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∙ 2014-10-28 17:09:50Wiki User
∙ 2014-10-28 17:09:50African religious beliefs were commonly based on worship of the sun god and moon god, who are almost universal among post-animistic religions around the world.
he attended pretoria bantu normal college and graduated in 1954 from the university of south Africa mastering theology in south Africa and began teaching to those in Africa about theology.
Early tribes in Africa were mostly forms of animism, which means that they worshipped natural things such as the animals and plants as well as the sun, moon, ect. However, other tribes such as the Ashanti base their faith off of minerals such as gold and the gods that govern those minerals. When Middle Eastern people immigrated to the Sahara desert in northern Africa, they brought with them Islamic beliefs, which still exist in parts of northern Africa today.
In older times, even up until the women's suffrage movement of the 19th and 20th centuries, women were considered inferior to men by most people who lived in patriarchal societies. Their job in those days was to simply keep the house tidy and care for the kids; the men's job was to keep a job to support the family and to defend the family from harm. Leadership roles weren't a huge part of housework or raising families. However, this isn't the case for all societies. Many Native American cultures, on the contrary, were matriarchal societies, meaning that the women had more political power than men did.
Religions that no longer exist are the many pagan forms practiced for thousands of years by ancient societies. Periodically, a few individuals revive imitations of some of these ancient religions but the incidence is anecdotal. Many unique religions and rites practiced by small groups in isolated regions disappeared when those societies disappeared. Religions that people today know little or nothing about. A good example is the society that once inhabited Easter Island and the statues they left behind.
East Africa was not dominated by large kingdomsEast Africa had more city-states and less central controlEast African Cultures were more diverse
Like all European powers in those days, Portugal saw Africa as an opportunuty to get rich.
Africa is too vast and different in its makeup to have single "values and traditions." They change from the north to south and east to the west. Better question would be asked about the different countries in Africa, or the different tribes in those countries in Africa.
Slaves sold in Mediterranean countries were generally from West Africa, while those sold in Persia were generally from East Africa.
Slaves sold in Mediterranean countries were generally from West Africa, while those sold in Persia were generally from East Africa.
An elephant native to Africa as opposed to those in India.
Slaves sold in Mediterranean countries were generally from West Africa, while those sold in Persia were generally from East Africa.
Patriarchal societies are those in which the "leaders" are male in gender. Matriarchal societies are those in which females are the "leaders".
By helping supply the Europeans with the slave trade, the rulers of certain African states were able to increase their power by acquiring more slaves for themselves. The slave trade also transformed the existing states and societies in Africa. As states sought to expand at the expense of their neighbors, instability and warfare came about. The military became important. The slave trade became an extension of African politics. African governments in the enslaving societies became more centralized while the those who bore the brunt of the slaving attacks became anti authoritarian. There was also a shift in the locus of power. Before the Europeans, the powerful African states were those that were in central Africa and could influence the trans-Saharan trade routes. Once the Europeans arrived, the power shifted to those states which were closer to the coast.
By helping supply the Europeans with the slave trade, the rulers of certain African states were able to increase their power by acquiring more slaves for themselves. The slave trade also transformed the existing states and societies in Africa. As states sought to expand at the expense of their neighbors, instability and warfare came about. The military became important. The slave trade became an extension of African politics. African governments in the enslaving societies became more centralized while the those who bore the brunt of the slaving attacks became anti authoritarian. There was also a shift in the locus of power. Before the Europeans, the powerful African states were those that were in central Africa and could influence the trans-Saharan trade routes. Once the Europeans arrived, the power shifted to those states which were closer to the coast.
By helping supply the Europeans with the slave trade, the rulers of certain African states were able to increase their power by acquiring more slaves for themselves. The slave trade also transformed the existing states and societies in Africa. As states sought to expand at the expense of their neighbors, instability and warfare came about. The military became important. The slave trade became an extension of African politics. African governments in the enslaving societies became more centralized while the those who bore the brunt of the slaving attacks became anti authoritarian. There was also a shift in the locus of power. Before the Europeans, the powerful African states were those that were in central Africa and could influence the trans-Saharan trade routes. Once the Europeans arrived, the power shifted to those states which were closer to the coast.
By helping supply the Europeans with the slave trade, the rulers of certain African states were able to increase their power by acquiring more slaves for themselves. The slave trade also transformed the existing states and societies in Africa. As states sought to expand at the expense of their neighbors, instability and warfare came about. The military became important. The slave trade became an extension of African politics. African governments in the enslaving societies became more centralized while the those who bore the brunt of the slaving attacks became anti authoritarian. There was also a shift in the locus of power. Before the Europeans, the powerful African states were those that were in central Africa and could influence the trans-Saharan trade routes. Once the Europeans arrived, the power shifted to those states which were closer to the coast.