What happened to the many African Kingdoms? History of Africa 1500-1800 Documentary 1/6

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 6 фев 2025
  • / jabzy
    / jabzyjoe
    African Kingdoms, Sokoto Caliphate, Mali Empire, Kingdom of Kongo, Rozvi Empire, Ashanti, Oyo, Kingdom of Benin, Funj, African History, Moroccan History, Barbary States, Mutapa, Zulu Kingdom, Xhosa

Комментарии • 4,9 тыс.

  • @HistoryScope
    @HistoryScope 3 года назад +4981

    I made 2 videos about Africa and that video gets A LOT of racist comments from people who think that Africa had nothing going on in this period, except people living in tents or caves. It's very nice to see a video which covers topics like this; one of the least taught periods of one of the least taught continents.

    • @blenshanegro3260
      @blenshanegro3260 3 года назад +167

      @Stratos I lol

    • @papachocolate1677
      @papachocolate1677 3 года назад +781

      @Stratos I how much research have you actually done? I'm not asking this to insult you, i'm just genuinely curious. Because even a decent amount of research into pre-colonial african architecture reveals structures that cannot be labeled just simply as "large huts". Infact just simply googling "pre colonial African architecture" is enough to get these results.
      Not to mention that they didn't have the same architecture achievements and styles from 12000 years ago. Cause like with all places, techniques and aesthetic sensibilities changed over time. So honestly, how much research did you do? because everything you said was false.

    • @crazychicSHENA
      @crazychicSHENA 3 года назад +272

      @Stratos I yes that's racist black people aren't dum as you think 🤔

    • @LionClanChief
      @LionClanChief 3 года назад +257

      Racists will always come and do their keyboard warrior shenanigans.

    • @LionClanChief
      @LionClanChief 3 года назад +123

      @Stratos I All measures like what exactly give a few examples with evidence.

  • @googleme6053
    @googleme6053 3 года назад +4055

    It’s so hilarious to see people literally be ANGRY that “subsaharan” Africans had lives, civilization, travel, trade routes, and political intrigue before Europeans arrived.

    • @cavaugnsharkey2699
      @cavaugnsharkey2699 3 года назад +568

      There's a word I like when referring to their behavior: cope.

    • @ezra5788
      @ezra5788 3 года назад +920

      Also people love to generalize when it comes to Africa. They speak of "sub-Saharan Africa" like it's a single homogeneous place. So-called sub-Saharan Africa has more genetic diversity than all of Europe and the Americas combined.
      There are over 1000 languages spoken, There are over 900 ethnic groups etc.. The Khoi San are very genetically and visually different from the Nillotes, who are genetically and visually different from the bantu, who are visually and genetically different from the pygmies, who are genetically and visually different from the Cushites etc.
      The average African you will see in South Sudan will look VERY different from the average African you will see in South Africa. Botswana is as far from Nigeria as Ireland is from Kazakhstan etc. Falling into generalizations for such a huge and diverse area is being very shallow.

    • @yourhuckleberry6757
      @yourhuckleberry6757 3 года назад +26

      I think it's funny that people need to identify with them.
      My ancestors were called Barbarians, vandals, savages...
      Probably why Germans wanted to identify with Aryans.
      I can see the same thing happening to black Americans.
      When you teach someone to be disenfranchised then provide them with.... something.

    • @yoboiboy4182
      @yoboiboy4182 3 года назад +24

      Right????

    • @thinkbeforeyoutype7106
      @thinkbeforeyoutype7106 3 года назад +39

      Exactly! I’ve noticed these new channels always make the same MISTAKE either willingly or unwillingly. For example, the Slave Trade associated with European colonials, they call it “Atlantic Slave Trade” which whitewashes any ethnicity or religion. However, when it comes to the Indian Slave Trade, they call either the Arab Slave Trade or the “Islamic Slave Trade” which emphasizes an ethnic or religion. This type of hypocrisy is why western historian and RUclipsrs who don’t see it or refuse to it become a JOKE!

  • @JabzyJoe
    @JabzyJoe  3 года назад +465

    Corrections - The Omani Ruling Family was the Yaruba Dynasty, not the Yoruba. Sometimes I say 17th Century but the timeline says 1700s.
    This is Part 1 of 5 on the Scramble for Africa (obviously this is just setting the scene). Thanks to the Patreons for voting and, if you'd like, I could always do with a little support in making these longer series and survival guides - www.patreon.com/jabzy

    • @christidiscipulus1576
      @christidiscipulus1576 3 года назад +6

      can you do more on the congo kingdom?

    • @SafavidAfsharid3197
      @SafavidAfsharid3197 3 года назад

      A video on Mughal-maratha war?

    • @LuisAldamiz
      @LuisAldamiz 3 года назад +3

      Add to the corrections that you confused Madeira with Canary Islands, Madeira is further North, almost equidistant from both Portugal and Morocco (but was uninhabited when Portugal claimed it). It is also much smaller than the Canarias, and was the first ever slave plantation colony, after the woodlands it give it the name were destroyed by intentional massive fires in order to plant sugarcane.
      Granted that Portugal was also involved in the conquest of Canary Islands but soon it was claimed by Castile instead, leading to some rivalry between the two Iberian powers in the region that would only be solved by the Tordesillas Treaty.

    • @lif3andthings763
      @lif3andthings763 3 года назад +3

      Also Morocco didn’t really single-handedly defeat Songhai. They captured and looted a few cities like Timbuktu which wasn’t even the capital but them were forced to retreat due to uprisings from the people.

    • @lif3andthings763
      @lif3andthings763 3 года назад +2

      The Zanj revolt is actually have said to be a revolt of the peasants along with free and enslaved Africansz

  • @kenkioqqo
    @kenkioqqo 2 года назад +156

    I'm from Kenya in East Africa. I really enjoy watching these African history documentaries every evening after work.

    • @PrussianFrost
      @PrussianFrost 2 года назад +2

      Dude look up Mansa Musa or the Kush kingdoms, yall dont teach your own history in school?

    • @JasonRobards2
      @JasonRobards2 2 года назад +3

      Are there good series like this made by youtubers from Africa? My youtube suggestions almost exclusively suggest European/American history channels. It would be interesting to watch this content from a different perspective.

    • @Niani23455
      @Niani23455 2 года назад +9

      @@JasonRobards2 1. Hometeam history
      2. From Nothing

    • @JasonRobards2
      @JasonRobards2 2 года назад

      @@Niani23455 thanks!

    • @BelearicBanana
      @BelearicBanana 2 года назад +3

      Nice to see another history nerd

  • @cavaugnsharkey2699
    @cavaugnsharkey2699 3 года назад +2448

    Good work. I've notice there is a trend of channels interested in African history or aspects of it, and so far it's a positive change to the usual imagery of poverty, starvation, and corruption that we are constantly fed about in regards to Africa.

    • @christianweibrecht6555
      @christianweibrecht6555 3 года назад +207

      Agreed, most people seem to only demonize or patronize that continent, both groups just love to oversimplify everything to

    • @cavaugnsharkey2699
      @cavaugnsharkey2699 3 года назад +60

      @@christianweibrecht6555 You summed it up better than I could.

    • @ericcloud1023
      @ericcloud1023 3 года назад +71

      Same here, history channels are starting to diverge from the euro-centric viewpoint (which is still my favorite area of history) and done videos on India, SE Asia, Africa, S. America, and the central Asian/Iranian area of influence that is just as rich. For example the Khazar Khaganate converted to Judaism....a nomadic horse archer culture actively embraced Judaism! Doesn't that just blow your mind! That and the Indo-European descendants living in the Gobi desert that were wiped out by the Medieval Chinese empire, (the Tar-somethings) history is full of amazing one-off irregularities like this and I love it! Like for example the Tai-Ping rebellion was started by a Chinese man claiming to be Jesus' brother which caused the deaths of up to 10million!!!

    • @Farhan917
      @Farhan917 3 года назад +29

      They wanted to keep Africans poor as long as possible that's why.

    • @Bradley2806
      @Bradley2806 3 года назад +2

      @@ericcloud1023I haven't heard of the indo Europeans in the Gobi, are you referring to the Tocharians. They were a group of indo Europeans in the Tarim basin, but they eventually assimilated into the ugygurs.

  • @Bloodycupcake54
    @Bloodycupcake54 3 года назад +1270

    Well done! It's rare to see African history talked about in an objective factual way!

    • @DeadGivaway
      @DeadGivaway 3 года назад +11

      what are you watching ?

    • @konradvonschnitzeldorf6506
      @konradvonschnitzeldorf6506 3 года назад +136

      @@DeadGivaway alot of pre-colonial african history that non-academics have access too is either eurocentric or afrocentric. The others refusing to see any progress in africa for thousands of years, the others somehow attributing anything good in the world with africa somehow or treating it like some sort of paradise.

    • @bobcostas6272
      @bobcostas6272 3 года назад

      Hahahahahahahaha

    • @bobcostas6272
      @bobcostas6272 3 года назад +4

      @@konradvonschnitzeldorf6506 hahahahahahah ok simp

    • @bobcostas6272
      @bobcostas6272 2 года назад +2

      @Kyjohc literally never made a road

  • @chris2thejmedia
    @chris2thejmedia 3 года назад +880

    History is not simply what is told in class, but the culmination of millions of day to day choices made by billions of people throughout their lives. This video just goes to show that it is so much more complex then students are lead to believe

    • @psychonautguide5630
      @psychonautguide5630 3 года назад +55

      @roger barron i mean, you're wrong. But you're entitled to your opinion.

    • @Buurba_Jolof
      @Buurba_Jolof 3 года назад +7

      @roger barron
      😂😂😂

    • @jaijai5250
      @jaijai5250 3 года назад +2

      There has to be a desire for truth in order to know true history. The “primitive” narrative of Africa suits Europeans. Most of them would be mortified to know the real reason behind the renaissance. They need to read the “Memoirs of the Secret Services of John Mackey”, and study the history of the Moors in Europe. I think they’d die of heart attacks because it’s contrary to their beliefs.
      I know the creator tells us not to wish for his judgement day, because none of us really knows where we stand but it will be great to see the smiles wiped off these racist fools faces.
      Jeremiah 16:19
      O Lord, my strength, and my fortress, and my refuge in the day of affliction, the Gentiles shall come unto thee from the ends of the earth, and shall say, Surely our fathers have inherited lies, vanity, and things wherein there is no profit.
      We are living through some very trying times, and only those with discernment can see scripture unfolding, and prophecy being fulfilled right before our very eyes.
      Black people remain proud that you were created in the image of the Creator and we have all seen the following:
      Ecclesiastes 10:7
      I have seen servants upon horses, and princes walking as servants upon the earth.

    • @allopez33
      @allopez33 3 года назад

      You just now learned that?????? You missed out on Tolstoys 'War and Peace'. Then again, I doubt you read much, if at all.

    • @allopez33
      @allopez33 3 года назад +1

      @@jaijai5250 Loincloths, Spears, Absence of written-language system until contact with Islam, Shamanism, Albinism understood as a tribal curse even in the modern era, Sleeping Sickness, Ebola, HIV, Sickle Cell Anemia, Malaria........that's what you had and still have. THE APPROPRIATION OF NORTH AFRICAN HISTORY (Berbers, Arabs, Moors, Tuaregs) is about your biggest historical accomplishment. What is comical about these uploads is the all-too-patent desperation at trying to compensate for the glaring absence of any notable achievements when compared to Europe, China, India, Israel, The Golden Age of Islam. To be sure, the Golden Mongol Horde under Ghengis Khan was more interesting and important than the entire history of Sub-Saharan Africa combined. By the way, leave the Egyptian pyramids alone. TAKE A GOOD LOOK AT THE FEATURES OF EGYPTIANS TODAY: THATS WHAT THE PEOPLE WHO ACTUALLY CONSTRUCTED THEM LOOK LIKE. AND COME UP WITH SOMETHING THAT IS TRULY YOURS WITHOUT CITING THE SPIRITUAL MUSINGS OF A WANDERING SEMITIC PEOPLE WHO ACTUALLY DID GO ON TO CONTRIBUTE TO THE MODERN WORLD. CULTURAL ENVY IS ALL YOU WILL EVER HAVE.

  • @kwakuba9167
    @kwakuba9167 3 года назад +261

    The biggest challenge about presenting Africa to the world is overcoming the entrenched myth that Africans are a people. A simple monolithic block of people called Africans. Ha ha ha. No. We are the African peopleS. Emphasis on the S. Plural. The continent has more human diversity than the rest of the world combined. In terms of language culture skin colors etc etc. I am from Ghana and apart from skin tone I have nothing in common with say a Somali or Botswana or Ethiopian. The only famous person I have seen address this nuance and present the specific context of certain issues is the late Fidel Castro. Even though I don't like communism I give Mr Castro credit for correctly presenting the correct context and nuance of specific issues on the continent and not using the broad brush "Africans" approach that still pertains to this day. .

    • @DevinMacGregor
      @DevinMacGregor 3 года назад +32

      It is always amazing how so many use broad strokes for a continent of diverse people. Not just Africa which many do not understand just how HUGE it is is but Europe and Asia as well. I have friends who wear their wokeness on their sleeves but then conflate Asian cultures, umm no that is Chinese and that is Japanese.
      Africa has SOOOO many different cultures. I was reading of just the diversity say in Nigeria is staggering. I was referring to all peoples but took some heat when I said that one of the worst things of appropriation is when someone claims another culture as their own just because the skin color is similar.
      I think it was the BBC but they have this documentary on 5 ancient kingdoms in the Sub Sahara Africa. I thought it was really good because it is something you normally do not see and all of these were far from each other as well.

    • @kwakuba9167
      @kwakuba9167 3 года назад +6

      @@DevinMacGregor you have read wide.thank you. The cultural appropriation argument is an another silly example of the ignorance of wokeness. It would mean a Thai is prohibited from wearing a kimono. Or a Nigerian is prohibited from wearing kente which is native to southern Ghana. Or a Zimbabwean is prohibited from wearing the boubou which is native to Senegal. Its just silly and ignorant.
      They even forgot that under Wokeism then dark skinned people should not be wearing suits shirts or coats because those came from cultures elsewhere .

    • @DevinMacGregor
      @DevinMacGregor 3 года назад

      @@kwakuba9167 I love when it gets shifted to food such as I can not say if a food was good or not that did not come directly from my culture. Yet I live in a multicultural society.
      I am thinking, but food is not genetic. I have a work friend who we would go to lunch periodically and she completely bought into this such as I could not tell her if a burrito was good or not because I am white and she is Mexican even though I grew up in Southern California eating burritos, tacos etc. Not to mention a burrito is what we call Tex Mex and it has only been in the last several decades the bulk of Mexico even knows what one is. It was not a part of Mexican cuisine. It is like certain foods here that you find in Chinese restaurants did not come from China and are not a part of traditional Chinese cuisine.
      So then I asked her so how can you tell me what a good Sushi place is because last I checked you are not Japanese. She had nothing to say after that. She loves sushi bars btw.
      It is just silly. If you want to know how to make a schnitzel I will tell you and I will trust you and your taste buds.
      All of this comes out of a hyper sense of identity.

    • @PAGoldenglovechamp06
      @PAGoldenglovechamp06 3 года назад +2

      You have nothing in common with me and I am African American within 3% Ghana blood

    • @MrMagic-nw2tl
      @MrMagic-nw2tl 3 года назад +4

      All 🩸 from the same creator different cultures

  • @justalittlebee
    @justalittlebee Год назад +17

    I appreciate your work on this series, I'm going to watch them all! I never imagined I'd ever see unbiased content on African history on RUclips, nor did I think it'd be suggested to me by the algorithm ... awesome

  • @phunkracy
    @phunkracy 3 года назад +1149

    Nice video, though I think Benin Empire deserved a mention, if only for the fact that its capital, Benin was one of the largest cities of its time (worldwide) and a wonder of city planning, divided into self sufficient districts, with sewerage and street lights. The plan itself was based upon mathematical principles in a fractal-like divisions.

    • @JabzyJoe
      @JabzyJoe  3 года назад +248

      Will be mentioned a couple times throughout the series

    • @phunkracy
      @phunkracy 3 года назад +31

      @@JabzyJoe

    • @ab9840
      @ab9840 3 года назад +50

      Never heard of Edo the capital city of the once empire of Benin. Thought, the Aztec capital city of Tenochtitlán (modern day Mexico city) was the wonder of the world back then.

    • @obatalaosun2222
      @obatalaosun2222 3 года назад +61

      @@ab9840 Look at that! You learn something new everyday!

    • @Cindy99765
      @Cindy99765 3 года назад +74

      @@ab9840 As someone whose parents come from Edo State and have Benin ancestry, I'm still really happy to see folks express interest in learning about our history!

  • @VolcyThoughts
    @VolcyThoughts 3 года назад +872

    Thank you for bringing light to the fact that there was history and cultural exchange before the scramble

    • @512TheWolf512
      @512TheWolf512 3 года назад +18

      It's common knowledge though.

    • @VolcyThoughts
      @VolcyThoughts 3 года назад +145

      @@512TheWolf512 you’d be surprised how many don’t know that there were civilizations outside of Egypt in Africa. A lot of people believe it was just a bunch of tribal mudhuts. Nothing complex

    • @Yawnymcsnore
      @Yawnymcsnore 3 года назад +10

      What a joke, Egypt Morocco etc are not really Africans they are Arabs.
      The Africans hadn't invented a written language, the wheel or a two story fucking Building what a joke.

    • @VolcyThoughts
      @VolcyThoughts 3 года назад +59

      @@Yawnymcsnore your first sentence is correct, the second is incorrect

    • @tobilobaokorodudu9594
      @tobilobaokorodudu9594 3 года назад +80

      @@VolcyThoughts non of it is correct. The north African population is still largely native i.e. berber, coptic etc. Only the elite are Arabs

  • @alexabood2516
    @alexabood2516 3 года назад +39

    Disney: "Endgame is the most ambitious crossover event in history"
    Africa: "hold my beer"

  • @magimon91834
    @magimon91834 3 года назад +464

    I feel like unfortunately an online discourse we never really give much credit or respect to actual African History either treat it as something unimportant or as one big tragedy with nothing good to it due to European interaction. I appreciate this video making a legitimate attempt to show what happened in a period and region which doesn't get the coverage it deserves

    • @Klipz369
      @Klipz369 3 года назад +47

      It’s like if we just cut out the 1600-1900 for Europeans and just say their history is 3BC-1400AD lotta goofy ass mfers. There’s a reason anywhere we touch down in big numbers whether it’s the slave trade in Americas or immigration to Europe sub Saharan Africans have a big impact on the culture especially the music we’re the oldest demographic of people on this planet and will likely be the last

    • @beepboopbeepp
      @beepboopbeepp 3 года назад +65

      It's half the european propaganda aspect of the "white mans burden" which heavily influenced this view, and also the idiotic discourss in america doesn't help the situation where even african americans argues that everything in Africa was purely black or darkskinned.
      The debate is so dumbed down it's like people put in their own personal views in history when in the end who gives a shit if north africans look different, so does south-africans, and eastern africans and western africans. They'd still all be africans is what people seem to ignore.

    • @niklassule-unofficial4200
      @niklassule-unofficial4200 3 года назад +12

      @Stratos I Sumerians were never called Iraqis.

    • @niklassule-unofficial4200
      @niklassule-unofficial4200 3 года назад +15

      @Stratos I 1. Sumer was never an empire, the first empire was the Akkadian empire.
      2. Yes, Sumer was located in the region that became Iraq, but that doesn't make their inhabitants Iraqis.

    • @niklassule-unofficial4200
      @niklassule-unofficial4200 3 года назад +12

      @Stratos I Whatever you say man. Never heard any Archaeologist say that Sumer was an empire.

  • @snaps5373
    @snaps5373 3 года назад +14

    I love finding new channels like this. Thank you so much for taking the time to not only research but compile everything.

  • @lindseyfrancesco4
    @lindseyfrancesco4 3 года назад +21

    I love videos like this that go in depth on the subjects generally neglected by history

  • @Baller4lifeATL
    @Baller4lifeATL 2 года назад +11

    Great work. Thank you for the high level overview of the side of African history that doesn’t get much coverage.

  • @allenhunt9732
    @allenhunt9732 3 года назад +28

    You're doing incredible work highlighting history that's often overlooked!

  • @HoiSourced
    @HoiSourced 3 года назад +85

    Great video Jabzy. Pre-colonial africa and the many kingdoms there are rarely covered, especially on youtube. Thanks for providing such a valuable video.

    • @ArturMorgan7491
      @ArturMorgan7491 3 года назад +9

      To be fair it’s hard to cover society’s which didn’t record their history

    • @dr.vikyll7466
      @dr.vikyll7466 2 года назад +10

      @@ArturMorgan7491 a lot of these societies recorded their history though? But what do expect from Adolf Hitler...

    • @PrussianFrost
      @PrussianFrost 2 года назад

      @@ArturMorgan7491 Fucking finally. At least you get it, people act like its a race thing but NO PEOPLE the societies just didnt document much.

    • @leonshamalla05
      @leonshamalla05 2 года назад +12

      @Danny Tallmage Im from Kenya and im part pf the Luhya ethnic group, we have texts and so many writings dating back to the bantu expansion in kenya. Our history is hidden, because all Africans know that the Europeans tried to erase it and they still try to today. Its easier to learn about africa if you’re there

    • @leonshamalla05
      @leonshamalla05 2 года назад +5

      @Danny Tallmage ur world is so tiny u know nothing outside, Luhya text existed thousands of years ago, we had a writing system similar to the one in Mali. If google is ur only source then maybe go outside

  • @nobody8328
    @nobody8328 2 года назад +11

    Thank you for these videos. I love learning about history, especially the many people and civilizations that weren't discussed during my "classical education".

  • @Genevaave
    @Genevaave 2 года назад +1

    Thanks!

  • @malekaltayari3936
    @malekaltayari3936 3 года назад +128

    Love to all my African brothers from Tunisia 🌹🇹🇳

  • @sc6658
    @sc6658 2 года назад +53

    I really, really enjoy history in a very broad sense (broad meaning I am interested in a lot of different time periods in a lot of different places) and seeing videos on seemingly barely touched subjects like this is absolutely wonderful. I’m a pretty busy person so I love listening to documentary videos like this while I do other work or run errands, and so I don’t get to read as much as I’d like to so videos like this absolutely make my day when I find them. Really quenches my thirst for knowledge that’s seemingly very difficult to find and in a way I can easily manage while going about my busy schedule. Thank you!

    • @D-E-S_8559
      @D-E-S_8559 2 года назад

      " Yoruba dynasty" displaced the Portuguese in the East coast of Africa--NO NO NO! the proliferation of this "internet historians" is to deliberately sow confusion through disambiguation of false facts.....
      Stay focused on the 800+ years of the Moors, Africans and Muslims in the Iberian peninsula....

  • @512TheWolf512
    @512TheWolf512 3 года назад +424

    Every sixty seconds in Africa a minute passes.

  • @BasileiaRomaionHistory
    @BasileiaRomaionHistory 3 года назад +10

    One of the most informative videos I have ever seen on the subject. I have learned many details I was unaware of. Keep up the great work!

  • @kwameadu0075
    @kwameadu0075 3 года назад +338

    No mention of the Asante Empire? Asante was the most powerful empire in West Africa during the 19th century. It was the only West African kingdom to defeat a major European power on more than one occasion. Asante fought the British for a century. You even had a depiction of an Asante soldier during your section on Oyo.

    • @michiga5220
      @michiga5220 3 года назад +31

      We all fought, my country was the first one to be bombed because they couldn't fight us on land or sea, im somali

    • @Olori-Ogun
      @Olori-Ogun 3 года назад +37

      @Wolfgang Rotz When did he say Black you turd ? The man clearly said he was Somali......

    • @Originalchili
      @Originalchili 3 года назад +31

      @@michiga5220 ahh yes the great Somalian military lol

    • @michiga5220
      @michiga5220 3 года назад +9

      @@Originalchili of course what could be any better!

    • @michiga5220
      @michiga5220 3 года назад +34

      @Wolfgang Rotz you sound confused for no reason

  • @anonnymousperson
    @anonnymousperson 3 года назад +182

    This is really amazing and we need more people doing in depth documentaries like this. Thank you Jabzy. This is also possibly the topic I most want to learn more about. Great job!

    • @Black_pearl_adrift
      @Black_pearl_adrift 3 года назад +4

      It's so hard to find videos about African history that can whittle down the huge amount of info!

  • @CommunistLlama
    @CommunistLlama 3 года назад +383

    Attaching the Malagasy to the Maori isn't really that accurate - they're distant and divergent branches. It'd be more appropriate to compare Malays or Indonesian groups, at least linguistically.

    • @theawesomeman9821
      @theawesomeman9821 3 года назад +17

      He probably got his source from Wikipedia

    • @LionClanChief
      @LionClanChief 3 года назад +43

      Plus there were Bantu populations of free Swahili town settlements who populated parts of the North he missed out that bit.

    • @In_Our_Timeline
      @In_Our_Timeline 3 года назад +2

      good point

    • @Matt_The_Hugenot
      @Matt_The_Hugenot 3 года назад +14

      They all descend from populations originating in what's now Taiwan.

    • @alexanderphilip1809
      @alexanderphilip1809 3 года назад +9

      That is indeed a stretch. Genetic similarities Maoris might possess if any would be with their closest neighbours in the Malay archipelago.

  • @leroyeli399
    @leroyeli399 3 года назад +9

    Thank you so much for covering this topic in as much detail as you did. Please keep up with such great content 😍

  • @aerialpunk
    @aerialpunk 3 года назад +47

    This is just so interesting! Thanks for providing such a balanced overview. I really appreciate how you added enough detail while still keeping it brief. And also how you avoided a lot of modern political traps and just focused on the facts. It was just very thoroughly interesting.

    • @rickwilliams967
      @rickwilliams967 Год назад +2

      Sounds like you're trying to find said political traps...

  • @scott2452
    @scott2452 3 года назад +105

    Great content!
    A small error though… “17th century” should refer to the 1600s.

    • @Matt_The_Hugenot
      @Matt_The_Hugenot 3 года назад +10

      The same error crept into mention of the 18th century.

    • @erikawhelan4673
      @erikawhelan4673 3 года назад +13

      There's a persistent off-by-one error in the enumeration of centuries.

    • @allopez33
      @allopez33 3 года назад +1

      LOOK WHO YOU'RE MENTIONING THAT TO.

    • @mpforeverunlimited
      @mpforeverunlimited 2 года назад

      @@erikawhelan4673 it would be easier if 0-99 was referred to as the 0th century or something like that

    • @erikawhelan4673
      @erikawhelan4673 2 года назад +2

      @@mpforeverunlimited You mean 1-100?

  • @Inzira155
    @Inzira155 3 года назад +78

    The Rwanda kingdom didnt start in the late 1600s as mentioned but rather in 11th to 12th centuries, what happened in the 1600s was a rebirth of the defeated kingdom by Ruganzu Ndori after a generation of non existence.

    • @scottanos9981
      @scottanos9981 3 года назад +2

      Also, where the hell did he get the idea that Mormons thought Jesus was born in the United States?

    • @diegelbeseegurke2116
      @diegelbeseegurke2116 3 года назад +4

      @@scottanos9981 It is a bit of a simplification and they naturally don't have the same mythology but I think it's a good analogy.

  • @EvilSmonker
    @EvilSmonker 3 года назад +23

    Love your new style of videos you have been making in the past year (being the longer format), it really allows you to go into detail in the nuanced, unbiased way that you tend to explain history. Still seem short but history is so dense that there is always things that are gonna be left behind.

  • @dejuandipper7821
    @dejuandipper7821 2 года назад +65

    Small correction : at 6:19 the rulers of Oman are named the "Yoruba dynasty" They were the Y'arubid Dynasty or the Yaruba. The Yoruba are a significant ethnic group in Nigeria.

    • @drose6437
      @drose6437 2 года назад

      yeah, but they're not the same

    • @kHoPhAe
      @kHoPhAe 2 года назад +8

      @@drose6437 That's his point

    • @ddd620
      @ddd620 Год назад +1

      @DRose There is a 'not' missing

  • @FrnnkEducation
    @FrnnkEducation 3 года назад +14

    Excited to hear what you've compiled!

  • @oceejekwam6829
    @oceejekwam6829 3 года назад +5

    The animation and sound are perfectly pitched.
    This is one steady stream of facts that ranged throughout the continent.

  • @dvtek
    @dvtek Год назад

    this by far the best history so far of Africa! so transparent and straight forward! looking forward to a part 2

  • @Tacomaster21
    @Tacomaster21 3 года назад +49

    Ty so much Jabzy for covering this subject. It is such an overlooked part of history, but should never be forgotten. Amazing video as always :)

  • @thefrenchkiwi9435
    @thefrenchkiwi9435 3 года назад +190

    An amazing video! We need more content like this, even if it's condensed, because African history is still sadly underrated and overlooked.

    • @dylandylantoriyama5370
      @dylandylantoriyama5370 2 года назад +18

      @The French Kiwi...It's underrated and overlooked because the West did that on purpose. It goes against the centuries of propaganda to paint Africans as one big monolith entity yet the continent is bigger then Europe with more civilizations then one can count on its fingers. The Akan civilization of modern day Ghana and Ivory Coast where a pain in the ass for the British and French with the many wars and victories of the Akan empire.....you really think the French and British in those days would teach how they lost from one of the most powerful and sophisticated African civilization ? No bro. I am not even African but Asian but i learned this later on in University and did my own research. Africa is has a untapped history that fears the west deep down, the west dont know much about Africa and the genesis of African civlizations and empires ..so what you dont know you fear.

    • @eldoplo1155
      @eldoplo1155 2 года назад

      @@dylandylantoriyama5370 this has nothing to do with the west. No one cares anywhere. There’s an entire planet and they also don’t care.

    • @eldoplo1155
      @eldoplo1155 2 года назад +6

      @@dylandylantoriyama5370 they’ve had 0 influence on the world except things like you just listed yourself, being a pain in everyone’s ass. They’ve directly contributed nothing to the modern world, so who cares. Keyword directly. I’m sure you’re gonna go on some cringe rant about their past influences.

    • @pretty7995
      @pretty7995 2 года назад +22

      @@eldoplo1155 What you just wrote makes no sense the world wouldn’t be where it’s at now if it weren’t for the colonisation of africa. Even today Europeans are still scrambling for Africa.

    • @kerenpooh5314
      @kerenpooh5314 2 года назад

      That’s was fine on purpose they even burned many of libraries and now the average African doesn’t know anything about thier own tribe

  • @benc640
    @benc640 3 года назад +200

    Brilliant. I’m ashamed to say that most of my knowledge about early African kingdoms comes from playing EU4 😂
    I also had no idea Tangier was in English hands for a time. Great video - subscribed.

    • @YoungMesrine
      @YoungMesrine 3 года назад

      That's what internet for just look for it.

    • @TK-js7yz
      @TK-js7yz 2 года назад +18

      EU4 and learning about history can go together -- nothing to be ashamed of. On the contrary -- the game is so complex -- only hard core history fans can truly enjoy it

    • @prestonjones1653
      @prestonjones1653 2 года назад +3

      Ck3 led me to a multiday rabbit hole.learning about the Oyo Empire. The spark to drive a search for knowledge matters little, so long as learning is pursued.

  • @ScarsoftheContinent
    @ScarsoftheContinent День назад

    I appreciate your work on this series

  • @MikhailTabigay
    @MikhailTabigay 3 года назад +81

    Another nice series Jabzy! btw I saw you in r/mongolia last week asking for help for a Basic Politics video. How is that? Any news about it?

    • @JabzyJoe
      @JabzyJoe  3 года назад +25

      Afraid not - I'm getting next to no biters on any country.

    • @MikhailTabigay
      @MikhailTabigay 3 года назад +5

      @@JabzyJoe That sucks man :/

  • @Theplanet_Information
    @Theplanet_Information Год назад +6

    Morocco is a rare example of a empire that later became a kingdom, whos people never gave up and kept believing in their Leader and kept fighting for their territories and against colonialism

    • @zenosama8599
      @zenosama8599 Год назад

      ​@NEVERmoreLenoreEVERnope only Moroccans

  • @randomperson6988
    @randomperson6988 3 года назад +102

    I would love to see more African history or discussion about conflict in Africa today

    • @marttiereeds3494
      @marttiereeds3494 3 года назад +10

      Everyone knows most conflicts in developing countries including the Middle East has the hand prints of Western Countries

  • @pablodesilvestro831
    @pablodesilvestro831 3 года назад +7

    High quality content! Great job 🔥

  • @gutyhuy3817
    @gutyhuy3817 3 года назад +23

    Amazing video, I can’t wait for the whole series. Wonder if the Roman, Chinese or Tamil traders from Somalia to modern Mozambique will get a mention.

  • @semregob3363
    @semregob3363 3 года назад +49

    The situation in Sudan was much more dramatic than this, the early 1700s marked the end of a long chaos of infighting in the country that lasted probably for more than 500 years, and saw prosperity that wasn't seen on this land since the emperial days of Kosh. everything was free and if you wanted to go to Hajj or get educated abroad the state would pay the entire costs, this also attracted migrants from west and north Africa.
    however in the early 1800s the Turks barged in in the name of "Caliphate", and the Sudanese people being fairly religious have fallen to this, starting the most humiliating and impoverishing eras in the nations long history, Ottoman/Turk soliders would plunder at will from farmers and herders, until the Mahdist Revolution broke out.

    • @bozkurt7612
      @bozkurt7612 3 года назад +1

      That was the Egyptians not the Turks.

    • @semregob3363
      @semregob3363 3 года назад +15

      @@bozkurt7612 The Egyptians were the "slaves" of the Turks as Mohammad Ali has said. Egyptians are just puppets of anyone who rule their land British/French/Ottomans etc.

    • @elitebeing21
      @elitebeing21 3 года назад

      @@semregob3363 lol

    • @MohamedRamadan-qi4hl
      @MohamedRamadan-qi4hl 3 года назад +1

      @@semregob3363 the armies that Mohamed Ali used to conqueror the region were not even egyptian

    • @Zeyede_Seyum
      @Zeyede_Seyum 3 года назад

      @@MohamedRamadan-qi4hl what were they?

  • @rayanat5803
    @rayanat5803 2 года назад +10

    im from Algeria and theres so much information about us that 95% of algerians doesnt even know, great work.

    • @advendale9119
      @advendale9119 2 года назад +1

      I’m curious if they teach about the Barbary Slave Trade in Algeria? (Between ~1500-1750, North Africans enslaved between 1-1.25 million Europeans through slave raids/piracy. A huge reason why France invaded Algeria in 1830 is because the Algerian government refused to stop enslaving French civilians). I’m just wondering if that is ever taught, or anything like that? Hello from America, I would love to visit the Maghreb one day ☺️

    • @ghassencsetwow
      @ghassencsetwow 2 года назад

      @@advendale9119 they don't even teach us about the trans saharan slave trade which was much much more massive and cruel let alone barbary one .

    • @advendale9119
      @advendale9119 2 года назад +1

      @@ghassencsetwow That is so surprising to me. Why would they not teach you your history? So in Algeria, they teach that Europeans/Americans did colonialism, slavery, etc. but not Arabs?

    • @ghassencsetwow
      @ghassencsetwow 2 года назад +1

      @@advendale9119 they don't teach about slavery at all w unlike sub Saharan Africa we weren't enslaved by Europeans they teach more about the recent colonialism.

    • @drose6437
      @drose6437 2 года назад

      @@advendale9119 yup

  • @Lofirainbows
    @Lofirainbows Год назад +21

    Sorting by newest, wish me luck.

  • @kingstarscream320
    @kingstarscream320 3 года назад +19

    Jazzy, Sandrhoman and Pike and Shot Channel are the best early modern RUclips history documentarians. Some good up and comers I recommend include “From Nothing”

  • @strategicgamingwithaacorns2874
    @strategicgamingwithaacorns2874 3 года назад +37

    THIS is the sort of video you want Boosted for Black History Month.

    • @mikeld2067
      @mikeld2067 3 года назад +2

      Multiple tribes killing eachother is about all they can do lmao

    • @matthewgardner5364
      @matthewgardner5364 3 года назад +28

      ​@@mikeld2067 More of multiple Empires competing against each other; the Empires of Europe/Asia weren't so different with their killings. Just shows how close together we all are

    • @aerialpunk
      @aerialpunk 3 года назад +3

      @@matthewgardner5364 Yeah agreed, I feel like this is not only an interesting overview of African history, but it's very humanizing in a way that a lot of modern talks involving race are not. I feel like it's all heavily, heavily coloured by the history of African slaves in the US, and people from all sides of the topic take those issues and project them onto every part of African history, and it's so inaccurate. Of course Africans had their own kingdoms, cultures, economies, trade relations, etc and very complex relationships with people all over the world - just like people from other continents did. Real history is so much more fascinating than the oversimplified, politicised versions.

    • @matthewgardner5364
      @matthewgardner5364 3 года назад +1

      @@aerialpunk Such a refined way to explain it lol. I concur dude this video based. Like this kinda history right here with its good and bad right and wrong; is my cup of tea. If history was taught like this in the classes and beyond more people would find it interesting. The winners in history can be so biased and leave things out or exaggerate things that were not meant to be so this video speaking from all sides is truly a gift.

    • @aerialpunk
      @aerialpunk 3 года назад +1

      @@matthewgardner5364 Thanks haha. And yeah I agree, watching this made me really feel how narrow the stuff we learn about in history classes is. I remember back when I was in high school, I felt like we spent every year learning the same things about WW2... Funnily enough, half my family is from Poland, and as I'm learning more about that sides history I realise that even with all that education, I actually knew very little about how the war affected the Polish. And that's in a continent we actually learn something about, nevermind places like Africa where you're lucky if they skim over any part of it besides the colonial slave trade. There's a whole world of history out there! And it's all so interesting. It'd be amazing if people would get a class where they just learn about the broad strokes of history in a balanced, unbiased way like this. It'd be interesting and broaden our knowledge a lot.

  • @MirzaAhmed89
    @MirzaAhmed89 3 года назад +54

    6:15 The Sultan of Oman lives in Zanzibar now. That's just where he lives.

  • @mueezadam8438
    @mueezadam8438 9 месяцев назад +1

    I like videos like these because they showcase my favourite part about historical perspectives: how events are so tightly interwoven with their spatial and temporal context that any newcomers (like the colonizers) were totally out of their depth when it came to making sense of the political maneuverings going on around them.
    When Caeser campaigned in Gaul he was always losing and gaining allies out of nowhere as his legions moved around the region. He writes in his histories like he’s in control of the situation but then you step back and realize he gets ambushed way too often to be by chance and he gets saved at the most unlikeliest of times (like during the vercingetorix battles) for him to be less of a mastermind and more of a chaotic element being vyed for by different sides

  • @HerrHayek
    @HerrHayek 2 года назад +12

    Ok, this makes sense...
    The Yarubid dynasty (Arabic: أسرة آل يعرب) (also the Yaruba or Ya'arubi) were rulers of Oman between 1624 and 1742, holding the title of Imam. They expelled the Portuguese from coastal strongholds in Muscat and united the country. They improved agriculture, expanded trade and built up Oman into a major maritime power. Their forces expelled the Portuguese from East Africa north of Mozambique and established long-lasting settlements on Zanzibar, Mombasa and other parts of the coast. The dynasty lost power during a succession struggle that started in 1712 and fell after a prolonged period of civil war.

  • @juord
    @juord 11 месяцев назад +4

    Very great and descriptive video of pre-colonial africa. People are so bigoted and hateful that they forget Africans are human too therefore they also had history

  • @cronaalbarn2146
    @cronaalbarn2146 3 года назад +117

    I've been looking for something like this for years, it's hard to get an idea of Africa brofore the scramble, between the vast distances, jostle environment, lack of records from the various tribal peoples, and a gerneral disinterest by historians of the time made it hard to find info by an amateur like myself. I really can't wait for the next installment

    • @ogeo.8966
      @ogeo.8966 3 года назад +14

      Try watching HomeTeam History videos. They have very good videos on precolonial Africa. Tell your friends lol.

    • @stevenrickett4333
      @stevenrickett4333 3 года назад +2

      There's always books!

    • @bobcostas6272
      @bobcostas6272 3 года назад +7

      “We couldnt write our own history down so this is later people’s faults!”
      Simps in a nutshellz

    • @animuslite8809
      @animuslite8809 3 года назад +1

      @@bobcostas6272 exactly, hes too busy KANGING to think about that tho

    • @tomsea6017
      @tomsea6017 3 года назад +12

      @@bobcostas6272 Yet again another ignorant and stupid statement. There's loads of written history from the ancient Mali empire and the Ethiopian (the various versions over time) empire. Besides issues around the language being indiscernible, there is enough history to cover and yet somehow when people do decide to cover Africa, it is only around slavery. Nobody has to cover anything but if you choose only one part of history, you have to be called out. But then, there're a**holes like you talking crap under every RUclips video which attempts to say anything other than the nonsense they want to believe.

  • @uberdonkey9721
    @uberdonkey9721 2 года назад

    Been looking for a documentary like this for so many years. Thankyou so much.

  • @willh4269
    @willh4269 2 года назад +3

    This was so fascinating thank you very much for this video

  • @Smilemonster1912
    @Smilemonster1912 3 года назад +4

    amazing video, opened my eyes on so many things I never knew about.

  • @winowmak3r
    @winowmak3r 3 года назад +6

    Such an under represented period in history. I never really learned what happened during this period until after I graduated university.

    • @Nytellem
      @Nytellem Год назад

      It’s almost as if it never existed

  • @toastertubbo
    @toastertubbo 3 года назад +4

    YOO HYPE I've been trying to learn about this stuff for a while but I can never get myself to sit down and skim through a textbook - thanks for helping me and a lot of others out!

    • @Black_pearl_adrift
      @Black_pearl_adrift 3 года назад

      Right I've got like 3 textbooks I haven't touched yet. 😭

  • @theodoreroosevelt3143
    @theodoreroosevelt3143 3 года назад +20

    this is one of my favorite videos of yours, i saw it twice.
    i wish we could spread more knowledge about the history of Africa kingdoms.
    "We wuz kangs" meme is racist trash but black Americans praise wrong ancestors(Egypt)
    while there was many great important empires they can be proud of

    • @spitxfire99
      @spitxfire99 3 года назад +5

      @roger barron Name the actual historians you've got your history from which contradicts anything in the video above.

    • @joanthemad5894
      @joanthemad5894 3 года назад +1

      @roger barron uhh the early historians were racists lol especially in the US. Thats why most people out side of africa dont know shit about it but cry ig

    • @DaduaMaiga
      @DaduaMaiga 3 года назад +1

      Exactly.

    • @zombieat
      @zombieat 3 года назад

      @@joanthemad5894 everyone has some racial biases even if not conscious of them.

  • @Aethgeir
    @Aethgeir 3 года назад +34

    Excellent concise history. Really makes me want to do a deep dive into some of these African kingdoms and nation states.

  • @fads90
    @fads90 3 года назад +4

    This was a treat. Great details. Thanks.

  • @JohnDaker35p
    @JohnDaker35p Год назад +6

    This video was very interesting to watch; are the sources you used somewhere I could access? I'd love to delve deeper into these places.

    • @t.c.6920
      @t.c.6920 Месяц назад

      Walter Rodney’s How Europe Underdeveloped Africa has a sizeable chapter covering pre-colonial African history

  • @jdmfan2170
    @jdmfan2170 3 года назад +86

    Not even 10 minutes in the video and the Portuguese are taking wins

    • @exaggeratedswaggerofablackteen
      @exaggeratedswaggerofablackteen 3 года назад +21

      The portuguese are my favorite Iberians.

    • @ushikiii
      @ushikiii 3 года назад +13

      @@exaggeratedswaggerofablackteen I prefer the Spanish

    • @andysawyer647
      @andysawyer647 3 года назад +26

      Wait until you hear about their losses. Like naval battles with poison arrows or when Congo forced them to return a thousand people who were kidnapped and sent to Brazil.

    • @jorge6207
      @jorge6207 3 года назад +4

      @@ushikiii You mean Castilians. Spanish is copyright infringement.

    • @jorge6207
      @jorge6207 3 года назад +4

      @@andysawyer647 Hey, if you want losses I will give you two: Mamora (1515) and Alcácer Quibir (1578). Have fun.

  • @aze94
    @aze94 3 года назад +21

    After you mentioned Muhammad Ali in Egypt I was hoping that you would go a bit deeper on the Egyptian-Ottoman War and the Oriental Crisis. Maybe in the next video?

  • @alexjackson6150
    @alexjackson6150 3 года назад +64

    Nice video. Small correction though, the norman "kingdom of africa" is more likely to be referring to the Roman province of Africa (which was mostly land in current tunisia), as opposed to saying they were the kings of the entire african continent.

    • @abdurrahmanqureshi3030
      @abdurrahmanqureshi3030 2 года назад +1

      That isnt a correction. Your literally just stating your interpretation of what the Normans meant when they stated they were " Kings of Africa". Even though that is just speculation.

    • @hamzahammami22
      @hamzahammami22 2 года назад +10

      @@abdurrahmanqureshi3030 nah what he said was right, africa at the time didn't have the same meaning as today, Africa was the old name of Tunisia with eastern Algeria and western Libya

    • @mpendakiswahili3053
      @mpendakiswahili3053 2 года назад

      @@abdurrahmanqureshi3030 hahaha

  • @amadoudiallo8557
    @amadoudiallo8557 3 года назад +17

    Glad to hear the Fulani get some recognition in African History

  • @mrnicewatch8877
    @mrnicewatch8877 3 года назад +38

    Proud to be Bantu, Shona . My totem and word of mouth family history checks out with your research. Love your channel.❤🇿🇼

    • @Badbadgoodkid
      @Badbadgoodkid 2 года назад

      hi that’s really interesting how it matches id like to know more!

    • @mrnicewatch8877
      @mrnicewatch8877 2 года назад

      @@Badbadgoodkid sure any time .

    • @h.m.5724
      @h.m.5724 2 года назад

      Without correcting him when he said Mutapa State was from Mozambique

    • @Monke_boi13
      @Monke_boi13 2 года назад +1

      @@mrnicewatch8877 we’re Gods true chosen ppl

    • @HonestMan112
      @HonestMan112 2 года назад +1

      @@Monke_boi13 we're all god's people

  • @sipp5657
    @sipp5657 3 года назад +18

    After taking a look through the comment replies and comments it's astonishing to see how many people just hate the idea of Africans being themselves before colonisation 😬like he didn't even say anything bad about Europe but people still mad. for what?????if you hate the idea of Africans thriving on their own just go to a different video?? ignore us and let us enjoy ourselves

    • @wolfgang6442
      @wolfgang6442 3 года назад +6

      Cause they're ignorant and can't except the truth

    • @FazeParticles
      @FazeParticles 3 года назад

      the Africans were supposed to crush the colonials on their coasts. they failed to do that but the fact that they fought them for a century before finally accepting subjugation is very impressive. unfortunately not enough.

    • @sipp5657
      @sipp5657 3 года назад +2

      @@FazeParticles Your comment didn't even respond to my comment it just validated my point further. Do you even know the colonial conflicts? Europeans were fighting across the world (started in African and eventually ended in Africa) for conquering of territories for 350 years (starting 15th century) before the Berlin conference (late 1800s). For those 100s of years everyone was on the same level militarily and the Africans had the home and number and environment advantage that's why we won 75% of the conflicts overall in those years (enough to stop European progression for the most part but not enough to stop them from keep on coming back). They only ever lost to Europeans when the internal conflict of that particular area crushed themselves internally making way for Europeans to come in. The only reason Europeans eventually won was because of the making of the first ever machine gun. that's it. without it you still would have kept losing and eventually giving up. And we did not "finally accepting subjugation" they still fought while subjugated and won eventually.

  • @OACYLU
    @OACYLU 3 года назад +92

    Awesome video! A lot of historical works, however, maintain that European trading initiatives in Guinea and West central Africa were not examples of colonization, not for lack of effort on part of Europe (The Papal Bulls outlining the ethos), but due to the fact that African armies and tropical diseases prevented any effective colonization until the late 19th century. Thus, European factories, forts, and lodges were often merely just that, trade centers, not colonies (practically no women were brought there for example). These were Trade centers that paid rents to powerful states. Colonial society arguably did not extend outside of the walls of the relatively small fortresses on the coasts . African power in the Atlantic age was real. This is not to say that the factories and forts were not powerful and did not impose this power, but African power matched it and each side sought to engage in commerce, which gave way to traditions of negotiation.
    And just a side note, had the merchant elite of Asante chose war instead of indirect colonial rule during the 19th century, the British would have been compelled to face off against hundreds of thousands of riflemen. Although there was conflict between the British and Asante, internal divisions prevented Asante from fully exerting itself against the Europeans. Many Gold Coast elites actually preferred what we call colonialism in efforts to modernize and industrialize, but of course the British were more interested in exploitation. But negotiation still occurred, which is likely why Ghana is where it is today! After roughly half a century of colonialism, Ghanaian elites were ready to challenge the British for independence, which they gained in 1957, being the first Black African nation to do so. Technically the region was never conquered per se, even in the Ages of Mali and Songhai, Sudanic cavalries could not overcome the forest societies of the Gold Coast, so negotiation gave way to a flourishing Gold trade. Not tryna hate lol ! I really enjoyed watching this, we need more stuff like this, and the imagery is really cool!

    • @shaftlamer
      @shaftlamer 2 года назад

      i bet we´ve been preventing you from learning to read with the 60% illiteracy rate in africa, right?

    • @godlikemonolith
      @godlikemonolith Год назад

      You are acting as if colonisation and subjugation ended after countries gained independence. You also ignore that much of colonisation wa specifically predicated on divide and conquer. Identify divisions in society, exploit those divisions to your side. Guess what, we are still doing this by bribing the ‘elites’ as you put it and subverting democracy to ensure our businesses operate without bother. It never stopped.

  • @carnage9413
    @carnage9413 3 года назад +1

    Beautiful video man, i love the music and the way you speak so calming:)

  • @DocMatthews0311
    @DocMatthews0311 3 года назад +3

    We appreciate your research and insight ✊🏽

  • @markhartfield8186
    @markhartfield8186 Год назад +6

    Glad to see everyone is educated now.

  • @LionClanChief
    @LionClanChief 3 года назад +63

    The Mutapa empire was not in Mozambique its had territories covering parts of Mozambique but the kingdom was still in Zimbabwe.

    • @tobilobaokorodudu9594
      @tobilobaokorodudu9594 3 года назад +23

      @@Kemetyu-Centered36 Wtf!!!! I've watched the whole video about thrice now and nowhere did i get even just an inkling of intentional bias

    • @andysawyer647
      @andysawyer647 3 года назад +8

      @@tobilobaokorodudu9594 he did a really good job overall, but it is quite Euro-centric. Before the Crimean war Africa was not a viable place to "take over" . Then came the Maxim gun, quinine, and civil disruption in different empires at different times. Much of the western and eastern parts of the content were being depopulated for over 2 centuries and it caused economic stagnation and civil regression.

    • @theveryproudmoroccan2834
      @theveryproudmoroccan2834 3 года назад

      @@Kemetyu-Centered36 no

    • @theveryproudmoroccan2834
      @theveryproudmoroccan2834 3 года назад +1

      @@andysawyer647 i don't agree

    • @Zathriscm
      @Zathriscm 3 года назад +5

      Always enjoy seeing your comments. You should make videos

  • @davidmizak4642
    @davidmizak4642 2 года назад +2

    You deliver excellent content to your audience. All of your effort put into creating this video is much appreciated. I'm truly grateful for your help!

  • @ftrgs7720
    @ftrgs7720 3 года назад +8

    Awesome video. Can you list your sources? I would be really interested to read them too.

  • @Mr.Nichan
    @Mr.Nichan 3 года назад +12

    6:17 The Ya'aruba/Ya'arubi/Ya'rubid Dynasty of Oman, not to be confused with the Yoruba from modern day Southwest Nigeria, Benin, and Togo, and the historical Oyo Empire and Ile-Ife Kingdom.

  • @XScorpionXful
    @XScorpionXful 3 года назад +24

    19:27 the history of Genoese Tabarkans doesn't end here: around the 1700s, coral trade was declining, and the island was occupied by the Bey of Tunis. However Charles Emmanuel III, king of Sardinia, ransomed some of the Tabarkan Ligurians to settle them in the island of St. Peter and the island of St. Antioch, both in a minor archipelago off the Western coast of Sardinia (though some already migrated there). The name of their first city, Carloforte (or Fort of Charles), was chosen in his honor. To this day, around 15.000 people still speak Tabarkan Ligurian there.

    • @MarkosMiller15
      @MarkosMiller15 3 года назад +1

      I'm Tunisian and I didn't know about that, thank you for sharing this information. Also that explains the distinctly european archtectural style of the villages and towns in that region of the country.

  • @deleted-something
    @deleted-something Год назад

    Finally I find one of these videos, very underapreciated overall, this is gonna be a interesting video

  • @masehoart7569
    @masehoart7569 3 года назад +15

    Super impressively & accurately done! Only AmaXhosa are factually Bantu - the word simply means "people" or many persons, singular Muntu ... it's a linguistic classification referring to a multitude of ethnicities who regardless of distances share a certain amount of similar words & customs which go back to a proto group, like Celts - the illustration at 5:20 is a Ndebele not a Shona - and all Bantu are mixed with whoever who was already in the regions they settled ...

    • @LionClanChief
      @LionClanChief 3 года назад +3

      It's a language family. Like Indo European, Afroasiatic and Niger Congo for example.

    • @avriel9527
      @avriel9527 3 года назад +1

      This us not accurately done! As usual, very eurocentric.

    • @thisvidsonly.7601
      @thisvidsonly.7601 2 года назад

      @@LionClanChief bantu languages are niger congo languages

    • @LionClanChief
      @LionClanChief 2 года назад

      @@thisvidsonly.7601 they aren't the same language family there is a link yes bit they aren't the same.

  • @yungjohnathan1188
    @yungjohnathan1188 3 года назад +8

    Fascinating content!

  • @thewallachianbard6975
    @thewallachianbard6975 3 года назад +17

    I've literally never been taught any of this in school .
    Thank you, Jabzy

    • @MarloSoBalJr
      @MarloSoBalJr 2 года назад +1

      Cos it doesn't feed the narrative. It requires research beyond the classroom

    • @Bolognabeef
      @Bolognabeef 2 года назад

      Because all of this contributed literally zero to history (except the Boers). It's simply irrelevant

  • @NostalgicBlackCulture
    @NostalgicBlackCulture 3 года назад +2

    Thanks for covering this topic I noticed before recently I had hard time finding videos on Africa before slavery

  • @douglasemmett8686
    @douglasemmett8686 3 года назад +8

    As an African from Ghana I know there is kingdoms b4 the scramble of africa but this video give me more insight of how a lot of things happen. Thanks for sharing

  • @thefulanichad
    @thefulanichad 3 года назад +8

    Thx you Jabzy I’m Fulani , I really appreciate the work you put on this videos 💪🏾💪🏾 , If you can do something about the fulani Jihad it will be 😍

    • @thefulanichad
      @thefulanichad 3 года назад

      I was subscribed to your channel since 2019 , you made my day bro 😎

    • @Falsafadantafa
      @Falsafadantafa 3 года назад +1

      Jam my brother 💪🏾

    • @hassanabdikarimmohamed2505
      @hassanabdikarimmohamed2505 3 года назад +2

      @@thefulanichad fulani are nothing compared to Hausa, hence why this video only mentioned thr powerful Hausa states and kingdom, hausa are chadic afroasiatic people related to Somalis who are Cushitic Afroasiatic people, hausa is the largest tribe in west africa in population and hausa had the earliest powerful Islamic kingdoms in their region

    • @thefulanichad
      @thefulanichad 3 года назад +1

      @@hassanabdikarimmohamed2505 who rule Hausa & Nigeria since three century ? 😭😭

    • @hassanabdikarimmohamed2505
      @hassanabdikarimmohamed2505 3 года назад

      @@thefulanichad Nigeria has been ruled by hausa generald and politicians since the 1960s, in fact the fulani (niger congo west africans) have all mixed with hausa (chwdic afroasiatic people carrying non african R1b dna) so that they can act special 🤣 🤣 🤣 hausa are your cultural masters, you learned Islam from hausa kingdoms who civilised you

  • @Artur_M.
    @Artur_M. 3 года назад +84

    Truly impressive summary/introduction to an enormous and complicated topic!
    BTW speaking of weird attempts of colonisation in Madagascar, there was certain Hungarian-Slovak-kinda-Polish nobleman Maurice Benyovszky (also spelt Beňovský or Beniowski), who after fighting in the Polish Bar Confederation against Russia, then being imprisoned all the way in Kamchatka and escaping, ended up having adventures in Madagascar, even trying to become a ruler of a part of the island. His story would be quite the material for a video of its own, especially as apparently a considerable amount of exaggerations and fiction got entangled with the facts in it.

    • @rediettadesse2828
      @rediettadesse2828 3 года назад

      I will NEVER believe the first habitants of madagascar are from around india and not bantu or from africa ?

  • @renaultft-1732
    @renaultft-1732 3 года назад

    This video is amazing. Its so condense and concise

  • @Archius_09
    @Archius_09 3 года назад +10

    Africa is very underrated

  • @kwakuba9167
    @kwakuba9167 3 года назад +40

    Point of correction. Africans are not a people. We are the African peopleS. Plural. Many distinct ethnic cultural linguistic and racial groups. Many. Saying the African people is like saying the Asian people or the pre colonial North American people as if they were a single monolithic entity. We were not, on any level and that is the case to this day.

    • @avisitor5427
      @avisitor5427 3 года назад +5

      Indeed , America’s tendency to identify with color is culturally destructive . Tho some populations of the country have no choice , it’s still not a good thing in itself situationally

    • @aerialpunk
      @aerialpunk 3 года назад +4

      Well, you're correct, but given that he spends the entire video talking about different regions with their kingdoms, languages, religions, internal and international relationships, etc I'm not sure it's really relevant/necessary to point it out... Because nothing in the videos content suggests he actually thinks they were literally all just one people.

  • @PAGoldenglovechamp06
    @PAGoldenglovechamp06 3 года назад +4

    I am African American and I love my blood. Far too long tho african history is told be out raiders. I will be visiting African for 6 months in February. I will be traveling to Nigeria Ethiopia and Sudan. Nigeria because I did a genetic test and I have high markers for hausa and Fulani people from nigeria I want to visit Ethiopia and Sudan because I have always wanted to visit. Love my black people.

  • @sagebias2251
    @sagebias2251 3 года назад

    Finally. I have been waiting for this for a long time.

  • @TheLosrodri
    @TheLosrodri 2 года назад +5

    Great production overall, definitely clean, BUT….a little too disjointed for me to get as much out of this as I could have. Might I suggest following the timeline chronologically, rather than, well, randomly?

  • @profverstrooid9401
    @profverstrooid9401 3 года назад +10

    I'm a South African. You may be aware of the Boer Great Trek, however, the free Afrikaans-speaking mixed race peoples of the Cape would also undertake their own treks to evade British dominion.
    These people were the original Afrikaners - the move to apply this term to white people only really became popular due to the efforts of Jan Hendrik Hofmeyer in the mid-late 1800s.
    These Afrikaners were also known as the Griqua or Griekwa. Some of them emigrated as far as Namibia, which is the origin of Windhoek (named after their origins in the Winterhoek mountainrange near Cape Town).
    Another Griqua state was established in the current North-West province of South Africa, called Griqualand West, and yet another was established in the border regions between the current Eastern Cape and KwaZulu Natal provinces, called Griqualand East. These states were later annexed by the British, however.
    The Griqua were a very unique people - Afrikaans speaking non-Europeans who wore European fashion, practiced marksmanship, drove lagers, practiced Christianity and used Roman-Dutch legal jurisprudence - essentially the same as the Boers, except that they were non-white.

    • @rioscordoba606
      @rioscordoba606 3 года назад +2

      I read a pdf(can't remember the name) about the original user of the word afrikaner.
      It went something like the 1st person to call himself a afrikaner wasn't a white skinned person, but a clear mixed person who got tried for something and responded to judge or magistrate In something like this, "you can't judge, I'm an afrikaner".
      If you can help me with the source, it would be greatly appreciated, because you sound like you have more knowledge on south African colonial history.

    • @profverstrooid9401
      @profverstrooid9401 3 года назад +1

      @@rioscordoba606 It appears Hendrik was, however, a European. But the article reiterates that, until that point, the term 'Afrikaner' applied exclusively to non-white or mixed settlers.

    • @TheMrgoodmanners
      @TheMrgoodmanners 3 года назад

      Griqua we're offspring of Dutch colonial settlers and enslaved Khoisan and Malay women.

  • @evere777x
    @evere777x 2 года назад +11

    its so weird to read these comments from americans being suprised that africa had much more complex history than they thought... I'm Polish and although we didn't learn african history in schools, we had some basics. Because it's simply impossible to equally learn about each single place in the world, but it makes sense to learn basics about these. I feel like americans dont learn... anything? in schools? That would explain why there are so many suprised people in comments, and why most of americans cant place a country on a map different than USA.

    • @evere777x
      @evere777x 2 года назад +1

      @@butcherofthybussy id say that 3 out of 5 people would guess Peru correctly, Wyoming I don't think so but thats like asking where german land Hessen is. But if you asked about all the major cities in US and better known states, i dont think anyone would have a problem. It's just basic world stuff you dont need to be a genius for it lol

    • @mollyblake9160
      @mollyblake9160 Год назад +2

      It's so weird you made this comment when thats not at all what I've seen in the comments. Can't even let a video about Africa be about Africa... why are you making this about the US?

    • @evere777x
      @evere777x Год назад

      @@mollyblake9160 guess we're in different comment section then XD

  • @sittingupnmyroom5456
    @sittingupnmyroom5456 3 года назад +1

    This information is very important to know, great work!

  • @sjappiyah4071
    @sjappiyah4071 3 года назад +13

    4:48 “ Sort of like an African version of Mormonism “ LOOOL GOLD

    • @LEFT4BASS
      @LEFT4BASS 3 года назад +4

      It’s really not accurate though. We believe Jesus visited the Americas, not that he was born or originated from here

    • @scottanos9981
      @scottanos9981 3 года назад +2

      My SIDES this "historian" sucks!

    • @sjappiyah4071
      @sjappiyah4071 3 года назад

      @@LEFT4BASS Hence why he said “SORT OF” not precisely.
      The whole point is just like you Mormons, they made up a fictional story of Jesus to insert him into their geographical/cultural context because they like american mormons think they’re the main character loool

    • @sjappiyah4071
      @sjappiyah4071 3 года назад

      @@scottanos9981 Cry harder

    • @ueks69
      @ueks69 3 года назад

      @@LEFT4BASS 😂🤣

  • @MS-dv7bd
    @MS-dv7bd 2 года назад +79

    As an African, it makes me sad to think about what we could've had and been as a people if circumstances were different.

    • @IrishCinnsealach
      @IrishCinnsealach 2 года назад

      You would be like this
      ruclips.net/video/tnRtBg2wxow/видео.html

    • @theActive_guitarist
      @theActive_guitarist 2 года назад +21

      I'm from Ghana...if you're to have a conversation with an ordinary person concerning some of our past civilisations they won't even believe such a history...In Ghana we look down on ourselves and think white people are the ones with all the knowledge...

    • @MS-dv7bd
      @MS-dv7bd 2 года назад

      😔

    • @brianbillingham3283
      @brianbillingham3283 2 года назад

      That is one of the many reasons blacks have always performed disastrously in all categories except running. Stop making excuses and ask yourself why my people cannot do anything right?

    • @odinfromcentr2
      @odinfromcentr2 2 года назад +7

      ​@@theActive_guitarist No one person or group of people ever had, has now, or ever will have all the knowledge there is to have, even if you expand the size of that group to everyone alive.
      Even a toddler can teach us something. 🙂

  • @greenwaysha4596
    @greenwaysha4596 3 года назад +3

    the Somali Ajuuran Empire had already fought with the Portuguese to free the Swahilis in Mombasa n further south areas in 1538-57, then Portuguese came back with a larger troops around1580-89 but this time they was going for Mogadishu and after a while n with the help of the Turkish Ottoman Empire we defeated them about a hundred years before the Adal empire invasion to Ethiopia.Another reason why the Portuguese helped Ethiopia was because they had personal grudge for the Muslim Somalis.
    Let’s not forget Ethiopians still eat raw meat to this day because of what the Somali Adal Empire did to them. They were literally scared to make fires n cook their food because if the Somalis saw the fire smoke or even smelled food being cooked they would go and kill ‘em all and this was going on for almost 15 years. That’s why to this day Raw meat is a delicacy for the Ethiopians

  • @festusmichira2727
    @festusmichira2727 2 года назад +1

    Thanks for such a great 👍 video of African history 👏