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African History 2: Ancient Ghana 73 Views
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Description:
Old Ghana is gone, but we're still gonna teach you about it.
Transcript
- 00:04
All right, now let’s spend some time in a powerful, ancient kingdom called Ghana. [Man bumps into woman holding book on ancient Ghana]
- 00:09
That’s what we’re…Ghana do.
- 00:12
Okay…so Ghana is not to be confused with the modern Republic of Ghana…a former British
- 00:17
colony on the coast of Africa with a population of over 25 million. [People walking in the Republic of Ghana]
- 00:21
Modern Ghana is about 400 miles south of ancient Ghana, and the two don’t really have much
Full Transcript
- 00:26
to do with one another.
- 00:27
Today, we’re zeroing in on the original Ghana.
- 00:31
Or as we like to call it: the OG. [Ghanaian people working on a beach]
- 00:35
No one knows for sure when Ghana came together.
- 00:37
But it’s thought that, at some point in the first millennia, Soninke
- 00:41
tribes, in what is now Northern Senegal and Southern Mauritania, came together under a [Soninke tribe appears with Dinga Cisse]
- 00:47
king named Dinga Cisse
- 00:50
Nobody seems able to agree on who Dinga Cisse was, but legend has it that he was a foreigner…
- 00:55
and that he may or may not have had godly powers. [Cisse zaps Soninke tribe man]
- 00:58
Ancient aliens, anyone?
- 01:00
Some think that the Soninke unified to protect themselves from attacks by nomadic raiders. [Football players run past the king and soninke tribe]
- 01:05
Uh, right.
- 01:06
Those guys.
- 01:07
But whatever the reason, they ended up founding a pretty impressive kingdom.
- 01:10
The wealth of ancient Ghana was built on gold. [Gold bars fall from the sky and cover a man]
- 01:13
Like… a lot of gold.
- 01:15
Ghana’s gold mines on the Senegal River were once described as some of the richest
- 01:19
known to man.
- 01:20
The king was apparently a fan of bling and covered himself, his court, and his horses [King wearing lots of jewelry]
- 01:25
in the stuff.
- 01:26
Ghana also exported slaves, salt, and copper, which they swapped for textiles, beads, and
- 01:32
other crafts.
- 01:33
And made bank in the process.
- 01:34
The key to Ghana’s success was its trading skills.
- 01:37
And when you lived on the edge of the Sahara in ancient times, the key to trade was camels. [Camels carrying goods]
- 01:43
These spitting dromedaries made Ghana what it was by tromping across the desert, loaded
- 01:48
with goods.
- 01:50
Guess you could say those camels were really, uh….busting their humps.
- 01:53
Of course, like all great kingdoms, Ghana had to fall.
- 01:56
No one can agree on exactly what happened, though. [Man walking by the ocean and falls on rocks]
- 01:59
One myth says that it was all because of Bida, the black snake.
- 02:02
The legend says that Bida gave Ghana prosperity as long as the country sacrificed one virgin [People carrying a woman for Bida]
- 02:07
to him every year.
- 02:10
One year, the fiancé of the selected virgin decided he wasn’t that into her being eaten [fiancee of virgin carries her away from Bida]
- 02:14
by a snake, so he rescued her.
- 02:17
Sounds heroic, right?
- 02:18
Too bad Bida then caused a drought that destroyed the entire kingdom.
- 02:23
So much for happily ever after.
- 02:25
There is actually historical evidence that a prolonged period of drought might’ve had
- 02:29
a lot to do with it.
- 02:30
That…plus new trade competition might’ve been what made Ghana a… goner.
- 02:34
Still, it was one of the earliest and richest kingdoms of West Africa and paved the way [Ghanaian man raking soil]
- 02:38
for a bunch of powerful kingdoms, like Mali and Songhai.
- 02:43
Kingdoms that hopefully didn’t have the same problem with…magical snakes…[Snake attacks man raking]
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