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A history of West Africa to the nineteenth century. With F. K. Buah and the advice of J. F. Ade Ajayi (1965)

von Basil Davidson

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This text is designed for students preparing for O Level history, offering an examination of some of the major trends and events in West African history from AD 1000-1800.
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It took awhile for my full attention to be absorbed by this history. I gathered that because of the paucity of material evidence for the earliest periods of West African history prior to 1000 A.D, historians, or Davidson, are forced to make many generalizations or assumptions. At times it felt like I was reading a Renaissance map of an unknown world. As the "flesh" of history became more abundant, the text became more engrossing. The epic of Sundiata, the emergence of Mali, Mansa Musa, and then the rise of the Songhay Empire were fascinating subjects. As Islam built and gained a foothold in the cities, it brought a literary culture and connections with the wider world. It also brought conflict between the cities (the power centers of empires) and the countryside (the traditonal, non-Islamic and often exploited tributaries of the empires). In the 15th c. the trade relationships with Europeans started peaceably and equitably with the Portugese, but slowly and insidiously, became an unequal relationship dependent on guns and slaves. This, with the decline of the Songhay Empire in particular, led to a shift in power centers from the inland to the coast and temporarily led to a decline in the advance of Islam. By the nineteenth century, new states and small empires formed of varying strength. The Asante Empire was one of the stronger confederations. While the slave trade had been abolished, Davidson made it clear that the tide of the European onslaught of Africa was becoming increasingly irresistible. The reader is set-up to brace themselves for that fateful carving of Africa by the end of the century. That subject is for another book. I think one of the main lessons of this history, rather than being a mere historical narrative of cultures, states and empires is that West Africa built thriving civilizations that were already connected to the outside world. These civilizations responded to outside influences in ways that were uniquely African. The trans-Atlantic slave trade brought a pressure on West Africa, like nothing it had ever seen before. After the slave trade was abolished, West African peoples began to reorganize themselves in ways capable of responding creatively to the emerging industrial world. In particular, the Asante appeared very close to producing something like the modern nation state. This gives a "what could have been" feeling while knowing full well that nearly all bits of West African land were eventually colonized by the same people the used to enslave and transport millions of its inhabitants far away from its shores. Basil Davidson's history, though written nearly sixty years ago, inspires me to study further the fascinating history of this impressive continent. The many maps throughout helped me to place the names of people groups in context. The Relative Dating Guide at the back of the book was also very helpful to place the names of Empires and Kings in their proper context. My only complaint is that the history is sometimes too speculative and when there appears to be nothing more to say on a subject, Davidson, resorts to "must haves" or makes generalizations that, for the casual reader, appear to be based on a single fact. ( )
  riskedom | Dec 30, 2019 |
e0026
  AfricaCari | Sep 7, 2012 |
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Mefre Sika,  I call Gold,
Sika ngye so.  Gold is mute.
Mefre Ntama  I call Cloth,
Ntama ngye so.  Cloth is mute.
Onipa ne asem.  It is Mankind that matters.
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dedicated with affection to
my friends and colleagues of the
University of California at Los Angeles
and especially

James S. Coleman
and
Robert R. Griffeth
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To understand the African present it is necessary to understand the African past.
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This text is designed for students preparing for O Level history, offering an examination of some of the major trends and events in West African history from AD 1000-1800.

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