100 things that you did not know about Africa
1.
 The human race is of African origin. The oldest known skeletal remains 
of anatomically modern humans (or homo sapiens) were excavated at sites 
in East Africa. Human remains were discovered at Omo in Ethiopia that 
were dated at 195,000 years old, the oldest known in the world.
2.
 Skeletons of pre-humans have been found in Africa that date back 
between 4 and 5 million years. The oldest known ancestral type of 
humanity is thought to have been the australopithecus ramidus, who lived
 at least 4.4 million years ago.
3. Africans were the 
first to organise fishing expeditions 90,000 years ago. At Katanda, a 
region in northeastern Zaïre (now Congo), was recovered a finely wrought
 series of harpoon points, all elaborately polished and barbed. Also 
uncovered was a tool, equally well crafted, believed to be a dagger. The
 discoveries suggested the existence of an early aquatic or fishing 
based culture.
4. Africans were the first to engage in 
mining 43,000 years ago. In 1964 a hematite mine was found in Swaziland 
at Bomvu Ridge in the Ngwenya mountain range. Ultimately 300,000 
artefacts were recovered including thousands of stone-made mining tools.
 Adrian Boshier, one of the archaeologists on the site, dated the mine 
to a staggering 43,200 years old.
5. Africans pioneered
 basic arithmetic 25,000 years ago. The Ishango bone is a tool handle 
with notches carved into it found in the Ishango region of Zaïre (now 
called Congo) near Lake Edward. The bone tool was originally thought to 
have been over 8,000 years old, but a more sensitive recent dating has 
given dates of 25,000 years old. On the tool are 3 rows of notches. Row 1
 shows three notches carved next to six, four carved next to eight, ten 
carved next to two fives and finally a seven. The 3 and 6, 4 and 8, and 
10 and 5, represent the process of doubling. Row 2 shows eleven notches 
carved next to twenty-one notches, and nineteen notches carved next to 
nine notches. This represents 10 + 1, 20 + 1, 20 - 1 and 10 - 1. 
Finally, Row 3 shows eleven notches, thirteen notches, seventeen notches
 and nineteen notches. 11, 13, 17 and 19 are the prime numbers between 
10 and 20.
6. Africans cultivated crops 12,000 years 
ago, the first known advances in agriculture. Professor Fred Wendorf 
discovered that people in Egypt’s Western Desert cultivated crops of 
barley, capers, chick-peas, dates, legumes, lentils and wheat. Their 
ancient tools were also recovered. There were grindstones, milling 
stones, cutting blades, hide scrapers, engraving burins, and mortars and
 pestles.
7. Africans mummified their dead 9,000 years 
ago. A mummified infant was found under the Uan Muhuggiag rock shelter 
in south western Libya. The infant was buried in the foetal position and
 was mummified using a very sophisticated technique that must have taken
 hundreds of years to evolve. The technique predates the earliest 
mummies known in Ancient Egypt by at least 1,000 years. Carbon dating is
 controversial but the mummy may date from 7438 (±220) BC.
8.
 Africans carved the world’s first colossal sculpture 7,000 or more 
years ago. The Great Sphinx of Giza was fashioned with the head of a man
 combined with the body of a lion. A key and important question raised 
by this monument was: How old is it? In October 1991 Professor Robert 
Schoch, a geologist from Boston University, demonstrated that the Sphinx
 was sculpted between 5000 BC and 7000 BC, dates that he considered 
conservative.
9. On the 1 March 1979, the New York 
Times carried an article on its front page also page sixteen that was 
entitled Nubian Monarchy called Oldest. In this article we were assured 
that: “Evidence of the oldest recognizable monarchy in human history, 
preceding the rise of the earliest Egyptian kings by several 
generations, has been discovered in artifacts from ancient Nubia” (i.e. 
the territory of the northern Sudan and the southern portion of modern 
Egypt.)
10. The ancient Egyptians had the same type of 
tropically adapted skeletal proportions as modern Black Africans. A 2003
 paper appeared in American Journal of Physical Anthropology by Dr Sonia
 Zakrzewski entitled Variation in Ancient Egyptian Stature and Body 
Proportions where she states that: “The raw values in Table 6 suggest 
that Egyptians had the ‘super-Negroid’ body plan described by Robins 
(1983). The values for the brachial and crural indices show that the 
distal segments of each limb are longer relative to the proximal 
segments than in many ‘African’ populations.”
11. The 
ancient Egyptians had Afro combs. One writer tells us that the Egyptians
 “manufactured a very striking range of combs in ivory: the shape of 
these is distinctly African and is like the combs used even today by 
Africans and those of African descent.”
12. The 
Funerary Complex in the ancient Egyptian city of Saqqara is the oldest 
building that tourists regularly visit today. An outer wall, now mostly 
in ruins, surrounded the whole structure. Through the entrance are a 
series of columns, the first stone-built columns known to historians. 
The North House also has ornamental columns built into the walls that 
have papyrus-like capitals. Also inside the complex is the Ceremonial 
Court, made of limestone blocks that have been quarried and then shaped.
 In the centre of the complex is the Step Pyramid, the first of 90 
Egyptian pyramids.
13. The first Great Pyramid of Giza,
 the most extraordinary building in history, was a staggering 481 feet 
tall - the equivalent of a 40-storey building. It was made of 2.3 
million blocks of limestone and granite, some weighing 100 tons.
14.
 The ancient Egyptian city of Kahun was the world’s first planned city. 
Rectangular and walled, the city was divided into two parts. One part 
housed the wealthier inhabitants – the scribes, officials and foremen. 
The other part housed the ordinary people. The streets of the western 
section in particular, were straight, laid out on a grid, and crossed 
each other at right angles. A stone gutter, over half a metre wide, ran 
down the centre of every street.
15. Egyptian mansions 
were discovered in Kahun - each boasting 70 rooms, divided into four 
sections or quarters. There was a master’s quarter, quarters for women 
and servants, quarters for offices and finally, quarters for granaries, 
each facing a central courtyard. The master’s quarters had an open court
 with a stone water tank for bathing. Surrounding this was a colonnade.
16
 The Labyrinth in the Egyptian city of Hawara with its massive layout, 
multiple courtyards, chambers and halls, was the very largest building 
in antiquity. Boasting three thousand rooms, 1,500 of them were above 
ground and the other 1,500 were underground.
17. 
Toilets and sewerage systems existed in ancient Egypt. One of the 
pharaohs built a city now known as Amarna. An American urban planner 
noted that: “Great importance was attached to cleanliness in Amarna as 
in other Egyptian cities. Toilets and sewers were in use to dispose 
waste. Soap was made for washing the body. Perfumes and essences were 
popular against body odour. A solution of natron was used to keep 
insects from houses . . . Amarna may have been the first planned ‘garden
 city’.”
18. Sudan has more pyramids than any other 
country on earth - even more than Egypt. There are at least 223 pyramids
 in the Sudanese cities of Al Kurru, Nuri, Gebel Barkal and Meroë. They 
are generally 20 to 30 metres high and steep sided.
19.
 The Sudanese city of Meroë is rich in surviving monuments. Becoming the
 capital of the Kushite Empire between 590 BC until AD 350, there are 84
 pyramids in this city alone, many built with their own miniature 
temple. In addition, there are ruins of a bath house sharing affinities 
with those of the Romans. Its central feature is a large pool approached
 by a flight of steps with waterspouts decorated with lion heads.
20.
 Bling culture has a long and interesting history. Gold was used to 
decorate ancient Sudanese temples. One writer reported that: “Recent 
excavations at Meroe and Mussawwarat es-Sufra revealed temples with 
walls and statues covered with gold leaf”.
21. In 
around 300 BC, the Sudanese invented a writing script that had 
twenty-three letters of which four were vowels and there was also a word
 divider. Hundreds of ancient texts have survived that were in this 
script. Some are on display in the British Museum.
22. 
In central Nigeria, West Africa’s oldest civilisation flourished between
 1000 BC and 300 BC. Discovered in 1928, the ancient culture was called 
the Nok Civilisation, named after the village in which the early 
artefacts were discovered. Two modern scholars, declare that “[a]fter 
calibration, the period of Nok art spans from 1000 BC until 300 BC”. The
 site itself is much older going back as early as 4580 or 4290 BC.
23.
 West Africans built in stone by 1100 BC. In the Tichitt-Walata region 
of Mauritania, archaeologists have found “large stone masonry villages” 
that date back to 1100 BC. The villages consisted of roughly circular 
compounds connected by “well-defined streets”.
24. By 250 BC, the foundations of West Africa’s oldest cities were established such as Old Djenné in Mali.
25.
 Kumbi Saleh, the capital of Ancient Ghana, flourished from 300 to 1240 
AD. Located in modern day Mauritania, archaeological excavations have 
revealed houses, almost habitable today, for want of renovation and 
several storeys high. They had underground rooms, staircases and 
connecting halls. Some had nine rooms. One part of the city alone is 
estimated to have housed 30,000 people.
26. West Africa had walled
 towns and cities in the pre-colonial period. Winwood Reade, an English 
historian visited West Africa in the nineteenth century and commented 
that: “There are . . . thousands of large walled cities resembling those
 of Europe in the Middle Ages, or of ancient Greece.”
27.
 Lord Lugard, an English official, estimated in 1904 that there were 170
 walled towns still in existence in the whole of just the Kano province 
of northern Nigeria.
28. Cheques are not quite as new 
an invention as we were led to believe. In the tenth century, an Arab 
geographer, Ibn Haukal, visited a fringe region of Ancient Ghana. 
Writing in 951 AD, he told of a cheque for 42,000 golden dinars written 
to a merchant in the city of Audoghast by his partner in Sidjilmessa.
29.
 Ibn Haukal, writing in 951 AD, informs us that the King of Ghana was 
“the richest king on the face of the earth” whose pre-eminence was due 
to the quantity of gold nuggets that had been amassed by the himself and
 by his predecessors.
30. The Nigerian city of Ile-Ife 
was paved in 1000 AD on the orders of a female ruler with decorations 
that originated in Ancient America. Naturally, no-one wants to explain 
how this took place approximately 500 years before the time of 
Christopher Columbus!
31. West Africa had bling culture
 in 1067 AD. One source mentions that when the Emperor of Ghana gives 
audience to his people: “he sits in a pavilion around which stand his 
horses caparisoned in cloth of gold: behind him stand ten pages holding 
shields and gold-mounted swords: and on his right hand are the sons of 
the princes of his empire, splendidly clad and with gold plaited into 
their hair . . . The gate of the chamber is guarded by dogs of an 
excellent breed . . . they wear collars of gold and silver.”
32.
 Glass windows existed at that time. The residence of the Ghanaian 
Emperor in 1116 AD was: “A well-built castle, thoroughly fortified, 
decorated inside with sculptures and pictures, and having glass 
windows.”
33. The Grand Mosque in the Malian city of 
Djenné, described as “the largest adobe [clay] building in the world”, 
was first raised in 1204 AD. It was built on a square plan where each 
side is 56 metres in length. It has three large towers on one side, each
 with projecting wooden buttresses.
34. One of the 
great achievements of the Yoruba was their urban culture. “By the year 
A.D. 1300,” says a modern scholar, “the Yoruba people built numerous 
walled cities surrounded by farms”. The cities were Owu, Oyo, Ijebu, 
Ijesa, Ketu, Popo, Egba, Sabe, Dassa, Egbado, Igbomina, the sixteen 
Ekiti principalities, Owo and Ondo.
35. Yoruba metal 
art of the mediaeval period was of world class. One scholar wrote that 
Yoruba art “would stand comparison with anything which Ancient Egypt, 
Classical Greece and Rome, or Renaissance Europe had to offer.”
36.
 In the Malian city of Gao stands the Mausoleum of Askia the Great, a 
weird sixteenth century edifice that resembles a step pyramid.
37.
 Thousands of mediaeval tumuli have been found across West Africa. 
Nearly 7,000 were discovered in north-west Senegal alone spread over 
nearly 1,500 sites. They were probably built between 1000 and 1300 AD.
38.
 Excavations at the Malian city of Gao carried out by Cambridge 
University revealed glass windows. One of the finds was entitled: 
“Fragments of alabaster window surrounds and a piece of pink window 
glass, Gao 10th – 14th century.”
39. In 1999 the BBC 
produced a television series entitled Millennium. The programme devoted 
to the fourteenth century opens with the following disclosure: “In the 
fourteenth century, the century of the scythe, natural disasters 
threatened civilisations with extinction. The Black Death kills more 
people in Europe, Asia and North Africa than any catastrophe has before.
 Civilisations which avoid the plague thrive. In West Africa the Empire 
of Mali becomes the richest in the world.”
40. Malian 
sailors got to America in 1311 AD, 181 years before Columbus. An 
Egyptian scholar, Ibn Fadl Al-Umari, published on this sometime around 
1342. In the tenth chapter of his book, there is an account of two large
 maritime voyages ordered by the predecessor of Mansa Musa, a king who 
inherited the Malian throne in 1312. This mariner king is not named by 
Al-Umari, but modern writers identify him as Mansa Abubakari II.
41.
 On a pilgrimage to Mecca in 1324 AD, a Malian ruler, Mansa Musa, 
brought so much money with him that his visit resulted in the collapse 
of gold prices in Egypt and Arabia. It took twelve years for the 
economies of the region to normalise.
42. West African 
gold mining took place on a vast scale. One modern writer said that: “It
 is estimated that the total amount of gold mined in West Africa up to 
1500 was 3,500 tons, worth more than $****30 billion in today’s market.”
43.
 The old Malian capital of Niani had a 14th century building called the 
Hall of Audience. It was an surmounted by a dome, adorned with 
arabesques of striking colours. The windows of an upper floor were 
plated with wood and framed in silver; those of a lower floor were 
plated with wood, framed in gold.
44. Mali in the 14th 
century was highly urbanised. Sergio Domian, an Italian art and 
architecture scholar, wrote the following about this period: “Thus was 
laid the foundation of an urban civilisation. At the height of its 
power, Mali had at least 400 cities, and the interior of the Niger Delta
 was very densely populated”.
45. The Malian city of 
Timbuktu had a 14th century population of 115,000 - 5 times larger than 
mediaeval London. Mansa Musa, built the Djinguerebere Mosque in the 
fourteenth century. There was the University Mosque in which 25,000 
students studied and the Oratory of Sidi Yayia. There were over 150 
Koran schools in which 20,000 children were instructed. London, by 
contrast, had a total 14th century population of 20,000 people.
46.
 National Geographic recently described Timbuktu as the Paris of the 
mediaeval world, on account of its intellectual culture. According to 
Professor Henry Louis Gates, 25,000 university students studied there.
47.
 Many old West African families have private library collections that go
 back hundreds of years. The Mauritanian cities of Chinguetti and Oudane
 have a total of 3,450 hand written mediaeval books. There may be 
another 6,000 books still surviving in the other city of Walata. Some 
date back to the 8th century AD. There are 11,000 books in private 
collections in Niger. Finally, in Timbuktu, Mali, there are about 
700,000 surviving books.
48. A collection of one 
thousand six hundred books was considered a small library for a West 
African scholar of the 16th century. Professor Ahmed Baba of Timbuktu is
 recorded as saying that he had the smallest library of any of his 
friends - he had only 1600 volumes.
49. Concerning 
these old manuscripts, Michael Palin, in his TV series Sahara, said the 
imam of Timbuktu “has a collection of scientific texts that clearly show
 the planets circling the sun. They date back hundreds of years . . . 
Its convincing evidence that the scholars of Timbuktu knew a lot more 
than their counterparts in Europe. In the fifteenth century in Timbuktu 
the mathematicians knew about the rotation of the planets, knew about 
the details of the eclipse, they knew things which we had to wait for 
150 almost 200 years to know in Europe when Galileo and Copernicus came 
up with these same calculations and were given a very hard time for it.”
50. The Songhai Empire of 16th century West Africa had a government position called Minister for Etiquette and Protocol.
51.
 The mediaeval Nigerian city of Benin was built to “a scale comparable 
with the Great Wall of China”. There was a vast system of defensive 
walling totalling 10,000 miles in all. Even before the full extent of 
the city walling had become apparent the Guinness Book of Records 
carried an entry in the 1974 edition that described the city as: “The 
largest earthworks in the world carried out prior to the mechanical 
era.”
52. Benin art of the Middle Ages was of the 
highest quality. An official of the Berlin Museum für Völkerkunde once 
stated that: “These works from Benin are equal to the very finest 
examples of European casting technique. Benvenuto Cellini could not have
 cast them better, nor could anyone else before or after him . . . 
Technically, these bronzes represent the very highest possible 
achievement.”
53. Winwood Reade described his visit to 
the Ashanti Royal Palace of Kumasi in 1874: “We went to the king’s 
palace, which consists of many courtyards, each surrounded with alcoves 
and verandahs, and having two gates or doors, so that each yard was a 
thoroughfare . . . But the part of the palace fronting the street was a 
stone house, Moorish in its style . . . with a flat roof and a parapet, 
and suites of apartments on the first floor. It was built by Fanti 
masons many years ago. The rooms upstairs remind me of Wardour Street. 
Each was a perfect Old Curiosity Shop. Books in many languages, Bohemian
 glass, clocks, silver plate, old furniture, Persian rugs, Kidderminster
 carpets, pictures and engravings, numberless chests and coffers. A 
sword bearing the inscription From Queen Victoria to the King of 
Ashantee. A copy of the Times, 17 October 1843. With these were many 
specimens of Moorish and Ashanti handicraft.”
54. In 
the mid-nineteenth century, William Clarke, an English visitor to 
Nigeria, remarked that: “As good an article of cloth can be woven by the
 Yoruba weavers as by any people . . . in durability, their cloths far 
excel the prints and home-spuns of Manchester.”
55. The
 recently discovered 9th century Nigerian city of Eredo was found to be 
surrounded by a wall that was 100 miles long and seventy feet high in 
places. The internal area was a staggering 400 square miles.
56.
 On the subject of cloth, Kongolese textiles were also distinguished. 
Various European writers of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries 
wrote of the delicate crafts of the peoples living in eastern Kongo and 
adjacent regions who manufactured damasks, sarcenets, satins, taffeta, 
cloth of tissue and velvet. Professor DeGraft-Johnson made the curious 
observation that: “Their brocades, both high and low, were far more 
valuable than the Italian.”
57. On Kongolese metallurgy
 of the Middle Ages, one modern scholar wrote that: “There is no 
doubting . . . the existence of an expert metallurgical art in the 
ancient Kongo . . . The Bakongo were aware of the toxicity of lead 
vapours. They devised preventative and curative methods, both 
pharmacological (massive doses of pawpaw and palm oil) and mechanical 
(exerting of pressure to free the digestive tract), for combating lead 
poisoning.”
58. In Nigeria, the royal palace in the 
city of Kano dates back to the fifteenth century. Begun by Muhammad 
Rumfa (ruled 1463-99) it has gradually evolved over generations into a 
very imposing complex. A colonial report of the city from 1902, 
described it as “a network of buildings covering an area of 33 acres and
 surrounded by a wall 20 to 30 feet high outside and 15 feet inside . . .
 in itself no mean citadel”.
59. A sixteenth century 
traveller visited the central African civilisation of Kanem-Borno and 
commented that the emperor’s cavalry had golden “stirrups, spurs, bits 
and buckles.” Even the ruler’s dogs had “chains of the finest gold”.
60. One of the government positions in mediaeval Kanem-Borno was Astronomer Royal.
61.
 Ngazargamu, the capital city of Kanem-Borno, became one of the largest 
cities in the seventeenth century world. By 1658 AD, the metropolis, 
according to an architectural scholar housed “about quarter of a million
 people”. It had 660 streets. Many were wide and unbending, reflective 
of town planning.
62. The Nigerian city of Surame 
flourished in the sixteenth century. Even in ruin it was an impressive 
sight, built on a horizontal vertical grid. A modern scholar describes 
it thus: “The walls of Surame are about 10 miles in circumference and 
include many large bastions or walled suburbs running out at right 
angles to the main wall. The large compound at Kanta is still visible in
 the centre, with ruins of many buildings, one of which is said to have 
been two-storied. The striking feature of the walls and whole ruins is 
the extensive use of stone and tsokuwa (laterite gravel) or very hard 
red building mud, evidently brought from a distance. There is a big 
mound of this near the north gate about 8 feet in height. The walls show
 regular courses of masonry to a height of 20 feet and more in several 
places. The best preserved portion is that known as sirati (the bridge) a
 little north of the eastern gate . . . The main city walls here appear 
to have provided a very strongly guarded entrance about 30 feet wide.”
63.
 The Nigerian city of Kano in 1851 produced an estimated 10 million 
pairs of sandals and 5 million hides each year for export.
64.
 In 1246 AD Dunama II of Kanem-Borno exchanged embassies with 
Al-Mustansir, the king of Tunis. He sent the North African court a 
costly present, which apparently included a giraffe. An old chronicle 
noted that the rare animal “created a sensation in Tunis”.
65.
 By the third century BC the city of Carthage on the coast of Tunisia 
was opulent and impressive. It had a population of 700,000 and may even 
have approached a million. Lining both sides of three streets were rows 
of tall houses six storeys high.
66. The Ethiopian city
 of Axum has a series of 7 giant obelisks that date from perhaps 300 BC 
to 300 AD. They have details carved into them that represent windows and
 doorways of several storeys. The largest obelisk, now fallen, is in 
fact “the largest monolith ever made anywhere in the world”. It is 108 
feet long, weighs a staggering 500 tons, and represents a 
thirteen-storey building.
67. Ethiopia minted its own 
coins over 1,500 years ago. One scholar wrote that: “Almost no other 
contemporary state anywhere in the world could issue in gold, a 
statement of sovereignty achieved only by Rome, Persia, and the Kushan 
kingdom in northern India at the time.”
68. The 
Ethiopian script of the 4th century AD influenced the writing script of 
Armenia. A Russian historian noted that: “Soon after its creation, the 
Ethiopic vocalised script began to influence the scripts of Armenia and 
Georgia. D. A. Olderogge suggested that Mesrop Mashtotz used the 
vocalised Ethiopic script when he invented the Armenian alphabet.”
69.
 “In the first half of the first millennium CE,” says a modern scholar, 
Ethiopia “was ranked as one of the world’s greatest empires”. A Persian 
cleric of the third century AD identified it as the third most important
 state in the world after Persia and Rome.
70. Ethiopia
 has 11 underground mediaeval churches built by being carved out of the 
ground. In the twelfth and thirteenth centuries AD, Roha became the new 
capital of the Ethiopians. Conceived as a New Jerusalem by its founder, 
Emperor Lalibela (c.1150-1230), it contains 11 churches, all carved out 
of the rock of the mountains by hammer and chisel. All of the temples 
were carved to a depth of 11 metres or so below ground level. The 
largest is the House of the Redeemer, a staggering 33.7 metres long, 
23.7 metres wide and 11.5 metres deep.
71. Lalibela is 
not the only place in Ethiopia to have such wonders. A cotemporary 
archaeologist reports research that was conducted in the region in the 
early 1970’s when: “startling numbers of churches built in caves or 
partially or completely cut from the living rock were revealed not only 
in Tigre and Lalibela but as far south as Addis Ababa. Soon at least 
1,500 were known. At least as many more probably await revelation.”
72.
 In 1209 AD Emperor Lalibela of Ethiopia sent an embassy to Cairo 
bringing the sultan unusual gifts including an elephant, a hyena, a 
zebra, and a giraffe.
73. In Southern Africa, there are
 at least 600 stone built ruins in the regions of Zimbabwe, Mozambique 
and South Africa. These ruins are called Mazimbabwe in Shona, the Bantu 
language of the builders, and means great revered house and “signifies 
court”.
74. The Great Zimbabwe was the largest of these
 ruins. It consists of 12 clusters of buildings, spread over 3 square 
miles. Its outer walls were made from 100,000 tons of granite bricks. In
 the fourteenth century, the city housed 18,000 people, comparable in 
size to that of London of the same period.
75. Bling 
culture existed in this region. At the time of our last visit, the 
Horniman Museum in London had exhibits of headrests with the caption: 
“Headrests have been used in Africa since the time of the Egyptian 
pharaohs. Remains of some headrests, once covered in gold foil, have 
been found in the ruins of Great Zimbabwe and burial sites like 
Mapungubwe dating to the twelfth century after Christ.”
76.
 Dr Albert Churchward, author of Signs and Symbols of Primordial Man, 
pointed out that writing was found in one of the stone built ruins: 
“Lt.-Col. E. L. de Cordes . . . who was in South Africa for three years,
 informed the writer that in one of the ‘Ruins’ there is a 
‘stone-chamber,’ with a vast quantity of Papyri, covered with old 
Egyptian hieroglyphics. A Boer hunter discovered this, and a large 
quantity was used to light a fire with, and yet still a larger quantity 
remained there now.”
77. On bling culture, one 
seventeenth century visitor to southern African empire of Monomotapa, 
that ruled over this vast region, wrote that: “The people dress in 
various ways: at court of the Kings their grandees wear cloths of rich 
silk, damask, satin, gold and silk cloth; these are three widths of 
satin, each width four covados [2.64m], each sewn to the next, sometimes
 with gold lace in between, trimmed on two sides, like a carpet, with a 
gold and silk fringe, sewn in place with a two fingers’ wide ribbon, 
woven with gold roses on silk.”
78. Southern Africans 
mined gold on an epic scale. One modern writer tells us that: “The 
estimated amount of gold ore mined from the entire region by the 
ancients was staggering, exceeding 43 million tons. The ore yielded 
nearly 700 tons of pure gold which today would be valued at over 
$******7.5 billion.”
79. Apparently the Monomotapan 
royal palace at Mount Fura had chandeliers hanging from the ceiling. An 
eighteenth century geography book provided the following data: “The 
inside consists of a great variety of sumptuous apartments, spacious and
 lofty halls, all adorned with a magnificent cotton tapestry, the 
manufacture of the country. The floors, cielings [sic], beams and 
rafters are all either gilt or plated with gold curiously wrought, as 
are also the chairs of state, tables, benches &c. The 
candle-sticks and branches are made of ivory inlaid with gold, and hang 
from the cieling by chains of the same metal, or of silver gilt.”
80.
 Monomotapa had a social welfare system. Antonio Bocarro, a Portuguese 
contemporary, informs us that the Emperor: “shows great charity to the 
blind and maimed, for these are called the king’s poor, and have land 
and revenues for their subsistence, and when they wish to pass through 
the kingdoms, wherever they come food and drinks are given to them at 
the public cost as long as they remain there, and when they leave that 
place to go to another they are provided with what is necessary for 
their journey, and a guide, and some one to carry their wallet to the 
next village. In every place where they come there is the same 
obligation.”
81. Many southern Africans have indigenous
 and pre-colonial words for ‘gun’. Scholars have generally been 
reluctant to investigate or explain this fact.
82. 
Evidence discovered in 1978 showed that East Africans were making steel 
for more than 1,500 years: “Assistant Professor of Anthropology Peter 
Schmidt and Professor of Engineering Donald H. Avery have found as long 
as 2,000 years ago Africans living on the western shores of Lake 
Victoria had produced carbon steel in preheated forced draft furnaces, a
 method that was technologically more sophisticated than any developed 
in Europe until the mid-nineteenth century.”
83. Ruins 
of a 300 BC astronomical observatory was found at Namoratunga in Kenya. 
Africans were mapping the movements of stars such as Triangulum, 
Aldebaran, Bellatrix, Central Orion, etcetera, as well as the moon, in 
order to create a lunar calendar of 354 days.
84. 
Autopsies and caesarean operations were routinely and effectively 
carried out by surgeons in pre-colonial Uganda. The surgeons routinely 
used antiseptics, anaesthetics and cautery iron. Commenting on a Ugandan
 caesarean operation that appeared in the Edinburgh Medical Journal in 
1884, one author wrote: “The whole conduct of the operation . . . 
suggests a skilled long-practiced surgical team at work conducting a 
well-tried and familiar operation with smooth efficiency.”
85. Sudan in the mediaeval period had churches, cathedrals, monasteries and castles. Their ruins still exist today.
86.
 The mediaeval Nubian Kingdoms kept archives. From the site of Qasr 
Ibrim legal texts, documents and correspondence were discovered. An 
archaeologist informs us that: “On the site are preserved thousands of 
documents in Meroitic, Latin, Greek, Coptic, Old Nubian, Arabic and 
Turkish.”
87. Glass windows existed in mediaeval Sudan.
 Archaeologists found evidence of window glass at the Sudanese cities of
 Old Dongola and Hambukol.
88. Bling culture existed in
 the mediaeval Sudan. Archaeologists found an individual buried at the 
Monastery of the Holy Trinity in the city of Old Dongola. He was clad in
 an extremely elaborate garb consisting of costly textiles of various 
fabrics including gold thread. At the city of Soba East, there were 
individuals buried in fine clothing, including items with golden thread.
89.
 Style and fashion existed in mediaeval Sudan. A dignitary at Jebel Adda
 in the late thirteenth century AD was interned with a long coat of red 
and yellow patterned damask folded over his body. Underneath, he wore 
plain cotton trousers of long and baggy cut. A pair of red leather 
slippers with turned up toes lay at the foot of the coffin. The body was
 wrapped in enormous pieces of gold brocaded striped silk.
90.
 Sudan in the ninth century AD had housing complexes with bath rooms and
 piped water. An archaeologist wrote that Old Dongola, the capital of 
Makuria, had: “a[n] . . . eighth to . . . ninth century housing complex.
 The houses discovered here differ in their hitherto unencountered 
spatial layout as well as their functional programme (water supply 
installation, bathroom with heating system) and interiors decorated with
 murals.”
91. In 619 AD, the Nubians sent a gift of a giraffe to the Persians.
92.
 The East Coast, from Somalia to Mozambique, has ruins of well over 50 
towns and cities. They flourished from the ninth to the sixteenth 
centuries AD.
93. Chinese records of the fifteenth century AD note that Mogadishu had houses of “four or five storeys high”.
94.
 Gedi, near the coast of Kenya, is one of the East African ghost towns. 
Its ruins, dating from the fourteenth or fifteenth centuries, include 
the city walls, the palace, private houses, the Great Mosque, seven 
smaller mosques, and three pillar tombs.
95. The ruined mosque in the Kenyan city of Gedi had a water purifier made of limestone for recycling water.
96.
 The palace in the Kenyan city of Gedi contains evidence of piped water 
controlled by taps. In addition it had bathrooms and indoor toilets.
97.
 A visitor in 1331 AD considered the Tanzanian city of Kilwa to be of 
world class. He wrote that it was the “principal city on the coast the 
greater part of whose inhabitants are Zanj of very black complexion.” 
Later on he says that: “Kilwa is one of the most beautiful and 
well-constructed cities in the world. The whole of it is elegantly 
built.”
98. Bling culture existed in early Tanzania. A 
Portuguese chronicler of the sixteenth century wrote that: “[T]hey are 
finely clad in many rich garments of gold and silk and cotton, and the 
women as well; also with much gold and silver chains and bracelets, 
which they wear on their legs and arms, and many jewelled earrings in 
their ears”.
99. In 1961 a British archaeologist, found
 the ruins of Husuni Kubwa, the royal palace of the Tanzanian city of 
Kilwa. It had over a hundred rooms, including a reception hall, 
galleries, courtyards, terraces and an octagonal swimming pool.
100.
 In 1414 the Kenyan city of Malindi sent ambassadors to China carrying a
 gift that created a sensation at the Imperial Court. It was, of course,
 a giraffe.
Wednesday, October 3, 2012
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