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Africa
Africa
is the world's second largest and second most-populous
continent, after Asia. At about 30,221,532 km²
(11,668,545 mi²) including adjacent islands,
it covers 6.0% of the Earth's total surface area,
and 20.4% of the total land area. With more than
890,000,000 people (as of 2005) in 61 territories,
it accounts for about 14% of the world's human
population. The continent is surrounded by the
Mediterranean Sea to the north, the Suez Canal
and the Red Sea to the northeast, the Indian Ocean
to the southeast, and the Atlantic Ocean to the
west.
Africa
straddles the equator and encompasses numerous climate
areas; it is the only continent to stretch from the
northern temperate to southern temperate zones. Because
of the lack of natural regular precipitation and irrigation
as well as glaciers or mountain aquifer systems, there
is no natural moderating effect on the climate except
near the coasts.
Etymology
Afri was the name of several peoples who dwelt in
North Africa near the provincial capital, Carthage.
The Roman suffix "-ca" denotes "country
or land".
Other
etymologies that have been postulated for the ancient
name 'Africa' with less support include:
the
Latin word aprica, meaning "sunny";
the Greek word aphrike, meaning "without cold."
This was proposed by historian Leo Africanus (1488-1554),
who suggested the Greek word phrike (f????, meaning
"cold and horror"), combined with the negating
prefix "a-", thus indicating a land free
of cold and horror. However, as the change of sound
from ph to f in Greek is datable to about the 10th
century, it is unlikely this is the origin.
Geography
Geography of Africa
A composite satellite image of Africa.Africa is
the largest of the three great southward projections
from the main mass of the Earth's exposed surface.
Separated from Europe by the Mediterranean Sea,
it is joined to Asia at its northeast extremity
by the Isthmus of Suez (transected by the Suez
Canal), 163 km (101 miles) wide. (Geopolitically,
Egypt's Sinai Peninsula east of the Suez Canal
is often considered part of Africa, as well.)
From the most northerly point, Ras ben Sakka in
Tunisia (37°21' N), to the most southerly
point, Cape Agulhas in South Africa (34°51'15"
S), is a distance of approximately 8,000 km (5,000
miles);[4] from Cape Verde, 17°33'22"
W, the westernmost point, to Ras Hafun in Somalia,
51°27'52" E, the most easterly projection,
is a distance of approximately 7,400 km (4,600
miles).[5] The coastline is 26,000 km (16,100
miles) long, and the absence of deep indentations
of the shore is illustrated by the fact that Europe,
which covers only 10,400,000 km² (4,010,000
square miles) about a third of the surface
of Africa has a coastline of 32,000 km
(19,800 miles).
Africa's
largest country is Sudan, and its smallest country
is the Seychelles, an archipelago off the east coast.
[6] The smallest nation on the continental mainland
is The Gambia.
According
to the ancient Romans, Africa lay to the west of Egypt,
while "Asia" was used to refer to Anatolia
and lands to the east. A definite line was drawn between
the two continents by the geographer Ptolemy (85 -
165 AD), indicating Alexandria along the Prime Meridian
and making the isthmus of Suez and the Red Sea the
boundary between Asia and Africa. As Europeans came
to understand the real extent of the continent, the
idea of Africa expanded with their knowledge.
Climate, fauna, and flora
The climate of Africa ranges from tropical to subarctic
on its highest peaks. Its northern half is primarily
desert or arid, while its central and southern areas
contain both savanna plains and very dense jungle
(rainforest) regions. In between, there is a convergence
where vegetation patterns such as sahel, and steppe
dominate.
Africa
boasts perhaps the world's largest combination of
density and "range of freedom" of wild animal
populations and diversity, with wild populations of
large carnivores (such as lions, hyenas, and cheetahs)
and herbivores (such as buffalo, deer, elephants,
camels, and giraffes) ranging freely on primarily
open non-private plains. It is also home to a variety
of jungle creatures (including snakes and primates)
and aquatic life (including crocodiles and amphibians).
Geography of Africa
A composite satellite image of Africa.Africa is
the largest of the three great southward projections
from the main mass of the Earth's exposed surface.
Separated from Europe by the Mediterranean Sea,
it is joined to Asia at its northeast extremity
by the Isthmus of Suez (transected by the Suez
Canal), 163 km (101 miles) wide.[3] (Geopolitically,
Egypt's Sinai Peninsula east of the Suez Canal
is often considered part of Africa, as well.)
From the most northerly point, Ras ben Sakka in
Tunisia (37°21' N), to the most southerly
point, Cape Agulhas in South Africa (34°51'15"
S), is a distance of approximately 8,000 km (5,000
miles);[4] from Cape Verde, 17°33'22"
W, the westernmost point, to Ras Hafun in Somalia,
51°27'52" E, the most easterly projection,
is a distance of approximately 7,400 km (4,600
miles).[5] The coastline is 26,000 km (16,100
miles) long, and the absence of deep indentations
of the shore is illustrated by the fact that Europe,
which covers only 10,400,000 km² (4,010,000
square miles) about a third of the surface
of Africa has a coastline of 32,000 km
(19,800 miles).
Africa's
largest country is Sudan, and its smallest country
is the Seychelles, an archipelago off the east
coast. The smallest nation on the continental
mainland is The Gambia.
According
to the ancient Romans, Africa lay to the west of Egypt,
while "Asia" was used to refer to Anatolia
and lands to the east. A definite line was drawn between
the two continents by the geographer Ptolemy (85 -
165 AD), indicating Alexandria along the Prime Meridian
and making the isthmus of Suez and the Red Sea the
boundary between Asia and Africa. As Europeans came
to understand the real extent of the continent, the
idea of Africa expanded with their knowledge.
Climate, fauna, and flora
The climate of Africa ranges from tropical to subarctic
on its highest peaks. Its northern half is primarily
desert or arid, while its central and southern areas
contain both savanna plains and very dense jungle
(rainforest) regions. In between, there is a convergence
where vegetation patterns such as sahel, and steppe
dominate.
Africa
boasts perhaps the world's largest combination of
density and "range of freedom" of wild animal
populations and diversity, with wild populations of
large carnivores (such as lions, hyenas, and cheetahs)
and herbivores (such as buffalo, deer, elephants,
camels, and giraffes) ranging freely on primarily
open non-private plains. It is also home to a variety
of jungle creatures (including snakes and primates)
and aquatic life (including crocodiles and amphibians).
History
History of Africa
Africa is considered by most paleoanthropologists
to be the oldest inhabited territory on earth, with
the human species originating from the continent.
During the middle of the twentieth century, anthropologists
discovered many fossils and evidence of human occupation
perhaps as early as 7 million years ago. Fossil remains
of several species of early apelike humans thought
to have evolved into modern man, such as Australopithecus
afarensis (radiometrically dated to c. 3.9-3.0 million
years BC),[7] Paranthropus boisei (c. 2.3-1.4 million
BC)[8] and Homo ergaster (c. 600,000-1.9 million BC)
have been discovered.
The
Ishango bone, dated to about 25,000 years ago,
shows tallies in mathematical notation. Throughout
humanity's prehistory, Africa (like all other
continents) had no nation states, and was instead
inhabited by groups of hunter-gatherers such as
the Khoi and San.
At
the end of the Ice Ages, estimated to have been around
10,500 BC, the Sahara had become a green fertile valley
again, and its African populations returned from the
interior and coastal highlands in Sub-Saharan Africa.
However, the warming and drying climate meant that
by 5000 BC the Sahara region was becoming increasingly
drier. The population trekked out of the Sahara region
towards the Nile Valley below the Second Cataract
where they made permanent or semi-permanent settlements.
A major climatic recession occurred, lessening the
heavy and persistent rains in Central and Eastern
Africa. Since then dry conditions have prevailed in
Eastern Africa, especially in Ethiopia in the last
200 years.
The
domestication of cattle in Africa precedes agriculture
and seems to have existed alongside hunter-gathering
cultures. It is speculated that by 6000 BC cattle
were already domesticated in North Africa . In
the Sahara-Nile complex, people domesticated many
animals including the pack ass, and a small screw
horned goat which was common from Algeria to Nubia.
Agriculturally,
the first cases of domestication of plants for agricultural
purposes occurred in the Sahel region circa 5000 BC,
when sorghum and African rice began to be cultivated.
Around this time, and in the same region, the small
guinea fowl became domesticated.
According
to the Oxford Atlas of World History, in the year
4000 BC the climate of the Sahara started to become
drier at an exceedingly fast pace[13]. This climate
change caused lakes and rivers to shrink rather significantly
and caused increasing desertification. This, in turn,
decreased the amount of land conducive to settlements
and helped to cause migrations of farming communities
to the more tropical climate of West Africa[14].
By
3000 BC agriculture arose independently in both the
tropical portions of West Africa, where African yams
and oil palms were domesticated, and in Ethiopia,
where coffee and teff became domesticated. No animals
were independently domesticated in these regions,
although domestication did spread there from the Sahel
and Nile regions[15]. Agricultural crops were also
adopted from other regions around this time as pearl
millet, cowpea, groundnut, cotton, watermelon and
bottle gourds began to be grown agriculturally in
both West Africa and the Sahel Region while finger
millet, peas, lentil and flax took hold in Ethiopia[16].
The
international phenomenon known as the Beaker culture
began to affect western North Africa. Named for the
distinctively shaped ceramics found in graves, the
Beaker culture is associated with the emergence of
a warrior mentality. North African rock art of this
period depicts animals but also places a new emphasis
on the human figure, equipped with weapons and adornments.
People from the Great Lakes Region of Africa settled
along the eastern shore of the Mediterranean Sea to
become the proto-Canaanites who dominated the lowlands
between the Jordan River, the Mediterranean and the
Sinai Desert.
By
the 1st millennium BC ironworking had been introduced
in Northern Africa and quickly began spreading across
the Sahara into the northern parts of sub-saharan
Africa[17] and by 500 BC metalworking began to become
commonplace in West Africa, possibly after being introduced
by the Carthaginians. Ironworking was fully established
by roughly 500 BC in areas of East and West Africa,
though other regions didn't begin ironworking until
the early centuries AD. Some copper objects from Egypt,
North Africa, Nubia and Ethiopia have been excavated
in West Africa dating from around 500 BC, suggesting
that trade networks had been established by this time.
Early civilisations and trade
About 3300 BC, the historical record opens in Africa
with the rise of literacy in the Pharaonic-ruled civilisation
of Ancient Egypt, which continued, with varying levels
of influence over other areas, until 343 BC.[19][20]
Prominent civilisations at different times include
Carthage, the Kingdom of Aksum, the Nubian kingdoms,
the empires of the Sahel (Kanem-Bornu, Ghana, Mali,
and Songhai), Great Zimbabwe, and the Kongo.[21][22]
After
the Sahara had become a desert it did not present
an impenetrable barrier for travellers between north
and south. Even prior to the introduction of the camel[23]
the use of oxen for desert crossing was common, and
trade routes followed oases that were strung across
the desert. The camel was first brought to Egypt by
the Persians after 525 BC, although large herds did
not become common enough in North Africa to establish
the trans-Saharan trade until the eighth century AD.
The Sanhaja Berbers were the first to exploit this.
Pre-colonial
Africa possessed perhaps as many as 10,000 different
states and polities [3] characterised by different
sorts of political organisation and rule. These included
small family groups of hunter-gatherers such as the
San people of southern Africa; larger, more structured
groups such as the family clan groupings of the Bantu-speaking
people of central and southern Africa and heavily-structured
clan groups in the Horn of Africa, the Sahelian Kingdoms,
and autonomous city-states such as the Swahili coastal
trading towns of the East African coast, whose trade
network extended as far as China.
In
1414, the Chinese admiral Zheng He visited Africa's
east coast. In 1482, the Portuguese established the
first of many trading stations along the coast of
Ghana at Elmina. The chief commodities dealt in were
slaves, gold, ivory and spices. The European discovery
of the Americas in 1492 was followed by a great development
of the slave trade, which, before the Portuguese era,
had been an overland trade almost exclusively, and
never confined to any one continent.
In
West Africa, the decline of the Atlantic slave trade
in the 1820s caused dramatic economic shifts in local
polities. The gradual decline of slave-trading, prompted
by a lack of demand for slaves in the New World, increasing
anti-slavery legislation in Europe and America, and
the British navy's increasing presence off the West
African coast, obliged African states to adopt new
economies. The largest powers of West Africa: the
Asante Confederacy, the Kingdom of Dahomey, and the
Oyo Empire, adopted different ways of adapting to
the shift. Asante and Dahomey concentrated on the
development of "legitimate commerce" in
the form of palm oil, cocoa, timber and gold, forming
the bedrock of West Africa's modern export trade.
The Oyo Empire, unable to adapt, collapsed into civil
wars.
Pre-colonial exploration
In the mid-nineteenth century, European explorers
became interested in exploring the heart of the continent
and opening the area for trade, mining and other commercial
exploitation. In addition, there was a desire to convert
the inhabitants to Christianity. The central area
of Africa was still largely unknown to Europeans at
this time. David Livingstone explored the continent
between 1852 and his death in 1873; amongst other
claims to fame, he was the first European to see the
Victoria Falls. A prime goal for explorers was to
locate the source of the River Nile. Expeditions by
Burton and Speke (1857-1858) and Speke and Grant (1863)
located Lake Tanganyika and Lake Victoria. The latter
was eventually proven as the source of the Nile. With
subsequent expeditions by Baker and Stanley, Africa
was well explored by the end of the century and this
was to lead the way for the colonization which followed.
Colonialism and the "scramble for Africa"
Main article: Colonization of Africa
Map showing European territorial claims on the African
continent in 1914In the late nineteenth century, the
European imperial powers engaged in a major territorial
scramble and occupied most of the continent, creating
many colonial nation states, and leaving only two
independent nations: Liberia, an independent state
partly settled by African Americans; and Orthodox
Christian Abyssinia (known today as Ethiopia). Colonial
rule by Europeans would continue until after the conclusion
of World War II, when all colonial states gradually
obtained formal independence.
Colonialism
had a destabilising effect on a number of ethnic groups
that is still being felt in African politics. Before
European influence, national borders were not much
of a concern, with Africans generally following the
practice of other areas of the world, such as the
Arabian Peninsula, where a group's territory was congruent
with its military or trade influence. The European
insistence of drawing borders around territories to
isolate them from those of other colonial powers often
had the effect of separating otherwise contiguous
political groups, or forcing traditional enemies to
live side by side with no buffer between them. For
example, although the Congo River appears to be a
natural geographic boundary, there were groups that
otherwise shared a language, culture or other similarity
living on both sides. The division of the land between
Belgium and France along the river isolated these
groups from each other. Those who lived in Saharan
or Sub-Saharan Africa and traded across the continent
for centuries often found themselves crossing borders
that existed only on European maps.
In
nations that had substantial European populations,
for example Rhodesia (now Zimbabwe) and South Africa,
systems of second-class citizenship were often set
up in order to give Europeans political power far
in excess of their numbers. In the Congo Free State,
personal property of King Leopold II of Belgium, the
native population was submitted to inhumane treatments,
and a near slavery status assorted with forced labor.
However, the lines were not always drawn strictly
across racial lines. In Liberia, citizens who were
descendants of American slaves had a political system
for over 100 years that gave ex-slaves and natives
to the area roughly equal legislative power despite
the fact the ex-slaves were outnumbered ten to one
in the general population. The inspiration for this
system was the United States Senate, which had balanced
the power of free and slave states despite the much-larger
population of the former.
Europeans
often altered the local balance of power, created
ethnic divides where they did not previously exist,
and introduced a cultural dichotomy detrimental to
the native inhabitants in the areas they controlled.
For example, in what are now Rwanda and Burundi, two
ethnic groups Hutus and Tutsis had merged into one
culture by the time German colonists had taken control
of the region in the nineteenth century. No longer
divided by ethnicity as intermingling, intermarriage,
and merging of cultural practices over the centuries
had long since erased visible signs of a culture divide,
Belgium instituted a policy of racial categorisation
upon taking control of the region, as racial based
categorisation and philosophies was a fixture of the
European culture of that time. The term Hutu originally
referred to the agricultural-based Bantu-speaking
peoples that moved into present day Rwanda and Burundi
from the West, and the term Tutsi referred to Northeastern
cattle-based peoples that migrated into the region
later. The terms described a person's economic class;
individuals who owned roughly 10 or more cattle were
considered Tutsi, and those with fewer were considered
Hutu, regardless of ancestral history. This was not
a strict line but a general rule of thumb, and one
could move from Hutu to Tutsi and vice versa.
The
Belgians introduced a racialized system; European-like
features such as fairer skin, ample height, narrow
noses were seen as more ideally Hamitic, and belonged
to those people closest to Tutsi in ancestry, who
were thus given power amongst the colonised peoples.
Identity cards were issued based on this philosophy.
Post-colonial Africa
Today, Africa contains 53 independent and sovereign
countries, which mostly still have the borders drawn
during the era of European colonialism.
Since
colonialism, African states have frequently been hampered
by instability, corruption, violence, and authoritarianism.
The vast majority of African nations are republics
that operate under some form of the presidential system
of rule. However, few of them have been able to sustain
democratic governments, and many have instead cycled
through a series of coups, producing military dictatorships.
A number of Africa's post-colonial political leaders
were military generals who were poorly educated and
ignorant on matters of governance. Great instability,
however, was mainly the result of marginalization
of other ethnic groups and graft under these leaders.
For political gain, many leaders fanned ethnic conflicts
that had been exacerbated, or even created, by colonial
rule. In many countries, the military was perceived
as being the only group that could effectively maintain
order, and it ruled many nations in Africa during
the 1970s and early 1980s. During the period from
the early 1960s to the late 1980s, Africa had more
than 70 coups and 13 presidential assassinations.
Border and territorial disputes were also common,
with the European-imposed borders of many nations
being widely contested through armed conflicts.
Cold
War conflicts between the United States and the Soviet
Union, as well as the policies of the International
Monetary Fund, also played a role in instability.
When a country became independent for the first time,
it was often expected to align with one of the two
superpowers. Many countries in Northern Africa received
Soviet military aid, while many in Central and Southern
Africa were supported by the United States, France
or both. The 1970s saw an escalation, as newly independent
Angola and Mozambique aligned themselves with the
Soviet Union and the West and South Africa sought
to contain Soviet influence by funding insurgency
movements. Some countries were ruled by communist
parties that sought to impose Soviet policies resulting
in atrocities such as the Ethiopian famine of 1985-89.
Politics
AlgeriaTogoBeninEquatorial GuineaChadEgyptEthiopiaEritreaCape*
VerdeLibyaMaliGhanaCôte
d'IvoireBurkina
FasoMauritaniaMoroccoSão Tomé and Príncipe*NigerGabonNigeriaCongoSomaliaSouth
AfricaNamibiaSudanTunisiaWestern
SaharaSenegalGambiaGuinea
BissauGuineaLiberiaMadagascarCent Afr RepKenyaUgandaTanzaniaBurundiRwandaAngolaSaint
Helena (UK)*CameroonSierra
LeoneLesothoZambiaZimbabweBotswanaMauritius*Réunion**ComorosSeychellesDemocratic
Republic of
the CongoSwazilandMozambiqueMalawiDjiboutiAtlantic
OceanAtlantic
OceanIndian
OceanStrait of GibraltarMediterranean SeaRed
SeaThe African Union (AU) is a federation consisting
of all of Africa's states apart from Morocco. The
union was formed, with Addis Ababa as its capital,
on June 26, 2001. In July 2004, the capital of the
African Union was relocated to Midrand, in the AU
Constituent Republic of South Africa. However, the
AU Commission has its headquarters at Addis Ababa.
There is a policy in effect to decentralise the African
Federation's institutions so that they are shared
by all the states
The
African Union, not to be confused with the AU Commission,
is formed by an Act of Union which aims to transform
the African Economic Community, a federated commonwealth,
into a state, under established international conventions.
The African Union has a parliamentary government,
known as the African Union Government, consisting
of legislative, judicial and executive organs, and
led by the African Union President and Head of State,
who is also the President of the Pan African Parliament.
A person becomes AU President by being elected to
the PAP, and subsequently gaining majority support
in the PAP.
President
Gertrude Ibengwe Mongella is the Head of State and
Chief of Government of the African Union, by virtue
of the fact that she is the President of the Pan African
Parliament. She was elected by Parliament in its inaugural
session in March 2004, for a term of five years. The
PAP consists of 265 legislators, five from each constituent
state of the African Union. Over 21% of the members
of the PAP are female.
The
powers and authority of the President of the African
Parliament derive from the Union Act, and the Protocol
of the Pan African Parliament, as well as the inheritance
of presidential authority stipulated by African treaties
and by international treaties, including those subordinating
the Secretary General of the OAU Secretariat (AU Commission)
to the PAP. The government of the AU consists of all-union
(federal), regional, state, and municipal authorities,
as well as hundreds of institutions, that together
manage the day-to-day affairs of the institution.
Failed
state policies, inequitable global trade practices,
and the effects of global climate change have resulted
in many widespread famines, and significant portions
of Africa remain with distribution systems unable
to disseminate enough food or water for the population
to survive. What had before colonialism been the source
for 90% of the world's gold has become the poorest
continent on earth, its former riches enjoyed by those
on other continents. The spread of disease is also
rampant, especially the spread of the human immunodeficiency
virus (HIV) and the associated acquired immune deficiency
syndrome (AIDS), which has become a deadly epidemic
on the continent. Despite numerous hardships, there
have been some signs the continent has hope for the
future. Democratic governments seem to be spreading,
though they are not yet the majority (The National
Geographic Society claims 13 African nations can be
considered truly democratic[citation needed]). Many
nations have recognised basic human rights for all
citizens and have created independent judiciaries.
There
are clear signs of increased networking among African
organisations and states. In the civil war in the
Democratic Republic of the Congo (former Zaire), rather
than rich, non-African countries intervening, neighbouring
African countries became involved (see also Second
Congo War). Since the conflict began in 1998, the
estimated death toll has reached 4 million. [27] Many
observers[attribution needed] suggest that the conflict
played a role similar to that of World War II, after
which European countries integrated their societies
in such a way that war between them becomes unthinkable.
Political associations such as the African Union offer
hope for greater co-operation and peace between the
continent's many countries. Extensive human rights
abuses still occur in several parts of Africa, often
under the oversight of the state. Most of such violations
occur for political reasons, often as a side effect
of civil war. Countries where major human rights violations
have been reported in recent times include the Democratic
Republic of the Congo, Sierra Leone, Liberia, Sudan,
Zimbabwe, and Côte d'Ivoire.
Economy
Economy of Africa
African Economic Community mapDue largely to the effects
of corrupt governments, despotism and colonialism,
Africa is the world's poorest inhabited continent.
According to the United Nations' Human Development
Report in 2003, the bottom 25 ranked nations (151st
to 175th) were all African nations.
While
rapid growth in China and now India, and moderate
growth in Latin America, has lifted millions beyond
subsistence living, Africa has gone backwards in terms
of foreign trade, investment, and per capita income.
This poverty has widespread effects, including lower
life expectancy, violence, and instability -- factors
intertwined with the continent's poverty.
Some
areas, notably Botswana and South Africa, have experienced
economic success. The latter has a wealth of natural
resources, being the world's leading producers of
both gold and diamonds, and a well-established legal
system. South Africa also has access to financial
capital, numerous markets, skilled labor, and first
world infrastructure in much of the country and the
opening of the Johannesburg Stock Exchange.
Over
a quarter of Botswana's budget (also a major diamond
producer) goes toward improving the infrastructure
of Gaborone, the nation's capital, largest city, and
one of the world's fastest growing cities. Other African
countries are making comparable progress, such as
Ghana, Kenya, Cameroon and Egypt.
Nigeria
sits on one of the largest proven oil reserves in
the world and has the highest population among nations
in Africa, with one of the fastest-growing economies
in the world.
From
1995 to 2005, economic growth picked up, averaging
5% in 2005. However some countries experienced much
higher growth (10+%) in particular, Angola, Sudan
and Equatorial Guinea, all three of which have recently
begun extracting their petroleum reserves.
Demographics
Main article: African people
Africa's population has grown rapidly since the mid
1800s when vast tracts were depopulated by the abduction
of people for purposes of enslavement. The last 40
years have seen a rapid increase in population; hence,
this population is relatively young. In some African
states half or more of the population is under 25
years old.[citation needed]
Speakers
of Bantu languages (part of the Niger-Congo family)
are the majority in southern, central and east Africa
proper. But there are also several Nilotic groups
in East Africa, and a few remaining indigenous Khoisan
('San' or 'Bushmen') and Pygmy peoples in southern
and central Africa, respectively. Bantu-speaking Africans
also predominate in Gabon and Equatorial Guinea, and
are found in parts of southern Cameroon and southern
Somalia. In the Kalahari Desert of Southern Africa,
the distinct people known as the Bushmen (also "San",
closely related to, but distinct from "Hottentots")
have long been present. The San are physically distinct
from other Africans and are the indigenous people
of southern Africa. Pygmies are the pre-Bantu indigenous
peoples of central Africa.
The
peoples of North Africa comprise two main groups;
Berber and Arabic-speaking peoples in the west, and
Egyptians in the east. The Arabs who arrived in the
seventh century introduced the Arabic language and
Islam to North Africa. The Semitic Phoenicians, the
European Greeks, Romans and Vandals settled in North
Africa as well. Berbers still make up the majority
in Morocco, while they are a significant minority
within Algeria. They are also present in Tunisia and
Libya. The Tuareg and other often-nomadic peoples
are the principal inhabitants of the Saharan interior
of North Africa. Nubians are a Nilo-Saharan-speaking
group (though many also speak Arabic), who developed
an ancient civilisation in northeast Africa.
During
the past century or so, small but economically important
colonies of Lebanese and Chinese have also developed
in the larger coastal cities of West and East Africa,
respectively.
Some
Ethiopian and Eritrean groups (like the Amhara and
Tigrayans, collectively known as "Habesha")
speak Semitic languages. The Oromo and Somali peoples
speak Cushitic languages, but some Somali clans trace
their founding to legendary Arab founders. Sudan and
Mauritania are divided between a mostly Arabized north
and a native African south (although the "Arabs"
of Sudan clearly have a predominantly native African
ancestry themselves). Some areas of East Africa, particularly
the island of Zanzibar and the Kenyan island of Lamu,
received Arab Muslim and Southwest Asian settlers
and merchants throughout the Middle Ages and in antiquity.
Beginning
in the sixteenth century, Europeans such as the Portuguese
and Dutch began to establish trading posts and forts
along the coasts of western and southern Africa. Eventually,
a large number of Dutch augmented by French Huguenots
and Germans settled in what is today South Africa.
Their descendants, the Afrikaners and the Coloureds,
are the largest European-descended groups in Africa
today. In the nineteenth century, a second phase of
colonisation brought a large number of French and
British settlers to Africa. The Portuguese settled
mainly in Angola, but also in Mozambique. The French
settled in large numbers in Algeria where they became
known collectively as pieds-noirs, and on a smaller
scale in other areas of North and West Africa as well
as in Madagascar. The British settled chiefly in South
Africa as well as the colony of Rhodesia, and in the
highlands of what is now Kenya. Germans settled in
what is now Tanzania and Namibia, and there is still
a population of German-speaking white Namibians. Smaller
numbers of European soldiers, businessmen, and officials
also established themselves in administrative centers
such as Nairobi and Dakar. Decolonisation during the
1960s often resulted in the mass emigration of European-descended
settlers out of Africa especially from Algeria,
Angola, Kenya and Rhodesia. However, in South Africa
and Namibia, the white minority remained politically
dominant after independence from Europe, and a significant
population of Europeans remained in these two countries
even after democracy was finally instituted at the
end of the Cold War. South Africa has also become
the preferred destination of white Anglo-Zimbabweans,
and of migrants from all over southern Africa.
European
colonisation also brought sizeable groups of Asians,
particularly people from the Indian subcontinent,
to British colonies. Large Indian communities are
found in South Africa, and smaller ones are present
in Kenya, Tanzania, and some other southern and east
African countries. The large Indian community in Uganda
was expelled by the dictator Idi Amin in 1972, though
many have since returned. The islands in the Indian
Ocean are also populated primarily by people of Asian
origin, often mixed with Africans and Europeans. The
Malagasy people of Madagascar are a Malay people,
but those along the coast are generally mixed with
Bantu, Arab, Indian and European origins. Malay and
Indian ancestries are also important components in
the group of people known in South Africa as Cape
Coloureds (people with origins in two or more races
and continents).
Languages
African languages
Map showing the distribution of African language families
and some major African languages. Afro-Asiatic extends
from the Sahel to Southwest Asia. Niger-Congo is divided
to show the size of the Bantu sub-family.
Many African countries today have more than one official
language.By most estimates, Africa contains well over
a thousand languages, some have estimated it to be
over two thousand languages (most of African rather
than European origin). Africa is the most polyglot
continent in the world; it is not rare to find individuals
there who fluently speak not only several African
languages, but one or two European ones as well. There
are four major language families native to Africa.
The
Afro-Asiatic languages are a language family of about
240 languages and 285 million people widespread throughout
East Africa, North Africa, the Sahel, and Southwest
Asia.
The Nilo-Saharan language family consists of more
than a hundred languages spoken by 30 million people.
Nilo-Saharan languages are mainly spoken in Chad,
Ethiopia, Kenya, Sudan, Uganda, and northern Tanzania.
The Niger-Congo language family covers much of Sub-Saharan
Africa and is probably the largest language family
in the world in terms of different languages. A substantial
number of them are the Bantu languages spoken in much
of sub-Saharan Africa.
The Khoisan languages number about 50 and are spoken
in Southern Africa by approximately 120 000 people.
Many of the Khoisan languages are endangered. The
Khoi and San peoples are considered the original inhabitants
of this part of Africa.
Following colonialism, nearly all African countries
adopted official languages that originated outside
the continent, although several countries nowadays
also use various languages of native origin (such
as Swahili) as their official language. In numerous
countries, English and French are used for communication
in the public sphere such as government, commerce,
education and the media. Arabic, Portuguese, Afrikaans
and Malagasy are other examples of originally non-African
languages that are used by millions of Africans today,
both in the public and private spheres.
Culture
Main article: Culture of Africa
African culture is characterised by a vastly diverse
patchwork of social values, ranging from extreme patriarchy
to extreme matriarchy, sometimes in tribes existing
side by side.
Modern
African culture is characterised by conflicted responses
to Arab nationalism and European imperialism. Increasingly,
beginning in the late 1990s, Africans are reasserting
their identity. In North Africa especially the rejection
of the label Arab or European has resulted in an upsurge
of demands for special protection of indigenous Amazigh
languages and culture in Morocco, Egypt, Algeria and
Tunisia. The emergence of Pan-Africanism since the
fall of apartheid has heightened calls for a renewed
sense of African identity. In South Africa, intellectuals
from settler communities of European descent increasingly
identify as African for cultural rather than geographical
or racial reasons. Famously, some have undergone ritual
ceremonies to become members of the Zulu or other
community.
Much
of the traditional African cultures have become impoverished
as a result of years of neglect and suppression by
colonial and neo-colonial regimes. There is now a
resurgence in the attempts to rediscover and revalourise
African traditional cultures, under such movements
as the African Renaissance led by Thabo Mbeki, Afrocentrism
led by an influential group of scholars including
Molefi Asante, as well as the increasing recognition
of traditional spiritualism through decriminalization
of Voudoo and other forms of spirituality. In recent
years African traditional culture has become synonymous
with rural poverty and subsistence farming.
Urban
culture in Africa, now associated with Western values,
is a great contrast from traditional African urban
culture which was once rich and enviable even by modern
Western standards. African cities such as Loango,
M'banza Congo, Timbuktu, Thebes, Meroe and others
had served as the world's most affluent urban and
industrial centers, clean, well-laid out, and full
of universities, libraries, and temples. This image
of traditional African urban living is in deep contrast
to European cities that were unclean, crowded and
disorganised...characteristics that they have retained
for the most part.
The
main and most enduring cultural fault-line in Africa
is the divide between traditional pastoralists and
agriculturalists. The divide is not, and never was
based on economic competition, but rather on the colonial
racial policy that identified pastoralists as constituting
a different race from agriculturalists, and enforcing
a form of apartheid between the two cultures beginning
in the 1880s and lasting until the 1960s. Although
European colonial powers were largely industrial,
many of the administrators and philosophers, whose
writings provided rationale for colonialism, applied
quasi-scientific eugenics policies and racist politics
on Africans in experiments of misguided social engineering.
Most
of the racial recategorisation of Africans to fit
European stereotypes was contradictory and incoherent.
However, because their legalism and laws that emanated
from these policies were backed by police force, the
scientific establishment and economic power, Africans
reacted by either conforming to the new rules, or
rejecting them in favour of Pan-Africanism. All across
Africa communities and individuals were measured by
colonial eugenics boards and reassigned identities
and ethnicities based on pseudoscience. The schools
taught that in general Africans who resembled Europeans
in some physical or cultural aspect were superior
to other Africans and deserved more privileges. This
caused animosity, incited by other Europeans - socialists
and communists - who identified Africans according
to dubious classes also modeled on European concerns.
The
easiest way to divide Africans was along economic
lines. Pastoralists, agriculturalists, hunter-gatherers
and Westernised Africans, all formed distinctly identifiable
cultures each of which came to play a different and
disfiguring role in Africa's modern politics. The
Westernised Africans, specifically Senegalese and
Sudanese Nubians from urban centers such as Dakar
and Khartoum, were used to serve as the bulk of colonial
troops against the rural Africans. Pastoralists were
radicalised by the wholesale confiscation of grazing
lands in favour of plantations. Agriculturalists came
into conflict for land and water with pastoralists
after the traditional sharing arrangements had been
destroyed by colonial policies.
75,000 year old Nassarius shell beads found in Blombos
Cave, South AfricaIn addition, a growing body of speculative
anthropology and race science made false claims about
the superiority and inferiority of Africans with different
cultural and economic backgrounds. The vast majority
of the scholarship on Africa was extraneous and catered
to the demand for exotic and outlandish representations
of Africa. The enforcement of the government decrees
and policies tended to produce effects that confirmed
the prejudices of the European colonialists.
African
art and architecture reflect the diversity of African
cultures. The oldest existing examples of art from
Africa are 75,000 year old beads made from Nassarius
shells that were found in Blombos Cave. The Great
Pyramid of Giza in Egypt was the world's tallest structure
for 4,000 years until the completion of Lincoln Cathedral
around 1300. The Ethiopian complex of monolithic churches
at Lalibela, of which the Church of St. George is
representative, is regarded as another marvel of engineering.
Music and dance
Main article: Music of Africa
The music of Africa is one of its most dynamic art
forms. Egypt has long been a cultural focus of the
Arab world, while remembrance of the rhythms of sub-Saharan
Africa, in particular west Africa, was transmitted
through the Atlantic slave trade to modern samba,
blues, jazz, reggae, rap, and rock and roll. Modern
music of the continent includes the highly complex
choral singing of southern Africa and the dance rhythms
of soukous, dominated by the music of the Democratic
Republic of Congo. Recent developments include the
emergence of African hip hop, in particular a form
from Senegal blended with traditional mbalax, and
Kwaito, a South African variant of house music. Afrikaans
music, also found in South Africa, is idiosyncratic
being composed mostly of traditional Boer music, while
more recent immigrant communities have introduced
the music of their homes to the continent.
Indigenous
musical and dance traditions of Africa are maintained
by oral traditions and they are distinct from the
music and dance styles of North Africa and Southern
Africa. Arab influences are visible in North African
music and dance and in Southern Africa western influences
are apparent due to colonisation.
Many
African languages are tone languages, in which pitch
level determines the meaning. This also finds expression
in African musical melodies and rhythms. A variety
of musical instruments are used, including drums (most
widely used), bells, musical bow, lute, flute, and
trumpet.
African
dances are important mode of communication and dancers
use gestures, masks, costumes, body painting and a
number of visual devices. With urbanisation and modernisation,
modern African dance and music exhibit influences
assimilated from several other cultures.
Legends of Africa
Main article: Legends of Africa
Africa has a wealth of history which is largely unrecorded.
A lot of myths, fables and legends abound.
Sports
53 African countries have football teams in the Confederation
of African Football, while both Ghana and Senegal
have moved beyond the knockout stage of recent FIFA
World Cups. South Africa will host the 2010 World
Cup tournament, and will be the first African country
to do so. The South African rugby team hosted and
won the 1995 Rugby World Cup. A number of African
nations, especially Ethiopia, Kenya, and Morocco,
have fielded numerous world-class long-distance runners
such as Abebe Bikila and Cosmas Ndeti.
Religion
See also: Christianity in Africa, Islam in Africa,
and Jews and Judaism in Africa
Africans profess a wide variety of religious beliefs
[28] with Christianity and Islam being the most widespread.
Approximately 46.3% of all Africans are Christians
and another 40.5% are Muslims. Roughly 11.8% of Africans
primarily follow indigenous African religions. A small
number of Africans are Hindu, or have beliefs from
the Judaic tradition. Examples of African Jews are
the Beta Israel, Lemba peoples and the Abayudaya of
Eastern Uganda.
The
indigenous Sub-Saharan African religions tend to revolve
around animism and ancestor worship. A common thread
in traditional belief systems was the division of
the spiritual world into "helpful" and "harmful".
Helpful spirits are usually deemed to include ancestor
spirits that help their descendants, and powerful
spirits that protect entire communities from natural
disaster or attacks from enemies; whereas harmful
spirits include the souls of murdered victims who
were buried without the proper funeral rites, and
spirits used by hostile spirit mediums to cause illness
among their enemies. While the effect of these early
forms of worship continues to have a profound influence,
belief systems have evolved as they interact with
other religions.
The
formation of the Old Kingdom of Egypt in the third
millennium BCE marked the first known complex religious
system on the continent. Around the ninth century
BCE, Carthage (in present-day Tunisia) was founded
by the Phoenicians, and went on to become a major
cosmopolitan center where deities from neighboring
Egypt, Rome and the Etruscan city-states were worshipped.
Today, many Jewish peoples also live in North Africa,
particularly in Tunisia, Algeria and Morocco.
The
founding of the Coptic Orthodox Church of Alexandria
is traditionally dated to the mid-first century, while
the Ethiopian Orthodox Church and the Eritrean Orthodox
Church officially date from the fourth century. These
are thus some of the first established Christian churches
in the world. At first, Christian Orthodoxy made gains
in modern-day Sudan and other neighbouring regions.
However, after the spread of Islam, growth was slow
and restricted to the highlands.
Islam
entered Africa as Arab Muslims conquered North Africa
between 640 and 710, beginning with Egypt. They settled
in Mogadishu, Melinde, Mombasa, Kilwa, and Sofala,
following the sea trade down the coast of East Africa,
and diffusing through the Sahara desert into the interior
of Africa -- following in particular the paths of
Muslim traders. Muslims were also among the Asian
peoples who later settled in British-ruled Africa.
Many
Sub-Saharan Africans were converted to Western Christianity
during the colonial period. In the last decades of
the twentieth century, various sects of Charismatic
Christianity rapidly grew. A number of Roman Catholic
African bishops were mentioned as possible papal candidates
in 2005. African Christians appear to be more socially
conservative than their co-religionists in much of
the industrialized world, which has quite recently
led to tension within denominations such as the Anglican
and Methodist Churches.
The
African Initiated Churches have experienced significant
growth in the twentieth and twenty-first centuries.
(Credit:
Wikipedia).
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