African Origin of Modern Humans
https://www.worldatlas.com/webimage/countrys/af.htm
As for Africa, scientists have formerly concluded that it is the
birthplace of mankind, as large numbers of human-like fossils (discovered nowhere
else) were found on the continent, some dating back 3.5 million years.
About 1.75 million years ago, early man spread throughout parts of
Africa. They became aggressive hunters, lived in caves and used fire and their
ability to create stone tools just to survive.
The Neanderthals arose some 200,000 years ago and inhabited regions in
northern Africa and across parts of southern Europe. There is also clear
evidence that they had control of fire, lived in caves, as well as open-air
structures of stone and vegetation.
One of the most important developments of primitive man was the creation
of stone tools. By 5000 BC farming was somewhat common in the northern areas of
Africa, as people were growing crops and herding livestock. During that time
the Sahara
Desert was a fertile area.
Ancient African History
In 3200 BC the Egyptian culture emerged along the lower reaches of the Nile River;
it was among the earliest civilizations and their tools and weapons were made
of bronze. They also pioneered the building of massive pyramids and temples.
Egyptians also developed mathematics, an innovative system of medicine,
irrigation and agricultural production techniques, writing and the first ships.
In short, the Egyptians left a lasting legacy upon the world.
Around 600 BC the use of metal tools spread across small population
bases and farming groups in North Africa, and their use gradually spread south
into what is now called South Africa.
The Phoenicians were an enterprising maritime trading culture from Lebanon
who spread across the Mediterranean
from 1550 BC to 300 BC. In 814 BC, they founded the city of Carthage in what is
now Tunisia
in north Africa; only to be destroyed by the Romans in 146 BC.
Meanwhile, the Egyptians continued to spread their culture across
Northern Africa, and kingdoms were created in Ethiopia
and Sudan.
The then-growing Roman Empire continued to expand its influence, and in 30 BC
Egypt became a province of Rome; Morocco the same in 42 AD.
Before the Middle Ages began, the Roman Empire collapsed and the Arabs
quickly took their place on the continent. In 698-700 they invaded Tunis
and Carthage and soon controlled all of coastal North Africa. The Arabs were
Muslims, and most of North Africa converted to Islam; Ethiopia
was the exception.
Soon kingdoms emerged in Africa; they traded with the Arabs using gold
plus a valuable commodity - slaves. One of the first kingdoms was Ghana,
located in what is now southeastern Mauritania and western Mali. The empire
grew rich from the trans-Saharan trade in gold and salt, but then lost its
power in the 11th century.
Additional kingdoms developed across the continent, including those in Benin
and Mali.
Both became rich by trading in gold, horse salt, and of course, slaves. And
like most kingdoms before them on any continent, they were invaded and in the
end destroyed.
Mogadishu, the now largest city in Somalia,
was settled by Arabs who traveled and traded on the east coast of Africa. The
Arabs' reach extended to Zanzibar,
which was used as a base for voyages between the Middle East
and India.
As other organized kingdoms were formed in central and southern Africa,
the Portuguese began to explore the western coast of Africa. By 1445 they
reached the Cape
Verde Islands and the coast of Senegal,
and the mouth of the River
Congo in 1482. They even sailed around the Cape of
Good Hope.
African Colonization and the
Slave Trade
The continent-changing 16th Century began with Europeans transporting
African slaves to the Americas for profit. A slave purchased on the African
coast for the equivalent of 14 English pounds in bartered goods could sell for
45 pounds in the American market.
The best-known method of commerce at the time was called the Triangular
Trading System. It involved British
and other European countries' manufactured goods which were shipped to Africa,
then slaves from there to the West
Indies and then sugar and other products back to Europe.
At the same time, Barbary pirates along the North African coast captured
thousands of ships. From the 16th to 19th century, an estimated 800,000 to 1.25
million people were taken captive as slaves. The pirates' impact on the
continent, however, peaked in the early to mid-17th century.
As tales of African riches spread north, the Europeans founded their
first real colonies in the early 16th century, when the Portuguese
settled in what is now Angola.
Later, the Dutch founded a colony in what is now South
Africa.
Strong movements to end slavery began in the late 18th century. France
became one of the first countries to abolish slavery in 1794. Britain banned
slave trade in 1807, but it was not officially abolished for good until 1848.
In some parts of Africa, slave-like practices continue to this day and have
proven difficult to eliminate.
Wholesale colonization of Africa by European countries began in 1814
when the British
snatched the Dutch Colony of South Africa. Carved up like a large pie, the
Brits, Dutch,French,
Germans
and Portuguese
grabbed all of the available pieces.
By the end of the 19th century, from Algeria
to Zimbabwe,
and from Botswana
to Niger,
the continent was now all but controlled by European powers. In the early
20th century the land grab continued as the British took control of Egypt.
By 1920, the forced occupation of African lands began to sour in Europe,
and change was in the wind. Africans were also driven by their passionate
desire for independence and the movement for same became unstoppable. By mid-century
most of the continent was independent, with Angola finally free in 1975.
Post-Colonial Africa
Self-government brought more than its share of civil wars, coup d'états and
ethnic conflicts to the newly emerged countries. Add to that mix some horrible
genocides, along with famines and out-of-control disease (HIV/AIDS), and Africa
was teetering on the edge, and in many areas still does today.
Although Africa remains the world's poorest inhabited continent, there
are many bright spots in this land of over one billion people and its 2,000 +
languages. Significant economic and social gains have taken place over the last
few years, with South
Africa, Nigeria,
Morocco
and Egypt
leading the way.
The largest segments of modern Africa's economies are agriculture and
mining, with tourism growing in some areas. Manufacturing industries have grown
large enough to ship products across the planet, and the oil export revenues of
Angola,
Libya
and Nigeria
have the potential to change the lives of millions.
Today the 54 countries of Africa have great potential, but this question
must be asked: "Can it change soon enough to meet the needs of its
people?" We can only hope so.
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