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unit 1 review
topic 5
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Swahili civilization emerged on
Africa's East
Coast around the
8th
Century
Swahili
civilization
Collection of
independent
city-states
Rose to prominence due to
strategic
location on the coast which gave them access to the
bustling
Indian Ocean trade
Swahili city-states focused mostly on
trade
, importing many goods from the
African
interior
Islam
Became a dominant belief system in the
Swahili
civilization, with conversion among the Swahili Elite taking place
voluntarily
Swahili
language
Hybrid between the
Bantu
family of languages and
Arabic
Swahili
city-states
Ruled by their own
King
Fierce
competition between them due to
International Trade
being the main source of wealth
Swahili
city-states and
Song China
Both
expanded
their wealth by participating in
trade
beyond their borders
Both featured a
hierarchical
class structure that organized their
societies
Differences
between Swahili city-states and Song China
China's political structure was highly
centralized
with an
emperor
, while there was no larger political structure that unified the Swahili States
Great Zimbabwe rose as a commercial
African State
, exporting
gold
and relying on farming and cattle as economic activities
Great Zimbabwe
rulers constructed a massive capital city, which was the largest structure in Africa after the
pyramids
in Egypt
In West
Africa
, large centralized Empires like
Ghana
and Mali rose and fell over centuries
House
of Kingdoms in West Africa
Collection of
independent
city-states that gained power through
trade
across the trans-saharan Trade Network
Resembled the
Swahili
city-states in being urbanized, commercialized, and acting as
middlemen
for goods
House of Kingdoms rulers eventually converted to
Islam
, which facilitated
trade
with Muslim merchants
Ethiopia
was a Christian kingdom that grew wealthy through trade in the Mediterranean Sea and Indian Ocean network, particularly by trading
salt
Ethiopia
Centralized
power with a
king
at the top and a stratified class hierarchy
Commissioned
the construction of massive Stone churches to communicate the ruler's
power
In general, more influential and Powerful
African States
during this period adopted
Islam
to organize their societies and facilitate trade
Ethiopia
was an exception, remaining Christian despite the general trend of Islamic conversion among powerful
African states