Skip to main content Accessibility help
×
Hostname: page-component-7479d7b7d-wxhwt Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-07-12T09:35:55.602Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

5 - Trans-Saharan contacts and the Iron Age in West Africa

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 March 2008

Raymond Mauny
Affiliation:
The Sorbonne
Get access

Summary

THE CLIMATIC BACKGROUND: THE DESICCATION OF THE SAHARA

Today all authorities agree that the Sahara had a humid climate during the six to eight millennia prior to about 2000 BC. Great lakes like the modern Lake Chad covered much of the southern Sahara. These have left evidence of their presence in the form of deposits of diatoms (which can provide radiocarbon dates); the skeletons of reptiles, mammals and fish; and waterside human habitation sites possessed of rich Stone Age industries. The largest of these lakes, ‘Mega-Chad’, then extended over 330,000 sq. km to the 325 m contour, whereas the modern lake has an area of only 25,000 sq. km, and is bounded by the 282-metre contour. The latter it should be noted, is not at the lowest point of the Chad basin, which in Djourab is only 165 m above sea level.

In these favourable conditions, a wide variety of fauna were able to live in areas which are today wholly desert, such as Tenere, Tanezrouft and Majabet al-Koubra. Innumerable neolithic sites have been found and, moreover, most of those rocks which are suitable are covered with pictures of the large ‘Ethiopian’ fauna which could then live in the Sahara, including elephants, rhinoceroses, giraffes, antelopes and hippopotamuses. Saharan man was then a hunter-gatherer and sometimes also a fisherman.

From about 5000 BC, the Sahara began slowly to change into desert, a development which is probably connected with the general increase in temperatures in the northern hemisphere which led to the melting of the glaciers of northern Europe.

Type
Chapter
Information
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 1979

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Arkell, A. J.Gold Coast copies of Vth–VIIIth-century bronze lamps’, Antiquity, March 1950.Google Scholar
Arkell, A. J. A history of the Sudan to AD 1821. London, 1955; 2nd edn, 1961; reprinted 1973.
Bailloud, G.Dans les tiroirs du Tchad’, Le Nouvel Observateur (Paris), 1965, 14.Google Scholar
Bailloud, G.L'Évolution des styles céramiques en Ennedi’, Actes du première colloque international d'archéologie africaine (Fort-Lamy, 1966), 1969.Google Scholar
Baker, H. G.Comments on the thesis that there was a centre of plant domestication near the headwaters of the river Niger’, Journal of African History, 1962, 3, 2.Google Scholar
Balout, L. Préhistoire de l'Afrique du Nord: essai de chronologie. Paris, 1955.
Baumann, H. and Westermann, D. Les Peuples et les civilisations de l'Afrique. Paris, 1948. [Translation of Baumann, R. Thurnwald and Westermann, , Völkerkunde Afrikas, Essen, 1940.]Google Scholar
Bishop, W. W. and Clark, J. D. eds. Background to evolution in Africa. Chicago, 1967.
Bouveignes, O.Note sur quelques monnaies trouvées au Congo belge’, Brousse (Leopoldville), 1966, 1–2.Google Scholar
Bovill, E. W. The golden trade of the Moors, 2nd edn. Oxford, 1968.
Breuil, H. Abbé Les roches peintes du Tassili n-Ajjer. Paris, 1964.
Briggs, L. C. The living races of the Sahara desert. Cambridge, Mass., 1958.
Butzer, K. W. Studien zum vor- und Frühgeschichtlich Landschaftwandel der Sahara. Wiesbaden, 1958–9.
Camps, G.Les traces d'un âge du bronze en Afrique du Nord’, Revue Africaine, 1960, 104.Google Scholar
Camps, G. Amekni, Néolithique ancien du Hoggar. Centre de Recherches Anthropologiques, Préhistoriques et Ethnographiques (Algiers), 1969, Mémoire 10.
Capot-Rey, R. Le Sahara français. Paris, 1953.
Cary, M. and Warmington, E. H. The ancient explorers, revised edn. London, 1963.
Caton-Thompson, G.The camel in dynastic Egypt’, Man, 1934, 34.Google Scholar
Chamla, M.-C. Les populations anciennes du Sahara et des régions limitrophes. Paris, 1968; Centre de Recherches Anthropologiques, Préhistoriques et Ethnographiques (Algiers), Mémoire 9.
Chapelle, J. Nomades noirs du Sahara. Paris, 1957.
Chevalier, A. ‘Le Sahara, centre d'origine des plantes cultivées’, in ‘La Vie dans les régions désertiques nord-tropicales de l'ancien monde’, Mémoire de la Société de Biogéographie de Paris, 1938, 6.Google Scholar
Childe, V. G. New light on the most ancient East. London, 1954.
Clark, J. D., ‘The British expedition to the Air mountains’, Geographical Journal, 1971, 137 (4).Google Scholar
Clark, J. D. The prehistory of Africa. London and New York, 1970.
Coppens, Y.L'Époque haddadienne: une page de la protohistoire du Tchad’, Publicações da Faculdade de Letras (Lisbon), In Memoriam do Abode H. Breuil, 1965, 1.Google Scholar
Coppens, Y.Les Cultures protohistoriques et historiques du Djourab’, Actes du premrère colloque international d'archéologie africaine (Fort-Lamy, 1966), 1969.Google Scholar
Courtin, J.Le Néolithique de Borkou’, Actes du premier colloque international d'archéologie africaine (Fort-Lamy, 1966), 1969.Google Scholar
Courtois, C. Les Vandales et l'Afrique. Algiers and Paris, 1955.
Dalziel, J. M. The useful plants of west tropical Africa. London, 1937.
Davies, Oliver, Hugot, H. J. and Seddon, D.The origins of African agriculture’, Current Anthropology, 1968, 9, 5.Google Scholar
Davies, Oliver. ‘The Iron Age in sub-Saharan Africa’, Current Anthropology, 1966, 7, 4.Google Scholar
Desanges, J.Le Triomphe de Cornelius Balbus (19 BC)’, Revue Africaine (Algiers), 1957, 101.Google Scholar
Desanges, J.Catalogue des tribus africaines de l'antiquité classique à l'ouest du Nil’, Publications de la Section d'Histoire de la Faculté des Lettres de Dakar, 1962, 4.Google Scholar
Desanges, J.Note sur la datation de l'expédition de Julius Maternus au pays d'Agyisymba’, Latomus, Revue d'Études Latines, 1964, 23, 4.Google Scholar
Diop, C. A. Le Laboratoire de Radiocarbone de l'IFAN. Dakar, 1968.
Diop, C. A.La métallurgie du fer sous l'ancien empire égyptien’, Bulletin del'IFAN, 1973, 35, 3 (sér. B).Google Scholar
Diop, L.-M.Métallurgie traditionnelle de l'âge du fer en Afrique’, Bulletin de l'IFAN, 1968, 30 (sér. B).Google Scholar
Du Puigaudeau, O. La route du l'ouest (Maroc-Mauritanie). Paris, 1945.
Dubief, J. Le Climat du Sahara. Algiers, 1959 and 1963. 2 vols.
Ducos, P.The Oriental Institute excavation at Mureybit, Syria: preliminary report of the 1965 campaign; Part IV, Les restes d'équidés’, Journal of Near Eastern Studies, 1970, 29.Google Scholar
Fage, J. D.Anthropology, botany and the study of Africa’ [review of Murdock, Africa], Journal of African History, 1961, 2, 2.Google Scholar
Fernandes, V. Description de la côte occidentale d'Afrique, Vol. 1 ed. by Cenival, P. and Monod, T., Paris, 1938; Vol. 11 ed. by Monod, T., Mota, A. Texeira and Mauny, R., Bissau, 1951.
Flight, Colin. ‘Kintampo, 1967’, West African Archaeological Newsletter, 1968, 8.Google Scholar
Frisk, H. ed. Periplus of the Erythraean Sea. Göteborg, 1927.
Gast, M. Alimentation des populations de l'Ahaggar, étude ethnographique. Algiers, 1968; Centre de Recherches Anthropologiques, Préhistoriques et Ethno-graphiques,Mémoire 8.
Gautier, E.-F. Le Passé de l'Afrique du Norḍ: les siècles obscurs, 2nd edn. Paris, 1952.
Germain, G.Qu'est-ce que le Périple d'Hannon? Document, amplification littéraire, ou faux intégral?’, Hespéris, 1957, 44.Google Scholar
Gsell, S.La Tripolitaine et le Sahara au IIIe siècle de notre ère’, Mémoires de l'Académie d'Inscriptions et Belles Lettres (Paris), 1926, 43.Google Scholar
Guthrie, Malcolm. Comparative Bantu: an introduction to the comparative linguistics and prehistory of the Bantu languages. Farnborough, 1967–71. 4 vols.
Guthrie, Malcolm. ‘Some developments in the prehistory of the Bantu languages’, Journal of African History, 1962, 2, 2.Google Scholar
Hawkes, J. and Woolley, Leonard Sir. Prehistory and the beginnings of civilization, Vol. 1 of UNESCO History of mankind. UNESCO and London, 1963.
Huard, P.Contribution à l'étude du cheval, du fer, et du chameau au Sahara occidental’, Bulletin de l'IFAN, 1960, 22 (sér. B).Google Scholar
Huard, P.Nouvelle contribution à l'étude du fer au Sahara et au Tchad’, Bulletin de l'IFAN, 1964, 26 (sér. B).Google Scholar
Huard, P.Introduction et diffusion du fer au Tchad’, Journal of African History, 1966, 7, 3.Google Scholar
Huard, P.Contribution à l'étude des premiers travaux agraires au Sahara tchadien’, Bulletin de la Société Préhistorique Française, Études et Travaux, 1970, 67, 2.Google Scholar
Hugot, H. J. ed. Missions Berliet Tenéré-Tchad, Documents Scientifiques. Paris, 1962.
Hugot, H. J. Le Sahara avant le déser. Paris, 1974.
Ibn, ‘Abd al-ḥakam. Kitāb futūḥ Misr wa'l-Maghrib wa-akhbārihā, ed. by Torrey, C. C.. English trans., The history of the conquest of Egypt, North Africa and Spain. New Haven, 1922. Revised edn. and French trans, of the part dealing with the Maghrib by Gateau, A., Conquête de l'Afrique du Nord et de l'Espagn. Algiers, 1942; 2nd edn, 1948.Google Scholar
Jeffreys, M. D. W.Maize and the Mande myth’, Current Anthropology, 1971, 12, 3.Google Scholar
Kalous, M.A contribution to the problem of Akori beads’, Journal of African History, 1966, 7, 1.Google Scholar
Kalous, M.Akori beads’, Bässler Archiv., 1968, 16, 1.Google Scholar
La Roncière, C.. La Dèouverte de l'Afrique au moyen âge. Cairo, 1924–7. 3 vols.
Lambert, N.Les industries sur cuivre dans l'ouest saharien’, West African Journal of Archaeology, 1971, 1.Google Scholar
Lebeuf, J.-P. Carte archéologique des abords du lac Tchad. Paris, Centre National des Recherches Scientifiques, 1969, 2 vols.
Leclant, J.Témoignage des sources antiques sur les pistes menant à l'Oasis d'Ammon’, Bulletin de l'Institut Français d'Archéologie Orientale, 1950, 49.Google Scholar
Leclant, J.Le Fer dans l'Égypte ancienne, le Soudan et l'Afrique’, Annales de l'Est, 1956, Mémoire 16.Google Scholar
Lewicki, T. West African food in the Middle Ages according to the Arabic sources. Cambridge, 1974.
Lhote, H.Le cheval et le chameau dans les peintures et gravures rupestres du Sahara’, Bulletin de l'IFAN, 1953, 15, 3 (sér. B).Google Scholar
Lhote, H. Les Touaregs du Hoggar, 2nd edn. Paris, 1955.
Lhote, H.Découverte de chars de guerre en Aïr’, Notes Africaines (Dakar), 1970, 127.Google Scholar
Lucas, A. and Harris, J. R. Ancient Egyptian materials and industries, 4th edn. London, 1962.
Malhomme, J.Les gravures préhistoriques du Grand Atlas de Marrrkech’, 7e congrès, Association Française pour l'Avancement des Sciences (Tunis, 1951), 1953.Google Scholar
Malhomme, J.Ṛeprésentations de haches du bronze (Grand Atlas)’, Bulletin de la Société Préhistorique du Maroc, 1953.Google Scholar
Mauny, R. Tableau géograbhique de l'ouest africain au moyen âge. Mémoires de l'IF AN (Dakar), 1961, no. 61; reprinted Amsterdam, 1967.
Mauny, R. Les siècles obscurs de l'Afrique noire: histoire et archéologie. Paris, 1970.
Mauny, R.L'Ouest africain chez Ptolémée (vers+141 AD)’, IIe Conferencia Internacional des Africanistas Ocidentais (Bissau, 1947), Vol. 1. Lisbon, 1950.Google Scholar
Mauny, R.Notes historiques autour des principales plantes cultivées d'Afrique Occidentale’, Bulletin de l'IFAN, 1953, 16.Google Scholar
Mauny, R.Catalogue des restes osseux humains préhistoriques trouvés dans l'Ouest africain’, Bulletin de l'IFAN, 1961, 23 (sér. B).Google Scholar
Mauny, R.Le Périple de la mer Erythrée et le problème du commerce romain en Afrique au sud du limes’, Journal de la Société des Africanistes, 1968, 38, 1.Google Scholar
McBurney, C. B. M. The Haua Fteah (Cyrenaica) and the Stone Age of the southeast Mediterranean. Cambridge, 1967.
Monod, T. Majabat al-Koubra, contribution à l'étude de l'empty quarter ouest saharien, Mémoires de l'IFAN, 52, 1958.
Morgan, W. B.The forest and agriculture in West Africa’, Journal of African History, 1962, 3, 2.Google Scholar
Munson, P. J.Corrections and additional comments concerning the “Tichitt tradition”’, West African Archaeological Newsletter, 1970, 10.Google Scholar
Murdock, G. P. Africa, its peoples and their culture history. New York, 1959.
Posener, G. ed. Dictionnaire de la civilisation égyptienne. Paris, 1959.
Reygasse, M. Monuments funéraires préislamiques d'Afrique du Nord. Paris, 1950.
Roberts, D. & , S. and Devisse, J. eds. Tegdaoust I: recherches sur Aoudaghost. Paris, 1970.
Robinson, A. L.The camel in antiquity’, Sudan Notes and Records, 1936.Google Scholar
Rosenberger, B.Les vieilles exploitations minières et les anciens centres métallurgiques du Maroc’. Revue de Géographie du Maroc, 1970, 17–18.Google Scholar
Roset, J. P.Art rupestre en Aïr’, Archeologia (Paris), 1971, 39.Google Scholar
Schofield, J. F.L'âge des peintures rupestres du sud de l'Afrique’, L'Anthropologie (Paris), 1949.Google Scholar
Seddon, D. in Roland Portères, H. J. Hugot and Seddon, D., ‘Origins of African agriculture’, Current Anthropology, 1968, 9.Google Scholar
Shaw, Thurstan. ‘On radiocarbon chronology of the Iron Age in sub-Saharan Africa’, Current Anthropology, 1969, 10.Google Scholar
Snowden, J. D. The cultivated races of sorghum. London, 1936.
Souville, G.Recherches sur l'existence d'un âge du bronze au Maroc’, Atti del VI Congrsso internazionale delle Scienze Preistoriche e Protohistoriche, Vol. II. Rome, 1965.Google Scholar
Spruytte, J.Le cheval et le char de l'Égypte ancienne’, Plaisirs Équestres, 1971, 51.Google Scholar
Tauxier, H.Les deux rédactions du Périple d'Hannon’, Revue Africaine (Algiers), 1882.Google Scholar
Trigger, B. G.The myth of Meroe and the African Iron Age’, African Historical Studies, 1969, 2, 1.Google Scholar
Vansina, Jan, Mauny, R. and Thomas, L. V. eds. The historian in tropical Africa. Oxford, 1964.
Vaufrey, R.Le Néolithique para-Toumbien: une civilisation agricole primitive du Soudan’, Revue Scientifique, 1967, No. 3267.Google Scholar
Wainwright, G. A.Iron in the Napatan and Meroitic ages’, Sudan Notes and Records, 1945, 26.Google Scholar
Williams, D. Icon and image. London, 1974.
Zeuner, F. E. A history of domesticated animals. London, 1963.

Save book to Kindle

To save this book to your Kindle, first ensure coreplatform@cambridge.org is added to your Approved Personal Document E-mail List under your Personal Document Settings on the Manage Your Content and Devices page of your Amazon account. Then enter the ‘name’ part of your Kindle email address below. Find out more about saving to your Kindle.

Note you can select to save to either the @free.kindle.com or @kindle.com variations. ‘@free.kindle.com’ emails are free but can only be saved to your device when it is connected to wi-fi. ‘@kindle.com’ emails can be delivered even when you are not connected to wi-fi, but note that service fees apply.

Find out more about the Kindle Personal Document Service.

Available formats
×

Save book to Dropbox

To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Dropbox.

Available formats
×

Save book to Google Drive

To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Google Drive.

Available formats
×