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    North Africa’s Place in the Mediterranean Economy of Late Antiquity
    Articleby Michael Goodyear

    North Africa’s Place in the Mediterranean Economy of Late Antiquity

    The Mediterranean Sea was the economic focal point of the Roman Empire. Rome's armies first established an empire across these waters beginning back in the times of the Roman Republic. In 200 CE, the Mediterranean was still the channel that...
    The Description of Africa
    Definitionby Sikeena Karmali Ahmed

    The Description of Africa

    The Description of Africa is the first comprehensive book about Africa, written by Leo Africanus, an African scholar trained in the Islamic intellectual tradition, in 1526, during the Italian Renaissance. A skillful mixture of anthropology...
    The Gold Trade of Ancient & Medieval West Africa
    Articleby Mark Cartwright

    The Gold Trade of Ancient & Medieval West Africa

    West Africa was one of the world's greatest producers of gold in the Middle Ages. Trade in the metal went back to antiquity but when the camel caravans of the Sahara linked North Africa to the savannah interior, the trade really took off...
    The Spread of Islam in Ancient Africa
    Articleby Mark Cartwright

    The Spread of Islam in Ancient Africa

    Following the conquest of North Africa by Muslim Arabs in the 7th century CE, Islam spread throughout West Africa via merchants, traders, scholars, and missionaries, that is largely through peaceful means whereby African rulers either tolerated...
    The Roman Empire in West Africa
    Articleby Arienne King

    The Roman Empire in West Africa

    At its fullest extent, the Roman Empire stretched from around modern-day Aswan, Egypt at its southernmost point to Great Britain in the north but the influence of the Roman Empire went far beyond even the borders of its provinces as a result...
    The Allied Victory in North Africa
    Articleby Mark Cartwright

    The Allied Victory in North Africa

    The Allied victory in North Africa was achieved in May 1943 after three years of indecisive battles across the region. Outnumbered and with its supply lines compromised, the Axis German-Italian army lost the Battle of Medenine before being...
    Roman Expeditions in Sub-Saharan Africa
    Articleby Joshua J. Mark

    Roman Expeditions in Sub-Saharan Africa

    Sub-Saharan Africa was explored by Roman expeditions between 19 BCE - 90 CE, most likely in an effort to locate the sources of valuable trade goods and establish routes to bring them to the seaports on the coast of North Africa, thereby minimizing...
    The Portuguese in East Africa
    Articleby Mark Cartwright

    The Portuguese in East Africa

    The Portuguese first took an interest in East Africa from the beginning of the 16th century as their empire spread eastwards across the Indian Ocean. Trade in the region was already well-established and carried out by Africans, Indians, and...
    Caesarea (North Africa)
    Definitionby Donald L. Wasson

    Caesarea (North Africa)

    Caesarea was actually the name of three separate cities: one in Palestine, one in Cappadocia (Asia Minor), and one in Mauretania, present-day Algeria. The first city, Caesarea Maritima, was built by Herod around 25 BCE and, like the other...
    The Salt Trade of Ancient West Africa
    Articleby Mark Cartwright

    The Salt Trade of Ancient West Africa

    Salt from the Sahara desert was one of the major trade goods of ancient West Africa where very little naturally occurring deposits of the mineral could be found. Transported via camel caravans and by boat along such rivers as the Niger and...

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