Ancient African People - children, slaves, families, the rich, the poor, children, and the differently abled.

Ancient African People


Ancient African society did not involve the huge differences between rich and poor people that plagued Europe and Asia. North Africa, being part of the Mediterranean community, was an exception, but south of the Sahara even kings and queens were not so much richer than their subjects. But there were kings and queens, and even if they weren’t very rich they did have power over the other people in their area. Traders often got to be very powerful as well.

Family was very important to African social networks. Many trades were done through networks of cousins and second cousins and even more distant relatives. In famines, too, people counted on distant relatives living in other regions to help them out.

Friendship, on the other hand, is not emphasized in African stories, or mainly to show how it is not as strong as families.

All over Islamic Africa – North Africa, West Africa, and East Africa – many boys went to school in the mosques, where they learned to recite the Koran. Bantu girls, both Muslim and traditional believers, had specialized training before they were able to marry. The boys participated in elaborate lessons to teach them how to be warriors and responsible men. More formal training of girls and boys was expected in Africa than among peasants in Europe or Asia.


Africans seem to have had slaves from the earliest times among themselves, who mainly acted as personal servants. But, damaging as this practice was, it was far outdistanced by the practice of capturing people and selling them into slavery abroad. Even before 1500 AD, when the Europeans were not involved, the slave trade was already capturing thousands of Africans every year and selling them away from their families and their homes. Most of the captured slaves were probably Bantu people. Some of them were forced to walk across the Sahara Desert to be slaves in North Africa, and especially to work in the salt mines of the Sahara. Others were shipped from the east coast of Africa to India and the Persian Gulf, to work in salt mines there. A total of about ten thousand slaves a year were probably exported in the years before 1500.

To find out more about African people, check out this book from Amazon.com or your library -

Daily Life of the Nubians, by Bob Bianchi (2004)

Egyptian People (part of Africa!)
Islamic People
Indian People
Slavery in the United States
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