim merchant literacy and diplomacy.
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Caravan redundancy: shifting routes ensured continuity even when climate or politics disrupted one path.
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Lineage networks: in forest and savanna, kin-based alliances stabilized trade and subsistence.
Long-Term Significance
By 1107 CE, West Africa stood at a high point of Sahelian power and trans-Saharan integration:
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Ghana (Wagadu) controlled the gold–salt axis at its zenith.
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Takrur rose in the Senegal valley as an Islamic kingdom.
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Gao emerged as a Muslim-led Sahelian power.
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Forest frontiers provided gold, kola, and ivory through Mande traders.
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Hausaland and Benin laid the foundations of durable polities.
This era established West Africa as a pivot of Afro-Eurasian trade, blending indigenous traditions with the growing influence of Islam, and setting the stage for the decline of Ghana and the rise of Mali in the 13th century.
Much of present-day Nigeria is divided long before 1500 into states, which can be identified with the modern ethnic groups that trace their history to the origins of these states.
These early states include the Yoruba kingdoms, the Edo kingdom of Benin, the Hausa cities, and Nupe.
In addition, numerous small states to the west and south of Lake Chad are absorbed or displaced in the course of the expansion of Kanem, which is centered to the northeast of Lake Chad.
Borno, initially the western province of Kanem, will become independent in the late fourteenth century.
Other states probably exist as well, but oral traditions and the absence of archaeological data do not permit an accurate dating of their antiquity.
West Africa (1108 – 1251 CE): Ghana’s Decline, Sundiata’s Revolution, and Benin’s Consolidation
Geographic and Environmental Context
West Africa includes Senegal, Mauritania, Mali, Burkina Faso, Niger, Guinea, Sierra Leone, Liberia, Côte d’Ivoire, Ghana, Togo, Benin, and Nigeria.
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The Sahelian belt (Senegal–Niger valleys) anchored kingdoms like Ghana (Wagadu) and Takrur.
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The Niger Bend and inner Niger delta supported riverine farming, fishing, and trade, with towns such as Gao rising to prominence.
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The forest–savanna frontiers of modern Guinea, Côte d’Ivoire, and Ghana served as entry points for gold, kola, and ivory into Sahelian networks.
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In the east, Hausaland (northern Nigeria) consolidated into a mosaic of town-based polities linked to desert and savanna routes.
Climate and Environmental Shifts
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Generally favorable rains, with localized dry spells.
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Flood-recession agriculture in the Inland Delta remained productive.
Societies and Political Developments
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Ghana (Wagadu) declined under internal fissures, shifting trade, and pressure from nomads and rival states.
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In the upper Niger, Sundiata Keita forged the Mali polity (crowned after the Battle of Kirina, c. 1235), uniting Mande chiefdoms and seizing the goldfields’ arteries.
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Gao persisted as a Songhay kingdom; Takrur remained an Islamic river state.
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Hausaland: city-states expanded walls, markets, and dynastic courts.
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Benin region: Ogiso-era town clusters consolidated toward the early Oba monarchy.
Economy and Trade
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Mali’s control of Bambuk–Buré gold routes shifted the balance from Ghana; salt from Taghaza/ Taoudenni supplied the Sahel.
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Caravans: copper from Takedda, textiles from Ghadames–Ghat, and horses from the Maghreb flowed south; gold, slaves, ivory, and kola moved north.
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Agriculture: Sahel grains; Inland Delta rice and fish; forest yams and oil palm.
Subsistence and Technology
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Irrigation and floodplain management in Inland Delta; iron hoes and sickles increased yields.
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Camel logistics refined; caravanserais multiplied along trunk routes.
Movement and Interaction Corridors
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Upper Niger trunk (Niani–Kangaba) under Mali;
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Gao–Air–Takedda copper axis;
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Senegal–Takrur routes to the Atlantic edge;
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Hausa corridors through Kano and Katsina toward the Sahara.
Belief and Symbolism
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Islamic courts in Mali, Gao, Takrur sponsored mosques and jurists; indigenous rites persisted in rural hinterlands.
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Griots preserved royal epics (e.g., Sundiata), legitimating rule.
Adaptation and Resilience
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Political succession from Ghana to Mali preserved caravan security.
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Ecological spread—Sahel grains + floodplain rice + forest kola—hedged climate risk.
Long-Term Significance
By 1251, Mali had supplanted Ghana; Gao, Takrur, Hausa, and Benin matured—setting up a 14th-century boom in gold, cities, and Islamic learning.
West Africa (1252 – 1395 CE): Mali’s Gold Age, Songhay’s Ascent, and Hausa–Benin City Networks
Geographic and Environmental Context
West Africa includes Senegal, Mauritania, Mali, Burkina Faso, Niger, Guinea, Sierra Leone, Liberia, Côte d’Ivoire, Ghana, Togo, Benin, and Nigeria.
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The Sahelian belt (Senegal–Niger valleys) anchored kingdoms like Ghana (Wagadu) and Takrur.
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The Niger Bend and inner Niger delta supported riverine farming, fishing, and trade, with towns such as Gao rising to prominence.
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The forest–savanna frontiers of modern Guinea, Côte d’Ivoire, and Ghana served as entry points for gold, kola, and ivory into Sahelian networks.
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In the east, Hausaland (northern Nigeria) consolidated into a mosaic of town-based polities linked to desert and savanna routes.
Climate and Environmental Shifts
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The onset of the Little Ice Age (~1300) introduced greater rainfall variability in the Sahel; core river basins and floodplains remained productive.
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Caravan viability continued with route adjustments to oasis conditions.
Societies and Political Developments
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Mali Empire reached its zenith: Mansa Musa (r. 1312–1337) centralized power, reformed finances, and performed the celebrated hajj (1324–1325), projecting Malian prestige across the Islamic world; Mansa Sulayman (r. 1341–1360) maintained stability.
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Songhay at Gao expanded autonomy under the Sonni dynasty (pre-Sunni Ali), positioning for later takeover of the Niger Bend.
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Hausa city-states (e.g., Kano, Katsina, Zaria) entrenched urban courts, craft guilds, and caravan diplomacy.
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Jolof confederation rose in Senegambia (mid-14th c.), shaping Atlantic-edge politics.
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Benin Kingdom consolidated the Oba monarchy (late 13th–14th c.), strengthening city walls, palace rituals, and regional trade.
Economy and Trade
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Gold from Bambuk–Buré and Wangara networks sustained Mali’s coin and credit circuits;
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Salt from Taghaza fed the Sahel; copper from Takedda supplied smiths; horses from the Maghreb armed elites.
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Agriculture: Sahel grains; Inland Delta rice/fish; forest kola, pepper, and palm products.
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Urban craft: cloth weaving, leatherwork, metalwork, and manuscript culture in Sahelian towns.
Subsistence and Technology
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Floodplain irrigation and rice paddies in the Inland Delta; millet–sorghum rotations across the Sahel; orchard and garden plots near cities.
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Camel caravans optimized with relay oases; riverine canoes moved grain and fish.
Movement and Interaction Corridors
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Niani–Timbuktu–Gao trunk within Mali; Gao–Air–Takedda; Takrur–Senegal; Hausa–Saharan routes through Air and Ajjer into the Maghreb; Benin–Nupe forest–savanna corridors to the Niger.
Belief and Symbolism
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Islam deepened in courts and trading towns (mosques, jurists, scholars); Timbuktu and Walata matured as centers of learning.
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Indigenous ritual remained strong in rural communities (earth shrines, rainmaking).
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Court pageantry—gold regalia, horse trappings—signaled sovereignty; griots preserved dynastic memory.
Adaptation and Resilience
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Route redundancy across Sahara and Sahel hedged against drought/war.
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Plural economies—grain, rice, fish, gold, salt, kola—spread risk.
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Urban institutions—guilds, mosques, market courts—stabilized exchange; kin/clan systems secured rural production.
Long-Term Significance
By 1395, West Africa was a constellation of powerful states and city networks—Mali at its height, Songhay rising, Hausa and Benin consolidating, Jolof emerging—bound into Afro-Eurasian circuits by gold, salt, and scholarship, and resilient enough to carry this prosperity into the 15th century.
West Africa (1396–1539 CE): Empires, Gold, and the Atlantic Turn
Geographic & Environmental Context
The subregion of West Africa includes the Sahelian and savanna zones stretching from the Senegal and Niger River basins across modern Mali, Burkina Faso, and Niger, as well as the forest and coastal belts of modern Guinea, Sierra Leone, Liberia, Côte d’Ivoire, Ghana, Togo, Benin, and Nigeria. Anchoring landscapes included the Niger River’s inland delta, the Sahel’s grasslands, the forested Guinea coast, and the Atlantic seaboard with its lagoons and estuaries.
Climate & Environmental Shifts
The Little Ice Age brought modest cooling and rainfall variability. Sahelian zones experienced alternating drought and recovery, testing herders and farmers. Savanna and forest belts enjoyed relatively stable rainfall, sustaining yam and oil palm cultivation. Along the coast, seasonal monsoons shaped farming cycles, while the Atlantic upwelling enriched marine fisheries.
Subsistence & Settlement
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Sahel and savanna: Millet, sorghum, and rice supported large populations, with cattle, sheep, and camels managed in mixed herding systems.
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Forest belt: Yams, kola, palm oil, and plantains anchored subsistence, complemented by hunting and river fisheries.
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Urban centers: Timbuktu, Gao, Jenne, and other cities combined farming hinterlands with trade, scholarship, and crafts.
Technology & Material Culture
Iron smelting and blacksmithing flourished, supplying weapons, hoes, and ritual objects. Sahelian architecture—mud-brick mosques and palaces—defined skylines (Djinguereber Mosque, Askia’s Tomb). In the forest, the Benin court produced brass and ivory works. Textiles, leatherwork, and gold jewelry circulated widely. Manuscripts in Arabic script preserved Islamic scholarship in Timbuktu and other cities.
Movement & Interaction Corridors
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Trans-Saharan routes: Caravans carried gold, kola, and captives north in exchange for salt, horses, and luxuries.
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River corridors: The Niger River served as an east–west artery for goods and ideas.
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Atlantic seaboard: Portuguese ships reached Senegal in the mid-15th century, later tapping the Gambia and Gold Coast, inaugurating direct Atlantic trade while older Saharan links persisted.
Cultural & Symbolic Expressions
Islam flourished in Sahelian capitals: mosques, Qur’anic schools, and zawiyas anchored faith and learning. Oral traditions of griots preserved epics and genealogies. In the forest zone, ritual kingship, sacred groves, and ancestral veneration structured societies. Festivals, drumming, and praise-songs reinforced political legitimacy.
Environmental Adaptation & Resilience
Agricultural diversification and transhumance buffered environmental stress. Tribute and trade redistributed surpluses in lean years. Coastal chiefdoms exploited fisheries and mangroves. Spiritual rituals reinforced cohesion under climate pressure.
Transition
By 1539 CE, the Songhai Empire dominated the Niger bend; Benin flourished as an artistic and political power; and coastal polities engaged Portuguese traders. Gold, ivory, kola, and enslaved captives linked West Africa to both Saharan and Atlantic networks, reshaping its place in the wider world.
Some of the Mande, who had stimulated the development of states in what is now northern Nigeria (the Hausa states and those of the Lake Chad area), move southwestward also in this same period, and impose themselves on many of the indigenous peoples of the northern half of modern Ghana and of Burkina Faso (Burkina—formerly Upper Volta), founding the states of Dagomba and Mamprusi.
The Mande also influence the rise of the Gonja state.
The Fulani come from the Senegal River valley, where their ancestors had developed a method of livestock management and specialization based on transhumance.
The movement of cattle along north-south corridors in pursuit of grazing and water follows the climatic pattern of the rainy and dry seasons.
Gradually, the pastoralists move eastward, first into the centers of the Mali and Songhai empires and eventually into Hausaland and Borno.
Some Fulbe had converted to Islam in the Senegal region as early as the eleventh century, and one group of Muslim Fulani had settled in the cities and mingled freely with the Hausa, from whom they have become racially indistinguishable.
Here, they constitute a devoutly religious, educated elite who have made themselves indispensable to the Hausa kings as government advisers, Islamic judges, and teachers.
Other Fulani, the lighter-skinned pastoral nomads, remain aloof from the Hausa and in some measure from Islam as well, herding cattle outside the cities and seeking pastures for their herds.
Some of the Hausa states—such as those at Kano, Katsina, and Gobir—had developed by the eleventh century into walled towns that engaged in trade and serviced caravans as well as manufactured cloth and leather goods.
Millet, sorghum, sugarcane, and cotton were produced in the surrounding countryside, which also provides grazing land for cattle.
Until the fifteenth century, the small Hausa states were on the periphery of the major empires of the era.
According to tradition, the Hausa rulers descend from a "founding hero" named Bayinjida, supposedly of Middle Eastern origin, who became sarki (king) of Daura after subduing a snake and marrying the queen of Daura.
Their children founded the other Hausa towns, which traditionally are referred to as the Hausa bakwai (Hausa seven).
Wedged in among the stronger Sudanic kingdoms, each of the Hausa states has acquired special military, economic, or religious functions.
No one state dominates the others, but at various times different states assume a leading role.
They are under constant pressure from Songhai to the west and Kanem-Borno to the east, to which they pay tribute.
Armed conflict usually is motivated by economic concerns, as coalitions of Hausa states mount wars against the Jukun and Nupe in the middle belt to collect slaves, or against one another for control of important trade routes.
Commerce is in the hands of commoners.
Within the cities, trades are organized through guilds, each of which is self-regulating and collects taxes from its members to be transmitted to the sarki as a pledge of loyalty.
In return, the king guarantees the security of the guild's trade.
The surrounding countryside produces grain for local consumption and cotton and hides for processing.
Islam was introduced to Hausaland along the caravan routes.
The famous Kano Chronicle records the conversion of Kano's ruling dynasty by clerics from Mali, demonstrating that the imperial influence of Mali extended far to the east.
Acceptance of Islam was gradual and was often nominal in the countryside, where folk religion continues to exert a strong influence.
Non-Islamic practices also are retained in the court ceremonies of the Hausa kings.
Nonetheless, Kano and Katsina, with their famous mosques and schools, come to participate fully in the cultural and intellectual life of the Islamic world.