NAME: DATE: PER: Bgsjdbo!Psjhjot!

Similar documents
Lesson 1: Traveling Asia s Silk Road

Many trade routes crossed the savanna through the region farmed by the Soninke people. The Soninke called their leader Ghana, or war chief.

Explorers. of the NEW WORLD. Discover the Golden Age of Exploration. Carla Mooney Illustrated by Tom Casteel

Chapter 5 and 6 Study Questions

Student Handout #4: Era 3 Societies around the World. The Olmec:

Did you know? Africa is one of the earth s seven continents. It is the second largest continent. Africa is a land of great beauty and resources.

Christopher Columbus Didn't Discover the New World; he Rediscovered it

Prince Henry the Navigator

Muhammad the prophet and founder of Islam. Mansa Musa a Muslim ruler of the Mali empire during its height

Eastern Hemisphere African Empires

History Department EXAMINATION-JULY 2013

First Contact: The Norse

Exploration ( )

What was Africa like before global integration?

Medieval Africa Section One: The Rise of African Civilizations

I. Development of Early African Civilization A. The geography of Africa is diverse (varied). This makes the cultures of Africa very diverse.

For Review Only. Contents. The World in the Year Columbus and His Big Plan The Big Voyage Land!... 12

Lesson 1: The Voyages of Columbus

Unit 3: European Explorers

African History. Return

Leif Eriksson Leif Eriksson Viking Greenland Vinland first to step foot in North America

Christopher Columbus Didn't Discover the New World; he Rediscovered it

Chapter 4: How and Why Europeans Came to the New World

Kingdoms & Trading States of Medieval Africa

9/12/16. Lesson 2-1 Notes: Early People

The Age of European Explorations

EQ: What was the impact of exploration and colonization on Europe?

Sudanic Kingdoms Ghana, Mali, Songhai

SSWH6 Describe the diverse characteristics of early African societies before 1500 CE/AD.

CAUSES OF EXPLORATION. READING and ASSIGNMENT. Read the excerpt below. Use the reading to complete the section of the graphic organizer.

Christopher Columbus Didn't Discover the New World; he Rediscovered it

Prince Henry the Navigator

STEVE EMBER: Welcome to THE MAKING OF A NATION American history in VOA Special English. I m Steve Ember.

Medieval Adventures. Travel Brochure. 9/27/2017 Medieval Africa Time Travel Guide - Diego Soto - Google Docs

Geography of WEST AFRICA 7.4.1

Slide 1. Slide 2. Slide 3

ISN 4. #2. List reasons why people migrate.

Columbus was thrilled. In a later letter, he wrote, I write this to tell you how in thirty-three

An Age of Exploration. Chapter 1 Section 2

Text 1: Conquistadores Arrive in the Americas. Topic 2 Lesson 1: Spanish Colonization and New Spain

World History and Geography to 1500 A.D. Unit VII Eastern Hemisphere Trade

Score / Name: P: CHAPTER 1 BELLWORK

Mexican History and Systems of Empire

Ancient Civilizations Project

Guided Reading. netw rks. The Maya. The Americas. Lesson 2 Life in the Americas ESSENTIAL QUESTION. Identifying Answer these questions about the Maya.

Fall of the Aztec & Incan Empires

Creating America (Survey)

Cabeza de Vaca Mini Q

7th Grade US History Standard # Do Now Day #21. Do Now

Name Class Date. Down 1. The Maya built these buildings to. 2. The Aztec leader killed by the. 4. He and his troops conquered the

Unit 2: Three Worlds Meet

Bartholomeu Dias. Cape of Good Hope 1487

In addition to salt list two other products a North African trader might bring to trade in West Africa.

Areas of Heavy Rainfall around 7000 B.C. present

Section 1. Objectives

The World of the 1400s. What Was Going On?

Chapter 1 The Beginnings of Human Society

African Civilizations 1500 BC-AD 700

Aztec and Inca Review

3 4 SPANISH EXPLORATION AND CONQUEST OF AMERICA,

Welcome back to World History! Thursday, January 18, 2018

WEST AFRICAN TRADING EMPIRES

Medieval Trade Systems

Golden kingdoms of Africa *

New Ideas, New Nations

In the late 1400 s scientific discoveries and the desire for wealth led to an age of exploration. New technologies allowed Europeans to travel

Spain Builds an Empire

The Empty Pot A Reading A Z Level N Leveled Book Word Count: 679 H K N LEVELED BOOK N.

Conquest in the Americas. World History

The Civilizations of America

Review Questions 1. How did the Bantu migrations affect existing cultures?

2.1 Why and how did humans first come to north America?

earliest recorded history to today. writing art artifacts Centuries-old written records reveal a long-lasting civilization in

The First Americans. Lesson 1: The Search for Early Peoples. All images found in this PPT were found at Google.

Ghana: A West African Trading Empire


Reference: Vasco da Gama. Vasco da Gama

EARLY AMERICAS. Ice age and the Olmec

9/21/14. Bell Work Fill in the blanks. Agenda. Complete vocabulary quiz. Finish Mansa Musa Instagram. Take notes on Songhai

Fall of the Aztec & Inca Civilizations

Cortes and Pizarro, Columbian Exchange, and Colonial Empires

Section 2. Objectives

Clash of Cultures: Two Worlds Collide By UShistory.org 2017

Christopher Columbus Didn't Discover the New World; he Rediscovered it

The Earliest Americans. Chapter 1 Section 1

Pepper: The King of Spices. Pepper: The King of Spices LEVELED BOOK O. A Reading A Z Level O Leveled Book Word Count: 1,198.

The Americans (Reconstruction to the 21st Century)

Lesson 2: China s Past. Ancient China

African Kingdoms and Salt

Mapping the West: The Journey of Lewis and Clark By Michael Stahl

10/16/14. Age of Exploration. Contact and Conflict

Lesson 1: Migration to the Americas

AP World History

7th Grade US History Standard #7H117 Do Now Day #17

The Native American Experience

Journal What trade goods did West Africa supply to North Africa

Fall of the Aztec & Incan Empires

Geography of the Middle East, an ancient and modern crossroads

Unit 3: Mesopotamia Test Respond to each question with the best answer based on what we ve learned in class.

Chapter Summary. Section 2: Kingdoms of West Africa. Section 1: Early Civilizations of Africa

Transcription:

Mr. Curzan AFAM NAME: DATE: PER: Bgsjdbo!Psjhjot! Many African words have entered into the English vernacular. These are examples of African Survivals or Africanisms that have contributed to the overall culture of America. African Word African-American Word Meaning Yaw Kay OK All right Hipi Hip Aware Cat Cat Person Goy Guy A young man of no standing Dega Dig Understand Kuta Cooter Tortoise Podzo Poor Joe Blue Heron Taki Tackies Small wild horses Tota Tote Carry Dzogal (to rise) Joggle board Seesaw Saut (to run around the Shout Religious ecstasy Kaaba) Banzar Banjo Musical instrument with neck of wood fitted with four strings - The Black Book: 35th Anniversary Edition by Middleton A. Harris, Ernest Smith, Morris Levitt, and Roger Furman OTHER WORDS: banana chimpanzee goober - peanut gumbo - from Bantu (Kimbundu ngombo meaning "okra") jambalaya possibly from tshiluba jamboree possibly from swahili "jambo". mambo - possibly West African through Haitian Creole merengue (dance) possibly from Fulani mererek i meaning to shake or quiver mojo - from Fula moco'o "medicine man" through Louisiana Creole French or Gullah obeah - from West African (Efik ubio, Twi ebayifo) okra - from Igbo ókùrù voodoo - from West African languages (Ewe and Fon vodu "spirit") yam - West African (Fula nyami, Twi anyinam) zombie - Central African (Kikongo zumbi, Kimbundu nzambi)

Africans In The Americas Before Columbus? Were there Africans in America before Columbus and before the Trans-Atlantic slave trade? Some scholars think so. You decide On [Columbus ] return from the third voyage to the new land he had reached he reports the presence of Negros there. Interesting as this is, even more telling is the account he gives, after the first voyage itself, of having received from the Indians, as it pleased him to call the natives, a present of certain guanines. and he (Columbus) wanted to find out what the Indians of Hispaniola had told him, that there had come to it from the south and southeast Negro people, who brought those spear points made of a metal which they call guanine, of which he had sent to the king and queen for assaying, and which was found to have in thirty-two parts, eighteen of gold, six of solver, and eight of copper. - Raccolta, parte I, vol. I, p.96 (as quoted by Leo Weiner in his text Africa and the Discovery of America.) Sculptures Possibly Showing Africans in the Americas before Columbus The Olmec Civilization in Mexico OLMEC HEAD SHOWING WHAT SEEMS TO BE BLACK AFRICAN FEATURES This head wears a helmet and has what some scholars say are African features - The Black Book: 35th Anniversary Edition by Middleton A. Harris, Ernest Smith, Morris Levitt, and Roger Furman

Wednesday, 13 December, 2000, 22:27 GMT Africa's 'greatest explorer' Abubakari gave up his kingdom to pursue knowledge By Joan Baxter in Mali An African emperor who ruled Mali in the 14th century discovered America nearly 200 years before Christopher Columbus, according to a book to be launched this month. Abubakari II ruled what was arguably the richest and largest empire on earth - covering nearly all of West Africa. According to a Malian scholar, Gaoussou Diawara in his book, 'The Saga of Abubakari II...he left with 2000 boats', the emperor gave up all power and gold to pursue knowledge and discovery. Abubakari's ambition was to explore whether the Atlantic Ocean - like the great River Niger that swept through Mali - had another 'bank'. Our aim is to bring out hidden parts of history Khadidjah Dire In 1311, he handed the throne over to his brother, Kankou Moussa, and set off on an expedition into the unknown. His predecessor and uncle, Soundjata Keita, had already founded the Mali empire and conquered a good stretch of the Sahara Desert and the great forests along the West African coast. Gold fields The book also focuses on a research project being carried out in Mali tracing Abubakari's journeys. "We are not saying that Abubakari II was the first ever to cross the ocean," says Tiemoko Konate, who heads the project "There is evidence that the Vikings were in America long before him, as well as the Chinese," he said.

The researchers claim that Abubakari's fleet of pirogues, loaded with men and women, livestock, food and drinking water, departed from what is the coast of present-day Gambia. They are gathering evidence that in 1312 Abubakari II landed on the coast of Brazil in the place known today as Recife. "Its other name is Purnanbuco, which we believe is an aberration of the Mande name for the rich gold fields that accounted for much of the wealth of the Mali Empire, Boure Bambouk." Another researcher, Khadidjah Djire says they have found written accounts of Abubakari's expedition in Egypt, in a book written by Al Omari in the 14th century. "Our aim is to bring out hidden parts of history", she says. Black traders Mr Konate says they are also examining reports by Columbus, himself, who said he found black traders already present in the Americas. They also cite chemical analyses of the gold tips that Columbus found on spears in the Americas, which show that the gold probably came from West Africa. But the scholars say the best sources of information on Abubakari II are Griots - the original historians in Africa. Mr Diawara says the paradox of Abubakari II, is that the Griots themselves imposed a seal of silence on the story. "The Griots found his abdication a shameful act, not worthy of praise," Mr Diawara said. "For that reason they have refused to sing praise or talk of this great African man." Mr Diawara says the Griots in West Africa such as Sadio Diabate, are slowly starting to divulge the secrets on Abubakari II. 'Hard-nosed historians' Most Griots are beginning to divulge Abubakari's secrets Mali was a gold kingdom, but most families live in poverty But the research team says an even bigger challenge is to convince hard-nosed historians elsewhere that oral history can be just as accurate as written records. Mr Diawara believes Abubakari's saga has an important moral lesson for leaders of small nation states in West Africa, which were once part of the vast Mande-speaking empire.

"Look at what's going on in all the remnants of that empire, in Ivory Coast, Sierra Leone, Liberia, Guinea. "Politicians are bathing their countries in blood, setting them on fire just so that they can cling to power," says Mr Diawara. "They should take an example from Abubakari II. He was a far more powerful man than any of them. And he was willing to give it all up in the name of science and discovery." "That should be a lesson for everyone in Africa today," concludes Mr Diawara. BBC NEWS http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/africa/1068950.stm