Deck 14: Patterns of State Formation in Africa, 600-1450 C.E

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Question
Under the Zagwe kings, the conversion of the peoples in the central and southern highlands to Christianity ____________.

A) was immediately abandoned
B) was only mildly encouraged
C) was fully resumed
D) was eventually abandoned
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Question
According to the official foundation narrative, the kings of Aksum were not only the descendants of the Queen of Sheba and the Israelite King Solomon but also the heirs to the Israelite __________________.

A) Ark of the Covenant
B) Dead Sea Scrolls
C) Torah
D) Old Testament
Question
During the period ____________, Nubia was a Christian kingdom along the middle Nile in the Sahara and sub-Saharan steppe.

A) 1500-1700
B) 600-1250
C) 1300-1500
D) 200-400
Question
Ancient Ghana emerged in the 600s as the strongest group of ___________ between the Niger inland delta in the east and the Senegal valley in the west.

A) chiefdoms
B) empires
C) city-states
D) kingdoms
Question
Unlike ________________, where kings appointed church officials, the Coptic patriarchs of Alexandria appointed the bishops, and these would remain independent from kings.

A) Armenia
B) Catholic Europe
C) Ghana
D) India
Question
A pattern of regional trade, urbanization, and chiefdom formation was also characteristic for the _______ and savanna of West Africa from the middle of the first millennium CE onwards.

A) plains
B) Sahel
C) grasslands
D) Gold Coast
Question
Mali's supply of _________ enjoyed an increased demand in the Islamic realm on the other side of the Sahara.

A) spices
B) emeralds
C) diamonds
D) gold
Question
Nubian churches were outposts of the ____________.

A) Nestorian Christian Church
B) Roman Catholic Church
C) Greek Orthodox Church
D) Coptic Church
Question
Interaction with the ______________ allowed Nubia to adapt itself to the Christian institutions of sacred kingship.

A) Achaemenid Empire
B) Chinese Empire
C) Roman Empire
D) Holy Roman Empire
Question
Archaeologists have so far discovered _____________ of a kingdom-wide taxation system in Christian Nubia.

A) ambiguous evidence
B) no evidence whatsoever
C) scant evidence
D) substantial evidence
Question
_________________ missionaries converted the Nubians to Christianity.

A) Roman
B) Persian
C) Greek
D) Egyptian
Question
The __________________ of southern Africa was the first region of the interior where a pattern of increasing wealth and population density became visible, during the period 600-1505.

A) Zimbabwean Plateau
B) Namib Desert
C) Okavango Delta of Botswana
D) Southern highlands of Mozambique
Question
During the period 600-1450, the Swahili people emerged as an indigenous African population of:

A) Christians.
B) warriors.
C) merchants.
D) Muslims.
Question
__________ descent is the possession of genealogy going back to the Prophet Muhammad.

A) Shiite
B) Ummayad
C) Sharifian
D) Swahili
Question
______________ was the most famous ruler of Mali and a staunch promoter of Islamic culture, science, and religion, especially in the city of Timbuktu.

A) Mahmud IV
B) Mansa Musa
C) Maghan II
D) Mandinke
Question
The earliest evidence for the existence of permanent agricultural and fishing settlements around Lake Upemba in central Africa points to the period around ____________.

A) 300 CE
B) 100 BCE
C) 800 CE
D) 1300 CE
Question
The Zagwe kingdom was synonymous with "Ethiopia" or ___________.

A) "Armenia"
B) "Abyssinia"
C) "Anatolia"
D) "Etruria"
Question
________________ is one of the earliest written histories in sub-Saharan Africa.

A) The Rosetta Stone
B) The Story of Sinuhe
C) The Glorious Victories of Amda Seyon
D) The Theogony
Question
Under a king ruling by divine right, Ethiopia was a confederation of:

A) vassal kingdoms.
B) provincial lords.
C) satellite religions.
D) independent empires.
Question
The Solomonid kings continued to embrace their Christian identity in legal matters, adopting a Christianized version of ____________, called The Law of the Kings or Fetha Nagast.

A) Salic law
B) Roman law
C) Sharia law
D) Kabbala law
Question
The Empire of Mali was founded by Malinke King _____________.

A) Solomon
B) Sundiata
C) Musa I
D) Sandaki
Question
Swahili _____________ were Muslims claiming Middle Eastern descent and, by virtue of profiting from long-distance trade with the countries around the Indian Ocean, either ascended to the throne of their cities as kings or governed their cities in a council along with their peers.

A) high priests
B) elders
C) patricians
D) mullahs
Question
The earliest of the rainforest village clusters to urbanize, Ife was the spiritual center of the _________ ethnic group and its oral traditions.

A) Edo
B) Swazi
C) Zulu
D) Yoruba
Question
The kings of Aksum and the patriarch of the Coptic Church abandoned the capital perhaps as early as the _____________ and reestablished themselves in a modest chiefdom with better agrarian resources farther south.

A) mid-600s
B) mid-800s
C) mid-400s
D) mid-1000s
Question
Some of the later rainforest kingdoms achieved great feats of engineering, including elaborate moats and ramparts, the most famous of which is Ijebu´s:

A) Kasubi Tombs
B) "Sungbo's Eredo"
C) Djinguereber Mosque
D) "The Forbidden City"
Question
In the 400s, Nubian chiefs established three small kingdoms that prospered in large measure as a result of the rapid spread of ________________.

A) gold mining operations
B) cattle farming
C) animal-driven waterwheels
D) crop rotation
Question
The Solomonid kings sponsored the composition of an elaborate foundation narrative, the ______________, aimed at legitimizing their dynasty.

A) Epic of Gilgamesh
B) Meqabian
C) Kebra Negast
D) Rig-Veda
Question
Power remained largely decentralized after the unification of the three Nubian kingdoms, with a dozen vassal rulers and appointed official called a(n) ______________.

A) eparch
B) mbira
C) saqqiya
D) thema
Question
Khariji dissidents, who became the earliest Muslim merchants in East Africa, were primarily interested in the ______________, a profitable enterprise in the Islamic empire.

A) spice trade
B) slave trade
C) manufacturing trade
D) mining trade
Question
By around ___________ Christianity in Nubia had largely given way to Islam.

A) 750
B) 1276
C) 1450
D) 1930
Question
One of the signs of the conversion of Nubians to Christianity in the 500s was:

A) Their refusal to participate in a hijra to Mecca with their neighbors.
B) Their recognition of the Patriarch in Constantinople over the Coptic authorities.
C) Their preference for democratic, rather than monarchic, government.
D) The conversion of pagan temples into churches.
Question
Later Muslim historians reinterpreted the pact made after a battle between Nubians and Arabs in 652 as:

A) A punishment on Arabic forces for violating the Nubians' neutrality.
B) An admission of Nubian submission to Islamic hegemony.
C) A temporary setback in the Islamicization of East Africa.
D) An invalid treaty, because the Nubians violated its terms almost immediately afterward.
Question
The Christian hierarchy in Nubia was:

A) Appointed by and responsible to the patriarch in Alexandria.
B) Composed of members of the royal family and controlled by the king.
C) An outpost of the Catholic Church, sending frequent messages to Rome.
D) Constantly seeking theological reconciliation with Muslims.
Question
In the 970s, the mysterious Queen Gudit or Judith:

A) Converted to Christianity and retired to a nunnery.
B) Converted to Islam and oversaw a translation of the Koran into Aksumite.
C) Married a Hebrew king and raised their child as the first Solomonid king.
D) Led several destructive campaigns in which churches were burned.
Question
Built in the early 1200s, the Lalibela monoliths were probably a reaction to:

A) The rediscovery of African spiritualism by the Aksumite kings.
B) The Muslims' recovery of Jerusalem in 1187.
C) The need for an Islamic pilgrimage center that was closer than Mecca.
D) A threatened Arab invasion and the need for a systematic defense.
Question
According to the Kebra Negast, the kings of Aksum were the descendants of a union between the queen of Sheba and Solomon, as well as the heirs to ______________.

A) The Ark of the Covenant
B) The Holy Grail
C) The letters of Prester John
D) Muhammad's son-in-law Ali
Question
An embassy of 30 people traveled to Italy around _________, and their king was identified with the mythical Prester John, a great Christian ruler in 'the east' who would help recover the Holy Land.

A) 30 CE
B) 1095 CE
C) 800 CE
D) 1300 CE
Question
A revolt among enslaved East Africans at the mouth of the __________ River between 868 and 883 led to the suppression of large-scale agricultural slavery in the region.

A) Nile
B) Congo
C) Tigris
D) Zambezi
Question
Wealthy Swahili merchant families came to associate themselves with the capital of the Shiite dynasty of the Buyids in __________.

A) Basra
B) Shiraz
C) Zanzibar
D) Cairo
Question
The ____________ traveler Ibn Battuta (1304-1369) claimed to see a combination of Islamic and pre-Islamic customs in the royal court of Sheikh Abu Bakr in Mogadishu.

A) Moroccan
B) Indian
C) Egyptian
D) Turkish
Question
From the early 900s, the major export item from Mapungubwe to Swahili cities was:

A) Porcelain
B) Bronze
C) Glass
D) Gold
Question
The enclosure complex of the Zimbabwe seems to have been all of the following except:

A) Composed of solid stone walls
B) Plastered or painted on the inside
C) An Islamic law school
D) Densely packed with houses
Question
A __________ bearing a date around 1505 was found in a burned and collapsed structure in the Great Zimbabwe compound, suggesting that trade routes were still viable at this period.

A) Gold Mapungubwe figurine
B) Bronze Ife mask
C) European parchment calendar
D) Chinese porcelain dish
Question
The regularization of a trans-Saharan trade by the __________ in the mid-500s had a profound effect in the Sahel.

A) Bantu
B) Romans
C) Nubians
D) Luba
Question
In contrast to their Swahili colleagues, the kings of ______ avoided a combination of traditional notions of kingship with Islam.

A) Mali
B) Mapungubwe
C) Ijebu
D) Ghana
Question
The onset of ___________ eventually led to the shrinking of the Malian empire by 1450.

A) Civil war
B) Drought
C) Christianization
D) French colonialism
Question
Scholars have explained the purpose of Sungbo's Eredo as being all of the following except:

A) To facilitate the collection of tolls.
B) To mark boundaries for ancestral lands and their spirits.
C) To stimulate the economy through construction projects.
D) To protect against enemies and elephants.
Question
The epic of Sundiata demonstrates that:

A) Fortuitous birth determines all future success.
B) Only men are capable of achieving long-lasting societal change.
C) Marginal figures in village life can cut across the established social order.
D) Islamicization led to the immediate rejection of West African spirituality.
Question
In 1270, a new dynasty of kings, the _____________, emerged some 300 miles south of Aksum, in the region of today's capital of Ethiopia, Addis Ababa.

A) Tigrays
B) Tewodros
C) Mapungubwe
D) Solomonids
Question
When one of local chiefs centralized rule in 1137, the new kingdom of ________ unified the highlands and battled the Muslims in the lowlands on the Red Sea coast in the name of a Christian Crusade.

A) Nubia
B) Ethiopia
C) Yemen
D) Malindi
Question
Nubian kingdoms prospered in large part as the result of the rapid spread of the animal-driven ________ invented in Egypt in the first century CE.

A) War chariot
B) Canal at Suez
C) Sailing ship on the Nile
D) Waterwheel
Question
A ruling in the mid-800s by an Egyptian Muslim judge allowed Nubian Muslims to acquire __________.

A) Private property
B) Arabic surnames
C) Written copies of the Koran
D) Statues of Muhammad
Question
________ Christianity, centered in Egypt, emphasizes the sole divine nature of Jesus.

A) Catholic
B) Orthodox
C) Coptic
D) Nestorian
Question
To its neighbors, the Zagwe kingdom was 'Ethiopia' or '_________', names rooted in the Hebrew and Christian Bibles.

A) Zimbabwe
B) Abyssinia
C) Oman
D) Eden
Question
The religious heritage of the Solomonids still lives on in Ethiopia, and among the _________, who form a small minority in Jamaica and are associated with Bob Marley.

A) Animists
B) Aksumists
C) Sundiatists
D) Rastafarians
Question
In the mid-1400s, Ethiopian kings adopted a Christianized version of _______________ law, The Law of the Kings (Fetha Nagast) from the Egyptian Copts.

A) Jewish
B) Roman
C) Persian
D) Islamic
Question
Many small rivers open into the Indian Ocean, but only the _________ River in the south was large enough to allow longer-range water traffic and the building of inland towns.

A) Congo
B) Nile
C) Niger
D) Zambezi
Question
Swahili cities were characterized by a central open square containing a __________, the main city well, and the tombs of saints.

A) Mosque
B) City Hall
C) Communal garden
D) Cathedral
Question
By 1400, Swahili city-states included all of the following except:

A) Mogadishu
B) Zanzibar
C) Gede
D) Limpopo
Question
Among the golden objects found among the items of the royal dynasty of Mapungubwe, signifying the power and magic of the kings, was a ____________.

A) Giraffe
B) Rhinoceros
C) Map of the world
D) Miniature palace
Question
At its height between 1250 and 1505, the kingdom of __________ represents the culmination of the southern African kingdoms.

A) Luba
B) Ghana
C) Mapungubwe
D) Great Zimbabwe
Question
Serving as a model for subsequent kingdoms in the savanna of central Africa, the Luba kingdom survived until the arrival of __________ colonialism at the end of the nineteenth century.

A) Belgian
B) French
C) British
D) German
Question
Ghana came to resemble the states on the Swahili coast and their hinterlands, where only the rulers and merchants were ____________.

A) Christians
B) African spiritualists
C) Berbers
D) Muslims
Question
At the head of a cavalry force borrowed from a chiefdom in the Sahel, Sundiata defeated ancient Ghana in 1235 and founded the empire of Mali, with its capital on an upper Niger tributary in modern __________.

A) Cameroon
B) Morocco
C) Guinea
D) Chad
Question
Mansa Musa established the city of ________ as a center of learning, focusing on Islamic law but also offering courses in a wide variety of sciences

A) Ijebu
B) Fez
C) Sofala
D) Timbuktu
Question
Sungbo's Eredo is a ___________ combination up to 70 feet deep/high and 100 miles long.

A) Rope and pulley
B) Mosque and minaret
C) Brick and mortar
D) Moat and rampart
Question
The stripes on the faces of some Ife figures are believed to distinguish one lineage from another or to represent:

A) The various religious affiliations of the settlement's inhabitants.
B) The passage from youth to adulthood.
C) The artists' skill in sculpting them while the terra cotta was being fired.
D) The religious ban on human depictions.
Question
In the Malian epic told about his life, Sundiata prevails over his enemies thanks to a discovery made by his ___________.

A) Wife
B) Mother
C) Son
D) Sister
Question
The East and West African expansion of trade under the impact of Islam may have also indirectly led to a __________ in the interior of Africa.

A) Debilitating plague
B) Population increase
C) Rediscovery of African spirituality
D) Flourishing of Islamic law schools
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Deck 14: Patterns of State Formation in Africa, 600-1450 C.E
1
Under the Zagwe kings, the conversion of the peoples in the central and southern highlands to Christianity ____________.

A) was immediately abandoned
B) was only mildly encouraged
C) was fully resumed
D) was eventually abandoned
C
2
According to the official foundation narrative, the kings of Aksum were not only the descendants of the Queen of Sheba and the Israelite King Solomon but also the heirs to the Israelite __________________.

A) Ark of the Covenant
B) Dead Sea Scrolls
C) Torah
D) Old Testament
A
3
During the period ____________, Nubia was a Christian kingdom along the middle Nile in the Sahara and sub-Saharan steppe.

A) 1500-1700
B) 600-1250
C) 1300-1500
D) 200-400
B
4
Ancient Ghana emerged in the 600s as the strongest group of ___________ between the Niger inland delta in the east and the Senegal valley in the west.

A) chiefdoms
B) empires
C) city-states
D) kingdoms
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 69 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
5
Unlike ________________, where kings appointed church officials, the Coptic patriarchs of Alexandria appointed the bishops, and these would remain independent from kings.

A) Armenia
B) Catholic Europe
C) Ghana
D) India
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 69 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
6
A pattern of regional trade, urbanization, and chiefdom formation was also characteristic for the _______ and savanna of West Africa from the middle of the first millennium CE onwards.

A) plains
B) Sahel
C) grasslands
D) Gold Coast
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 69 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
7
Mali's supply of _________ enjoyed an increased demand in the Islamic realm on the other side of the Sahara.

A) spices
B) emeralds
C) diamonds
D) gold
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 69 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
8
Nubian churches were outposts of the ____________.

A) Nestorian Christian Church
B) Roman Catholic Church
C) Greek Orthodox Church
D) Coptic Church
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
9
Interaction with the ______________ allowed Nubia to adapt itself to the Christian institutions of sacred kingship.

A) Achaemenid Empire
B) Chinese Empire
C) Roman Empire
D) Holy Roman Empire
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 69 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
10
Archaeologists have so far discovered _____________ of a kingdom-wide taxation system in Christian Nubia.

A) ambiguous evidence
B) no evidence whatsoever
C) scant evidence
D) substantial evidence
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
11
_________________ missionaries converted the Nubians to Christianity.

A) Roman
B) Persian
C) Greek
D) Egyptian
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 69 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
12
The __________________ of southern Africa was the first region of the interior where a pattern of increasing wealth and population density became visible, during the period 600-1505.

A) Zimbabwean Plateau
B) Namib Desert
C) Okavango Delta of Botswana
D) Southern highlands of Mozambique
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 69 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
13
During the period 600-1450, the Swahili people emerged as an indigenous African population of:

A) Christians.
B) warriors.
C) merchants.
D) Muslims.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 69 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
14
__________ descent is the possession of genealogy going back to the Prophet Muhammad.

A) Shiite
B) Ummayad
C) Sharifian
D) Swahili
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
15
______________ was the most famous ruler of Mali and a staunch promoter of Islamic culture, science, and religion, especially in the city of Timbuktu.

A) Mahmud IV
B) Mansa Musa
C) Maghan II
D) Mandinke
Unlock Deck
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
16
The earliest evidence for the existence of permanent agricultural and fishing settlements around Lake Upemba in central Africa points to the period around ____________.

A) 300 CE
B) 100 BCE
C) 800 CE
D) 1300 CE
Unlock Deck
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
17
The Zagwe kingdom was synonymous with "Ethiopia" or ___________.

A) "Armenia"
B) "Abyssinia"
C) "Anatolia"
D) "Etruria"
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 69 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
18
________________ is one of the earliest written histories in sub-Saharan Africa.

A) The Rosetta Stone
B) The Story of Sinuhe
C) The Glorious Victories of Amda Seyon
D) The Theogony
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 69 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
19
Under a king ruling by divine right, Ethiopia was a confederation of:

A) vassal kingdoms.
B) provincial lords.
C) satellite religions.
D) independent empires.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 69 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
20
The Solomonid kings continued to embrace their Christian identity in legal matters, adopting a Christianized version of ____________, called The Law of the Kings or Fetha Nagast.

A) Salic law
B) Roman law
C) Sharia law
D) Kabbala law
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 69 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
21
The Empire of Mali was founded by Malinke King _____________.

A) Solomon
B) Sundiata
C) Musa I
D) Sandaki
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 69 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
22
Swahili _____________ were Muslims claiming Middle Eastern descent and, by virtue of profiting from long-distance trade with the countries around the Indian Ocean, either ascended to the throne of their cities as kings or governed their cities in a council along with their peers.

A) high priests
B) elders
C) patricians
D) mullahs
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 69 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
23
The earliest of the rainforest village clusters to urbanize, Ife was the spiritual center of the _________ ethnic group and its oral traditions.

A) Edo
B) Swazi
C) Zulu
D) Yoruba
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 69 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
24
The kings of Aksum and the patriarch of the Coptic Church abandoned the capital perhaps as early as the _____________ and reestablished themselves in a modest chiefdom with better agrarian resources farther south.

A) mid-600s
B) mid-800s
C) mid-400s
D) mid-1000s
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 69 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
25
Some of the later rainforest kingdoms achieved great feats of engineering, including elaborate moats and ramparts, the most famous of which is Ijebu´s:

A) Kasubi Tombs
B) "Sungbo's Eredo"
C) Djinguereber Mosque
D) "The Forbidden City"
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 69 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
26
In the 400s, Nubian chiefs established three small kingdoms that prospered in large measure as a result of the rapid spread of ________________.

A) gold mining operations
B) cattle farming
C) animal-driven waterwheels
D) crop rotation
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 69 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
27
The Solomonid kings sponsored the composition of an elaborate foundation narrative, the ______________, aimed at legitimizing their dynasty.

A) Epic of Gilgamesh
B) Meqabian
C) Kebra Negast
D) Rig-Veda
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 69 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
28
Power remained largely decentralized after the unification of the three Nubian kingdoms, with a dozen vassal rulers and appointed official called a(n) ______________.

A) eparch
B) mbira
C) saqqiya
D) thema
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 69 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
29
Khariji dissidents, who became the earliest Muslim merchants in East Africa, were primarily interested in the ______________, a profitable enterprise in the Islamic empire.

A) spice trade
B) slave trade
C) manufacturing trade
D) mining trade
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 69 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
30
By around ___________ Christianity in Nubia had largely given way to Islam.

A) 750
B) 1276
C) 1450
D) 1930
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 69 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
31
One of the signs of the conversion of Nubians to Christianity in the 500s was:

A) Their refusal to participate in a hijra to Mecca with their neighbors.
B) Their recognition of the Patriarch in Constantinople over the Coptic authorities.
C) Their preference for democratic, rather than monarchic, government.
D) The conversion of pagan temples into churches.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 69 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
32
Later Muslim historians reinterpreted the pact made after a battle between Nubians and Arabs in 652 as:

A) A punishment on Arabic forces for violating the Nubians' neutrality.
B) An admission of Nubian submission to Islamic hegemony.
C) A temporary setback in the Islamicization of East Africa.
D) An invalid treaty, because the Nubians violated its terms almost immediately afterward.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 69 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
33
The Christian hierarchy in Nubia was:

A) Appointed by and responsible to the patriarch in Alexandria.
B) Composed of members of the royal family and controlled by the king.
C) An outpost of the Catholic Church, sending frequent messages to Rome.
D) Constantly seeking theological reconciliation with Muslims.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 69 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
34
In the 970s, the mysterious Queen Gudit or Judith:

A) Converted to Christianity and retired to a nunnery.
B) Converted to Islam and oversaw a translation of the Koran into Aksumite.
C) Married a Hebrew king and raised their child as the first Solomonid king.
D) Led several destructive campaigns in which churches were burned.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 69 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
35
Built in the early 1200s, the Lalibela monoliths were probably a reaction to:

A) The rediscovery of African spiritualism by the Aksumite kings.
B) The Muslims' recovery of Jerusalem in 1187.
C) The need for an Islamic pilgrimage center that was closer than Mecca.
D) A threatened Arab invasion and the need for a systematic defense.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 69 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
36
According to the Kebra Negast, the kings of Aksum were the descendants of a union between the queen of Sheba and Solomon, as well as the heirs to ______________.

A) The Ark of the Covenant
B) The Holy Grail
C) The letters of Prester John
D) Muhammad's son-in-law Ali
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 69 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
37
An embassy of 30 people traveled to Italy around _________, and their king was identified with the mythical Prester John, a great Christian ruler in 'the east' who would help recover the Holy Land.

A) 30 CE
B) 1095 CE
C) 800 CE
D) 1300 CE
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 69 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
38
A revolt among enslaved East Africans at the mouth of the __________ River between 868 and 883 led to the suppression of large-scale agricultural slavery in the region.

A) Nile
B) Congo
C) Tigris
D) Zambezi
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 69 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
39
Wealthy Swahili merchant families came to associate themselves with the capital of the Shiite dynasty of the Buyids in __________.

A) Basra
B) Shiraz
C) Zanzibar
D) Cairo
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 69 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
40
The ____________ traveler Ibn Battuta (1304-1369) claimed to see a combination of Islamic and pre-Islamic customs in the royal court of Sheikh Abu Bakr in Mogadishu.

A) Moroccan
B) Indian
C) Egyptian
D) Turkish
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41
From the early 900s, the major export item from Mapungubwe to Swahili cities was:

A) Porcelain
B) Bronze
C) Glass
D) Gold
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42
The enclosure complex of the Zimbabwe seems to have been all of the following except:

A) Composed of solid stone walls
B) Plastered or painted on the inside
C) An Islamic law school
D) Densely packed with houses
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k this deck
43
A __________ bearing a date around 1505 was found in a burned and collapsed structure in the Great Zimbabwe compound, suggesting that trade routes were still viable at this period.

A) Gold Mapungubwe figurine
B) Bronze Ife mask
C) European parchment calendar
D) Chinese porcelain dish
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k this deck
44
The regularization of a trans-Saharan trade by the __________ in the mid-500s had a profound effect in the Sahel.

A) Bantu
B) Romans
C) Nubians
D) Luba
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k this deck
45
In contrast to their Swahili colleagues, the kings of ______ avoided a combination of traditional notions of kingship with Islam.

A) Mali
B) Mapungubwe
C) Ijebu
D) Ghana
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k this deck
46
The onset of ___________ eventually led to the shrinking of the Malian empire by 1450.

A) Civil war
B) Drought
C) Christianization
D) French colonialism
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k this deck
47
Scholars have explained the purpose of Sungbo's Eredo as being all of the following except:

A) To facilitate the collection of tolls.
B) To mark boundaries for ancestral lands and their spirits.
C) To stimulate the economy through construction projects.
D) To protect against enemies and elephants.
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
48
The epic of Sundiata demonstrates that:

A) Fortuitous birth determines all future success.
B) Only men are capable of achieving long-lasting societal change.
C) Marginal figures in village life can cut across the established social order.
D) Islamicization led to the immediate rejection of West African spirituality.
Unlock Deck
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k this deck
49
In 1270, a new dynasty of kings, the _____________, emerged some 300 miles south of Aksum, in the region of today's capital of Ethiopia, Addis Ababa.

A) Tigrays
B) Tewodros
C) Mapungubwe
D) Solomonids
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
50
When one of local chiefs centralized rule in 1137, the new kingdom of ________ unified the highlands and battled the Muslims in the lowlands on the Red Sea coast in the name of a Christian Crusade.

A) Nubia
B) Ethiopia
C) Yemen
D) Malindi
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k this deck
51
Nubian kingdoms prospered in large part as the result of the rapid spread of the animal-driven ________ invented in Egypt in the first century CE.

A) War chariot
B) Canal at Suez
C) Sailing ship on the Nile
D) Waterwheel
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k this deck
52
A ruling in the mid-800s by an Egyptian Muslim judge allowed Nubian Muslims to acquire __________.

A) Private property
B) Arabic surnames
C) Written copies of the Koran
D) Statues of Muhammad
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k this deck
53
________ Christianity, centered in Egypt, emphasizes the sole divine nature of Jesus.

A) Catholic
B) Orthodox
C) Coptic
D) Nestorian
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k this deck
54
To its neighbors, the Zagwe kingdom was 'Ethiopia' or '_________', names rooted in the Hebrew and Christian Bibles.

A) Zimbabwe
B) Abyssinia
C) Oman
D) Eden
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k this deck
55
The religious heritage of the Solomonids still lives on in Ethiopia, and among the _________, who form a small minority in Jamaica and are associated with Bob Marley.

A) Animists
B) Aksumists
C) Sundiatists
D) Rastafarians
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k this deck
56
In the mid-1400s, Ethiopian kings adopted a Christianized version of _______________ law, The Law of the Kings (Fetha Nagast) from the Egyptian Copts.

A) Jewish
B) Roman
C) Persian
D) Islamic
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k this deck
57
Many small rivers open into the Indian Ocean, but only the _________ River in the south was large enough to allow longer-range water traffic and the building of inland towns.

A) Congo
B) Nile
C) Niger
D) Zambezi
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k this deck
58
Swahili cities were characterized by a central open square containing a __________, the main city well, and the tombs of saints.

A) Mosque
B) City Hall
C) Communal garden
D) Cathedral
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k this deck
59
By 1400, Swahili city-states included all of the following except:

A) Mogadishu
B) Zanzibar
C) Gede
D) Limpopo
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k this deck
60
Among the golden objects found among the items of the royal dynasty of Mapungubwe, signifying the power and magic of the kings, was a ____________.

A) Giraffe
B) Rhinoceros
C) Map of the world
D) Miniature palace
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k this deck
61
At its height between 1250 and 1505, the kingdom of __________ represents the culmination of the southern African kingdoms.

A) Luba
B) Ghana
C) Mapungubwe
D) Great Zimbabwe
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k this deck
62
Serving as a model for subsequent kingdoms in the savanna of central Africa, the Luba kingdom survived until the arrival of __________ colonialism at the end of the nineteenth century.

A) Belgian
B) French
C) British
D) German
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k this deck
63
Ghana came to resemble the states on the Swahili coast and their hinterlands, where only the rulers and merchants were ____________.

A) Christians
B) African spiritualists
C) Berbers
D) Muslims
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k this deck
64
At the head of a cavalry force borrowed from a chiefdom in the Sahel, Sundiata defeated ancient Ghana in 1235 and founded the empire of Mali, with its capital on an upper Niger tributary in modern __________.

A) Cameroon
B) Morocco
C) Guinea
D) Chad
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k this deck
65
Mansa Musa established the city of ________ as a center of learning, focusing on Islamic law but also offering courses in a wide variety of sciences

A) Ijebu
B) Fez
C) Sofala
D) Timbuktu
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66
Sungbo's Eredo is a ___________ combination up to 70 feet deep/high and 100 miles long.

A) Rope and pulley
B) Mosque and minaret
C) Brick and mortar
D) Moat and rampart
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k this deck
67
The stripes on the faces of some Ife figures are believed to distinguish one lineage from another or to represent:

A) The various religious affiliations of the settlement's inhabitants.
B) The passage from youth to adulthood.
C) The artists' skill in sculpting them while the terra cotta was being fired.
D) The religious ban on human depictions.
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
68
In the Malian epic told about his life, Sundiata prevails over his enemies thanks to a discovery made by his ___________.

A) Wife
B) Mother
C) Son
D) Sister
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k this deck
69
The East and West African expansion of trade under the impact of Islam may have also indirectly led to a __________ in the interior of Africa.

A) Debilitating plague
B) Population increase
C) Rediscovery of African spirituality
D) Flourishing of Islamic law schools
Unlock Deck
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Unlock Deck
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Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 69 flashcards in this deck.