Part 3: Western Views of Islam and Africa. Oct 13: Medieval, Early Modern Perspectives

Similar documents
Enemies & Neighbours: Re-negotiating Empire & Islam

African Kingdoms. Part I: General Info. Part II: West African Kingdoms.

North and Central African Societies

Empires develop in northern, western, and southern Africa. Trade helps spread Islam and makes some African empires very wealthy.

World History: Patterns of Interaction

LESSON WATCH Key Ideas Factual

Chapter 8 Reading Guide: African Civilizations and the Spread of Islam

Name: Date: Period: African Civilizations and the Spread of Islam, p

Part 2: Islamization of Africa. Oct 8: Islamic Slavery and Slave Trading

Chapter 12: Crusades and Culture in the Middle Ages, Lesson 2: The Crusades

The Foundation of the Modern World

Islamization of Africa II: Sept. 24 North Africa: conversion and conquest

!e Quest of # Europeans (3$-1460AD)

THE RISE OF ISLAM U N I T I I I

NOTES: Unit 3 -Chapter 9: The Islamic World and Africa. In this chapter you will learn about developments in the during the.

UNIT 3 -CHAPTER 9: THE ISLAMIC WORLD AND AFRICA

North and Central African Societies

Big Idea The Ottoman Empire Expands. Essential Question How did the Ottomans expand their empire?

African Kingdoms. The Kingdom of Ghana

Eastern City-States and Empires of Africa

1. What Ottoman palace complex serves as a useful comparison with the Forbidden City? Describe one way that the Hongwu emperor sought to

Indian Ocean Trade and Social & Cultural Change AN AGE OF ACCELERATING CONNECTIONS ( )

Africa s. #24 Arab, Ashanti, Bantu, & Swahili

The Nineteenth Century: Islam

DBQ Unit 6: European Age of Exploration

WHII 2 a, c d, e. Name: World History II Date: SOL Review Day 1

Name: Date: Period: 1. Using p , mark the approximate boundaries of the Ottoman Empire and the Qing Empire

Warmup. What does Islam mean? Submission to the will of Allah

Warm-Up: What are 2 inferences/observations you can make about the Ottoman Empire in 1580?

The Journey of Ibn Battuta

Unit 4: Byzantine Empire, Islamic Empires, Ottoman Empire

Indian Ocean Trade. Height C.E.

The Islamic World and Africa. Chapter 9

Pt.II: Colonialism, Nationalism, the Harem 19 th -20 th centuries

AP World History Mid-Term Exam

World History Grade: 8

OTTOMAN EMPIRE Learning Goal 1:

Brain Wrinkles. African. Arab, Ashanti, Bantu, & Swahili

Period 4: Global Interactions, c Chapter 21: SW Asia & the Indian Ocean, pp Mrs. Osborn RHS APWH

The Decline of Kemet as the Light of the World and its Effect on African Collective Spiritual Progress

WHI.08: Islam and WHI.10: Africa

APWH Chapter 27.notebook January 04, 2016

netw rks Where in the world? When did it happen? African Civilizations Lesson 1 The Rise of African Civilizations ESSENTIAL QUESTION Terms to Know

Chapter 18: Half Done Notes

The Arabian Peninsula. Farming limited in Arabia Commerce lively Mecca, near Red Sea, most important of coastal towns

The Worlds of European Christendom. Chapter 9

Part 2: Islamization of Africa. September 22 North African Conquest & Empire Building: North Africa, Abyssinia and the Almoravids

NAME DATE CLASS b.c b.c. a.d. 1 a.d a.d c b.c. History of Axum begins

Making of the Modern World 13 New Ideas and Cultural Contacts Spring 2016, Lecture 4. Fall Quarter, 2011

World History Honors Semester 1 Review Guide

Chapter 3: Columbus Interactions with Muslims in America

Chapter 10. Byzantine & Muslim Civilizations

Ottoman Empire. 1400s-1800s

The Crusades. Footsteps of Faith. Windstar Cruises Ross Arnold, Fall 2013

Virginia Mason Vaughan. "thick lips"

PORTUGUESE PRESENCE AND END EA YOURS IN EAST AFRICA,

Name: Date: Period: UNIT 2 TEST SECTION 1: THE GUPTA EMPIRE IN INDIA

Sit by Indian Ocean City Teams

Islam The Spread of Islam

WHI SOL Review Packet: Part II

This Magnificent African. Partition and Conquest

Chapter 10: From the Crusades to the New Muslim Empires

Overview: Making of Empire

The Byzantine Empire

World History Mid-term Exam Review Social Studies Team

Big Idea Suleiman the Magnificent rules during a Golden Age. Essential Question How did Suleiman the Magnificent gain and maintain power?

The Byzantine Empire. By History.com, adapted by Newsela staff on Word Count 1,009 Level 1060L

Chapter 9 1. Explain why Islam is considered more than a religion, but rather a way of life?

2. Which of the following luxury goods came to symbolize the Eurasian exchange system? a. Silk b. Porcelain c. Slaves d. Nutmeg

Key Terms and People. Section Summary. The Later Middle Ages Section 1

Text 5: The Crusades. Topic 7: Medieval Christian Europe ( ) Lesson 4: Economic Expansion and Change: The Crusades and After

CHAPTER EIGHT African Civilizations and the Spread of Islam

Unit: Cross-Cultural Exchange on the Trans-Saharan Trade Routes HOW DO HISTORIANS KNOW ABOUT CULTURAL AND GEOGRAPHIC INTERSECTIONS?

Name Review Questions. WHII Voorhees

Lecture 11. Dissolution and diffusion: the arrival of an Islamic society

PAF Chapter HISTORY GRADE - 7 Intervention Work Book

The Renaissance Begins AN AGE OF ACCELERATING CONNECTIONS ( )

Muslim Empires Chapter 19

Medieval Matters: The Middle Age

correlated to the Missouri Grade Level Expectations Grade 6 Objectives

O"oman Empire. AP World History 19a

New Visions Global History Curriculum 9th Grade Pacing Calendar Sunday Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Friday Saturday 1 2 3

Overview: Making of Empire

This section intentionally blank

The Power of the Church

9. Why is Timur important to world history?

Osman s Dream : defining the early Ottomans

REGIONAL AND TRANSREGIONAL INTERACTIONS C

Nomadic Empires and Eurasian Integration States and Societies of Sub-Saharan Africa

Arabian Peninsula Most Arabs settled Bedouin Nomads minority --Caravan trade: Yemen to Mesopotamia and Mediterranean

Lecture 14. Global Economy and the Rise of Gunpowder States

Read Chapters from your textbook. Answer the following short answer and multiple choice questions based on the readings in the space provided.

World History I. Robert Taggart

Defining Ottoman : Legacy of a Dream

Text 6: The Effects of the Crusades. Topic 7: Medieval Christian Europe ( ) Lesson 4: Economic Expansion and Change: The Crusades and After

What is Islam? Second largest religion in the world. 1.2 Billion Muslims (20% of earth population) Based on beliefs on Jews & Christians

The Spread of Islam Through West Africa

Bell Activity page 105

Name: Period 4: 1450 C.E C.E.

1. What initiated early Western European Empires to expand? What role did geography play?

Transcription:

Part 3: Western Views of Islam and Africa Oct 13: Medieval, Early Modern Perspectives

European Views: Islam, Africa Robinson: traditions shaping European views 1) Climes of Greek Ptolemy 2) Atlantic Slave Trade 3) Association Islam with Arabic/Arab 4) Islamdom vs Christendom 5) Racialization of civilization

Ancient/Medieval Muslim Views Robinson: - notes ancient Greeks understanding of climes as articulated by Ptolemy but - notes Europe s first knowledge of Africa filtered through Muslim World - Arab/Arabic travellers, merchants, compilers provided information on geography, flora/fauna, ethnography, wealth of Sahara and bilad as-sudan (West Africa); Swahili City-States (East African coast) to cosmopolitan Muslim Spain - translated by scholars, moved into medieval Europe intellectual sphere - connection with Ptolemy probably 12 th C. writer Al-Idrisi

Ancient/Medieval Muslim Views Medieval Arab views of Sahara predicated on belief that: - river ( large body of flowing water ) linked Atlantic to Nile - rich sources of gold lay beyond it -(from 9 th C): Africans (in and south of Sahara) converting to Islam. - importance: what these realities meant for commerce Origin appears to have been: -10 th C. map (al-masudi) - 12 th C. text (al-idrisi) tried to fit new information into existing Ptolemaic conceptual framework -postulated divided Nile: one flowing north into Egypt, other across Sudan - imagined all major towns lie along the river Historians realize confusion, do not always factor it into textual reading

Ancient/Medieval Muslim Views Neither Muslim writers nor Europeans had means to challenge perceived wisdom : - both either lacked knowledge of African interior [Portuguese until late 15 th C] - or saw it through Islamic prism, strongly shaped by pre-existing views of climes (eg Ibn Battuta) - reflected in maps 10 th -15 th centuries

10 th C. View of Africa Map of World (African-Iranian part) from al-masudi (916) [note: view is from north to south]

12 th C. View of Africa T and O map with Jerusalem at the center. This reflected the Church s view of God s World. [ Book of Kells ]

Arabs Concept Africa: 13 th C. From Robinson, p.75

Medieval Mapamundi (c.1485-1500)

Genoa Chart of North Africa (c.1490) [The Work of Christopher Columbus?]

European Views of Islam Robinson: also shaped by European understanding Islam: - presented by Christians as heresy - Mohamed last of prophets, Abraham, Jesus and others predecessors - therefore, they too were Muslims (those who submit to God) - clearly heresy from point of view Church Following arrival Muslims North Africa (7 th C), Almoravids in Spain (11 th C), two events key in shaping views between 1100-1500: - 1055 Christian re-conquest Toledo (Spain) - Crusades (began 1099)/Saladin (Muslim leader who took Jerusalem, 1187) Argues: led to demonizing of Islamic religion: Prophet and Qur an

European Views of Islam Need to add : role of Ottoman Conquest of Constantinople (1453) - mentions (later) in context of role of Ottomans in Africa - crucial in process of demonizing - Constantinople: capital former Eastern Roman Empire - then centre Eastern Orthodox Christianity in Byzantine Empire - 1453 Sultan Mehmet II carried out successful siege, using rapidly built fortress, navy, army of janissaries, clever strategies - several European eyewitnesses : awed by military power, authority of Sultan, taking of booty (property, jewels, slaves ) - reported back to Europe - reactions: darkest day in the history of the world

European Views of Islam From the moment when Constantinople fell, Europeans regarded the Turks with a mixture of horror and fascination. They were outside the bounds of society, and almost beyond the real of humanity. John Lyly described the Turk as "vile and brutish". Other authors made much of the Turks' supposed addiction to unnatural vice...an image of the "Terrible Turk" who ate children alive -- a stereotype which rapidly was becoming universal in the West and which mothers found useful for terrifying naughty children. [Andrew Wheatcroft, The Ottomans (1994) - contemporary secondary source, 'reporting' on European response to news of Fall of Constantinople; see Wheatcroft, Additional Readings]

European Views of Islam Legend of Prester John - aspect of beliefs about Islam was collaborating belief that Christian King continued to rule wealthy kingdom hidden behind Dar al-islam - was awaiting European assistance to fight back the evil Muslims and retake Holy Land (as well as trade with East) - geographical location varied but by medieval era, believed to be situated in Horn of Africa - when Portuguese accepted invitation Christian King Ethiopia (early-mid16 th C.), believed they had found Prester John - disappointed when battle was for local power, not destruction Muslim World [refer back to lecture on Islamization: Horn of Africa, Ethiopia]

European Views of Islam Robinson: after 1500, these European views did not change (in terms of their essential beliefs) in spite of experiences in dealing with Islamic Regimes (Morocco, Ottoman Empire) Robinson himself comments upon two additional factors arising from these: - Orientalism [from late 18 th C.] - Abolition [of the slave trade mostly 18 th -19 th centuries] Each of these experiences continued to shape European views of Islam and Muslim Societies including in Africa We will look at each in turn during the next two lectures.

European Views 1500-1700 Robinson: rise of Atlantic Slave Trade - shifted European focus - can easily trace how stereotypes of black Africa developed in context of legitimizing Atlantic Trade - makes point: process not applicable to Muslim Africans (in other words, Islamic Africa left out of Europe s developing vision of Africa) - implication: therefore left out, period [until late 18 th C.] Argument can (should) be nuanced.

European Views 1500-1700 Important: - where were the Europeans? - why were they there? - what were they seeing of Islamic Africa?

European Views 1500-1700 Where were they? - Horn (Ethiopia see earlier lecture on Islamization ) - North Africa (Morocco Portuguese; Egypt Venetians) - East Africa (Portuguese coast, islands) - Sahara (Portuguese) - Senegambia (region surrounding Senegal and Gambia Rivers French, British)

European Views: North Africa North Africa: from 16 th C. Europeans encountered Ottomans - Venice major trading partner with Ottomans, Mamluk Egypt (paid each tribute to ensure peaceful trade) - ties between Venetians (oligarchy, nobility, merchants) and Mamluks particularly strong - closest years prior to Ottoman conquest Egypt (1517) - longest reigning doge of Venice (1423 57) born in Mamluk Egypt - Venetian physician, member of nobility (Nicolo Barbaro) one of most important eye-witnesses to fall of Constantinople - account one of those referred to by Wheatcroft: long, detailed description military power evil, wicked, faithless Turks - fed back into European impressions of, relations with Ottomans in North Africa:

European Views: North Africa North Africa Ottomans, under Suleiman the Magnificent, controlled most of North Africa from Egypt to Algiers 1517-1566

European Views: East Africa Portuguese: part of Gold, Glory and God exploration of Prince Henry ( the Navigator ) - monopoly of Arab knowledge Muslim Africa challenged East Africa: - Vasco da Gama 1498 (in search of India) - discovered wealthy Swahili City States [Davidson video Caravans of Gold Swahili Coast] - next expedition returned 1505, sacked Kilwa and other cities - claimed coast 1515 [lecture, Sept. 20] - as in West Africa: goal to intercept gold trade (from southern Africa [also in Davidson Swahili Coast] - built Fort Jesus (off Mozambique) - failed to establish control

12 th C. View of Africa East Africa Dar al-islam according to al-idrisi (12 th C.)

European Views: East Africa Frustrated by military weakness, inability to access wealth the saw: - presented descriptions of East African "Moors" as if they were still engaged in Crusades - women were victims of these infidels ('proof' of Islam's oppression) - and potential Christian converts -(Malindi women resisted, those of Mombasa embraced ) [Davidson video Caravans of Gold narration sacking of Kilwa; McDougall Women in African Muslim Societies, Resources]

European Views: Morocco North Africa: - Portuguese drawn into Morocco 1415, Ceuta - hoped to attract trans-saharan trade failed - 1490s, established Santa Cruz on coast - hoped to intercept trade - generated powerful Moroccan opposition, rise of new dynastic state Sa adiens, based in Sahara (looked South to Sudan and East to Tafilelt) - 1541 Moroccans forced Portuguese out - took over fort overlooking harbour: renamed Agadir (meaning fort/fortress )

European Views: Mauritania - Meanwhile established Arguin (trading factory) Mauritanian coast - information about Sahara, its peoples now filtered through Portuguese lens - was acquired initially from coastal raids (random kidnappings of Saharans along the coast) - subsequently from commercial exchanges at Arguin - explorations along the extensive Senegal-Gambian coast (named for two rivers) - Alvise de Ca da Mosto, Valentim Fernandes and Pacheco Pereira most important sources of information trade, people

European Views: Mauritania - highlighted operations of gold, salt and slave trades - reported that gold and slaves crossing the desert taken to entrepot of Wadan - Cargoes divided: some diverted towards Arguin, most continues north to Barbary coasts - Impact of information: 1487 Portuguese establish trading factory at Wadan (presumably to intercept more of northern trade) - Short-lived - Local tradition: Portuguese driven out - Pereira: hostile reception forced them to leave - First (and last) attempt at establishing inland in Sahara failure

.Arguin.Wadan Tarra Hodges

European Views: Mauritania - knowledge thereafter generated from coastal exploration - Continued interest in commerce, described tribal participation different Saharan groups - Also: conflict between indigenous Muslim Sanhaja clerics (zawaya) and immigrant Muslim Arab warriors (hassan) - formed base of European understanding Saharan society from the sixteenth century onwards [as argued more generally by Robinson]

European Views: West Africa interior But not end of knowledge of Muslim interior: - 1690 representative Royal African Society, Cornelius Hodges, sent via Gambia river to interior - aim: intercept slave trade oriented to French (Senegal) - find out why Moors do not want to trade - described active desert-side trade in region near ancient Awdaghust [recently confirmed by archaeological work] - also insight into evolving relations between Morocco West Africa (apart from traditional focus on conquest of Niger Bend 1591)

European Views: West Africa interior His men reported, they were directed to a large town named Tarra, verry neare as bigg as ye Citty of London with ye walls [in] ye Moores Countrey said to be the only mart for slaves in all those western parts of Africa. Any merchants carrying European goods, wishing to purchase slaves here, had first to turn their goods into cloth and with cloth purchase the Salt of ye Moores who bring it above 1100 miles on Camells and will Truck it for no othr soart of commodities than Cloathes, Gold and Slaves. After acquiring the salt, merchants could truck it for slaves wch is ye Reason yt many times before they can dispatch ye goods of 4 or 5 slaves yt costs ym ½ as much for Lodgin and Provisions. But it goes with 500 ozs of gold, pays no customes and may turn it into what commodity he pleasethe, In less yn two Dayes If he pleaseth

.Arguin.Wadan Tarra Hodges

European Views: West Africa interior Also recounted that three days after their arrival in Tarra, some 40000 horsemen and camels [arrived] to Lay siege to It. Ye Emperor drew his forces and incamped without ye towne to receive ym there Hodges men were drawn into assisting ye Moores : it pleased God to give ym such good success, they being all very good firemen, yt the Emperor attributed ye victory and safeguard of his country wholely to Mahamit. - believe Hodges men saw army of Moroccan Sultan sent to Tarra to assist Saharan clan allied with him, resist demands for tribute from local inhabitants insight into Muslim society and economy

European Views: West Africa interior Why is this information not part of Robinson s discussion? - rise of Atlantic Slave trade - not only shifted contemporary European focus away from Muslim Africa (as Robinson argues), subsequently shifted historians attention as well - triumph of caravel over caravan [see McDougall, Resources] - assumption that Atlantic Slave trade overshadowed economy of interior made desert-side commercial activities and societies invisible - clear that end of 17 th century ye Moores dominated economy - also that Sahara and sub-saharan region ancient Awdaghust considered part of larger Moroccan empire from Morocco s point of view

European Views: West Africa interior Europeans aware: - shaped commercial strategies -18 th C. French archival report notes Moors still obstructing trade along Senegal river: ongoing problem But in 18 th century, new influences began to shape reports, interact with pre-existing ideas of Moors and Turks : - account by Christian Slave Thomas Pellow (Morocco) - Napoleon s conquest of Egypt, growth Orientalism [to be explored further, next day]