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|  |  |  |  | The Earth and Its Peoples: A Global History, Second Edition
Richard W. Bulliet, Pamela Kyle Crossley, Daniel R. Headrick, Steven W. Hirsch, Lyman L. Johnson, David Northrup
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 |  | Primary Sources
| Introduction
| Questions to Consider
| Source
"History and Description of Africa"
(1526) Leo Africanus
Introduction
Al-Hassan ibn-Muhammad al-Wazzan al-Fasi, better known as Leo
Africanus, was probably born in the 1460s in Granada, the last Muslim toehold
in Spain, but was raised in Fez (in modern Morocco). He died in 1554.
Educated in Islamic law, he entered the service of the sultan of Fez, who
sent him on commercial and diplomatic missions across sub-Saharan West
Africa. During one such mission, he was captured by Christian pirates and
brought to Rome in 1518, where Pope Leo X persuaded him to accept Christianity.
While in Rome in 1526 he completed in Italian his History and Description
of Africa, probably based on an earlier version he had written in Arabic.
It recounts his observations during his travels in Africa and became a
principal source of European knowledge of the region. In the following
excerpts, Leo describes several states he visited in the western part of
the Sudan, the extensive grass-covered plain that stretches across Africa
south of the Sahara. When Leo visited the region in the early 1500's,
the strongest state was the Songhai Empire, in which the two most important
cities were Gao, the capital, and Timbuktu, which was ruled by a governor
in the name of the emperor. Because of this work he became known
as Leo Africanus, Latin for Leo the African.
Questions to Consider
- Based on the details Leo chose to include in his description of Africa,
who might his intended audience have been? What interest might that
audience have had in Africa?
-
What important differences, if any, did Leo see between African and
European society?
Source
THE KINGDOM OF MALI
In this kingdom there is a large and ample village containing more than
six thousand families, and named Mali, which is also the name of the whole
kingdom. Here the king has his residence. The region itself yields great
abundance of wheat, meat and cotton. Here are many craftsmen and merchants
in all places: and yet the king honorably entertains all strangers. The
inhabitants are rich and have plenty of merchandise. Here is a great number
of temples, clergymen, and teachers, who read their lectures in the mosques
because they have no colleges at all. The people of the region excel all
other Negroes in wit, civility, and industry, and were the first that embraced
the law of Muhammad....
THE CITY OF TIMBUKTU
All its houses are ... cottages, built of mud and covered with thatch.
However, there is a most stately mosque to be seen, whose walls are made
of stone and lime, and a princely palace also constructed by the highly
skilled craftsmen of Granada. Here there are many shops of artisans and
merchants, especially of those who weave linen and cotton, and here Barbary
merchants bring European cloth. The inhabitants, and especially resident
aliens, are exceedingly rich, since the present king married both of his
daughters to rich merchants. Here are many wells, containing sweet water.
Whenever the Niger River overflows, they carry the water into town by means
of sluices. This region yields great quantities of grain, cattle, milk,
and butter, but salt is very scarce here, for it is brought here by land
from Tegaza, which is five hundred miles away. When I was there, I saw
one camel-load of salt sold for eighty ducats.
The rich king of Timbuktu has many plates and scepters of gold, some
of which weigh 1,300 pounds, and he keeps a magnificent and well-furnished
court. When he travels anywhere, he rides upon a camel, which is led by
some of his noblemen. He does so likewise when going to war, and all his
soldiers ride upon horses. Whoever wishes to speak to this king must first
of all fall down before his feet and then taking up earth must sprinkle
it on his own head and shoulders. ... [The king] always has under arms
3,000 horsemen and a great number of foot soldiers who shoot poisoned arrows.
They often skirmish with those who refuse to pay tribute and whomever they
capture they sell to the merchants of Timbuktu. Here very few horses are
bred. ... Their best horses are brought out of North Africa. As soon as
the king learns that any merchants have come to the town with horses, he
commands that a certain number be brought before him. Choosing the best
horse for himself, he pays a most liberal price for it....
Here are great numbers of religious teachers, judges, scholars and other
learned persons, who are bountifully maintained at the kings expense. Here
too are brought various manuscripts or written books from Barbary, which
are sold for more money than any other merchandise.
The coin of Timbuktu is gold, without any stamp or inscription, but
in matters of small value they use certain shells from the kingdom of Persia.
Four hundred of these are worth a ducat, and six pieces of Timbuktu's golden
coin weigh two-thirds of an ounce.
The inhabitants are gentle and cheerful and spend a great part of the
night in singing and dancing throughout the city streets. They keep large
numbers of male and female slaves, and their town is greatly vulnerable
to fire. At the time of my second visit, almost half the town burned down
in the space of five hours.
THE TOWN AND KINGDOM OF GAO
Here are very rich merchants and to here journey continually large numbers
of Negroes who purchase here cloth from Barbary and Europe. The town abounds
in grain and meat but lacks wine, trees and fruits. However, there are
plenty of melons, lemons and rice. Here there are many wells, which also
contain very sweet and wholesome water. Here also is a certain place where
slaves are sold, especially upon those days when merchants assemble. A
young slave of fifteen years of age is sold for six ducats, and children
are also sold.
The king of this region has a certain private palace in which he keeps
a large number of concubines and slaves, who are watched by eunuchs. To
guard his person he maintains a sufficient troop of horsemen and foot soldiers.
Between the first gate of the palace and the inner part, there is a walled
enclosure wherein the king personally decides all of his subjects controversies.
Although the king is most diligent in this regard and conducts all business
in these matters, he has in his company counsellors and such other officers
as his secretaries, treasurers, stewards and auditors.
It is a wonder to see the quality of merchandise that is daily brought
here and how costly and sumptuous everything is. Horses purchased in Europe
for ten ducats are sold here for forty and sometimes fifty ducats apiece.
There is not European cloth so coarse as to sell for less than four ducats
an ell. If it is anywhere near fine quality, they will give fifteen ducats
for an ell, and an ell of the scarlet of Venice or of Turkish cloth is
here worth thirty ducats. A sword is here valued at three or four crowns,
and likewise are spears, bridles and similar commodities, and spices are
all sold at a high rate. However, of all other items, salt is the most
expensive.
The rest of this kingdom contains nothing but villages and hamlets inhabited
by herdsmen and shepherds, who in winter cover their bodies with the skins
of animals, but in summer they go naked, save for their private parts.
... They are an ignorant and rude people, and you will scarcely find one
learned person in the square of a hundred miles. They are continually burdened
by heavy taxes; to the point that they scarcely have anything left on which
to live.
THE KINGDOM OF BORNO
They have a most powerful prince. ... He has in readiness as many as
three thousand horsemen and a huge number of foot soldiers; for all his
subjects are so serviceable and obedient to him, that whenever he commands
them, they will arm themselves and will follow him wherever he leads them.
They pay him no tribute except tithes on their grain; neither does the
king have any revenues to support his state except the spoils he gets from
his enemies by frequent invasions and assaults. He is in a state of perpetual
hostility with a certain people who live beyond the desert of Seu, who
in times past marching with a huge army of footsoldiers over the said desert,
devastated a great part of the Kingdom of Borno. Whereupon the king sent
for the merchants of Barbary and ordered them to bring him a great store
of horses: for in this country they exchange horses for slaves, and sometimes
give fifteen or twenty slaves for a horse. And by this means there were
a great many horses bought although the merchants were forced to stay for
their slaves until the king returned home as a conqueror with a great number
of captives, and satisfied his creditors for his horses. Frequently it
happens that the merchants must stay three months before the king returned
from the wars. ... Sometimes he does not bring home enough slaves to satisfy
the merchants and sometimes they are forced to wait a whole year. ... And
yet the king seems marvelously rich, because his spurs, bridles, platters,
dishes, pots and other vessels are made of gold. The king is extremely
covetous and would rather pay his debts in slaves rather than gold.
Source:
Leo Africanus, "History and Description of Africa," in Alfred Andrea and James Overfield, eds. The Human Record: Sources in Global History, Volume II, 3rd Edition (Boston: Houghton Mifflin Co., 1998): 46-49.
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