Eminent Arab
historians and African scholars have
written on the empires of Ghana, Mali, Songhay, and Kanem Bornu. They
document famous trade routes in Africa - from Sijilmasa to Taghaza,
Awdaghast,
which led to the empire of Ghana, and from Sijilmasa to Tuat, Gao and
Timbikutu.
Al-Bakri describes Ghana as highly advanced and economically a
prosperous
country as early as the eleventh century. He also discusses the
influence of
Islam in Mali in the 13th century and describes the rule of Mansa Musa,
whose
fame spread to Sudan, North Africa and up to Europe.
Spread of Islam in West Africa
Islam reached the
Savannah region in the 8th Century
C.E., the date the written history of West Africa begins The Muslim-Arab
historians began to write about West Africa in the early 8th century.
The
famous scholar Ibn Munabbah wrote as early as 738 C.E., followed by
Al-Masudi
in 947 C.E. As Islam spread in the Savannah region, it was quite
natural that
commercial links should also come to be established with North Africa.
Trade
and commerce also paved way for the introduction of new elements of
material
culture, and made possible the intellectual development which naturally
followed the introduction and spread of literacy, and for which parts of
the Sudan were to become famous in the centuries to come. In the
Kingdom of Tekur, situated on both banks of the Senegal, Islam was
accepted as early as 850 C.E., by the
Dya’ogo dynasty. This dynasty was the first Negro people who accepted
Islam.
It was for this reason that Muslim-Arab historians
referred to Bilad al-Tekur as ‘The Land of the Black Muslims.’ War-jabi, son
of Rabis, was the first ruler of Tekur in whose reign Islam was firmly
established in Tekur and the Islamic Shari’ah system was enforced. This gave a
uniform Muslim law to the people. By the time the Al- Murabitun of Almoravids
began their attack on Tekur in 1042 C.E., Islam had made a deep impact on the
people of that area. Al-Idrisi in 1511 described the Tekur Country as ‘secure,
peaceful and tranquil.’ The capital town of Tekur was also called Tekur which
had become center of commerce. Merchants used to bring wool to sell there from
Greater Morocco and in return, took with them gold and beads.
We have enough
documents about the history of this
region since it was known to the Arab historians as the Bilad al-Sudan,
the
land of the Blacks. In the medieval period, the most well-known empires
that
grew there are known until our day: The empires of Ghana, Mali, Songhay,
and Kanem Bornu. Eminent Arab historians have written about the
glories of these
lands, notable among whom are Al-Bakri, Al-Masudi, Ibn Batutah and Ibn
Khaldun.
Besides these scholars, there were local scholars whose works have come
down to
us. As for example Tarikh al-Sudan, the History of the Sudan, by Al-Sadi and Tarikh al-Fattash by Muhammad al-Kati.
There were famous
trade routes, like the one from Sijilmasa
to Taghaza, Awdaghast, which led to the empire of Ghana, and another
from
Sijilmasa to Tuat, Gao and Timbikutu. There were others which connected
the
present Nigeria with Tripoli via Fez to Bornu and Tunisia with Nigeria
via Ghadames, Ghat, and Agades to Hausa land. These routes had made all
the above
mentioned places famous trade centers. These centers of trade
invariably
became centers of Islamic learning and civilization. New ideas came
through
visiting traders in the field of administrative practices. We shall
study
briefly the expansion of Islam in each of the ancient empires of Western
Sudan.
Islam in the Ancient Empire of Ghana
Al-Bakri, the Muslim geographer, gives us an early
account of the ancient Soninke empire of Ghana. His Kitab fi Masalik wal
Mamalik (The Book of Roads and Kingdoms) describes Ghana of 1068 as highly advanced. Economically, it was a prosperous country. The King had employed
Muslim interpreters and most of his ministers and treasurers were also Muslims.
The Muslim ministers were learned enough to record events in Arabic and
corresponded, on behalf of the king, with other rulers. “Also, as Muslims,
they belonged to the larger body politic of the Islamic world and this would
make it possible to establish international relations.”
Al-Bakri gives the following picture of Islam in Ghana in the 11th century:
The city of Ghana consists of two towns lying on a
plain, one of which is inhabited by Muslims and is large, possessing 12 mosques
one of which is congregational mosque for Friday prayers: each has its Imam,
Muezzin and paid reciters of the Quran. The town possesses a large number of jurists,
consults and learned men
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