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Topic 10.2History (2028+) HL36 flashcards

Pre-colonial sub-Saharan African states (c.800–1945)

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Card 1 of 3610.2.1
10.2.1
Question

Who founded the Mali Empire and when did he defeat his key rival?

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All Flashcards in Topic 10.2

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10.2.112 cards

Card 1definition
Question

Who founded the Mali Empire and when did he defeat his key rival?

Answer

Sundiata Keita; defeated Sumanguru Kanté at the Battle of Kirina, c.1235.

Card 2concept
Question

What political change did Sundiata Keita bring to the Malinke clans?

Answer

He united scattered clan chiefdoms under one central king (mansa), replacing fragmented rule.

Card 3example
Question

Which ruler's 1324 pilgrimage to Mecca is famous evidence of Mali's wealth?

Answer

Mansa Musa — he distributed so much gold along the way it reportedly devalued currency in Cairo.

Card 4definition
Question

Name the two goldfields that funded the Mali Empire.

Answer

Bure and Wangara, in the upper Niger/Senegal region.

Card 5definition
Question

Which Saharan town anchored the salt trade linked to Mali?

Answer

Taghaza — its rock-salt mines fed the trans-Saharan caravan routes.

Card 6concept
Question

List the four factor categories historians use to explain state emergence.

Answer

Political, military, social, and economic factors — and they typically reinforce each other rather than acting alone.

Card 7example
Question

What role did enslaved people play in pre-colonial trade and labour?

Answer

They were traded north across the Sahara and also used within the state itself for farming, mining, and military/official roles — often captured through wars of conquest.

Card 8process
Question

Why were the Niger River floodplains essential to Mali's growth?

Answer

They produced the food surplus (millet, rice, sorghum) needed to feed cities, soldiers, and traders who were not farming themselves.

Card 9comparison
Question

Compare: the 'military conquest' vs 'economic control' arguments for Mali's rise.

Answer

Military: Kirina delivered territory and goldfields by force. Economic: ongoing trade wealth funded the army and gave Mali lasting stability beyond conquest — historians debate which was primary.

Card 10definition
Question

What was the gbara?

Answer

A council of clan elders that helped administer and legitimise royal rule in the Mali Empire.

Card 11process
Question

Why did Mali's rulers keep gold-mining locations secret from outside traders?

Answer

To protect prices and maintain control over the trade — a deliberate strategy so outsiders never mined the gold directly.

Card 12comparison
Question

How does the Zulu Kingdom's rise under Shaka offer a useful comparison to Mali?

Answer

Zulu power (from 1816) is usually explained mainly through military reform (the iklwa stabbing spear, new regiments) rather than trade — showing the 'most important cause' can differ between states.

10.2.212 cards

Card 13concept
Question

What was the Golden Stool (Sika Dwa Kofi)?

Answer

The sacred symbol of the Ashanti nation's soul, said to have descended from the sky in 1701. It was never sat on — even the Asantehene knelt beside it. It legitimised Osei Tutu's authority and still unifies the Ashanti today.

Card 14definition
Question

Define centralization of power (Ashanti context)

Answer

Turning many separate chiefdoms into one state with a single ruler at the top, who controls tribute, law, and the army instead of each chief acting alone.

Card 15example
Question

Who founded the centralized Ashanti state and when?

Answer

Osei Tutu, with the priest Okomfo Anokye, around 1701 — uniting Akan clans under the Golden Stool after defeating Denkyira.

Card 16process
Question

How did Ashanti succession usually work?

Answer

Matrilineal succession: the next Asantehene came from the royal mother's bloodline, not the father's. The Queen Mother (Asantehemaa) nominated candidates and could reject an unfit one.

Card 17example
Question

Name one Ashanti diplomatic strategy toward Britain

Answer

Alternating between negotiated treaties (e.g. accepting British protection talks) and armed resistance (the Anglo-Ashanti Wars, 1823–1900), depending on which better protected trade and independence at the time.

Card 18concept
Question

What religious role did the Asantehene hold?

Answer

He was not just a political ruler but a spiritual figurehead, custodian of the Golden Stool and connected to ancestor-worship rituals that linked the living king to dead ancestors.

Card 19comparison
Question

Compare: centralized states like Ashanti vs. decentralized societies

Answer

Centralized: one ruler, capital (Kumasi), tribute system, standing army. Decentralized: power spread across many small chiefs/village heads with no single overlord — easier to defend locally, harder to mobilise for large wars or trade.

Card 20definition
Question

What was the Queen Mother's (Asantehemaa) formal power?

Answer

She nominated the Asantehene from eligible royal candidates, could veto an unsuitable choice, sat on the ruling council, and managed some female-only judicial matters.

Card 21comparison
Question

Give one way ordinary Ashanti women's status differed from the Queen Mother's

Answer

Most women worked as farmers and traders, could own property and sue in Ashanti courts, but had far less formal political power than female royals — everyday authority stayed mostly with men.

Card 22example
Question

What cultural legacy did the Ashanti state spread?

Answer

Kente cloth weaving, akan goldweights, Twi language and proverbs, and Adinkra symbols became markers of Ashanti and wider Akan identity, still valued in Ghana today.

Card 23concept
Question

Why do historians debate how 'centralized' Ashanti authority really was?

Answer

Some stress the Asantehene's real control over tribute, army and law (strong centralization); others point out outlying regions kept local chiefs with real autonomy, so control varied by distance from Kumasi.

Card 24process
Question

What is a 'substantiated judgement' in a Paper 3 essay?

Answer

A final answer to 'to what extent' that is not just 'yes' or 'no', but weighs the strongest evidence on each side and explains, with reasons, which side is more convincing.

10.2.312 cards

Card 25concept
Question

What are the four reasons for decline of pre-colonial African states on this syllabus?

Answer

Opposition/resistance/civil wars; foreign challenges; economic factors; the trade in enslaved peoples.

Card 26definition
Question

Battle of Mbwila (1665)

Answer

Portuguese victory over Kongo's King António I, who was killed; triggered decades of Kongo civil war over succession.

Card 27process
Question

Why couldn't Kongo simply replace its dead king smoothly in 1665?

Answer

Kongo's succession was contested among rival princes/provinces rather than automatic, so a sudden royal death without a clear heir caused factional war.

Card 28example
Question

Afonso I of Kongo (r.1509–1543)

Answer

Christian convert king who complained to Portugal that unregulated slaving was depopulating his kingdom, even while relying on slave-trade revenue himself.

Card 29process
Question

How did the slave trade become self-reinforcing in Kongo after 1665?

Answer

Rival factions raided each other for captives to sell for European guns, and those guns fuelled more raiding — a destructive cycle.

Card 30comparison
Question

How did Swahili city-states' economic decline differ from Kongo's?

Answer

Swahili cities (e.g. Kilwa) lost independent access to Indian Ocean trade after Portuguese force from 1498 — external strangulation, not mainly internal spiral.

Card 31example
Question

Impact of Kongo's collapse on successor states

Answer

Kongo fragmented into rival factions and breakaway provinces like Soyo, which traded directly with Europeans instead of through the weakened royal court.

Card 32concept
Question

Who suffered most as Kongo's central authority broke down?

Answer

Ordinary farmers, women and children — most vulnerable to slave raiding and left unprotected once central authority collapsed.

Card 33example
Question

Dona Beatriz Kimpa Vita and the Antonian movement (1704)

Answer

A prophet who claimed Jesus was Kongolese and led a mass movement to reoccupy and spiritually reunify the ruined capital, São Salvador; executed in 1706.

Card 34process
Question

How did trade networks change after Kongo's decline?

Answer

Older inland trade routes lost importance; new coastal, slave-trade-driven networks (e.g. via Soyo) grew and permanently shifted where wealth and power sat.

Card 35process
Question

Best essay structure for 'To what extent do you agree…' [15]

Answer

Clear thesis engaging the claim, argument FOR, argument AGAINST, then a substantiated judgement that directly answers 'to what extent'.

Card 36definition
Question

Is historiography (naming academic historians) required for top marks in 2028 Paper 3?

Answer

No — the top mark band rewards weighing arguments/evidence and reaching a judgement, not naming historians.

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