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Atlantic voyage of the predecessor of Mansa Musa

In 1324, while staying in Cairo during his hajj, Mansa Musa, the ruler of the Mali Empire, told an Egyptian official whom he had befriended that he had come to rule when his predecessor led a large fleet in an attempt to cross the Atlantic Ocean and never returned. This account, recorded by the Arab historian al-Umari, has attracted considerable interest and speculation as a possible instance of pre-Columbian trans-oceanic contact. The voyage is popularly attributed to a Mansa Abu Bakr II,[a] but no such mansa ever reigned. Rather, the voyage is inferred to have been undertaken by Mansa Muhammad ibn Qu.

A precise date for the suggested voyage is not known, though it is interpreted as having occurred in or shortly before 1312, the year Musa is inferred to have become mansa. No clear evidence of the fate of the voyage has been found.

Musa's account

Mansa Musa stayed in Cairo for three months in 1324 while en route to Mecca for the hajj.[1] While there, he befriended an emir named Abu al-Hasan Ali ibn Amir Hajib, who was the governor of the district of Cairo Musa was staying in.[2] Ibn Amir Hajib later recounted to the scholar al-Umari what he had learned of Mali from his conversations with Musa. In one such conversation, Ibn Amir Hajib had asked Musa how he had become king, and Musa responded:

We belong to a house which hands on the kingship by inheritance. The king who was my predecessor did not believe that it was impossible to discover the furthest limit of the Atlantic Ocean and wished vehemently to do so. So he equipped 200 ships filled with men and the same number equipped with gold, water, and provisions enough to last them for years, and said to the man deputed to lead them: "Do not return until you reach the end of it or your provisions and water give out." They departed and a long time passed before anyone came back. Then one ship returned and we asked the captain what news they brought. He said: "Yes, O Sultan, we traveled for a long time until there appeared in the open sea [as it were] a river with a powerful current. Mine was the last of those ships. The [other] ships went on ahead but when they reached that place they did not return and no more was seen of them and we do not know what became of them. As for me, I went about at once and did not enter that river." But the sultan disbelieved him. Then that sultan got ready 2,000 ships, 1,000 for himself and the men whom he took with him and 1,000 for water and provisions. He left me to deputize for him and embarked on the Atlantic Ocean with his men. That was the last we saw of him and all those who were with him, and so I became king in my own right.[3]

Al-Umari’s record of this conversation is the only account of this voyage, as it is not mentioned by other medieval Arab historians or West African oral tradition.[4] Nonetheless, the possibility of such a voyage has been taken seriously by several historians.[4][5][6]

Identity of Musa's predecessor

 
Maghan Kon Fatta
 
  
 1. Mari Jata
Sunjata
 Abu Bakr[b]
Mande Bori
  
     
2. Uli
Yerelinkon
3. Wati
4. Khalifa
daughter

Faga Leye[d]
   
   
7. Qu
Ko or Ko Mamadi
 5. Abu Bakr[c]
Bata Mande Bori
9. Musa
Kanku Musa
 
 
8. Muhammad
Ko Mamadi or Niani Mamadu

Genealogy of the mansas of the Mali Empire up to Musa, following Levtzion's interpretation of Ibn Khaldun.[7]Bolded individuals reigned as mansa of the Mali Empire, with numbers indicating the order in which they ruled. The sixth mansa, Sakura, is not included as he was not related to the others. The upper, non-italicized name is the name given by Ibn Khaldun, the lower name is the name given in oral tradition.[8][9]

The identity of the mansa responsible for the voyage has been subject to some confusion.[15] Al-Umari’s record of Musa’s account does not mention mansa’s name, giving no indication of his identity other than that he was Musa’s predecessor.[3] According to the Arab historian Ibn Khaldun, writing several decades later, Musa’s predecessor as mansa was Muhammad ibn Qu. As such, several historians have attributed the voyage to Mansa Muhammad.[15][4][16]

Many sources call the mansa in question Abu Bakr II.[15] However, the inclusion of a Mansa Abu Bakr II in the list of Malian rulers is an error that originated in a mistranslation of Ibn Khaldun’s text by the 19th-century European historian Baron de Slane.[17] De Slane translated Ibn Khaldun as saying that the kingship passed from Muhammad to Abu Bakr, then to Musa. However, in the original Arabic text, Abu Bakr is only mentioned in his role as the progenitor of Musa's lineage, not as a ruler. The Abu Bakr in question was a brother of Sunjata, the founder of the Mali Empire, and apparently never himself ruled. Another figure named Abu Bakr did rule as mansa, but he was the predecessor of Sakura, not Musa.[18]

Additionally, some historians have suggested without elaboration that the voyage should be attributed to Mansa Qu,[19][4][20] who was the father and predecessor of Muhammad ibn Qu according to Ibn Khaldun.[21]

Interpretation

No uncontroversial evidence of pre-Columbian contact between Africa and the Americas has ever been found.[22] Regardless of whether any of the Malian ships ever reached the Americas, they apparently never returned to Africa and there were not any long-term economic consequences of the voyage.[5]

The river on the sea described by the survivor of the first expedition is presumably the Canary Current.[6] The inclusion of this fact in Musa's account indicates that Musa had some awareness of the oceanographic conditions of the open Atlantic. The Canary Current flows from West Africa to the Americas, which would have facilitated travel from Africa to the Americas but prevented it in the opposite direction.[23]

Ivan van Sertima and Malian researcher Gaoussou Diawara proposed that the voyage reached the New World.[24][25] Van Sertima cites the abstract of Columbus's log made by Bartolomé de las Casas, according to which the purpose of Columbus's third voyage was to test both the claims of King John II of Portugal that "canoes had been found which set out from the coast of Guinea [West Africa] and sailed to the west with merchandise" as well as the claims of the native inhabitants of the Caribbean island of Hispaniola that "from the south and the southeast had come black people whose spears were made of a metal called guanín ... from which it was found that of 32 parts: 18 were gold, 6 were silver, and 8 copper."[26][27]

However, scholars dispute evidence of any such voyage reaching the Americas, and that there are insufficient evidentiary grounds to suppose there has been contact between Africa and the New World at any point in the pre-Columbian era.[22] Haslip-Viera et al. noted in particular that "no genuine African artifact has ever been found in a controlled archaeological excavation in the New World". Karl Taube, a professor at UC Riverside specializing in pre-Columbian Mesoamerican history writes there "simply is no material evidence of any Pre-Hispanic contact between the Old World and Mesoamerica before the arrival of the Spanish in the sixteenth century".[28]

Legacy

Mansa Musa himself appears to have considered his predecessor's plan to be impractical.[5] The main point he appears to have been trying to make to Ibn Amir Hajib is that his predecessor's failed voyage paved the way to his becoming king.[15] Likewise, it has been speculated that the lack of information in oral tradition about the voyage reflects a view that the mansa's voyage was a shameful abdication of duty.[25]

In modern times, the voyage has become more celebrated.[29] The Malian historian Gaoussou Diawara has remarked that the mansa should be looked up to by modern politicians as an example of a ruler who valued science and discovery over holding onto power.[25]

Footnotes

  1. ^ Variously spelled as Abu Bakr II or Abubakari II
  2. ^ In 1959, D. T. Niane regarded Sunjata's brother Abu Bakr/Mande Bori as having reigned between Khalifa and Sakura.[10] However, Ibn Khaldun said that the Abu Bakr who reigned between Khalifa and Sakura was the grandson of Sunjata through his daughter, not the brother of Sunjata, and only mentions Sunjata's brother Abu Bakr as being the ancestor of Musa.[11] Niane later accepted Levtzion's interpretation that Abu Bakr/Mande Bori and the Abu Bakr who reigned between Khalifa and Sakura were different figures.[12]
  3. ^ In 1959, D. T. Niane, following De Slane's mistaken interpretation that there were two mansas named Abu Bakr, identified the Abu Bakr I (who reigned between Khalifa and Sakura) with Mande Bori, Sunjata's brother, and Abu Bakr II (who De Slane regarded as reigning between Muhammad and Musa) with Bata Mande Bori, a figure who is said to be a son of Sunjata by the jeliw of Dioma.[10] The word "Bata" indicates that Bata Mande Bori was not the biological son of Sunjata, but related to him through the female line.[10] De Slane's translation called Abu Bakr II a son of Sunjata's sister, and Niane accepted this interpretation of Abu Bakr/Bata Mande Bori's relationship.[8][10] However, with Levtzion's 1963 discovery that De Slane had mistranslated Ibn Khaldun, only one Abu Bakr was recognized as having reigned, placed between Khalifa and Sakura.[8] This Abu Bakr is said to be the son of Sunjata's daughter by Ibn Khaldun, and is interpreted as corresponding to the Bata Mande Bori of oral tradition, with Mande Bori never having reigned. Niane later agreed with this identification.[12]
  4. ^ The literal translation of Ibn Khaldun is that Musa is the son of Abu Bakr, but the line can also be read as more generally indicating Abu Bakr as an ancestor of Musa.[13] Oral tradition names Musa's father as Faga Leye.[10] Regarding Musa as Abu Bakr's grandson is more chronologically plausible.[14]

References

  1. ^ Gomez 2018, p. 117.
  2. ^ Levtzion & Hopkins 2000, p. 267.
  3. ^ a b Levtzion & Hopkins 2000, pp. 268–269.
  4. ^ a b c d Gomez 2018, p. 101.
  5. ^ a b c Devisse & Labib 1984, p. 666.
  6. ^ a b Thornton 2012, p. 13.
  7. ^ Levtzion 1963, p. 353.
  8. ^ a b c Levtzion 1963.
  9. ^ Niane 1984.
  10. ^ a b c d e Niane 1959.
  11. ^ Levtzion & Hopkins 2000, pp. 333–334.
  12. ^ a b Niane 1984, p. 247.
  13. ^ Levtzion & Hopkins 2000, p. 424.
  14. ^ Levtzion 1963, p. 347.
  15. ^ a b c d Fauvelle 2018, p. 165.
  16. ^ Canós-Donnay 2019.
  17. ^ Levtzion 1963, p. 346.
  18. ^ Levtzion 1963, p. 344.
  19. ^ Thornton 2012.
  20. ^ Rucker 2018.
  21. ^ Levtzion 1963, p. 345.
  22. ^ a b Haslip-Viera, Ortiz de Montellano & Barbour 1997.
  23. ^ Thornton 2012, pp. 11–13.
  24. ^ Van Sertima 1976.
  25. ^ a b c Baxter 2000.
  26. ^ Morison 1963, pp. 262, 263.
  27. ^ Thacher 1903, pp. 379, 380.
  28. ^ Taube 2004, p. 1.
  29. ^ Thornton 2012, p. 9.

Bibliography

  • Austen, Ralph A.; Jan A. M. M. Jansen (1996). "History, Oral Transmission and Structure in Ibn Khaldun's Chronology of Mali Rulers". History in Africa. Waltham, MA: African Studies Association. 23 (1): 17–28. doi:10.2307/3171932. hdl:1887/2778. ISSN 0361-5413. JSTOR 3171932. OCLC 2246846. S2CID 53136557.
  • Baxter, Joan (2000-12-13). "Africa's 'greatest explorer'". BBC News.
  • Bell, Nawal Morcos (1972). "The Age of Mansa Musa of Mali: Problems in Succession and Chronology". International Journal of African Historical Studies. New York: Africana Publishing, for the Boston University African Studies Center. 5 (2): 221–234. doi:10.2307/217515. ISSN 0361-7882. JSTOR 217515. OCLC 48537235.
  • Canós-Donnay, Sirio (2019-02-25). "The Empire of Mali". Oxford Research Encyclopedia of African History. Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/acrefore/9780190277734.013.266. ISBN 978-0-19-027773-4.
  • Cooley, William Desborough (1841). The Negroland of the Arabs Examined and Explained; or, An Inquiry into the Early History and Geography of Central Africa. London: J. Arrowsmith. OCLC 4760870.
  • Devisse, J.; Labib, S. (1984). "Africa in inter-continental relations". In Niane, D. T. (ed.). General History of Africa IV: Africa from the Twelfth to the Sixteenth Century.
  • Fauvelle, François-Xavier (2018) [2013]. "The Sultan and the Sea". The Golden Rhinoceros: Histories of the African Middle Ages. Troy Tice (trans.). Princeton University Press. ISBN 978-0-691-18126-4.
  • Gomez, Michael A. (2018). African Dominion: A New History of Empire in Early and Medieval West Africa. Princeton University Press. ISBN 9780691196824.
  • Haslip-Viera, Gabriel; Bernard Ortiz de Montellano; Warren Barbour (June 1997). . Current Anthropology. Chicago, IL: University of Chicago Press, sponsored by Wenner-Gren Foundation for Anthropological Research. 38 (3): 419–441. doi:10.1086/204626. ISSN 0011-3204. OCLC 62217742. S2CID 162054657. Archived from the original (Reproduced online) on 2011-04-15. Retrieved 2008-04-10.
  • Haslip-Viera, Gabriel; Ortiz de Montellano, Bernard; Barbour, Warren (1997). "Robbing Native American Cultures: Van Sertima's Afrocentricity and the Olmecs". Current Anthropology. 38 (3): 419–441. doi:10.1086/204626. S2CID 162054657.
  • Morison, Samuel Eliot (1963). Journals and Other Documents on the Life and Voyages of Christopher Columbus. New York: The Heritage Press.
  • Levtzion, Nehemia (1963). "The Thirteenth- and Fourteenth-Century Kings of Mali". Journal of African History. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. 4 (3): 341–353. doi:10.1017/S002185370000428X. ISSN 0021-8537. JSTOR 180027. OCLC 1783006. S2CID 162413528.
  • Levtzion, Nehemia (1977). "The western Mahgrib and Sudan". In Roland Anthony Oliver (volume ed.) (ed.). The Cambridge History of Africa: Vol. 3, From c. 1050 to c. 1600. John Donnelly Fage and Roland Oliver (series general eds.) (reprinted 2001 ed.). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. pp. 331–462. ISBN 0-521-20981-1. OCLC 185545332.
  • Levtzion, Nehemia; Hopkins, J. F. P., eds. (2000). Corpus of Early Arabic Sources for West African History. Markus Wiener Publishers. ISBN 978-1-55876-241-1.
  • Masonen, Pekka (2000). The Negroland Revisited: Discovery and Invention of the Sudanese Middle Ages. Annales Academiae Scientiarum Fennicae, Ser. Humaniora, no. 309. Helsinki: Finnish Academy of Science and Letters. ISBN 951-41-0886-8. OCLC 45681680.
  • Ortiz de Montellano, Bernard; Gabriel Haslip-Viera; Warren Barbour (Spring 1997). "They Were NOT Here before Columbus: Afrocentric Hyperdiffusionism in the 1990s". Ethnohistory. Durham, NC: Duke University Press, issued by the American Society for Ethnohistory. 44 (2): 199–234. doi:10.2307/483368. ISSN 0014-1801. JSTOR 483368. OCLC 42388116.
  • Niane, Djibril Tamsir (1959). . Recherches Africaines (in French). Archived from the original on 2007-05-19.
  • Niane, D. T. (1984). "Mali and the second Mandingo expansion". In Niane, D. T. (ed.). General History of Africa IV: Africa from the Twelfth to the Sixteenth Century.
  • Rucker, Walter C. (2018). "The Black Atlantic and the African Diaspora". Oxford Research Encyclopedia of Religion. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-934037-8.
  • Taube, Karl (2004). (PDF). Pre-Columbian Art at Dumbarton Oaks, no. 2. Washington, D.C.: Dumbarton Oaks Research Library and Collection; Trustees of Harvard University. ISBN 0-88402-275-7. OCLC 56096117. Archived from the original (PDF online reproduction) on 2008-02-27.
  • Thacher, John Boyd (1903). Christopher Columbus: his life, his work, his remains, as revealed by original printed and manuscript records, together with an essay on Peter Martyr of Anghera and Bartolomé De Las Casas, the first Historians of America. New York: G. P. Putnam's Sons.
  • Thornton, John K. (2012-09-10). A Cultural History of the Atlantic World, 1250-1820. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0521727341.
  • Van Sertima, Ivan (1976). They Came Before Columbus. New York: Random House. ISBN 0-8129-6817-4.

See also

  • Zheng He (admiral of the 14th-century Chinese long-distance fleet)

External links

  • Malian praise singer Sadio Diabate, singing about Abubakar II - BBC World Service Audio

atlantic, voyage, predecessor, mansa, musa, 1324, while, staying, cairo, during, hajj, mansa, musa, ruler, mali, empire, told, egyptian, official, whom, befriended, that, come, rule, when, predecessor, large, fleet, attempt, cross, atlantic, ocean, never, retu. In 1324 while staying in Cairo during his hajj Mansa Musa the ruler of the Mali Empire told an Egyptian official whom he had befriended that he had come to rule when his predecessor led a large fleet in an attempt to cross the Atlantic Ocean and never returned This account recorded by the Arab historian al Umari has attracted considerable interest and speculation as a possible instance of pre Columbian trans oceanic contact The voyage is popularly attributed to a Mansa Abu Bakr II a but no such mansa ever reigned Rather the voyage is inferred to have been undertaken by Mansa Muhammad ibn Qu A precise date for the suggested voyage is not known though it is interpreted as having occurred in or shortly before 1312 the year Musa is inferred to have become mansa No clear evidence of the fate of the voyage has been found Contents 1 Musa s account 2 Identity of Musa s predecessor 3 Interpretation 4 Legacy 5 Footnotes 6 References 7 Bibliography 8 See also 9 External linksMusa s account EditMansa Musa stayed in Cairo for three months in 1324 while en route to Mecca for the hajj 1 While there he befriended an emir named Abu al Hasan Ali ibn Amir Hajib who was the governor of the district of Cairo Musa was staying in 2 Ibn Amir Hajib later recounted to the scholar al Umari what he had learned of Mali from his conversations with Musa In one such conversation Ibn Amir Hajib had asked Musa how he had become king and Musa responded We belong to a house which hands on the kingship by inheritance The king who was my predecessor did not believe that it was impossible to discover the furthest limit of the Atlantic Ocean and wished vehemently to do so So he equipped 200 ships filled with men and the same number equipped with gold water and provisions enough to last them for years and said to the man deputed to lead them Do not return until you reach the end of it or your provisions and water give out They departed and a long time passed before anyone came back Then one ship returned and we asked the captain what news they brought He said Yes O Sultan we traveled for a long time until there appeared in the open sea as it were a river with a powerful current Mine was the last of those ships The other ships went on ahead but when they reached that place they did not return and no more was seen of them and we do not know what became of them As for me I went about at once and did not enter that river But the sultan disbelieved him Then that sultan got ready 2 000 ships 1 000 for himself and the men whom he took with him and 1 000 for water and provisions He left me to deputize for him and embarked on the Atlantic Ocean with his men That was the last we saw of him and all those who were with him and so I became king in my own right 3 Al Umari s record of this conversation is the only account of this voyage as it is not mentioned by other medieval Arab historians or West African oral tradition 4 Nonetheless the possibility of such a voyage has been taken seriously by several historians 4 5 6 Identity of Musa s predecessor Edit Maghan Kon Fatta 1 Mari JataSunjata Abu Bakr b Mande Bori 2 UliYerelinkon3 Wati4 KhalifadaughterFaga Leye d 7 QuKo or Ko Mamadi 5 Abu Bakr c Bata Mande Bori9 MusaKanku Musa 8 MuhammadKo Mamadi or Niani MamaduGenealogy of the mansas of the Mali Empire up to Musa following Levtzion s interpretation of Ibn Khaldun 7 Bolded individuals reigned as mansa of the Mali Empire with numbers indicating the order in which they ruled The sixth mansa Sakura is not included as he was not related to the others The upper non italicized name is the name given by Ibn Khaldun the lower name is the name given in oral tradition 8 9 The identity of the mansa responsible for the voyage has been subject to some confusion 15 Al Umari s record of Musa s account does not mention mansa s name giving no indication of his identity other than that he was Musa s predecessor 3 According to the Arab historian Ibn Khaldun writing several decades later Musa s predecessor as mansa was Muhammad ibn Qu As such several historians have attributed the voyage to Mansa Muhammad 15 4 16 Many sources call the mansa in question Abu Bakr II 15 However the inclusion of a Mansa Abu Bakr II in the list of Malian rulers is an error that originated in a mistranslation of Ibn Khaldun s text by the 19th century European historian Baron de Slane 17 De Slane translated Ibn Khaldun as saying that the kingship passed from Muhammad to Abu Bakr then to Musa However in the original Arabic text Abu Bakr is only mentioned in his role as the progenitor of Musa s lineage not as a ruler The Abu Bakr in question was a brother of Sunjata the founder of the Mali Empire and apparently never himself ruled Another figure named Abu Bakr did rule as mansa but he was the predecessor of Sakura not Musa 18 Additionally some historians have suggested without elaboration that the voyage should be attributed to Mansa Qu 19 4 20 who was the father and predecessor of Muhammad ibn Qu according to Ibn Khaldun 21 Interpretation EditNo uncontroversial evidence of pre Columbian contact between Africa and the Americas has ever been found 22 Regardless of whether any of the Malian ships ever reached the Americas they apparently never returned to Africa and there were not any long term economic consequences of the voyage 5 The river on the sea described by the survivor of the first expedition is presumably the Canary Current 6 The inclusion of this fact in Musa s account indicates that Musa had some awareness of the oceanographic conditions of the open Atlantic The Canary Current flows from West Africa to the Americas which would have facilitated travel from Africa to the Americas but prevented it in the opposite direction 23 Ivan van Sertima and Malian researcher Gaoussou Diawara proposed that the voyage reached the New World 24 25 Van Sertima cites the abstract of Columbus s log made by Bartolome de las Casas according to which the purpose of Columbus s third voyage was to test both the claims of King John II of Portugal that canoes had been found which set out from the coast of Guinea West Africa and sailed to the west with merchandise as well as the claims of the native inhabitants of the Caribbean island of Hispaniola that from the south and the southeast had come black people whose spears were made of a metal called guanin from which it was found that of 32 parts 18 were gold 6 were silver and 8 copper 26 27 However scholars dispute evidence of any such voyage reaching the Americas and that there are insufficient evidentiary grounds to suppose there has been contact between Africa and the New World at any point in the pre Columbian era 22 Haslip Viera et al noted in particular that no genuine African artifact has ever been found in a controlled archaeological excavation in the New World Karl Taube a professor at UC Riverside specializing in pre Columbian Mesoamerican history writes there simply is no material evidence of any Pre Hispanic contact between the Old World and Mesoamerica before the arrival of the Spanish in the sixteenth century 28 Legacy EditMansa Musa himself appears to have considered his predecessor s plan to be impractical 5 The main point he appears to have been trying to make to Ibn Amir Hajib is that his predecessor s failed voyage paved the way to his becoming king 15 Likewise it has been speculated that the lack of information in oral tradition about the voyage reflects a view that the mansa s voyage was a shameful abdication of duty 25 In modern times the voyage has become more celebrated 29 The Malian historian Gaoussou Diawara has remarked that the mansa should be looked up to by modern politicians as an example of a ruler who valued science and discovery over holding onto power 25 Footnotes Edit Variously spelled as Abu Bakr II or Abubakari II In 1959 D T Niane regarded Sunjata s brother Abu Bakr Mande Bori as having reigned between Khalifa and Sakura 10 However Ibn Khaldun said that the Abu Bakr who reigned between Khalifa and Sakura was the grandson of Sunjata through his daughter not the brother of Sunjata and only mentions Sunjata s brother Abu Bakr as being the ancestor of Musa 11 Niane later accepted Levtzion s interpretation that Abu Bakr Mande Bori and the Abu Bakr who reigned between Khalifa and Sakura were different figures 12 In 1959 D T Niane following De Slane s mistaken interpretation that there were two mansas named Abu Bakr identified the Abu Bakr I who reigned between Khalifa and Sakura with Mande Bori Sunjata s brother and Abu Bakr II who De Slane regarded as reigning between Muhammad and Musa with Bata Mande Bori a figure who is said to be a son of Sunjata by the jeliw of Dioma 10 The word Bata indicates that Bata Mande Bori was not the biological son of Sunjata but related to him through the female line 10 De Slane s translation called Abu Bakr II a son of Sunjata s sister and Niane accepted this interpretation of Abu Bakr Bata Mande Bori s relationship 8 10 However with Levtzion s 1963 discovery that De Slane had mistranslated Ibn Khaldun only one Abu Bakr was recognized as having reigned placed between Khalifa and Sakura 8 This Abu Bakr is said to be the son of Sunjata s daughter by Ibn Khaldun and is interpreted as corresponding to the Bata Mande Bori of oral tradition with Mande Bori never having reigned Niane later agreed with this identification 12 The literal translation of Ibn Khaldun is that Musa is the son of Abu Bakr but the line can also be read as more generally indicating Abu Bakr as an ancestor of Musa 13 Oral tradition names Musa s father as Faga Leye 10 Regarding Musa as Abu Bakr s grandson is more chronologically plausible 14 References Edit Gomez 2018 p 117 Levtzion amp Hopkins 2000 p 267 a b Levtzion amp Hopkins 2000 pp 268 269 a b c d Gomez 2018 p 101 a b c Devisse amp Labib 1984 p 666 a b Thornton 2012 p 13 Levtzion 1963 p 353 a b c Levtzion 1963 Niane 1984 a b c d e Niane 1959 Levtzion amp Hopkins 2000 pp 333 334 a b Niane 1984 p 247 Levtzion amp Hopkins 2000 p 424 Levtzion 1963 p 347 a b c d Fauvelle 2018 p 165 Canos Donnay 2019 Levtzion 1963 p 346 Levtzion 1963 p 344 Thornton 2012 Rucker 2018 Levtzion 1963 p 345 a b Haslip Viera Ortiz de Montellano amp Barbour 1997 Thornton 2012 pp 11 13 Van Sertima 1976 a b c Baxter 2000 Morison 1963 pp 262 263 Thacher 1903 pp 379 380 Taube 2004 p 1 Thornton 2012 p 9 Bibliography EditAusten Ralph A Jan A M M Jansen 1996 History Oral Transmission and Structure in Ibn Khaldun s Chronology of Mali Rulers History in Africa Waltham MA African Studies Association 23 1 17 28 doi 10 2307 3171932 hdl 1887 2778 ISSN 0361 5413 JSTOR 3171932 OCLC 2246846 S2CID 53136557 Baxter Joan 2000 12 13 Africa s greatest explorer BBC News Bell Nawal Morcos 1972 The Age of Mansa Musa of Mali Problems in Succession and Chronology International Journal of African Historical Studies New York Africana Publishing for the Boston University African Studies Center 5 2 221 234 doi 10 2307 217515 ISSN 0361 7882 JSTOR 217515 OCLC 48537235 Canos Donnay Sirio 2019 02 25 The Empire of Mali Oxford Research Encyclopedia of African History Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 acrefore 9780190277734 013 266 ISBN 978 0 19 027773 4 Cooley William Desborough 1841 The Negroland of the Arabs Examined and Explained or An Inquiry into the Early History and Geography of Central Africa London J Arrowsmith OCLC 4760870 Devisse J Labib S 1984 Africa in inter continental relations In Niane D T ed General History of Africa IV Africa from the Twelfth to the Sixteenth Century Fauvelle Francois Xavier 2018 2013 The Sultan and the Sea The Golden Rhinoceros Histories of the African Middle Ages Troy Tice trans Princeton University Press ISBN 978 0 691 18126 4 Gomez Michael A 2018 African Dominion A New History of Empire in Early and Medieval West Africa Princeton University Press ISBN 9780691196824 Haslip Viera Gabriel Bernard Ortiz de Montellano Warren Barbour June 1997 Robbing Native American Cultures Van Sertima s Afrocentricity and the Olmecs Current Anthropology Chicago IL University of Chicago Press sponsored by Wenner Gren Foundation for Anthropological Research 38 3 419 441 doi 10 1086 204626 ISSN 0011 3204 OCLC 62217742 S2CID 162054657 Archived from the original Reproduced online on 2011 04 15 Retrieved 2008 04 10 Haslip Viera Gabriel Ortiz de Montellano Bernard Barbour Warren 1997 Robbing Native American Cultures Van Sertima s Afrocentricity and the Olmecs Current Anthropology 38 3 419 441 doi 10 1086 204626 S2CID 162054657 Morison Samuel Eliot 1963 Journals and Other Documents on the Life and Voyages of Christopher Columbus New York The Heritage Press Levtzion Nehemia 1963 The Thirteenth and Fourteenth Century Kings of Mali Journal of African History Cambridge Cambridge University Press 4 3 341 353 doi 10 1017 S002185370000428X ISSN 0021 8537 JSTOR 180027 OCLC 1783006 S2CID 162413528 Levtzion Nehemia 1977 The western Mahgrib and Sudan In Roland Anthony Oliver volume ed ed The Cambridge History of Africa Vol 3 From c 1050 to c 1600 John Donnelly Fage and Roland Oliver series general eds reprinted 2001 ed Cambridge Cambridge University Press pp 331 462 ISBN 0 521 20981 1 OCLC 185545332 Levtzion Nehemia Hopkins J F P eds 2000 Corpus of Early Arabic Sources for West African History Markus Wiener Publishers ISBN 978 1 55876 241 1 Masonen Pekka 2000 The Negroland Revisited Discovery and Invention of the Sudanese Middle Ages Annales Academiae Scientiarum Fennicae Ser Humaniora no 309 Helsinki Finnish Academy of Science and Letters ISBN 951 41 0886 8 OCLC 45681680 Ortiz de Montellano Bernard Gabriel Haslip Viera Warren Barbour Spring 1997 They Were NOT Here before Columbus Afrocentric Hyperdiffusionism in the 1990s Ethnohistory Durham NC Duke University Press issued by the American Society for Ethnohistory 44 2 199 234 doi 10 2307 483368 ISSN 0014 1801 JSTOR 483368 OCLC 42388116 Niane Djibril Tamsir 1959 Recherches sur l Empire du Mali au Moyen Age Recherches Africaines in French Archived from the original on 2007 05 19 Niane D T 1984 Mali and the second Mandingo expansion In Niane D T ed General History of Africa IV Africa from the Twelfth to the Sixteenth Century Rucker Walter C 2018 The Black Atlantic and the African Diaspora Oxford Research Encyclopedia of Religion Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 934037 8 Taube Karl 2004 Olmec Art at Dumbarton Oaks PDF Pre Columbian Art at Dumbarton Oaks no 2 Washington D C Dumbarton Oaks Research Library and Collection Trustees of Harvard University ISBN 0 88402 275 7 OCLC 56096117 Archived from the original PDF online reproduction on 2008 02 27 Thacher John Boyd 1903 Christopher Columbus his life his work his remains as revealed by original printed and manuscript records together with an essay on Peter Martyr of Anghera and Bartolome De Las Casas the first Historians of America New York G P Putnam s Sons Thornton John K 2012 09 10 A Cultural History of the Atlantic World 1250 1820 Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0521727341 Van Sertima Ivan 1976 They Came Before Columbus New York Random House ISBN 0 8129 6817 4 See also EditZheng He admiral of the 14th century Chinese long distance fleet External links EditMalian praise singer Sadio Diabate singing about Abubakar II BBC World Service Audio Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Atlantic voyage of the predecessor of Mansa Musa amp oldid 1170674792, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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