Originally posted by Albert Speer
say what?
you apparently didn't read enough if you came up with this stupid, horribly wrong conclusion that sub-saharan africa was primitive
say what?
you apparently didn't read enough if you came up with this stupid, horribly wrong conclusion that sub-saharan africa was primitive
I know it was mostly agricultural and sedentary, and hunting-gathering was nearly inexistent except in underpopulated jungles. I know the Africans had no trouble remaining at the top of the food chain. I know there was such a thing as politics in Africa, with the complexity of lineage societies (which btw were opposed to the possibility of a centralised power). I know Africa had its own religions and rites. Subsaharian Africans definitely knew how to trade as well: they traded slaves easily, and the Niger Delta empires took their wealth from trading gold with North Africa.
However, it seems subsaharian Africa didn't develop technology on its own past this neolithic stage. The few elaborate weapons (starting with iron swords) used by subsaharian empires were bought to the Arabs. Ethiopia's centralized power was directly inspired by the Arabs, and founding myths of the Ghana empires talk about Jews fleeing to southern Sahara and creating an empire.
Subsaharian Africans have always supplied slaves to foreign powers, starting with the Nubians and their yearly supply to Egypt.
I've read here about the "spear principle" (I think that's the name) : intelligent species may develop enough tech to move to the top of the food chain, but no further, because nobody's challenging them. This theory implies that the intelligent species is peaceful, and not oriented towards killing itself (this is obviously not the case for the human being).
Africa was everything but peaceful, so the 'spear principle' doesn't apply there. So, I reamin clueless to why the technology tree seemed to stop about before bronze age for subsaharian Africa, and why the empires spanning there didn't seem to be able to develop techs by themselves.
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