Mali Empire
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Mali Empire | |||||||||||||||||||
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c. 1235–1672 | |||||||||||||||||||
Capital | Identification disputed; possibly no fixed capital | ||||||||||||||||||
Common languages | Mandinka, Fulani, Wolof, Bambara | ||||||||||||||||||
Religion |
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Government | Monarchy | ||||||||||||||||||
Mansa | |||||||||||||||||||
• 1235–1255 | Mari Djata I (first) | ||||||||||||||||||
• c. 17th century | Mahmud IV (last) | ||||||||||||||||||
Legislature | Gbara | ||||||||||||||||||
Historical era | Postclassical Era to Early Modern Era | ||||||||||||||||||
c. 1235 | |||||||||||||||||||
• State divided among emperor Mahmud Keita IV's sons | c. 1610 | ||||||||||||||||||
• Niani sacked and burned by the Bamana Empire | 1672 | ||||||||||||||||||
Area | |||||||||||||||||||
1250[1] | 100,000 km2 (39,000 sq mi) | ||||||||||||||||||
1380[1][2] | 1,100,000 km2 (420,000 sq mi) | ||||||||||||||||||
1500[1] | 400,000 km2 (150,000 sq mi) | ||||||||||||||||||
Currency | Gold dust (Salt, copper, silver and cowries were also common in the empire) | ||||||||||||||||||
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The Mali Empire (Manding: Mandé[3] or Manden; Arabic: مالي, romanized: Mālī) was an empire in West Africa from c. 1226 to 1670. The empire was founded by Sundiata Keita (c. 1214 – c. 1255) and became renowned for the wealth of its rulers, especially Mansa Musa (Musa Keita). At its peak, Mali was the largest empire in West Africa, widely influencing the culture of the region through the spread of its language, laws, and customs.[4]
The empire began as a small Mandinka kingdom at the upper reaches of the Niger River, centered around the Manding region.[3] It began to develop during the 11th and 12th centuries as the Ghana Empire, or Wagadu, declined and trade routes shifted southward.[5] The history of the Mali Empire before the 13th century is unclear, as there are conflicting and imprecise accounts by both Arab chroniclers and oral traditionalists. The first ruler for which there is accurate written information is Sundiata Keita, a warrior-prince of the Keita dynasty who was called upon to free the local people from the rule of the king of the Sosso Empire, Soumaoro Kanté. The conquest of Sosso in c. 1235 marked the emergence of Mali as a major power.
Following the death of Sundiata Keita, in c. 1255, the kings of Mali were referred to by the title mansa.[6] In c. 1285 Sakoura, a former royal court slave, became emperor and was one of Mali's most powerful rulers, greatly expanding the empire's territory. He made a pilgrimage to Mecca during the reign of Mamluk Sultan An-Nasir Muhammad (r. 1298–1308), but died on his voyage home. Mansa Musa took the throne in c. 1312. He made a famous pilgrimage to Mecca from 1324 to 1326, where his generous gifts and his expenditure of gold caused significant inflation in Egypt.[7] Maghan I succeeded him as mansa in 1337, but was deposed by his uncle Suleyman in 1341. It was during Suleyman's 19-year reign that Ibn Battuta visited Mali.[8] Suleyman's death marked the end of Mali's Golden Age and the beginning of a slow decline.
The Tarikh al-Sudan records that Mali was still a sizeable state in the 15th century. At that time, the Venetian explorer Alvise Cadamosto and Portuguese traders confirmed that the peoples who settled within Gambia River were still subject to the mansa of Mali.[9] Upon Leo Africanus's visit at the beginning of the 16th century, his descriptions of the territorial domains of Mali showed that it was still a kingdom of considerable size. However, from 1507 onwards neighboring states such as Diarra, Great Fulo and the Songhai Empire chipped away at Mali's borders. In 1542, the Songhai invaded the capital but were unsuccessful in conquering the empire. During the 17th century, the Mali Empire faced incursions from the Bamana Empire, who ultimately sacked and burned the capital in 1670. The Mali Empire rapidly disintegrated, being replaced by independent chiefdoms. The Keitas retreated to the town of Kangaba, where they became provincial chiefs.[10]
Historiography[edit]
Much of the recorded information about the Mali Empire comes from 14th-century Tunisian historian Ibn Khaldun, 14th-century Moroccan traveller Ibn Battuta and 16th-century Andalusian traveller Leo Africanus. The other major source of information comes from Mandinka oral tradition, as recorded by storytellers known as griots.[6] Imperial Mali is also known through the account of Shihab al-'Umari, written in about 1340 by a geographer-administrator in Mamluk Egypt. His information about the empire came from visiting Malians taking the hajj, or pilgrim's voyage to Mecca. He had first-hand information from several sources, and from a second-hand source he learned of the visit of Mansa Musa. The traveller Ibn Battuta, who visited Mali in 1352 left the first account of a West African kingdom made directly by an eyewitness; the others are usually second-hand. The third great account is that of Ibn Khaldun, who wrote in the early 15th century. While the accounts are of limited length, they provide a fairly good picture of the empire at its height.
After Ibn Khaldun's death in 1406, there are no further Arab primary sources except for Leo Africanus, who wrote more than a century later.[11] Arab interest in the Mali Empire declined after the Songhai conquered the northern regions of the empire which formed the primary contact between Mali and the Arab world.[11] For the later period of the Mali Empire, the major written primary sources are Portuguese accounts of the coastal provinces of Mali and neighboring societies.[12]
Etymology of Mali[edit]
Mali, Mandé, Manden, and Manding are all various pronunciations of the same word across different languages and dialects.[13][14] The version recorded by medieval Arab geographers is Mali (Arabic: مالي, romanized: Mālī). Mali is the Fula form of the word.[15][14] In the Manding languages, the modern descendants of the language spoken at the core of the Mali Empire, Manden or Manding is the name of the region corresponding to the heartland of the Mali Empire.[16]
Medieval sources are divided over whether Mali is the name of a town or a region. Ibn Battuta who visited the capital city from 1352 to 1353, called it Mali. The 1375 Catalan Atlas portrayed a "city of Melly" (Catalan: ciutat de Melly) in West Africa.[17] Leo Africanus said that the capital city was called Melli.[18] However, Ibn Fadlallah al-Umari gives Mali as the name of the capital province and Ibn Khaldun refers to Mali as a people, with each giving different names for the capital city itself.[19] Whether Mali originated as the name of a town or region, the name was subsequently applied to the entire empire ruled from Mali.[20][18]
Another hypothesis suggests that the name Mali is derived from Mandé mali "hippopotamus", an animal that had special significance to the Keitas, and that Mandé means "little manatee". A legend claims that Sunjata transformed into a hippopotamus.[14] However, these hypotheses have been rejected by locals and are inconsistent with the apparent cognate status of Mali and Mandé.[21]
History[edit]
In the first millennium BC, early cities and towns were founded along the middle Niger River, including at Dia which reached its peak around 600 BC,[22] and Djenne-Djenno, which lasted from around 250 BC to 900 AD. By the 6th century AD, the lucrative trans-Saharan trade in gold, salt and slaves had begun, facilitating the rise of West Africa's great empires.
Pre-imperial Mali[edit]
There are a few references to Mali in early Islamic literature. Among these are references to "Pene" and "Malal" in the work of al-Bakri in 1068,[23][24] the story of the conversion of an early ruler, known to Ibn Khaldun (by 1397) as Barmandana,[25] and a few geographical details in the work of al-Idrisi.[26]
Through the oral tradition of griots, the Keita dynasty claims descent from Lawalo, one of the sons of Bilal,[27] the faithful muezzin of Islam's prophet Muhammad, a dubious assertion.[28][29]
Hunters from the Ghana Empire (or Wagadou), particularly mythical ancestors Kontron and Sanin, were the first Mandinka in the Manding region and founded the Malinké hunter brotherhood. The area was famous for the large amount of game that it sheltered, as well as its dense vegetation. The Camara (or Kamara) are said to be the first family to have lived in Manding, after having left Oualata in Wagadou due to drought. They founded the first village of the Manding, Kirikoroni, then Kirina, Siby, Kita. A very large number of families that make up the Mandinka community were born in Manding.
The Manden city-state of Ka-ba (present-day Kangaba) served as the capital and name of the province. From at least the beginning of the 11th century, Mandinka kings ruled Manden from Ka-ba in the name of the Ghanas.[30] The ruler was elected from among the heads of the major clans, and at this time had little real power.[31]
Wagadou's control over Manden ended in the 12th century.[32] The Kangaba province, free of Soninké influence, splintered into twelve kingdoms with their own faama.[33] Manden was split in half with the Dodougou territory to the northeast and the Kri territory to the southwest.[34]
In approximately 1140 the Sosso kingdom of Kaniaga, a former vassal of Wagadou, began conquering the lands of its old rulers. By 1180 it had even subjugated Wagadou, forcing the Soninké to pay tribute. In 1203, the Sosso king and sorcerer Soumaoro Kanté came to power and reportedly terrorised much of Manden stealing women and goods from both Dodougou and Kri.[35]
Sundjata Keita[edit]
Early life[edit]
According to Niane's version of the epic, Sundiata of the Keita clan was born in the early 13th century. during the rise of Kaniaga. He was the son of Niani's faama, Nare Fa (also known as Maghan Kon Fatta, meaning the handsome prince). Sundiata's mother was Maghan Kon Fatta's second wife, Sogolon Kédjou.[27] She was a hunchback from the land of Do, south of Mali. The child of this marriage received the first name of his mother (Sogolon) and the surname of his father (Djata). Combined in the rapidly spoken language of the Mandinka, the names formed Sondjata, Sundjata or Sundiata Keita.[27] In Ibn Khaldun's account, Sundjata is recorded as Mari Djata with "Mari" meaning "Amir" or "Prince". He also notes that Djata or "Jatah" means "lion".[36]
Prince Sundjata was prophesied to become a great conqueror. To his parents' dread, the prince did not have a promising start. Sundiata, according to the oral traditions, did not walk until he was seven years old.[33] However, once Sundiata eventually gained use of his legs he grew strong and respected, but by that time his father had died. Despite the faama's wish to respect the prophecy and put Sundiata on the throne, the son from his first wife Sassouma Bérété was crowned instead. As soon as Sassouma's son Dankaran Touman took the throne, he and his mother forced the increasingly popular Sundjata into exile along with his mother and two sisters. Before Dankaran Touman and his mother could enjoy their power, King Soumaoro set his sights on Niani forcing Dankaran to flee to Kissidougou.[27]
After many years in exile, first at the court of Wagadou and then at Mema, a delegation from his home reached Sundjata and begged him to combat the Sosso and free the kingdoms of Manden.
War against Soumaoro Kante[edit]
Leading the combined armies of Mema, Wagadou and the Mandinka city-states, Sundiata led a revolt against the Kaniaga Kingdom around 1234.[37] The combined forces of northern and southern Manden defeated the Sosso army at the Battle of Kirina (also known as Krina) in approximately 1235.[38] This victory resulted in the fall of the Kaniaga kingdom and the rise of the Mali Empire. After the victory, King Soumaoro disappeared, and the Mandinka stormed the last of the Sosso cities. Maghan Sundiata was declared "faama of faamas" and received the title "mansa", which translates as "king". At the age of 18, he gained authority over all the 12 kingdoms in an alliance that became the Mali Empire. He was crowned under the throne name Sundjata Keita becoming the first Mandinka emperor. And so the name Keita became a clan/family and began its reign.[33]
Reign[edit]
The reign of Mansa Sundiata Keita saw the conquest of several key places in the Mali Empire. He never personally took the field again after Kirina, but his generals continued to expand the frontier, especially in the west where they reached the Gambia River and the marches of Tekrur. This enabled him to rule over a realm larger than even the Ghana Empire in its apex.[38] When the campaigning was done, his empire extended 1,000 miles (1,600 km) east to west with those borders being the bends of the Senegal and Niger rivers.[39] After unifying Manden, he added the Wangara goldfields, making them the southern border. The northern commercial towns of Oualata and Audaghost were also conquered and became part of the new state's northern border. Wagadou and Mema became junior partners in the realm and part of the imperial nucleus. The lands of Bambougou, Jalo (Fouta Djallon), and Kaabu were added into Mali by Fakoli Koroma (known as Nkrumah in Ghana, Kurumah in the Gambia, Colley in Casamance, Senegal),[33] Fran Kamara (Camara) and Tiramakhan Traore (Trawally in the Gambia),[40] respectively.
Imperial Mali[edit]
Different oral traditions conflict with each other, as well as with Ibn Khaldun, about the transfer of power following Sunjata's death.[42] There was evidently a power struggle of some kind involving the gbara or great council and donson ton or hunter guilds. In the interregnum following Sunjata's death, the jomba or court slaves may have held power.[43] Some oral traditions agree with Ibn Khaldun in indicating that a son of Sunjata, named Yerelinkon in oral tradition and Wali in Arabic, took power as Sunjata's successor.[44] Ibn Khaldun regarded Wali as one of Mali's greatest rulers.[45] He went on the hajj during the reign of Mamluk sultan Baibars (1260–1277).[a]
Wali was succeeded by his brother Wati, about whom nothing is known,[47][48] and then his brother Khalifa. Khalifa would shoot arrows at his subjects, so he was overthrown and killed.[45] He was replaced by Abu Bakr, a son of Sunjata's daughter. Abu Bakr was the first and only mansa to inherit through the female line, which has been argued to be either a break from or a return to tradition.[49] Then an enslaved court official, Sakura, seized power. Sakura was able to stabilize the political situation in Mali. Under his leadership, Mali conquered new territories and trade with North Africa increased.[50] He went on the hajj during the reign of Mamluk sultan an-Nasir Muhammad (1298–1308) and was killed in Tajura on his way back to Mali.[51] After Sakura's death, power returned to the line of Sunjata, with Wali's son Qu taking the throne.[51] Qu was succeeded by his son Muhammad, who launched two voyages to explore the Atlantic Ocean.[b] After the loss of the first expedition, Muhammad led the second expedition himself. He left Kanku Musa, a grandson of Sunjata's brother Mande Bori, in charge during his absence. Eventually, due to Muhammad's failure to return, Musa was recognized as mansa.[54]
Musa Keita I (Mansa Musa)[edit]
Kankan Musa, better known as Mansa Musa probably took power in approximately 1312, although an earlier date is possible.[55][56] His reign is considered the golden age of Mali.[57] He was one of the first truly devout Muslims to lead the Mali Empire. He attempted to make Islam the faith of the nobility,[58] but kept to the imperial tradition of not forcing it on the populace. He also made Eid celebrations at the end of Ramadan a national ceremony. He could read and write Arabic and took an interest in the scholarly city of Timbuktu, which he peaceably annexed in 1324. Via one of the royal ladies of his court, Musa transformed Sankore from an informal madrasah into an Islamic university. Islamic studies flourished thereafter.
Mansa Musa Keita's crowning achievement was his famous pilgrimage to Mecca, which started in 1324 and concluded with his return in 1326. Accounts of how many people and how much gold he spent vary. All of them agree that he took a very large group of people; the mansa kept a personal guard of some 500 men,[59] and he gave out so many alms and bought so many things that the value of gold in Egypt and Arabia depreciated for twelve years.[60] When he passed through Cairo, historian al-Maqrizi noted "the members of his entourage proceeded to buy Turkish and Ethiopian slave girls, singing girls and garments, so that the rate of the gold dinar fell by six dirhams."
Another testimony from Ibn Khaldun describes the grand pilgrimage of Mansa Musa consisting of 12,000 slaves:
"He made a pilgrimage in 724/1324 [...]. At each halt, he would regale us [his entourage] rare foods and confectionery. His equipment furnishings were carried by 12.000 private slave women (Wasaif) wearing gown and brocade (dibaj) and Yemeni silk [...]. Mansa Musa came from his country with 80 loads of gold dust (tibr), each load weighing three qintars. In their own country they use only slave women and men for transport, but for long journeys such as pilgrimages they have mounts."[61]
Contemporary sources suggest that the mounts employed by this caravan were one hundred elephants, which carried those loads of gold, and several hundred camels, carrying the food, supplies and weaponries which were brought to the rear.[62]
Musa took out large loans from money lenders in Cairo before beginning his journey home. It is not known if this was an attempt to correct the depreciation of gold in the area due to his spending,[7] or if he had simply run out of the funds needed for the return trip.[63] Musa's hajj, and especially his gold, caught the attention of both the Islamic and Christian worlds. Consequently, the name of Mali and Timbuktu appeared on 14th century world maps.
While on the hajj, he met the Andalusian poet and architect es-Saheli. Mansa Musa brought the architect back to Mali to beautify some of the cities. But more reasoned analysis suggests that his role, if any, was quite limited. The architectural crafts in Granada had reached their zenith by the fourteenth century, and its extremely unlikely that a cultured and wealthy poet would have had anything more than a dilettante's knowledge of the intricacies of contemporary architectural practice.[64] Mosques were built in Gao and Timbuktu along with impressive palaces also built in Timbuktu. By the time of his death in 1337, Mali had control over Taghazza, a salt-producing area in the north, which further strengthened its treasury.
That same year, after the Mandinka general known as Sagmandir put down yet another rebellion in Gao,[58] Mansa Musa came to Gao and accepted the capitulation of the King of Ghana and his nobles.
By the end of Mansa Musa's reign, the Sankoré University had been converted into a fully staffed university with the largest collections of books in Africa since the Library of Alexandria. The Sankoré University was capable of housing 25,000 students and had one of the largest libraries in the world with roughly 1,000,000 manuscripts.[65][66]
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A manuscript page from Timbuktu
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Manuscript of Nasir al-Din Abu al-Abbas Ahmad ibn al-Hajj al-Amin al-Tawathi al-Ghalawi's Kashf al-Ghummah fi Nafa al-Ummah. From the Mamma Haidara Commemorative Library, Timbuktu.
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A manuscript page from Timbuktu showing a table of astronomical information
Mansa Musa Keita was succeeded by his son, Maghan Keita I, in 1337.[58] Mansa Maghan Keita I spent wastefully and was the first lacklustre emperor since Khalifa Keita. But the Mali Empire built by his predecessors was too strong for even his misrule and it passed intact to Musa's brother, Souleyman Keita in 1341.
Souleyman Keita[edit]
Mansa Souleyman Keita (or Suleiman) took steep measures to put Mali back into financial shape, thereby developing a reputation for miserliness.[58] It is during his reign that Fula raids on Takrur began. There was also a palace conspiracy to overthrow him hatched by the Qasa (the Manding term meaning Queen) Kassi and several army commanders.[58] Mansa Souleyman's generals successfully fought off the military incursions, and the senior wife Kassi behind the plot was imprisoned.
The mansa also made a successful hajj, kept up correspondence with Morocco and Egypt and built an earthen platform at Kangaba called the Camanbolon where he held court with provincial governors and deposited the holy books he brought back from Hedjaz.
The only major setback to his reign was the loss of Mali's Dyolof province in Senegal. The Wolof populations of the area united into their own state known as the Jolof Empire in the 1350s. Still, when Ibn Battuta arrived at Mali in July 1352, he found a thriving civilisation on par with virtually anything in the Muslim or Christian world. Mansa Souleyman Keita died in 1360 and was succeeded by his son, Camba Keita.
Mari Djata Keita II[edit]
After a mere nine months of rule, Mansa Camba Keita was deposed by one of Maghan Keita I's three sons. Konkodougou Kamissa Keita, named for the province he once governed,[33] was crowned as Mansa Mari Djata Keita II in 1360. He ruled oppressively and nearly bankrupted Mali with his lavish spending. He did however, maintain contacts with Morocco, sending a giraffe to King Abu Hassan. Mansa Mari Djata Keita II became seriously ill in 1372,[58] and power moved into the hands of his ministers until his death in 1374.
Musa Keita II[edit]
The reign of Mari Djata Keita II was ruinous and left the empire in bad financial shape, but the empire itself passed intact to the dead emperor's brother. Mansa Fadima Musa Keita, or Mansa Musa Keita II, began the process of reversing his brother's excesses.[58] He did not, however, hold the power of previous mansas because of the influence of his kankoro-sigui.
Kankoro-sigui Mari Djata, who had no relation to the Keita clan, essentially ran the empire in Musa Keita II's stead. Ibn Khaldun recorded that in 776 A.H or 1374/1375 AD he interviewed a Sijilmasan scholar named Muhammad b. Wasul who had lived in Gao and had been employed in its judiciary. The latter told Ibn Khaldun about devastating struggle over Gao between Mali imperial forces against Berber Tuareg forces from Takedda.[67] The text of Ibn Khaldun says "Gao, at this time is devastated".[67] It seems quite possible that an exodus of the inhabitants took place at this juncture and the importance of the city was not revived until the rise of the Songhai empire.[67]
The Songhai settlement effectively shook off Mali's authority in 1375. Still, by the time of Mansa Musa Keita II's death in 1387, Mali was financially solvent and in control of all of its previous conquests short of Gao and Dyolof. Forty years after the reign of Mansa Musa Keita I, the Mali Empire still controlled some 1,100,000 square kilometres (420,000 sq mi) of land throughout Western Africa.[68][9]
Maghan Keita II[edit]
The last son of Maghan Keita I, Tenin Maghan Keita (also known as Kita Tenin Maghan Keita for the province he once governed) was crowned Mansa Maghan Keita II in 1387.[33] Little is known of him except that he only reigned two years. He was deposed in 1389, marking the end of the Faga Laye Keita mansas.
Obscure lineages (1389–1545)[edit]
From 1389 onwards, Mali gained a host of mansas of obscure origins. This is the least known period in Mali's imperial history. What is evident is that there is no steady lineage governing the empire. The other characteristic of this era is the gradual loss of its northern and eastern possessions to the rising Songhai Empire and the movement of the Mali's economic focus from the trans-Saharan trade routes to the burgeoning commerce along the coast.
Sandaki Keita[edit]
Mansa Sandaki Keita, a descendant of kankoro-sigui Mari Djata Keita, deposed Maghan Keita II, becoming the first person without any Keita dynastic relation to officially rule Mali.[58] Sandaki Keita should not however be taken to be this person's name but a title. Sandaki likely means High Counsellor or Supreme Counsellor, from san or sanon (meaning "high") and adegue (meaning counsellor).[69] He only reigned a year before a descendant of Mansa Gao Keita removed him.[33]
Mahmud Keita, possibly a grandchild or great-grandchild of Mansa Gao Keita, was crowned Mansa Maghan Keita III in 1390. During his reign, the Mossi emperor Bonga of Yatenga raided into Mali and plundered Macina.[58] Emperor Bonga did not appear to hold the area, and it stayed within the Mali Empire after Maghan Keita III's death in 1400.
15th–16th centuries[edit]
In the early 15th century, Mali was still powerful enough to conquer and settle new areas. One of these was Dioma, an area south of Niani populated by Fula Wassoulounké.[33] Two noble brothers from Niani, of unknown lineage, went to Dioma with an army and drove out the Fula Wassoulounké. The oldest brother, Sérébandjougou Keita, was crowned Mansa Foamed or Mansa Musa Keita III. His reign saw the first in a string of many great losses to Mali. In 1433–1434, the Mali Empire lost control of Timbuktu to the Tuareg, led by Akil Ag-Amalwal.[70][71] Three years later, Oualata also fell into their hands.[58]
Following Musa Keita III's death, his brother Gbèré Keita became emperor in the mid-15th century.[33] Gbèré Keita was crowned Mansa Ouali Keita II and ruled during the period of Mali's contact with Portugal. In the 1450s, Portugal began sending raiding parties along the Gambian coast.[72] The Gambia was still firmly in Mali's control, and these raiding expeditions met with disastrous fates before Portugal's Diogo Gomes began formal relations with Mali via its remaining Wolof subjects.[73] Alvise Cadamosto, a Venetian explorer, recorded that the Mali Empire was the most powerful entity on the coast in 1454.[73]
Despite their power in the west, Mali was losing the battle for supremacy in the north and northeast. The new Songhai Empire conquered Mema,[58] one of Mali's oldest possessions, in 1465. It then seized Timbuktu from the Tuareg in 1468 under Sunni Ali Ber.[58]
In 1477, the Yatenga emperor Nasséré made yet another Mossi raid into Macina, this time conquering it and the old province of BaGhana (Wagadou).[74]
Mansa Mahmud Keita II came to the throne in 1481 during Mali's downward spiral. It is unknown from whom he descended; however, another emperor, Mansa Maghan Keita III, is sometimes cited as Mansa Mahmud Keita I. Still, throne names do not usually indicate blood relations. Mansa Mahmud Keita II's rule was characterised by more losses to Mali's old possessions and increased contact between Mali and Portuguese explorers along the coast. In 1481, Fula raids against Mali's Tekrur provinces began.
The growing trade in Mali's western provinces with Portugal witnessed the exchange of envoys between the two nations. Mansa Mahmud Keita II received the Portuguese envoys Pêro d'Évora and Gonçalo Enes in 1487.[33] The mansa lost control of Jalo during this period.[75] Meanwhile, Songhai seized the salt mines of Taghazza in 1493. That same year, Mahmud II sent another envoy to the Portuguese proposing alliance against the Fula. The Portuguese decided to stay out of the conflict and the talks concluded by 1495 without an alliance.[75]
Songhai forces under the command of Askia Muhammad I defeated the Mali general Fati Quali Keita in 1502 and seized the province of Diafunu.[58] In 1514, the Denianke dynasty was established in Tekrour and it was not long before the new kingdom of Great Fulo was warring against Mali's remaining provinces.[76]
In 1534, Mahmud III, the grandson of Mahmud II, received another Portuguese envoy to the Mali court by the name of Pero Fernandes.[77] This envoy from the Portuguese coastal port of Elmina arrived in response to the growing trade along the coast and Mali's now urgent request for military assistance against Songhai.[78] Still, no help came from the envoy and further possessions of Mali were lost one by one. The date of Mahmud's death and identity of his immediate successor are not recorded, and there is a gap of 65 years before another mansa's identity is recorded.[79]
In 1544 or 1545,[c] a Songhai force led by kanfari Dawud, who later succeeded his brother Askia Ishaq as ruler of the Songhai Empire, sacked the capital of Mali and purportedly used the royal palace as a latrine.[80] However, the Songhai do not maintain their hold on the Malian capital.[81]
Mali's fortunes seem to have improved in the second half of the 16th century. Around 1550, Mali attacked Bighu in an effort to regain access to its gold.[82] Songhai authority over Bendugu and Kala declined by 1571, and Mali may have been able to reassert some authority over them.[81] The breakup of the Wolof Empire allowed Mali to reassert authority over some of its former subjects on the north bank of the Gambia, such as Wuli, by 1576.[83]
The swan song of the Mali Empire came in 1599, under the reign of Mansa Mahmud IV. The Songhai Empire had fallen to the Saadi Sultanate of Morocco eight years earlier, and Mahmud sought to take advantage of their defeat by trying to capture Jenne.[84] Mahmud sought support from several other rulers, including the governor of Kala, Bukar. Bukar professed his support, but believing Mahmud's situation to be hopeless, secretly went over to the Moroccans. The Malian and Moroccan armies fought at Jenne on 26 April, the last day of Ramadan, and the Moroccans were victorious thanks to their firearms and Bukar's support, but Mahmud was able to escape.[85]
Collapse[edit]
It would be the Mandinka themselves that would cause the final destruction of the empire. Around 1610, Mahmud Keita IV died. Oral tradition states that he had three sons who fought over Manden's remains. No single Keita ever ruled Manden after Mahmud Keita IV's death, resulting in the end of the Mali Empire.[86]
Manden divided[edit]
The old core of the empire was divided into three spheres of influence. Kangaba, the de facto capital of Manden since the time of the last emperor, became the capital of the northern sphere. The Joma area, governed from Siguiri, controlled the central region, which encompassed Niani. Hamana (or Amana), southwest of Joma, became the southern sphere, with its capital at Kouroussa in modern Guinea.[86] Each ruler used the title of mansa, but their authority only extended as far as their own sphere of influence. Despite this disunity in the realm, the realm remained under Mandinka control into the mid-17th century. The three states warred with each other as much, if not more, than they did against outsiders, but rivalries generally stopped when faced with invasion. This trend would continue into colonial times against Tukulor enemies from the west.[87]
The Bamana jihad[edit]
Then, in 1630, the Bamana of Djenné declared their version of holy war on all Muslim powers in present-day Mali.[88] They targeted Moroccan pashas still in Timbuktu and the mansas of Manden. In 1645, the Bamana attacked Manden, seizing both banks of the Niger right up to Niani.[88] This campaign gutted Manden and destroyed any hope of the three mansas cooperating to free their land. The only Mandinka power spared from the campaign was Kangaba.
Sack of Niani[edit]
Mama Maghan, mansa of Kangaba, campaigned against the Bamana in 1667 and laid siege to Segou–Koro for a reported three years.[89] Segou, defended by Bitòn Coulibaly, successfully defended itself and Mama Maghan was forced to withdraw.[89] Either as a counter-attack or simply the progression of pre-planned assaults against the remnants of Mali, the Bamana sacked and burned Niani in 1670.[88] Their forces marched as far north as Kangaba, where the mansa was obliged to make a peace with them, promising not to attack downstream of Mali. The Bamana, likewise, vowed not to advance farther upstream than Niamina.[90] Following this disastrous set of events, Mansa Mama Maghan abandoned the capital of Niani.
Government[edit]
As founded by Mari Djata, it was composed of the "three freely allied states" of Mali, Mema and Wagadou plus the Twelve Doors of Mali.[27]
The Twelve Doors of Mali were a coalition of conquered or allied territories, mostly within Manden, with sworn allegiance to Sundiata and his descendants. Upon stabbing their spears into the ground before Sundiata's throne, each of the twelve kings relinquished their kingdom to the Keita dynasty.[27] In return for their submission, they became "farbas", a combination of the Mandinka words "farin" and "ba" (great farin).[91] Farin was a general term for northern commander at the time. These farbas would rule their old kingdoms in the name of the mansa with most of the authority they held prior to joining the empire.
The Mansa held ultimate, unquestioned authority. Audiences with the monarch were governed by strict protocol.[92] Conquered areas were ruled directly by the state through a farin (also called farin-ba or farba), essentially a military governor, chosen by the Mansa. Duties of the farin included managing the garrison, collecting taxes and customs duties, and controlling the local administration of justice. He could also take power away from the native administration if required and raise an army in the area for defence or putting down rebellions.[93] This system tended to promote assimilation into the empire.[92]
The post of farba was very prestigious, and his descendants could inherit it with the mansa's approval. The mansa could also replace a farba if he got out of control.[citation needed]
Most of the empire consisted of autonomous kingdoms of communities who recognized the Mansa's ultimate authority and paid tribute.[92] At the local level (village, town and city), kun-tiguis (heads of family) elected a dougou-tigui (village-master) from a bloodline descended from that locality's founder.[94] The county level administrators called kafo-tigui were appointed by the governor of the province.[58] Only at the state or province level was there any real interference from the central authority. Provinces picked their own governors via their own custom (election, inheritance, etc.) and, regardless of their title in the province, were recognised as dyamani-tigui (province-master) by the mansa.[58] Dyamani-tiguis had to be approved by the mansa and were subject to his oversight. If the mansa didn't believe the dyamani-tigui was capable or trustworthy, a farba might be installed to oversee the province or administer it outright.
Conquered territories that had proven quiescent could receive this level of autonomy rather than remain under direct rule, but territories that were crucial to trade or subject to revolt could and did lose this privilege as well and have a farin installed to rule over them.[93]
Great Assembly[edit]
The Gbara or Great Assembly would serve as the Mandinka deliberative body and council of state until the collapse of the empire in 1645. Its first meeting, at the famous Kouroukan Fouga (Division of the World), had 29 clan delegates presided over by a belen-tigui (master of ceremony). The Kouroukan Fouga put in place social and economic reforms including prohibitions on the maltreatment of prisoners and slaves, installing documents between clans which clearly stated who could say what about whom. Also, Sundiata divided the lands amongst the people assuring everyone had a place in the empire and fixed exchange rates for common products.[95]
The final incarnation of the Gbara, according to the surviving traditions of northern Guinea, held 32 positions occupied by 28 clans.[96] It functioned as the ruler's cabinet, with different dignitaries given different portfolios (war, justice, economy, foreign relations, religion, etc.), and all major social groups of Mande society were represented.[92]
Territorial Administration[edit]
The Mali Empire covered a larger area for a longer period of time than any other West African state before or since. What made this possible was the decentralised nature of administration throughout the state. According to Burkinabé writer Joseph Ki-Zerbo, the farther a person travelled from the capital, the more decentralised the mansa's power became.[99] Nevertheless, the mansa managed to keep tax money and nominal control over the area without agitating his subjects into revolt. The Malian state balanced centralization and decentralization by dividing the empire into a series of provinces and vassal states that had been either conquered or annexed, respectively. These were administered in different ways.
The Mali Empire reached its largest area under the Laye Keita mansas. Al-Umari, who wrote down a description of Mali based on information given to him by Abu Sa’id 'Otman ed Dukkali (who had lived 35 years in the capital), reported the realm as being square and an eight-month journey from its coast at Tura (at the mouth of the Senegal River) to Muli. Umari also describes the empire as being south of Marrakesh and almost entirely inhabited except for few places. Mali's domain also extended into the desert. He describes it as being north of Mali but under its domination implying some sort of vassalage for the Antasar, Yantar'ras, Medussa and Lemtuna Berber tribes.[100]
The empire's total area included nearly all the land between the Sahara Desert and coastal forests. It spanned the modern-day countries of Senegal, southern Mauritania, Mali, northern Burkina Faso, western Niger, the Gambia, Guinea-Bissau, Guinea, the Ivory Coast and northern Ghana. By 1350, the empire covered approximately 478,819 square miles (1,240,140 km2).[101] The empire also reached its highest population during the Laye period ruling over 400 cities,[citation needed] towns and villages of various religions and elasticities. During this period only the Mongol Empire was larger.[citation needed]
Al-ʿUmari reported that Mali had fourteen provinces.[102] His list does not necessarily accurately reflect the actual organization of the Mali Empire,[103] and the identification of the listed provinces is controversial. Several of the names are spelled in a variety of ways in different manuscripts. Al-ʿUmari's list, which is quoted with slight differences by al-Qalqashandi, is as follows:
- Ghana (Ghāna): Corresponds to the former Ghana Empire.
- Zafun (Zāfūn): Diafunu[104]
- Tirafka (Tirafkā):[d] Probably the same as Tiraqqa, a town on the Niger between Timbuktu and Gao mentioned by several other sources.[105] Alternatively, may be Tiringa, between Kayes and Nioro, or the same as trnqh, which may be Futa Toro.
- Takrur (Takrūr): On 3rd cataract of the Senegal River, north of Jolof. By the 14th century, the term Takrur had become commonly misused by Arab writers.
- Sanghana (Sanghāna): A region surrounding the mouth of the Senegal river. The name of the river may be derived from the name Sanghana.[106]
- bānbʿw (Arabic: بانبعو) or bānbġw (Arabic: بانبغو): Possibly the Bambuk region, between the Senegal and Faleme rivers, which was a major source of gold, but identification is uncertain.[107]
- Zarqatabana (Zarqaṭābanā)
- bytrā (Arabic: بيترا):[e] Possibly a typographical error for Banbarā, referring to the Bambara people.[108]
- Damura (Damūrā)
- Zagha (Zāghā): Dia. Ruled by a sultan who was a vassal of the Mansa of Mali.[109]
- Kabura (Kāburā): Along the Niger upstream of Zagha.[110] Like Zagha, ruled by a sultan who was a vassal of the Mansa of Mali. Identified with Diafarabé by Delafosse and Kaara (south of the Niger, opposite Kokry) by Bazin.[111] Also spelled Kabara or Kabira; not to be confused with Kabara, Timbuktu's port on the Niger.
- Bawaghuri (Bawāghūrī):[f] Possibly Zagra (Zāgharī), ten days' travel south of Walata.[112]
- Kawkaw (Kawkaw): The city of Gao, which was called Kawkaw by medieval Arabic sources. Formerly an independent kingdom, it was annexed into the Mali Empire by either Mansa Sakura or Mansa Musa. It later became the capital of the Songhai Empire.
- Mali (Mālī): The capital province, for which the empire gets its name. Al-'Umari reports that the capital itself, located in the province of Mali, was called byty.[g]
Al-ʿUmari also indicates that four Amazigh tribes were subjects of Mali:
- Yantaṣar or Kel Antasar: Located in the vicinity of the Adrar des Ifoghas.[113]
- Tīn Gharās or Yantar'ras: Correspond to the modern Kel Gres. Located in the vicinity of Tadmekka in medieval times.[113][105]
- Madūsa: Members of the Sanhaja confederation located on the Niger between Ghana and Tadmekka.[113]
- Lamtūna: Members of the Sanhaja confederation in the vicinity of the Adrar Plateau and Tagant Plateau.[113]
Gomez instead suggests that these tribes would have inhabited territory in the vicinity of Mema, Ghana, and Diafunu.[114]
Capital location[edit]
The identity of the capital city of the Mali Empire is a matter of dispute among historians. Scholars have located the capital in Niani, or somewhere on the Niger, or proposed that it changed several times, that there was no true capital, or even that it lay as far afield as the upper Gambia River in modern-day Senegal.[115] Seemingly contradictory reports written by Arab visitors, a lack of definitive archaeological evidence, and the diversity of oral traditions all contribute to this uncertainty.[116] A particular challenge lies in interpreting early Arabic manuscripts, in which, without vowel markings and diacritics, foreign names can be read in numerous different ways (e.g. Biti, Buti, Yiti, Tati).[115] Ibn Battuta and Leo Africanus both call the capital "Mali."[117]
Early European writers such as Maurice Delafosse believed that Niani, a city on what is now the border between Guinea and Mali, was the capital for most of the empire's history, and this notion has taken hold in the popular imagination.[118] Djibril Tamsir Niane, a Guinean historian, has been a forceful advocate of this position in recent decades. The identification of Niani as imperial capital is rooted in an (possibly erroneous) interpretation of the Arab traveler al Umari's work, as well as some oral histories. Extensive archaeological digs have shown that the area was an important trade and manufacturing center in the 15th century, but no firm evidence of royal residence has come to light.[119]
Niani's reputation as an imperial capital may derive from its importance in the late imperial period, when the Songhai Empire to the northeast pushed Mali back to the Manding heartland. Several 21st century historians have firmly rejected Niani as a capital candidate based on a lack of archaeological evidence of significant trade activity, clearly described by Arab visitors, particularly during the 14th century, Mali's golden age.[115] In fact, there is a conspicuous absence of archaeological samples of any kind from Niani dated to the late 13th through early 15th centuries, suggesting that Niani may have been uninhabited during the heyday of the Mali Empire.[115]
Various sources cite several other cities as capitals of the Mali Empire, some in competition with the Niani hypothesis and others addressing different time periods. A city called Dieriba or Dioliba is sometimes mentioned as the capital or main urban center of the province of Mande in the years before Sundiata, that was later abandoned.[120]
Many oral histories point to a town called Dakajalan as the original home of the Keita clan and Sundiata's childhood home and base of operations during the war against the Soso. It may have been located close to modern Kangaba. Mande bards in the region speak of the Dakajalan site, containing Sundiata's grave, as sacrosanct.[121] Kangaba became the last refuge of the Keita royal family after the collapse of the Mali Empire, and so has for centuries been associated with Sundiata in the cultural imagination of Mande peoples. If Dakajalan was, in fact, situated near Kangaba, this may also have contributed to their conflation, beginning with Delafosse's speculation that the latter may have begun as a suburb of the former.[122]
According to Jules Vidal and Levtzion, citing oral histories from Kangaba and Keyla, another onetime capital was Manikoro or Mali-Kura, founded after the destruction of Niani.[123]
Parallel to this debate, many scholars have argued that the Mali Empire may not have had a permanent "capital" in the sense that the word is used today, and historically was used in the Mediterranean world. Rather, authority would rest with the mansa and his court, wherever he went. Therefore, Arabic visitors may have assigned the "capital" label merely to whatever major city the mansa was based out of at the time of their visit.[124] It has been suggested that the name given in the Arabic sources for the capital of Mali is derived the Manding word "bambi", meaning "dais", and as such refers to the "seat of government" in general rather than being the name of a specific city.[125] Such impermanent capitals are a historically widespread phenomenon, having occurred in other parts of Africa such as Ethiopia, as well as outside Africa, such as in the Holy Roman Empire.[126]
Economy[edit]
During the peak of the kingdom, Mali was extremely wealthy, particularly due to trade in gold.
Trade[edit]
Trade was a significant factor to the rise and success of Mali. Its height coincided with the period when Timbuktu came under the Mansa's control. The empire taxed every ounce of gold, copper and salt that entered its borders. By the 14th century, a pax mandinka reigned in West Africa, allowing trade to flourish.[127]
There was no standard currency throughout the realm, but several forms were used. The Sahelian and Saharan towns of the Mali Empire were staging posts in the long-distance caravan trade and trading centres for various West African products. At Taghaza, for example, salt was exchanged; at Takedda, copper. Ibn Battuta observed the use of slaves in both towns. During most of his journey, Ibn Battuta travelled with a retinue that included slaves, most of whom carried goods for trade. On the return from Takedda to Morocco, his caravan transported 600 female slaves, suggesting that slavery was a substantial part of the commercial activity of the empire.[128]
Gold[edit]
Mali's wealth in gold did not primarily come from direct rule of gold-producing regions, but rather from tribute and trade with the regions where gold was found.[129] Gold nuggets were the exclusive property of the mansa and were illegal to trade within his borders. All gold was immediately handed over to the imperial treasury in return for an equal value of gold dust. Gold dust had been weighed and bagged for use at least since the time of the Ghana Empire. Mali borrowed the practice to stem inflation, since it was so prominent in the region. The most common measure for gold within the realm was the mithqal (4.5 grams of gold).[48] This term was used interchangeably with dinar, though it is unclear if coined currency was used in the empire. Gold dust was used all over the empire, but was not valued equally in all regions.
By the beginning of the 14th century, Mali was the source of almost half the Old World's gold exported from mines in Bambuk, Boure and Galam.[58] Gold mines in Boure, which is located in present-day Guinea, were discovered sometime near the end of the 12th century.[130]
Salt[edit]
Salt, another critical trade good, was as valuable, if not more valuable, than gold in sub-Saharan Africa. It was cut into pieces and spent on goods with close to equal buying power throughout the empire.[131] While it was as good as gold in the north, it was even better in the south, as it was rare there.[citation needed] Every year merchants entered Mali via Oualata with camel loads of salt to sell in the capital. Ibn Battuta had written that in Taghaza, one of Mali's most important salt mines, there were no trees, only sand and the salt mines. Nobody lived in the area except the Musafa servants who sug the salt and lived on dates imported from Sijilmasa and the Dar'a valley, camel meat and millet imported from the Sudan. The buildings were constructed from slabs of salt and roofed with camel skins. The salt was dug from the ground and cut into thick slabs, two of which were loaded onto each camel where they would be taken south across the desert to Oualata and sold. The value of the salt was chiefly determined by the transport costs. According to Ibn Battuta one camel load of salt sold at Walata for 8–10 mithqals of gold, but in Mali proper it was worth 20–30 ducats and sometimes even 40.[131][132]
Copper[edit]
Copper was also a valued commodity in imperial Mali. According to Ibn Battuta,[133][134] copper was mined from Takedda in the north and traded by the bar in the south for gold. Contemporary sources claim 60 copper bars traded for 100 dinars of gold.[33]
Military[edit]
The number and frequency of conquests in the late 13th century and throughout the 14th century indicate the Kolonkan mansas inherited and/or developed a capable military. Sundjata is credited with at least the initial organisation of the Manding military. However, it went through radical changes before reaching the legendary proportions proclaimed by its subjects. As a result of steady tax revenue and stable government beginning in the last quarter of the 13th century, the Mali Empire was able to project its power throughout its own extensive domain and beyond. It had a well-organised army with an elite corps of horsemen and many foot soldiers in each battalion. An army was required to guard the borders to protect its flourishing trade. Evidence of cavalry in terracotta figures suggest the empire's prosperous economy as horses are not indigenous to Africa.[135]
Strength[edit]
The Mali Empire maintained a semi-professional, full-time army in order to defend its borders. The entire nation was mobilised, with each clan obligated to provide a quota of fighting-age men.[33] These men had to be of the horon (freemen) caste and appear with their own arms. Historians who lived during the height and decline of the Mali Empire consistently record its standing army peaking at 100,000, with 10,000 of that number being made up of cavalry.[33][136] With the help of the river clans, this army could be deployed throughout the realm on short notice.[137][138] Numerous sources attest that the inland waterways of West Africa saw extensive use of war canoes and vessels used for war transport where permitted by the environment. Most West African canoes were of single-log construction, carved and dug out from one massive tree trunk.[139]
Order of battle[edit]
The army of the Mali Empire during the 14th century was divided into northern and southern commands led by the Farim-Soura and Sankar-Zouma, respectively.[33] Both of these men were part of Mali's warrior elite known as the ton-ta-jon-ta-ni-woro ("sixteen carriers of quivers"). Each representative or ton-tigi ("quiver-master") provided counsel to the mansa at the Gbara, but only these two ton-tigi held such wide-ranging power.
The ton-tigi belonged to an elite force of cavalry commanders called the farari ("brave men"). Each individual farariya ("brave") had a number of infantry officers beneath them called kèlè-koun or dùùkùnàsi. A kèlè-koun led free troops into battle alongside a farima ("brave man") during campaign. A dùùkùnàsi performed the same function except with slave troops called sofa ("guardian of the horse") and under the command of a farimba ("great brave man"). The farimba operated from a garrison with an almost entirely slave force, while a farima functioned on field with virtually all freemen.
Equipment[edit]
The army of the Mali Empire used of a wide variety of weapons depending largely on where the troops originated. Only sofa were equipped by the state, using bows and poisoned arrows. Free warriors from the north (Mandekalu or otherwise) were usually equipped with large reed or animal hide shields and a stabbing spear that was called a tamba. Free warriors from the south came armed with bows and poisonous arrows. The bow figured prominently in Mandinka warfare and was a symbol of military force throughout the culture. Bowmen formed a large portion of the field army as well as the garrison. Three bowmen supporting one spearman was the ratio in Kaabu and the Gambia by the mid-16th century. Equipped with two quivers and a knife fastened to the back of their arm, Mandinka bowmen used barbed, iron-tipped arrows that were usually poisoned. They also used flaming arrows for siege warfare. While spears and bows were the mainstay of the infantry, swords and lances of local or foreign manufacture were the choice weapons of the cavalry. Ibn Battuta comments on festival demonstrations of swordplay before the mansa by his retainers including the royal interpreter.[140] Another common weapon of Mandekalu warriors was the poison javelin used in skirmishes. Imperial Mali's horsemen also used iron helmet and mail armour for defence[141] as well as shields similar to those of the infantry.
Legacy[edit]
The Mali Empire had a massive effect on the development of West Africa societies even well after its peak. Its expansion spread Mande culture and the Mande languages from the mouth of the Gambia River to what is now Burkina Faso and, particularly through Dyula traders, from the Niger loop to the trading centers on the south coast. All across this region, political institutions with Malian structures and terminology survived to the colonial period and beyond.[92]
Architecture[edit]
Imperial Malian architecture was characterised by Sudano-Sahelian architecture. This style is distinguished by the use of mudbricks and an adobe plaster, with large wooden-log support beams that jut out from the wall face for large buildings such as mosques or palaces.
The dating of the original Great Mosque of Djenné, the most prominent example of this style today, is uncertain but thought to date as early as 1200 to as late as 1330.[142] The current structure, built under French colonial rule by the traditional Djenne masons, dates from 1907 and recreates some of the original's design and on the original plan.[142] The earliest document mentioning the old Djenne mosque is Abd al-Sadi's Tarikh al-Sudan, which gives the early history, presumably from the oral tradition as it existed in the mid seventeenth century. The tarikh states that a Sultan Kunburu became a Muslim and had his palace pulled down and the site turned into a mosque; he then built another palace for himself near the mosque on the east side.[142][143]
The Sudano-Sahelian influence was particularly widely incorporated during the rule of Mansa Musa I, who constructed many architectural projects, including the Great Mosque of Gao and Royal Palace in Timbuktu, which was built with the assistance of Ishaak al-Tuedjin, an architect brought by Musa from his pilgrimage to Mecca.[144]
See also[edit]
Notes[edit]
- ^ His hajj was during the reign of Baibars, which was from 1260 to 1277.[46]
- ^ There is some ambiguity over the identity of the mansa responsible for the voyages. The voyage is often incorrectly attributed to a Mansa Abu Bakr II, but no such mansa ever reigned.[52] The account of the voyage does not mention the mansa by name, only indicating that it was Musa's immediate predecessor. According to Ibn Khaldun, Musa's immediate predecessor was Muhammad.[53]
- ^ 952 AH
- ^ Variant: Tiranka (Tirankā)
- ^ Included in al-Qalqashandi's quotation of al-'Umari, but not in any manuscript of al-'Umari's text itself, which only list thirteen provinces despite saying there are fourteen.
- ^ Variant spellings include brlġwry (Arabic: برلغوري) and brāġwdy (Arabic: براغودي)
- ^ Al-Qalqashandi quotes al-'Umari as spelling it banbī, but this is actually how al-'Umari spells the name of the royal dais, not the capital.
References[edit]
- ^ a b c Taagepera 1997, p. 497.
- ^ Turchin, Adams & Hall 2006, p. 222.
- ^ a b Ki-Zerbo, Joseph: UNESCO General History of Africa, Vol. IV, Abridged Edition: Africa from the Twelfth to the Sixteenth Century, p. 57. University of California Press, 1997.
- ^ "The Empire of Mali, In Our Time – BBC Radio 4". BBC. Retrieved 29 October 2015.
- ^ Davidson, Basil (29 October 2014). West Africa before the Colonial Era: A History to 1850. Routledge. ISBN 978-1-317-88265-7.
- ^ a b Imperato & Imperato 2008, p. 201.
- ^ a b Goodwin 1957.
- ^ Imperato & Imperato 2008, p. 202.
- ^ a b Imperato & Imperato 2008, p. 203.
- ^ Imperato & Imperato 2008, p. 204.
- ^ a b Ly-Tall 1984, p. 172.
- ^ Ly-Tall 1984, p. 172–173.
- ^ Delafosse 1912a, p. 121–122.
- ^ a b c Niane 2006, p. 85.
- ^ Gomez 2018, p. 68.
- ^ Conrad 2004, p. xxxiii.
- ^ Fauvelle 2018, p. 191.
- ^ a b Hunwick 1973, p. 197.
- ^ Levtzion & Hopkins 2000, pp. 261, 333, 336.
- ^ Levtzion & Hopkins 2000, pp. 261–262.
- ^ Delafosse 1912a, pp. 121–122 "On a voulou trouver à ce mto une étymologie totémique et on a traduit Mali par «hippopotame» et Mandé par «petit lamentin» : ces deux étymologies sont rejetées par les indigènes du pays, c'est-à-dire les Malinké, qui déclarent que Mandé ou Mali est simpliment le nom de leur patrie et qu'ils n'en connaissent pas la signification (1) et qui, au surplus, n'ont aucun totem de peuple, pas plus le lamentin que l'hippopotame: un de leurs clans seulement a pour tana ou «tabou» l'hippopotame et il n'en porte pas le nom (clan des Keïta)." "(1) Si d'ailleurs la forme mali peut signifier «hippopotame» dans certains dialectes, ce sens ne peut en aucune façon s'appliquer à la forme mandé; part contre, si l'on peut traduire mandé, mané, mani, etc. par «petit lamentin», il serait bien difficile de donner la même traduction aux formes mali, "mallé", etc.; on pourrait encore proposer l'étymologie de «fils de maitre», mais elle serait également fort douteuse."
- ^ Arazi, Noemie. "Tracing History in Dia, in the Inland Niger Delta of Mali -Archaeology, Oral Traditions and Written Sources" (PDF). University College London. Institute of Archaeology.
- ^ al-Bakri, translated in Levtzion & Hopkins 2000, p. 82.
- ^ Levtzion & Hopkins 2000, p. 451.
- ^ Ibn Khaldun, translated in Levtzion & Hopkins 2000, p. 333.
- ^ al-Idrisi 1154, translated in Levtzion & Hopkins 2000, p. 108.
- ^ a b c d e f Niane, D. T.: "Sundiata: An Epic of Old Mali". Longman, 1995.
- ^ Nasr, Seyyed Hossein. The Heart of Islam: Enduring Values for Humanity. New York: HarperCollins, 2009, p. 92. Print. ISBN 0061746606.
- ^ Boyce, D. George; de Witte, Ludo (October 2002). "The Assassination of Lumumba". The Journal of Military History. 66 (4): 1249. doi:10.2307/3093322. ISSN 0899-3718. JSTOR 3093322.
- ^ Heusch, Luc de: "The Symbolic Mechanisms of Sacred Kingship: Rediscovering Frazer". The Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute, 1997.
- ^ Cissoko 1983, pp. 57.
- ^ Lange, Dierk (1996), "The Almoravid expansion and the downfall of Ghana", Der Islam 73 (2): 313–351
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Niane 1975
- ^ "Google Translate". Retrieved 16 September 2009.
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- ^ Ibn Khaldun in Levtzion and Hopkins, eds. and transl. Corpus, p. 333.
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- ^ a b Blanchard 2001, p. 1117.
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- ^ Levtzion 1963.
- ^ Gomez 2018, p. 93.
- ^ Gomez 2018, pp. 93, 95.
- ^ Gomez 2018, p. 96.
- ^ a b Levtzion & Hopkins 2000, p. 333.
- ^ Levtzion 1963, p. 344.
- ^ Gomez 2018, p. 97.
- ^ a b Niane 1959.
- ^ Gomez 2018, p. 94.
- ^ Levtzion & Hopkins 2000, p. 334.
- ^ a b Levtzion 1963, p. 345.
- ^ Fauvelle 2018, p. 165.
- ^ Levtzion 1963, p. 346.
- ^ Levtzion & Hopkins 2000, p. 269.
- ^ Levtzion 1963, pp. 349–350.
- ^ Bell 1972, pp. 224–225.
- ^ Levtzion 1963, pp. 347.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p Stride, G. T., & C. Ifeka: "Peoples and Empires of West Africa: West Africa in History 1000–1800". Nelson, 1971.
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- ^ "Kingdom of Mali". Bu.edu. Archived from the original on 31 August 2009. Retrieved 16 September 2009.
- ^ El Hamel, Chouki (27 February 2014). Black Morocco: A History of Slavery, Race, and Islam. Cambridge University Press. p. 126. ISBN 978-1139620048.
- ^ Woods, John E.; Pfeiffer, Judith; Quinn, Sholeh Alysia; Tucker, Ernest (2006). History and Historiography of Post-Mongol Central Asia and the Middle East: Studies in Honor of John E. Woods. Otto Harrassowitz Verlag. p. 442. ISBN 3447052783.
- ^ Silady, Alex (11 June 2018). "Four People Who Single-handedly Caused Economic Crises". SmartAsset.
- ^ The Meanings of Timbuktu, Bloom, p. 52.
- ^ See: Said Hamdun & Noël King (eds.), Ibn Battuta in Black Africa. London, 1975, pp. 52–53.
- ^ "Lessons from Timbuktu: What Mali's Manuscripts Teach About Peace | World Policy Institute". Worldpolicy.org. Archived from the original on 29 October 2013. Retrieved 24 October 2013.
- ^ a b c Saad, Elias N. (14 July 1983). Social History of Timbuktu: The Role of Muslim Scholars and Notables 1400-1900 (Cambridge History of Science Cambridge Studies in Islamic Civilization ed.). Cambridge University Press. pp. 29–30. ISBN 0521246032.
- ^ Lifshitz, Fima (1 January 2009). An African Journey Through Its Art. AuthorHouse. p. 72. ISBN 9781438934501.
- ^ Cooley 1966, p. 66.
- ^ Hunwick 1999, pp. 12, 30.
- ^ Levtzion 1973, p. 81.
- ^ Thornton, John K.: Warfare in Atlantic Africa, 1500–1800. Routledge, 1999.
- ^ a b Cosmovisions.com [dead link]
- ^ "Mossi (1250–1575 AD) – DBA 2.0 Variant Army List". Fanaticus.org. 21 August 2006. Archived from the original on 2 August 2009. Retrieved 16 September 2009.
- ^ a b "Etext.org". Archived from the original on 11 July 2006.
- ^ Kelly Mass (9 December 2023). African History A Closer Look at Colonies, Countries, and Wars. Efalon Acies. ISBN 9791222482699. Retrieved 23 December 2023.
Denianke dynasty was established at Tekrour in 1514, leading to war with Mali's surviving regions by Great Fulo's new kingdom.
- ^ "The history of Africa – Peul and Toucouleur". Retrieved 16 September 2009.
- ^ "Africa and Slavery 1500–1800 by Sanderson Beck". San.beck.org. Retrieved 16 September 2009.
- ^ Person 1981, p. 643.
- ^ Gomez 2018, p. 331.
- ^ a b Person 1981, p. 618.
- ^ Wilks 1982, p. 470.
- ^ Person 1981, p. 621.
- ^ Ly-Tall 1984, p. 184.
- ^ al-Sadi, translated in Hunwick 1999, pp. 234–235
- ^ a b Jansen 1996.
- ^ Jansen, Jan: "The Younger Brother and the Stranger. In search of a status discourse for Mande". Cashiers d'etudes africanines, 1996.
- ^ a b c "Chronology Mali". Retrieved 16 September 2009.
- ^ a b Delafosse 1912b, p. 283.
- ^ Delafosse 1912b, p. 284.
- ^ Person, Yves: SAMORI: UNE REVOLUTION DYULA. Nîmes, impr. Barnier, 1968.
- ^ a b c d e Cissoko 1983, pp. 59.
- ^ a b "How the Mali Empire in the 12th century revolved levels of governance". Retrieved 16 September 2009.
- ^ O'Sullivan, John M. (1980), "Slavery in the Malinke Kingdom of Kabadougou (Ivory Coast)", International Journal of African Historical Studies, 13 (4): 633–650, doi:10.2307/218199, JSTOR 218199
- ^ "Kouroukan Fouga". Embassy of Mali in Canada. Retrieved 10 May 2020.
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- ^ Meredith, Martin (2014). The Fortunes of Africa. New York: Public Affairs. p. 75. ISBN 9781610396356.
- ^ Shillington, Kevin (2012). History of Africa. London: Palgrave Macmillan. pp. 101–102. ISBN 9780230308473.
- ^ "Google Translate". Retrieved 16 September 2009.
- ^ Blanchard 2001, p. 1118.
- ^ David C. Conrad (2009). Empires of Medieval West Africa: Ghana, Mali, and Songhay. Infobase Publishing. p. 116. ISBN 978-1-4381-0319-8.
- ^ Levtzion & Hopkins 2000, p. 261.
- ^ Levtzion & Hopkins 2000, p. 411.
- ^ Hunwick 1999b, p. 94.
- ^ a b Levtzion & Hopkins 2000, p. 458.
- ^ Levtzion & Hopkins 2000, p. 455.
- ^ Levtzion & Hopkins 2000, p. 445.
- ^ Levtzion & Hopkins 2000, p. 446.
- ^ Levtzion & Hopkins 2000, p. 287.
- ^ Levtzion & Hopkins 2000, pp. 287, 415.
- ^ Hunwick 1999, p. 19.
- ^ Blanchard 2001, p. 1119.
- ^ a b c d Blanchard 2001, p. 1118.
- ^ Gomez 2018, p. 127.
- ^ a b c d Fauvelle-Aymar 2012.
- ^ Conrad 1994.
- ^ Hunwick 1973, p. 199.
- ^ Ki-Zerbo, 57.
- ^ Conrad 1994, p. 369.
- ^ Green 1991, p. 128.
- ^ Conrad 1994, p. 373.
- ^ Green 1991, p. 129.
- ^ Green 1991, pp. 128–129.
- ^ Conrad 1994, p. 365.
- ^ Hunwick 1973.
- ^ Haour 2005.
- ^ Cissoko 1983, pp. 58.
- ^ Candice Goucher, Charles LeGuin, and Linda Walton, Trade, Transport, Temples, and Tribute: The Economics of Power Archived 29 May 2016 at the Wayback Machine, in In the Balance: Themes in Global History (Boston: McGraw-Hill, 1998).
- ^ Gomez 2018, p. 107–108.
- ^ Blauer, Lauré; Ettagale, Jason (2008). Cultures of the World Mali. Marshall Cavendish, 2008. p. 25. ISBN 978-0761425687.
- ^ a b Blanchard 2001, p. 1115.
- ^ Levtzion & Hopkins 2000, p. 414, note 5.
- ^ Dunn 2005, p. 305.
- ^ Levtzion & Hopkins 2000, pp. 301–303.
- ^ Nelson, Joe (2015). Historium. Big Pictures Press. p. 12.
- ^ Willard, Alice (1 April 1993). "Gold, Islam and Camels: The Transformative Effects of Trade and Ideology". Comparative Civilizations Review. 28 (28): 88. ISSN 0733-4540.
- ^ "Google Translate". Retrieved 16 September 2009.
- ^ Sarr, Mamadou (1991). L'empire du Mali. p. 92. Archived from the original on 6 April 2008. Retrieved 9 June 2008.
- ^ Robert Smith, "The Canoe in West African History", The Journal of African History, Vol. 11, No. 4 (1970), pp. 515–533.
- ^ Charry 2000, p. 358.
- ^ Robin Law (1976). "Horses, Firearms, and Political Power in Pre-Colonial West Africa, Past and Present". Past and Present. 72 (1): 112–132. doi:10.1093/past/72.1.112.
- ^ a b c Bourgeois 1987.
- ^ Hunwick 1999, p. 18. "When the sultan became a Muslim. he had his palace pulled down and the site turned into a mosque dedicated to God Most High. This is the present congregational mosque. He built another palace for himself and his household near the mosque on the east side."
- ^ Alexander, Leslie (2010). Encyclopedia of African American History (American Ethnic Experience ed.). ABC-CLIO. pp. 73–74. ISBN 978-1851097692.
Primary sources[edit]
- al-Bakri, Kitāb al-masālik wa-ʼl-mamālik [The Book of Routes and Realms], translated in Levtzion & Hopkins 2000
- al-Idrisi (1154), Nuzhat al-mushtāq fī ikhtirāq al-āfāq نزهة المشتاق في اختراق الآفاق [The Pleasure of Him Who Longs to Cross the Horizons], translated in Levtzion & Hopkins 2000
- Al-Umari, Masalik al-Absar fi Mamalik al-Amsar [Pathways of Vision in the Realms of the Metropolises], translated in Levtzion & Hopkins 2000
- Ibn Khaldun, Kitāb al-ʻIbar wa-dīwān al-mubtadaʼ wa-l-khabar fī ayyām al-ʻarab wa-ʼl-ʻajam wa-ʼl-barbar [The Book of Examples and the Register of Subject and Predicate on the Days of the Arabs, the Persians and the Berbers]. Translated in Levtzion & Hopkins 2000.
- Ibn Battuta; Ibn Juzayy (1356), Tuḥfat an-Nuẓẓār fī Gharāʾib al-Amṣār wa ʿAjāʾib al-Asfār تحفة النظار في غرائب الأمصار وعجائب الأسفار [A Masterpiece to Those Who Contemplate the Wonders of Cities and the Marvels of Travelling], translated in Levtzion & Hopkins 2000
- al-Sadi, Taʾrīkh al-Sūdān, translated in Hunwick 1999
Other sources[edit]
- Bell, Nawal Morcos (1972). "The Age of Mansa Musa of Mali: Problems in Succession and Chronology". The International Journal of African Historical Studies. 5 (2): 221–234. doi:10.2307/217515. ISSN 0361-7882. JSTOR 217515.
- Blanchard, Ian (2001). Mining, Metallurgy and Minting in the Middle Ages Vol. 3. Continuing Afro-European Supremacy, 1250–1450. Stuttgart: Franz Steiner Verlag. ISBN 3-515-08704-4.
- Bourgeois, Jean-Louis (1987). "The History of the Great Mosques of Djenné". African Arts. 20 (3): 54–63, 90–92. doi:10.2307/3336477. JSTOR 3336477.
- Charry, Eric S. (2000). Mande Music: Traditional and Modern Music of the Maninka and Mandinka of Western Africa. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. pp. 500 Pages. ISBN 0-226-10161-4.
- Cissoko, Sekene Mody (1983). "Formations sociales et État en Afrique précoloniale : Approche historique". Présence Africaine. COLLOQUE SUR « LA PROBLÉMATIQUE DE L'ÉTAT EN AFRIQUE NOIRE » (127/128): 50–71. doi:10.3917/presa.127.0050. JSTOR 24350899. Retrieved 4 July 2023.
- Conrad, David C. (1994). "A town called Dakajalan: the Sunjata tradition and the question of Ancient Mali's capital". Journal of African History. 35 (3): 355–377. doi:10.1017/s002185370002675x. JSTOR 182640. S2CID 162273464.
- Conrad, David C. (2004). Sunjata: a West African epic of the Mande peoples. Indianapolis: Hackett. ISBN 0-87220-697-1.
- Cooley, William Desborough (1966) [1841]. The Negroland of the Arabs Examined and Explained. London: Routledge. ISBN 0-7146-1799-7.
- Delafosse, Maurice (1912). Haut-Sénégal Niger (in French). Vol. I. Le Pays, les Peuples, les Langues. Paris: Maisonneuve & Larose.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: date and year (link) - Delafosse, Maurice (1912). Haut-Sénégal Niger (in French). Vol. II. L'Histoire. Paris: Maisonneuve & Larose.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: date and year (link) - Delafosse, Maurice (1912). Haut-Sénégal Niger (in French). Vol. III. Les civilisations. Paris: Maisonneuve & Larose.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: date and year (link) - Dunn, Ross E. (2005) [1996]. The Adventures of Ibn Battuta. University of California Press. ISBN 978-0-520-24385-9.
- Fauvelle-Aymar, François-Xavier (2012). "Niani redux. A final rejection of the identification of the site of Niani (Republic of Guinea) with the capital of the kingdom of Mali". P@lethnology: 235–252. ISSN 2108-6532.
- Fauvelle, François-Xavier (2018) [2013]. The Golden Rhinoceros: Histories of the African Middle Ages. Troy Tice (trans.). Princeton University Press. ISBN 978-0-691-18126-4.
- Gomez, Michael A. (2018). African Dominion: A New History of Empire in Early and Medieval West Africa. Princeton: Princeton University Press. ISBN 9781400888160.
- Goodwin, A. J. H. (1957). "The Medieval Empire of Ghana". South African Archaeological Bulletin. 12 (47): 108–112. doi:10.2307/3886971. JSTOR 3886971.
- Green, Kathryn L. (1991). ""Mande Kaba," the Capital of Mali: A Recent Invention?". History in Africa. 18: 127–135. doi:10.2307/3172058. ISSN 0361-5413. JSTOR 3172058. S2CID 161600126.
- Haour, Anne (2005). "Power and permanence in precolonial Africa: a case study from the central Sahel". World Archaeology. 37 (4): 552–565. doi:10.1080/00438240500412816. ISSN 0043-8243. S2CID 162397096.
- Hunwick, John O. (1973). "The mid-fourteenth century capital of Mali". Journal of African History. 14 (2): 195–206. doi:10.1017/s0021853700012512. JSTOR 180444. S2CID 162784401.
- Hunwick, John O. (1999). Timbuktu and the Songhay Empire: Al-Saʻdi's Taʼrīkh al-Sūdān down to 1613, and other contemporary documents. Islamic history and civilization : studies and texts. Leiden; Boston: Brill. ISBN 978-90-04-11207-0.
- Hunwick, John (1999). "Islamic financial institutions: theoretical structures and aspects of their application in sub-Saharan Africa". In Stiansen, Endre & Guyer, Jane I. (eds.). Credit, Currencies and Culture: African Financial Institutions in Historical Perspective. Stockholm: Nordiska Afrikainstitutet. pp. 78–102. ISBN 91-7106-442-7.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: date and year (link) - Imperato, Pascal James; Imperato, Gavin H. (2008). Historical Dictionary of Mali. Scarecrow Press. ISBN 978-0-8108-5603-5.
- Insoll, Timothy (2003). The Archaeology of Islam in Sub-Saharan Africa. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-65702-4.
- Jansen, Jan (1996). "The Representation of Status in Mande: Did the Mali Empire Still Exist in the Nineteenth Century?". History in Africa. 23: 87–109. doi:10.2307/3171935. hdl:1887/2775. JSTOR 3171935. S2CID 53133772.
- Ibn Khaldun (1958). F. Rosenthal (ed.). The Muqaddimah (K. Ta'rikh - "History"). Vol. 1. London: Routledge & Kegan Paul Ltd. pp. 264–268. OCLC 956182402. (on the Kings of Mali)
- Ki-Zerbo, Joseph (1978). Histoire de l'Afrique noire: D'hier à demain. Paris: Hatier. ISBN 2-218-04176-6.
- Ki-Zerbo, Joseph (1997). UNESCO General History of Africa, Vol. IV, Abridged Edition: Africa from the Twelfth to the Sixteenth Century. Berkeley: University of California Press. ISBN 0-520-06699-5.
- Levtzion, N. (1963). "The thirteenth- and fourteenth-century kings of Mali". Journal of African History. 4 (3): 341–353. doi:10.1017/S002185370000428X. JSTOR 180027. S2CID 162413528.
- Levtzion, Nehemia (1973). Ancient Ghana and Mali. London: Methuen. ISBN 0-8419-0431-6.
- Levtzion, Nehemia; Hopkins, John F.P., eds. (2000). Corpus of Early Arabic Sources for West Africa. New York: Marcus Weiner Press. ISBN 1-55876-241-8. First published in 1981 by Cambridge University Press, ISBN 0-521-22422-5
- Ly-Tall, M. (1984). "The decline of the Mali Empire". In Niane, D. T. (ed.). Africa from the Twelfth to the Sixteenth Century. General history of Africa. Vol. 4. Paris: UNESCO. pp. 172–186. ISBN 92-3-101-710-1.
- Monteil, Ch. (1929). "Les Empires du Mali. Étude d'histoire et de sociologie soudanais". Bulletin du Comité d'études historiques et scientifiques de l'Afrique occidentale française (in French). XII (3–4): 291–447.
- Piga, Adriana (2003). Islam et villes en Afrique au sud du Sahara: Entre soufisme et fondamentalisme. Paris: KARTHALA Editions. ISBN 2-84586-395-0.
- Niane, D. T. (1994). Sundiata: An Epic of Old Mali. Harlow: Longman African Writers. ISBN 0-582-26475-8.
- Niane, Djibril Tamsir (2006). Sundiata: an epic of Old Mali. Translated by Pickett, G. D. (Revised ed.). Harlow, England: Pearson Longman. ISBN 978-1-4058-4942-5.
- Niane, Djibril Tamsir (1959). "Recherches sur l'Empire du Mali au Moyen Age". Recherches Africaines (in French). Archived from the original on 19 May 2007.
- Niane, D. T. (1975). Recherches sur l'Empire du Mali au Moyen Âge. Paris: Présence Africaine.
- Person, Yves (1981). "Nyaani Mansa Mamudu et la fin de l 'empire du Mali". Publications de la Société française d'histoire des outre-mers: 613–653.
- Stride, G. T. & Ifeka, C. (1971). Peoples and Empires of West Africa: West Africa in History 1000–1800. Edinburgh: Nelson. ISBN 0-17-511448-X.
- Taagepera, Rein (September 1997). "Expansion and Contraction Patterns of Large Polities: Context for Russia" (PDF). International Studies Quarterly. 41 (3): 475–504. doi:10.1111/0020-8833.00053. JSTOR 2600793. Retrieved 10 April 2021.
- Thornton, John K. (1999). Warfare in Atlantic Africa 1500–1800. London and New York: Routledge. pp. 194 Pages. ISBN 1-85728-393-7.
- Turchin, Peter; Adams, Jonathan M.; Hall, Thomas D. (December 2006). "East-West Orientation of Historical Empires" (PDF). Journal of World-Systems Research. 12 (2): 218–229. ISSN 1076-156X. Archived from the original (PDF) on 17 May 2016. Retrieved 10 April 2021.
- Wilks, Ivor (1982). "Wangara, Akan and Portuguese in the Fifteenth and Sixteenth Centuries. II. The Struggle for Trade". The Journal of African History. 23 (4): 463–472. doi:10.1017/S0021853700021307. JSTOR 182036. S2CID 163064591.
Further reading[edit]
- Gomez, Michael A. (2018). African Dominion: A New History of Empire in Early and Medieval West Africa. Princeton: Princeton University Press. ISBN 978-0-691-19682-4.
- Levtzion, Nehemia (1973). Ancient Ghana and Mali. London: Methuen. ISBN 0-8419-0431-6.
- Ly-Tall, M. (1984). "The decline of the Mali empire". In Niane, D. T. (ed.). Africa from the Twelfth to the Sixteenth Century. General History of Africa. Paris: UNESCO. ISBN 92-3-101-710-1.
- Niane, Djibril Tamsir (1959). "Recherches sur l'Empire du Mali au Moyen Age". Recherches Africaines (in French). Archived from the original on 19 May 2007.
- Niane, D. T. (1984). "Mali and the second Mandingo expansion". In Niane, D. T. (ed.). Africa from the Twelfth to the Sixteenth Century. General History of Africa. Paris: UNESCO. ISBN 92-3-101-710-1.
External links[edit]
- African Kingdoms Mali
- Metropolitan Museum – Empires of the Western Sudan: Mali Empire
- The Story of Africa: Mali – BBC World Service
- Ibn Battuta: Travels in Asia and Africa 1325–1354 – excerpts from H. A. R. Gibb's translation