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General History of Africa

The General History of Africa (GHA) is a two-phase project launched by UNESCO in 1964.[1] The 1964 General Conference of UNESCO, during its 13th Session, instructed the Organization to undertake this initiative after the newly independent African Member States expressed a strong desire to reclaim their cultural identity, to rectify widespread ignorance about their Continent's history, and to break free of discriminatory prejudices. Phase One, which began in 1964 and was completed in 1999, consisted of writing and publishing eight volumes which highlight the shared heritage of the peoples of Africa. Phase Two, which began in 2009, focuses on the elaboration of history curricula and pedagogical materials for primary and secondary schools on the basis of the eight volumes of the GHA. Phase Two also focuses on the promotion of the use and harmonization of the teaching of this collection in higher education institutions throughout the Continent. Phase Two also concerns the implementation of these materials in schools in Africa and the diaspora. The objective of both Phase One and Phase Two of the project is to re-appropriate the interpretation and writing of African histories and to demonstrate the contribution of African cultures past and present to the history of humanity at large.

General History of Africa (in Portuguese).

Volumes and contributors edit

Volume 1: Methodology and African Historiography (1981) edit

Chapter No. Chapter Title[2] Author (and Nationality)[2]
General Introduction Joseph Ki-Zerbo (Burkina Faso)[nb 1]
1 The development of African historiography John Donnelly Fage (U.K.)
2 The place of history in African society Boubou Hama (Niger) and Joseph Ki-Zerbo (Burkina Faso)
3 Recent trends in African historiography and their contribution to history in general Philip Dearmond Curtin (U.S.A.)
4 Sources and specific techniques used in African history: general outline Théophile Obenga (Republic of the Congo)
5 Written sources before the fifteenth century Hichem Djait (Tunisia)
6 Written sources from the fifteenth century onwards Ivan Hrbek [cs] (Czech Republic)[nb 2]
7 Oral tradition and its methodology Jan Vansina (Belgium)
8 The living tradition Amadou Hampâté Bâ (Mali)
9 African archeology and its techniques including dating techniques Zaky Iskander (Egypt)
10 History and linguistics Pathé Diagne (Senegal)
Editorial Note: Theories on the 'races' and history of Africa Joseph Ki-Zerbo (Burkina Faso)
11 Migrations and ethnic and linguistic differentiations Dmitri Olderogge (Russia)[nb 3]
12 African linguistic classification Joseph Harold Greenberg (U.S.A.)
Appendix to Chapter 12: The language map of Africa David Dalby (U.K.)
13 Historical geography: physical aspects Sékouba Diarra (Mali)
14 Historical geography: economic aspects Akin Ladipo Mabogunje (Nigeria)
15 The interdisciplinary methods adopted in this study Joseph Ki-Zerbo (Burkina Faso)
16 Chronological framework: African pluvial and glacial epochs Rushdi Said (Egypt) and Hugues Faure (France)
17 Homonization: General problems Yves Coppens (France) and Lionel Balout (France)
18 African fossil man Richard Leakey (Kenya)[nb 4]
19 The prehistory of East Africa John Edward Giles Sutton (U.K.)
20 The prehistory of Southern Africa John Desmond Clark (U.S.A.)
21 The prehistory of Central Africa Roger de Bayle des Hermens (France) and Francis Van Noten (Belgium) with Pierre de Maret (Belgium), Jan Moeyersons (Belgium), K. Muya and Emile Roche (France)
22 The prehistory of North Africa Lionel Balout (France)
23 The prehistory of the Sahara Henri Jean Hougot (France)
24 The prehistory of West Africa Charles Thurstan Shaw (U.K.)
25 The prehistory of the Nile Valley Fernand Debono (U.K.)
26 African prehistoric art Joseph Ki-Zerbo (Burkina Faso)
27 The origins, development and expansion of agricultural techniques Roland Portères [fr] (France) and Jacques Barrau (France)
28 Discovery and diffusion of metals and the development of social systems until the fifth century before the Christian era Jean Vercoutter (France)
Conclusion: From nature in the raw to liberated humanity Joseph Ki-Zerbo (Burkina Faso)

Volume 2: Ancient Civilizations of Africa (1981) edit

Chapter No. Chapter Title[3] Author (and Nationality)[3]
Introduction Gamal Eddin Mokhtar (Egypt) with Jean Vercoutter (France)
1 Origin of the Ancient Egyptians Cheikh Anta Diop (Senegal)
[nb 5] Annex to Chapter 1: Report on the symposium on 'The Peopling of Ancient Egypt and the Deciphering of the Meroitic Script' (Cairo, 28 January-3 February 1974)
2 Pharaonic Egypt Abdel Moneim Abu Bakr (Egypt)
3 Pharaonic Egypt: society, economy and culture Jean Yoyotte (France)
4 Egypt's relations with the rest of Africa Abd el Hamid Zayid (Egypt) with Jean Devisse [fr] (France)
5 The legacy of Pharaonic Egypt Rashid El Nadoury (Egypt) with Jean Vercoutter (France)
6 Egypt in the Hellenistic era Henry Riad (Egypt) with Jean Devisse [fr] (France)
7 Egypt under Roman domination Sergio Donadoni (Italy)
8 The importance of Nubia: a link between Central Africa and the Mediterranean S. Adam (Egypt) with Jean Vercoutter (France)
9 Nubia before Napata (-3100 to -750) Negm-el-Din Mohammed Sherif (Sudan)
10 The Empire of Kush: Napata and Meroë Jean Leclant (France)
11 The civilization of Napata and Meroë Ahmed Ali Hakem (Sudan) with Ivan Hrbek [cs] (Czech Republic) and Jean Vercoutter (France)
12 The spreading of Christianity in Nubia Kazimierz Michałowski (Poland)
13 Pre-Axumite culture H. de Contension (France)
14 The civilization of Axum from the first to the seventh century Francis Anfray (France)
15 Axum: political system, economics and culture, first to fourth century Yuri Mikhailovich Kobishanov (Russia)[nb 6]
16 Christian Axum Tekle Tsadik Mekouria (Ethiopia)
17 The proto-Berbers Jehan Desanges (France)
18 The Carthaginian period Brian Herbert Warmington (U.K.)
19 The Roman and post-Roman period in North Africa Ammar Mahjoubi [fr] (Tunisia) and Pierre Salama (France)[nb 7]
20 The Sahara in classical antiquity Pierre Salama (France)
21 Introduction to the later prehistory of Sub-Saharan Africa Merrick Posnansky (U.K.)
22 The East African coast and its role in maritime trade Abdul Sheriff (Tanzania)
23 East Africa before the seventh century John Edward Giles Sutton (U.K.)
24 West Africa before the seventh century Bassey Wai-Andah (Nigeria)
25 Central Africa Francis Van Noten (Belgium) with Daniel Cahen (Belgium) and Pierre de Maret (Belgium)
26 Southern Africa: hunters and food-gatherers John Parkington (U.K.)
27 The beginnings of the Iron Age in Southern Africa David Walter Phillipson (U.K.)
28 Madagascar Pierre Vérin [fr] (France)
29 The societies of Africa south of the Sahara in the Early Iron Age Merrick Posnansky (U.K.)
Conclusion Gamal Eddin Mokhtar (Egypt)

Volume 3: Africa from the Seventh to the Eleventh Century (1988) edit

Chapter No. Chapter Title[8] Author (and Nationality)[8]
1 Africa in the context of world history Ivan Hrbek [cs] (Czech Republic)
2 The coming of Islam and the expansion of the Muslim empire Muhammad al-Fasi (Morocco) and Ivan Hrbek [cs] (Czech Republic)
3 Stages in the development of Islam and its dissemination in Africa
4 Islam as a social system in Africa since the seventh century Zakari Dramani-Issifou [fr] (Benin)
5 The peoples of the Sudan: Population movements Francois de Medeiros (Benin)
6 The Bantu-speaking peoples and their expansion Samwiri Lwanga-Lunyiigo (Uganda) and Jan Vansina (Belgium)
7 Egypt from the Arab conquest until the end of the Fatimid state (1171) Thierry Bianquis (France)
8 Christian Nubia at the height of its civilization Stefan Jakobielski (Poland)
9 The conquest of North Africa and the Berber resistance H. Mones (Egypt)
10 The independence of the Maghrib Mohamed Talbi (Tunisia)
11 The role of the Sahara and Saharians in relationships between North and South Tadeusz Lewicki [pl] (Poland)
12 The emergence of the Fatimids Ivan Hrbek [cs] (Czech Republic)
13 The Almovarids Ivan Hrbek [cs] (Czech Republic) and Jean Devisse [fr] (France)
14 Trade and trade routes in West Africa Jean Devisse [fr] (France)
15 The Chad region as a crossroads Dierk Lange (Germany) and Bawuro Barkindo (Nigeria)
16 The Guinea zone: General situation Thurston Shaw (U.K.)
17 The Guinean belt: The peoples between Mount Cameroon and the Ivory Coast Bassey Wai Andah (Nigeria) with James Anquandah (Ghana)
18 The peoples of Upper Guinea (between Ivory Coast and the Casamance) Bassey Wai Andah (Nigeria)
19 The Horn of Africa Tekle-Tsadik Mekouria (Ethiopia)
20 Ethiopia's relations with the Muslim world Enrico Cerulli (Italy)
21 The East African coast and the Comoro Islands Fidelis T. Masao (Tanzania) and Henry W. Mutoro (Kenya)
22 The East African interior Christopher Ehret (U.S.A.)
23 Central Africa to the north of the Zambezi David Walter Phillipson (U.K.)
24 Southern Africa to the south of the Zambezi Thomas N. Huffman (U.S.A.)
25 Madagascar Madame Bakoly Domenichini-Ramiaramanana (Madagascar)
26 The African diaspora in Asia Yusof Talib (Singapore) with F. El-Samir (Iraq)
27 Relations between different regions of Africa Abdoulaye Bathily (Senegal) with Claude Meillassoux (France)
28 Africa from the seventh to the eleventh century: Five formative centuries Jean Devisse [fr] (France) and Jan Vansina (Belgium)

Volume 4: Africa from the Twelfth to the Sixteenth Century (1984) edit

Chapter No. Chapter Title[9] Author (and Nationality)[9]
1 Introduction Djibril Tamsir Niane (Guinea)[nb 8]
2 The unification of the Maghreb under the Alhomads O. Saidi (Tunisia)
3 The spread of civilization in the Maghreb and its impact on Western civilization Mohamed Talbi (Tunisia)
4 The disintrigation of the political unity of the Maghreb Ivan Hrbek [cs] (Czech Republic)
5 Society in the Maghrib after the disappearance of the Alhomads R. Idris (France)
6 Mali and the second Mandigo expansion Djibril Tamsir Niane (Guinea)
7 The decline of the Mali empire Madina Ly-Tall (Mali)
8 The Songhay from the 12th to the 16th century Sékéné Mody Cissoko (Senegal)
9 The peoples and kingdoms of the Niger Bend and the Volta basin from the 12th to 16th century Michel Izard (France)
10 The kingdoms and peoples of Chad Dierk Lange (Germany)
11 The Hausa and their neighbours in central Sudan Mahdi Adamu (Nigeria) with André Salifou (Niger)
12 The coastal peoples: From Casamance to the Ivory Coast lagoons Yves Person (France)
13 From the Ivory Coast lagoons to the Volta Pierre Kipré (Ivory Coast)
14 From the Volta to the Cameroon Alan Frederick Charles Ryder (U.K.)
15 Egypt and the Muslim world Jean-Claude Garcin [fr] (France)
16 Nubia from the late 12th century to the Funj conquest in the early 15th century Luboš Kropáček [cs] (Czech Republic)
17 The Horn of Africa: The Solomonids in Ethiopia and the states of the Horn of Africa Taddesse Tamrat (Ethiopia)
18 The development of Swahili civilization Victor V. Matveiev (U.S.S.R.)
19 Between the coast and the great lakes Christopher Ehret (U.S.A.)
20 The Great Lakes region Bethwell Allan Ogot (Kenya)
21 The Zambezi and Limpopo basins: 1100-1500 Brian Murray Fagan (U.K.)
22 Equatorial Africa and Angola: Migrations and the emergence of the first states Jan Vansina (Belgium)
23 Southern Africa: Its peoples and social structures Leonard Diniso Ngcongco (Botswana) with Jan Vansina (Belgium)
24 Madagascar and the neighbouring islands from the 12th to the 16th century Faranirina Esoavelomandroso (Madagascar)
25 Relationships and exchanges among the different groups Djibril Tamsir Niane (Guinea)
26 Africa in inter-continental relations Jean Devisse [fr] (France) with S. Labib (Egypt)
27 Conclusion Djibril Tamsir Niane (Guinea)

Volume 5: Africa from the Sixteenth to the Eighteenth Century (1992) edit

Chapter No. Chapter Title[10] Author (and Nationality)[10]
1 The struggle for international trade and its implications for Africa Marian Małowist [pl] (Poland)
2 African political, economic and social structures during this period Pathé Diagne (Senegal)
3 Population movements and the emergence of new social-political forms in Africa Jan Vansina (Belgium)
4 Africa in world history: the export slave trade from Africa and the emergence of an Atlantic economic order Joseph E. Inikori (Nigeria)
5 The African diaspora in the old and new worlds Joseph E. Harris (U.S.A.)
6 The Ottoman conquest of Egypt Rudolf Vesely (Czechoslovakia)
7 The Sudan, 1500-1800 Yusuf Fadl Hasan (Sudan) and Bethwell Allan Ogot (Kenya)
8 Morocco Mohammad El Fasi (Morocco)
9 Algeria, Tunisia and Libya: The Ottomans and their heirs Mohamed Hédi Chérif (Tunisia)
10 Senegambia from the sixteenth to the eighteenth century: evolution of the Wolof, Sereer and Tukuloor Boubacar Barry (Senegal)
11 The end of the Songhay empire Michel Abitbol (Israel)
12 From the Niger to the Volta Michel Izard [fr] (France) and Joseph Ki-Zerbo (Burkina Faso)
13 The states and cultures of the Upper Guinea coast Christophe Wondji (Ivory Coast)
14 The states and cultures of the Lower Guinea coast Albert Adu Boahen (Ghana)
15 Fon and Yoruba: the Niger delta and Cameroon Ebiegberi Joe Alagoa (Nigeria)
16 The Hausa states Diouldé Laya (Niger)
17 Kanem-Borno: its relations with the Mediterranean sea, Bagirmi and other states in the Chad basin Bawuro M. Barkindo (Nigeria)
18 From the Cameroon grasslands to the Upper Nile Elikia M'Bokolo [fr] (Democratic Republic of Congo)[nb 9]
19 The Kongo kingdom and its neighbours Jan Vansina (Belgium) based on a contribution by Theophile Obenga (Republic of Congo)
20 The political system of the Luba and Lunda: its emergence and expansion Isidore Ndaywel è Nziem (Democratic Republic of Congo)[nb 10]
21 The northern Zambezia-Lake Malawi region Kings Mbacazwa Phiri (Malawi), Owen J. M. Kalinga (Malawi) and Hoyini H. K. Bhila (Zimbabwe)
22 Southern Zambezia Hoyini H. K. Bhila (Zimbabwe)
23 Southern Africa Donald Denoon (U.K.)
24 The Horn of Africa Eike Haberland (Germany)
25 East Africa: The coast Ahmed Idha Salim (Kenya)
26 The Great Lakes region: 1500-1800 James Bertin Webster (Canada), Bethwell Allan Ogot (Kenya) and Jean-Pierre Chrétien [fr] (France)
27 The interior of East Africa: The peoples of Kenya and Tanzania, 1500-1800 William Robert Ochieng (Kenya)
28 Madagascar and the islands of the Indian Ocean Raymond K. Kent (U.S.A.)
29 The historical development of African societies, 1500-1800: Conclusion Bethwell Allan Ogot (Kenya)

Volume 6: Africa from the Nineteenth century until the 1880s (1989) edit

Chapter No. Chapter Title[11] Author (and Nationality)[11]
1 Africa at the beginning of the nineteenth century: Issues and prospects Jacob Festus Ade Ajayi (Nigeria)
2 Africa and the world economy Immanuel Wallerstein (U.S.A.)
3 New trends and processes in Africa in the nineteenth century Albert Adu Boahen (Ghana)
4 The abolition of the slave trade Serge Daget (France)
5 The Mfecane and the rise of the new African states Leonard Diniso Ngcongco (Botswana)
6 The impact of Mfecane on the Cape colony Elleck Kufakunesu Mashingaidze (Zimbabwe)
7 The British, Boers and Africans in South Africa, 1850–80 Ngwabi Mulunge Bhebe (Zimbabwe)
8 The countries of the Zambezi basin Allen F. Isaacman (U.S.A.)
9 The East African coast and hinterland, 1800–45 Ahmed Idha Salim (Kenya)
10 The East African coast and hinterland, 1845–80 Isaria Ndelahiyosa Kimambo (Tanzania)
11 Peoples and states of the Great Lakes region David William Cohen (U.S.A.)
12 The Congo basin and Angola Jean-Luc Vellut (Belgium)
13 The renaissance of Egypt, 1805–81 Anouar Abdel-Malek (Egypt)
14 The Sudan in the nineteenth century H. A. Ibrahim (Sudan) with Bethwell Allan Ogot (Kenya)
15 Ethiopia and Somalia Richard Pankhurst (U.K.) with Lee V. Cassanelli (U.S.A.)
16 Madagascar 1800-80 Phares Mukasa Mutibwa (Uganda) with Faranirina V. Esoavelomandroso (Madagascar)
17 New trends in the Maghreb: Algeria, Tunisia and Libya Mohamed Hédi Chérif (Tunisia)
18 Morocco from the beginning of the nineteenth century to 1880 Abdallah Laroui (Morocco)
19 New patterns of European intervention in the Maghreb Nikolay A. Ivanov (U.S.S.R.)
20 The Sahara in the nineteenth century Stephen Baier (U.S.A.)
21 The nineteenth-century Islamic revolutions in West Africa Aziz A. Batran (Sudan)
22 The Sokoto caliphate and Borno Murray Last (U.K.)
23 Massina and Torodbe (Tukuloor) empire until 1878 Madina Ly-Tall (Mali)
24 States and peoples of Senegambia and Upper Guinea Y. Person (France)
25 States and peoples of the Niger Bend and the Volta Kwame Arhin (Ghana) and Joseph Ki-Zerbo (Burkina Faso)
26 Dahomy, Yorubaland, Borgu and Benin in the nineteenth century Anthony Ijaola Asiwaju (Nigeria)
27 The Niger delta and the Cameroon region Ebiegberi Joe Alagoa (Nigeria) with Lovett Zephaniah Elango (Cameroon) and Nicolas Metegue N'nah (Gabon)
28 The African diaspora Franklin W. Knight (Jamaica) with Yusof Talib (Singapore) and Philip D. Curtin (U.S.A.)
29 Conclusion: Africa on the eve of the European conquest Jacob Festus Adeniyi Ajayi (Nigeria)

Volume 7: Africa under colonial domination, 1880-1935 (1985) edit

Chapter No. Chapter Title[12] Author (and Nationality)[12]
1 Africa and the colonial challenge Albert Adu Boahen (Ghana)
2 European partition and conquest of Africa: An overview Godfrey Nwanoruo Uzoigwe (Nigeria)
3 African initiatives and resistance in the face of partition and conquest Terence Osborn Ranger (U.K.)
4 African initiatives and resistance in North-East Africa H. A. Ibrahim (Sudan) with Abbas I. Ali (Sudan)
5 African initiatives and resistance in North Africa and the Sahara Abdallah Laroui (Morocco)
6 African initiatives and resistance in West Africa, 1880-1914 M'Baye Gueye (Senegal) and Albert Adu Boahen (Ghana)
7 African initiatives and resistance in East Africa, 1880-1914 Henry A. Mwanzi (Kenya)
8 African initiatives and resistance in Central Africa, 1880-1914 Allen F. Isaacman (U.S.A.) and Jan Vansina (Belgium)
9 African initiatives and resistance in Southern Africa David Chanaiwa (Zimbabwe)
10 Madagascar, 1880s-1930s: African initiatives and reaction to colonial conquest and domination M. Esoavelomandroso (Madagascar)
11 Liberia and Ethiopia, 1880-1914: The survival of two African states M. B. Akpan (Nigeria) with A. B. Jones (Liberia) and Richard Pankhurst (U.K.)
12 The First World War and its consequences Michael Crowder (U.K.)
13 Methods and institutions of European domination R. F. Betts (U.S.A.) with Anthony Ijaola Asiwaju (Nigeria)[nb 11]
14 The colonial economy Walter Rodney (Guyana)
15 The colonial economy of the former French, Belgian and Portuguese zones, 1914–35 Catherine Coquery-Vidrovitch (France)
16 The colonial economy: The former British zones Martin H. Y. Kaniki (Tanzania)
17 The colonial economy: North Africa Ahmed Kassab (Tunisia), A. A. Abdussalam (Libya) and F. S. Abusedra (Egypt)
18 The social repercussions of colonial rule: Demographic aspects John Charles Caldwell (Australia)
19 The social repercussions of colonial rule: The new social structures Adiele Eberechukwu Afigbo (Nigeria)
20 Religion in Africa during the colonial era Kofi Asare Opoku (Ghana)
21 The arts in Africa during the period of colonial rule Wole Soyinka (Nigeria)
22 African politics and nationalism, 1919–35 B. Olatunji Oloruntimehin (Nigeria)
23 Politics and nationalism in North-East Africa, 1919–35 H. A. Ibrahim (Sudan)
24 Politics and nationalism in the Maghrib and the Sahara, 1919–35 Jacques Berque (France)
25 Politics and nationalism in West Africa, 1919–35 Albert Adu Boahen (Ghana)
26 Politics and nationalism in East Africa, 1919–35 Eisha Stephen Atieno Odhiambo (Kenya)
27 Politics and nationalism in Central and Southern Africa, 1919–35 Apollon Borisovich Davidson (Russia)[nb 12], Allen Isaacman (U.S.A.) and R. Pélissier (France)
28 Ethiopia and Liberia, 1914-35: Two independent African states in the colonial era M. B. Akpan (Nigeria) with A. B. Jones (Liberia) and Richard Pankhurst (U.K.)
29 Africa and the New World R. D. Ralston (U.S.A.) with Fernando Augusto Albuquerque Mourão (Brazil)
30 Colonialism in Africa: Its impact and significance Albert Adu Boahen (Ghana)
Y. Kwarteng (Ghana)
(Editorial assistant)

Volume 8: Africa since 1935 (1993) edit

Chapter No. Chapter Title[14] Author (and Nationality)[14]
1 Introduction Ali Al'amin Mazrui (Kenya)
2 The Horn and North Africa, 1935-45: Crises and change Tayeb Chenntouf (Algeria)
3 Tropical and equatorial Africa under French, Portuguese and Spanish domination, 1935–45 Majhemout Diop (Senegal) with David Birmingham (U.K.), Ivan Hrbek [cs] (Czech Republic), Alfredo Margarido (Portugal) and Djibril Tamsir Niane (Guinea)
4 Africa under British and Belgium domination, 1935–45 Michael Crowder (U.K.)
5 Seek ye first the political kingdom Ali Al'amin Mazrui (Kenya)
6 North Africa and the Horn Ivan Hrbek [cs] (Czech Republic)
7 West Africa, 1945–60 Jean Suret-Canale (France) and Albert Adu Boahen (Ghana)
8 Equatorial West Africa Elikia M'Bokolo [fr] (Democratic Republic of Congo)[nb 13]
9 The struggle for political sovereignty in Eastern Africa, 1945 to independence Michael Twaddle (U.K.) with Lucille Rabearimanana (Madagascar) and Isaria Ndelahiyosa Kimambo (Tanzania)
10 Southern Africa since 1945 David Chanaiwa (Zimbabwe)
11 Economic changes in Africa in the world context Catherine Coquery-Vidrovitch (France)
12 Agriculture and rural development since 1935 Maxwell Owusu (Ghana)
13 Industrial development and urban growth, 1935–80 Pierre Kipré (Ivory Coast)
14 Comparative strategies of economic decolonization in Africa Adebayo Adedeji (Nigeria)
15 Nation-building and changing political structures Jonah Isawa Elaigwu (Nigeria) with Ali Al'amin Mazrui (Kenya)
16 Nation-building and changing political values Joseph Ki-Zerbo (Burkina Faso), Ali Al'amin Mazrui (Kenya) and Christophe Wondji (Ivory Coast) with Albert Adu Boahen (Ghana)
17 Religion and social evolution Tshishiku Tshibangu (Democratic Republic of Congo)[nb 14]with Jacob Festus Ade Ajayi (Nigeria) and Lemin Sanneh (Ghana)
18 Language and social change Alfa Ibrahima Sow [fr] (Guinea) and Mohamed Hassan Abdulaziz (Ghana)
19 The development of modern literature since 1935 Ali Al'amin Mazrui (Kenya) with Mario de Andrade (Angola), M'hamed Alaoui Abdalaoui (Morocco), Daniel P. Kunene (South Africa) and Jan Vansina (Belgium)
20 Arts and society since 1935 Jan Vansina (Belgium)
21 Trends in philosophy and science in Africa Ali Al'amin Mazrui (Kenya) and Jacob Festus Ade Ajayi (Nigeria) with Albert Adu Boahen (Ghana) and Tshishiku Tshibangu (Democratic Republic of Congo)
22 Education and social change Aklilu Habte (Ethiopia) and Teshome Wagaw (Ethiopia)[nb 15] with Jacob Festus Ade Ajayi (Nigeria)
23 Africa and its diaspora since 1935 Joseph E. Harris (U.S.A.) with Slimane Zeghidour (Algeria)
24 Pan-Africanism and regional integration Samuel Kingsley Botwe Asante (Ghana) with David Chanaiwa (Zimbabwe)
25 Pan-Africanism and Liberation Edem Kodjo (Togo) and David Chanaiwa (Zimbabwe)
26 Africa and the capitalist countries Chinweizu (Nigeria)
27 Africa and the socialist countries Iba Der Thiam (Senegal) and James Mulira (Uganda) with Christophe Wondji (Ivory Coast)
28 Africa and the developing regions Locksley Edmonson (Jamaica)
29 Africa and the United Nations since 1945 Edmund Kwam Kouassi (Togo)
30 Toward the year 2000 Ali Al'amin Mazrui (Kenya)

Volume 9 (to be published in 2024) edit

Source:[15]

A future ninth volume is planned which will "update the knowledge of previous volumes [...] in the light of new developments in research".[16]

This volume will be made up of four sections:

  • Section 1 – Will explore the "epistemological, methodological and theoretical foundations of writing on the history of Africa and people of African descent in the twenty-first century".[16]
  • Section 2 – Reviewing content from the first eight volumes.[16]
  • Section 3 – Updating of early history of Africa.[16]
  • Section 4 – New developments in historical studies over the past two thousand years.[16]

Volume 10: Africa and Its Diasporas (November 2023) edit

Chapter No.[15] Chapter Title[17] Author[17]
Section I: Redefining Global Africanity and Blackness
Introduction: The Epistemological Basis for Claiming Black Identities Carole Boyce-Davis
1 Blackness Beyond the United States: Understanding New Diasporic Definitions Michelle M. Wright
2 Conceptualising Colour Representation in Antiquity: From Kmt, The Greco-Roman World to The Middle Ages Amon Saba Saakana
3 North Africa and the Origins of Epistemic Blackness Jesse Benjamin
4 What's in a Name? Complications of Blackness and Afrodescendant Definitions in Latin America and the Spanish-speaking Caribbean Augustín Laó-Montes
5 Becoming Black: Brazil's Long Search for Racial History Elaine Rocha
6 The Indian Ocean as Diasporic Field Françoise Verges
7 African Diaspora in South Asia: A Theoretical Perspective Shihan de Silva Jayasuriya
8 Blacks/Africans in China: Historical Process and Diasporic Experience Anshan Li
9 Being Black in Australia Karina Smith, Christopher Sonn and Tracy Cooper
10 Transnationalism, Diasporas and the African Diaspora: Some Theoretical Considerations Harry Goulbourne
11 Economics of the Translantic African Diaspora Joseph E. Inikori
12 Reflections in Indigeneity and African Belonging in the Caribbean and the Americas Shona N. Jackson
13 Black Studies Epistemologies in the United States of America Charisse Burden-Stelly
14 Transnational Feminism for Global Africa Amina Mama
15 Intellectual Genealogies of Black/Queer/Diaspora Jafari S. Allen
16 Genealogy of a Discriminatory Rhetoric in the Classical Arab-Muslim World Sarah Trabelsi
Section II: Mapping the African Diasporas
Introduction Vanicléia Silva Santos
1 Africans in Ancient China (900–1600 CE) Don J. Wyatt
2 The Afro-Indian Diaspora and the Rise of European Influence (1500–1700) Faaeza Jasdanwalla
3 Iranian People of African Descent: Local Boundary and National Unity Behnaz Mirzai
4 The African Diaspora in Oceania (1700–1800) Cassandra Pybus
5 The 'Masombika' or 'Makoa' in Madagascar Klara Boyer-Rossol
6 Mauritius, between Community Compartmentalisation and Cultural Melting Pots Catherine Servan-Schreiber
7 Africans in Portugal: Integration and Africanity (Fifteenth–Nineteenth Centuries) Isabel Castro Henriques
8 Afro-Atlantic Communities in the Atlantic World Roquinaldo Ferreira and Carlos de Silva Jr.
9 Creolization in Early Modern West Africa and African Diaspora: Lowcountry Creola' and the Making of Gullah Geeche ca. 1500–1860 Edda L. Fields-Black
10 Communities of African Descent in Canada Michele A. Johnson
11 African-Mexican Communities: Excluded from the Mexican Nation Paulette A. Ramsay
12 African Communities in Costa Rica and Central America Rina Caceres
13 Blackness Across Borders: Jamaican Diasporas and New Politics of Citizenship Deborah A. Thomas
14 Resistance of Malagasy Slaves to Enslavement (in the Seventeenth and Eighteenth Centuries) Rafael Thiébaut
15 Enslaved Revolt in Brazil João José Reis
16 Enslaved Resistance in North America Sylviane Diouf
17 The Participation of Berber, Nubian and Sudanese Soldiers in the Muslim Conquest of the Iberian Peninsula (Eighth-Twelfth centuries) Sarah Trabelsi
18 Haiti and Global Africa Matthew J. Smith
19 Maroonism and Resistance in the Afro-Columban Pacific Rafael Antonio Díaz Díaz
20 African Brazil: Geographies, Cartographies and Invisibilities Rafael Sanzio Araújo Dos Anjos
21 Comparative Perspectives of Abolition of Slavery in the Americas and Africa Ana Lucia Araújo
22 Muslims' Resistance in the Americas Sylviane Diouf
23 Lady of the Rosary, Mameto Kalunga: Black Brotherhoods and Devotions in the Luso-African Atlantic Lucilene Reginaldo
24 African Nations in Afro-Brazilian Religions Luis Nicolau Parés
25 The Invisible Linguistic Ties Between Africa and the Other Side Alain Anselin
26 The Presence of African Languages in Latin America Margarida Petter
27 African Oral Traditions in Brazil Sônia Maria de Melo Queiróz
28 Slavery and Gender in the Americas and Africa Mariana P. Candido
29 The Origins of African Foodways in the Americas Judith A. Carney
30 Technologies, Inheritances and Redefinitions in the Experience of the African Diaspora: Ceramics, Metallurgy and Quilombos Luís Cláudio Pereira Symanksi and Flávio dos Santo Gomes
31 Africans in the Diaspora and the Experience of Navigation Jaime Rodrigues
32 Returnee Africans of the Indian Ocean: The Bombay Africans Clifford Pereira
33 African Diaspora, Sierra Leone and Protestant Christianity, circa 1780–1860 Suzanne Schwarz
34 The Krios People of Sierra Leone: A Rooted Errance (Seventeenth–Nineteenth Centuries) Sylvie Kandé
35 Agudás – The 'Brazilians' of Benin Milton Guran
36 Back to Africa: The Return of Slaves Freed in Brazil Mônica Lima E Souza
Section III: Life Stories and Freedom Narratives of Global Africa
Introduction: Life Stories and Freedom Narratives of Global Africa Paul E. Lovejoy
1 Children in the Indian Ocean Edward A. Alpers
2 Juan Correa, a Baroque Painter of African Descent from New-Spanish Mexico María Elisa Velásquez
3 Biographies of Africans in Diaspora: Individual Trajectories and Collective Identities Nielson Rosa Bezerra
4 Joseph Bologne De Saint-Georges (1745–1799) Margaret Crosby-Arnold
5 Notices for Fugitive Slaves in the Atlantic World: Life Stories and 'Little[s] Pace[s] of Narrative' Jean-Pierre Le Glaunec
6 'I am not a Slave': Liberated Africans and their Usage of the Judicial System in Nineteenth Century Rio de Janeiro Daniela Carvalho Cavalheiro
7 Biography, History, and Diaspora: The Bight of Benin and Bahia Kristin Mann and Lisa Earl Castillo
8 Dona Ana Joaquina dos Santos Silva: A Woman Merchant of Nineteenth Century Luanda Vanessa S. Oliveira
9 Testimonies of Slavery & Freedom: The North American Slave Narrative Mary Miall Mitchell
10 Osifekunde of Ijebu (Yorubaland) Olatunji Ojo
11 Nadir Agha: The Life of a Black Eunuch, A Journey from Abyssinia to the Ottoman Palace (c. 1870 to 1957) Özgül Özdemir
12 Nicholas Said of Borno: American Civil War Veteran Mohammed Bashir Salau
13 From Slavery to Freedom: The Interesting Narrative of Gustavus Vassa, the African (aka Olaudah Equiano) Chika Unigwe
14 Fragments of the Life History of Fuseng-Be: A Temne Woman Sold in Freetown, Sierra Leone in the Early Nineteenth Century Susanne Schwarz
15 From Captives to Heroes: Liberated Africans in Calabar, 1850–1920 David Lishilinimle Imbua
16 The Whitney Plantation (Habitation Haydel) of the German Coast of Louisiana (1750–1860) Ibrahima Seck
17 Catherine Mulgrave-Zimmermann Maureen Warner-Lewis
18 The Slavery and Freedom Narrative of Mahommah Gardo Baquaqua in the Nineteenth-Century Atlantic World Bruno Rafael Véras

Volume 11 (to be published in 2024) edit

Source:[15]

This volume will "[address] contemporary challenges for Africa and its diasporas around the world".[16]

  • Section 1 – Exploring the concept of "Global Africa".[16]
  • Section 2 – The current situation of "gloablized Africans" on the continent and beyond the continent.[16]
  • Section 3 – How Africa is "participating in the challenges of the contemporary world".[16]

History edit

"My own background, the experience I gained as a teacher and as chairman... taught me how necessary it was for the education of young people and for the information of the public at large to have a history book produced by scholars with inside knowledge of the problems and hopes of Africa and with the ability to apprehend the Continent in its entirety."
- Amadou Mahtar M'Bow, former Director General of UNESCO (1974-1987)


The project encompasses two of UNESCO's key priorities - Africa and Education. Africa, in terms of a response to urgent development needs at the national level and to accompany the regional integration process; and education because this issue is a fundamental human right and the very basis of development and responsible citizenry. African peoples expressed their desire to “decolonize” the history of their Continent in order to deconstruct the traditional prejudices and clarify the truth of the African past. The project also takes into consideration modern teaching tools, such as internet resources and multimedia platforms, to ensure that learning is an interactive discovery process. Africa was never cut off from the rest of the world, and benefitted from mutual exchange and influences with Asia, the Middle East, Europe, and the Americas. The slave trade, slavery, and colonization had a considerable impact on the fragmentation of the Continent. The African Diaspora that resulted contributed in a significant manner to the creation of new cultures and societies. The Pedagogical Use of the General History of Africa aims to develop curriculum that highlights the African contribution to the progress of Humanity, African shared values, interaction with the rest of the world.

In this perspective, the creation of the African Union (AU) and the implementation of the NEPAD philosophy of developing Africa-led solutions to African challenges offered a new and favorable context for a political leadership committed to African regional integration and provided a mechanism for addressing history teaching within the continent as a whole. Furthermore, the Action Plan of the Second Decade for Education in Africa (2006 to 2015), which emphasizes the strengthening of the links between education and culture and improving the quality of pedagogical content, constitutes an ideal framework for the implementation of the project.

Article 7 of the Charter of African Cultural Renaissance adopted in 2006 in Khartoum at the Heads of State Summit stipulates that:

“African States commit themselves to work for African Renaissance. They agree on the need for reconstruction of the historical memory and conscience of Africa and the African Diaspora. They consider that the general History published by UNESCO constitutes a valid base for teaching the History of Africa and recommend its dissemination, including in African languages, as well as the publication of its abridged and simplified versions for wider audiences.”
 
1977 Meeting for the General History of Africa
 
2010 Scientific Committee Meeting for the General History of Africa

Phase One edit

(1964–1999) Following their decolonization in the early 1960s, African countries expressed a strong desire to recover their ownership of their past and the production of knowledge regarding their heritage. The African member states of UNESCO were then called upon to re-affirm their cultural identities and reinforce the common aspiration to achieve African unity. Part of these efforts included combating certain preconceptions including the assumption that the lack of written sources made it difficult to engage in serious study or production of African history. The conventional reading of history also needed to be challenged in order to depict a more accurate picture of the African continent, of its cultural diversity, and its contribution to the general progress of humankind. Thus, at its 16th Session (1964), the General Conference of UNESCO invited the Director-General to undertake the elaboration of a General History of Africa. In this framework, the General History of Africa was written and published in eight volumes, with a main edition in English, French and Arabic. Additional publications have been produced in Chinese, Portuguese, Russian, German, Italian, Spanish, and Japanese. Furthermore, twelve studies and documents on related themes as well as an abridged version of the main edition in English, French, Kiswahili, Hausa and Fulfulde were published. This tremendous undertaking represented thirty five years of cooperation between three hundred and fifty experts from Africa and from the rest of the world. This work involved some of the most eminent African scholars such as Cheikh Anta Diop, Joseph Ki-Zerbo, Theophile Obenga, Ali Mazrui, Gamal Mokhtar, Bethwell A. Ogot, etc. It also included non-African experts, such as Jan Vansina, Jean Devisse [fr] and Philip Curtin.

The main preoccupation of Phase 1 was to provide a culturally relevant perspective based on an interdisciplinary approach with a focus on the history of ideas and civilizations, societies and institutions. To that end, it was envisaged to develop an African centered point of view using African sources, such as oral traditions, art forms and linguistics. It was decided as well to adopt a continental perspective of Africa as a whole avoiding the usual dichotomy between North Africa and Sub-Saharan Africa. This shift in perspective is reflected by the significant number of renowned African scholars who contributed to this project as members of the International Scientific Committee, editors and authors.

To tackle this task, made all the more complex and difficult by the vast range of sources and the fact that documents were widely scattered, UNESCO had to proceed in stages. The first stages (1965 to 1969) consisted of gathering documentation and planning the work. Several meetings were held and campaigns were conducted in the field to collect oral traditions and establish regional documentation centers. In addition, several activities were undertaken: including the collection of unpublished manuscripts in Arabic and Ajami (manuscripts in African languages written with Arabic alphabet), the compilation of archival inventories and the preparation of a Guide to the Sources of the History of Africa, culled from the archives and libraries of a number of European and Asian countries and later published in nine volumes.

The second stage (1969 to 1971) was devoted to the deliberation of complex substantial and methodological questions raised by the compilation of the GHA. It was decided that the GHA should cover three million years of African history, in eight volumes, published in English, Arabic, French, and in African languages such as Kiswahili, Hausa, and Fulfulde.

The next stage (1971 to 1999) consisted of the drafting and publication. This began with the establishment of the International Scientific Committee to ensure the intellectual and scientific responsibility of the work and oversee the drafting and publication of the volumes. During this period, UNESCO organized scientific colloquia and symposia on topics related to the history of Africa most of which were overlooked by researchers. The results of these meetings were published in a series of books entitled “UNESCO Studies and Documents -The General History of Africa”. Twelve studies were published covering a wide range of subjects including: the Slave trade, relations between Africa and the Arab world, relations between Africa and the Indian Ocean, and the role of youth and women.

Bearing in mind that history teaching is instrumental in shaping peoples’ identities and in understanding the common ties underlying the cultural diversity in any region, and in order to implement one of the goals initially set for the General History of Africa by its initiators, UNESCO, in collaboration with the African Union Commission, launched in March 2009, Phase II of GHA entitled the “Pedagogical Use of the General History of Africa” project.

 
Eight volumes of the General History of Africa

Phase Two edit

In 2009 UNESCO launched the second phase of the project focusing on the implementation of the GHA entitled, the “Pedagogical Use of the General History of Africa.” This phase, which constitutes a priority in the cooperation between UNESCO and the African Union, falls within the framework of the Action Plan of the Second Decade for Education in Africa (2006–2015). The Action Plan emphasizes the strengthening of the links between education and culture and improving the quality of pedagogical contents such as internet resources and audiovisual materials. It further corresponds to recommendations made following several meetings organized by UNESCO before and after the completion of the first phase of the GHA.

In order to successfully implement the second phase of the project, UNESCO has had to have the project validated by different African institutional and academic stakeholders including the Ministers of Education and various professional associations including historians, history teachers, pedagogues, et al. At the Ministers of Education of the COMEDAF meeting in November 2009, the African Ministers reaffirmed their support for the project and recalled the political leadership of the African Union on the Project. This continued cooperation between the Commission of the African Union and UNESCO has been necessary to facilitate the appropriation of the project.

Objectives:
“This project gives us a formidable opportunity to develop a pan-African vision that also highlights the contribution of African cultures and civilizations to humankind.” [18]

- Irina Bokova, Director General of UNESCO June 16, 2010
 
The Pedagogical Use of the General History of Africa Brochure

The main objective of Phase Two, entitled "The Pedagogical Use of the General History of Africa" is to contribute to the regenerating of the teaching of African history on the basis of the General History of Africa in African Union member States with the view to promote the African regional integration process. In particular, the project aims to:

  • develop common content for use in African primary and secondary schools, for three different age groups (under 12, 13-16 and 17–19) as well as an historical atlas and an educational CD-Rom. The content could, if necessary, be adapted to local circumstances without changing the regional scope;
  • improve teacher training in light of the latest findings in historical research and advances made in the methodology and methods of history teaching. A teachers’ guide will be elaborated and guidelines to reinforce initial and in-service training of primary and secondary school teachers will be defined.
  • promote the teaching of and harmonize the use of the GHA in higher education institutions across the continent.

Implementation:
To implement the project, UNESCO established a ten-member Scientific Committee (SC) representing the five sub regions of the Continent, entrusted with the intellectual and scientific responsibility of the project. The committee members were designated by the Director General of UNESCO in February 2009 after a series of consultations held with different partners and stakeholders including: the African Union, the Africa Group of UNESCO, the donor country, the African Historian Association, the International Association of Historians, and members of the former International Scientific Committee established for the first phase of the Project. These members are: Professor Alaa El-din Shaheen (Egypt), Professor Taieb El Bahloul (Libyan Arab Jamahiriya), Professor Sifiso Ndlovu (South Africa), Professor Amakobe Florida Karani (Kenya), Professor Adame Ba Konaré (Mali), Professor Jean Michel Mabeko-Tali (Congo), Professor Lily Mafela (Botswana), Professor Elikia M’bokolo (D.R. Congo), Professor Mamadou N’doye (Senegal), Professor Bahru Zewde (Ethiopia).

The aforementioned members were installed on February 24, 2009, in the framework of the Forum for African Regional and Sub-Regional Organizations to Support Cooperation between UNESCO and NEPAD (FORASUN) that took place in Tripoli (Libya) from February 20–24, 2009,[19] UNESCO organized an Expert Meeting on March 16–17, 2009 [20] to discuss the proposed methodology for the implementation of the project. This meeting was immediately followed by the first meeting of the Scientific Committee (SC), which took place from March 18–20, 2009.

Major developments since the launch of Phase Two:

1. Organization of an expert meeting:
UNESCO organized on March 16–17, 2009 an Expert Meeting which gathered 35 experts from the different African sub regions, including members of the former International Scientific Committee for the first Phase of the GHA, editors and authors of the GHA volumes, representatives of African sub regional organizations et al. During the meeting, the experts discussed the proposed methodology for the implementation of the project and made concrete recommendations to the SC.

2. Organization of the 1st meeting of the SC:
The SC for the Pedagogical Use of the General History of Africa held its First Meeting from March 18–20, 2009 at UNESCO HQ.[7] The Committee:

  • Elected its Bureau (Prof. Mbokolo, Chairman; Prof. N’doye, 1st Vice-Chairman; Prof. El Bahloul, 2nd Vice-Chairman; Prof. Mafela, Rapporteur)
  • Determined the functioning of the Committee
  • Discussed the methodology and activities proposed for the implementation of the project
  • Examined the recommendations formulated to that end by the Experts Meeting
  • Stressed the need to make the most of any relevant political and cultural events to present the Project and to advocate for it

3. Endorsement by the Executive Council of the African Union (AU)

  • During its Sixth Ordinary Session held in Khartoum, on 24–25 January 2006, the African Union Heads of States took a decision regarding the strengthening of the links between education and culture (Assembly/AU/dec.96 (VI)), as one of the main focus areas of the Plan of Action for the Second Decade of Education for Africa (2006-2015)
  • During its Fifteenth Ordinary Session held in Syrte (Libya) from 24 to 30 June 2009, the Council adopted a decision in which it expressed its support for the project and urged the African Union Member States to contribute to its implementation (Decision EX.CL/Dec. 492 (XV) Rev.1).

4.Endorsement by the Conference of Ministers of Education of the African Union (COMEDAF)

  • During their Second Extraordinary Session (COMEDAF II+), which took place from 4 to 8 September 2006 in Maputo (Mozambique), the African Ministers of Education pointed out in their Declaration the teaching of African history as one of the issues critical to successfully eradicate deficiencies in Africa's Education systems and to ensure that education plays its role in the vision of the African Union and this, within the Second Decade of Education for Africa.
  • During their Fourth Ordinary Session (COMEDAF IV) held in Mombasa (Kenya), 23–26 November 2009, the African Ministers, in their communiqué, reaffirmed their support for the project and recalled the political leadership of the African Union on the project.

5. Designation of focal points within the African Ministers of Education (MoE):
46 African Ministers of Education out of 51 have designated focal points within their ministries to participate in and follow up the implementation of the project.

6. Designation of the drafting committees for the elaboration of pedagogical tools on the basis of the GHA:
The SC for the project met from 24 to 28 October 2010 to designate members of the drafting committees for the common pedagogical content and teachers guides. The Committee selected 30 experts who will compose the above-mentioned committees taking into account competency, gender, and geographical balance.

Conflicting views between historians edit

Due to the nature of the series, different historians had contrasting and conflicting views on certain subject matters.

Cheikh Anta Diop's "Origin of the ancient Egyptians" chapter edit

Cheikh Anta Diop's contribution to the second volume focused on the ancient Egyptian race controversy and his argument that "the whole of the [ancient] Egyptian population [...] was negro, barring an infiltration of white nomads in the proto-dynastic epoch",[21] and that "the black population of Upper Egypt began to retreat only at the time of the Persian occupation".[22] This argument was not universally accepted by the other contributors to the UNESCO series. Diop's chapter had a note from editor Gamal Mokhtar warning the reader that "The opinions expressed by Professor Cheikh Anta Diop in this chapter are those which he presented and developed at the Unesco symposium on 'The peopling of ancient Egypt' [...] The arguments put forward in this chapter have not been accepted by all the experts interested in the problem."[23] In the introduction to the volume, Mokhtar himself argued that "it is highly doubtful whether the inhabitants that introduced civilization into the Nile valley ever belonged to one single, pure race". Mokhtar later added in the introduction that “It is more than probable that the African strain, black or light, is preponderant in the Ancient Egyptian, but in the present state of our knowledge it is impossible to say more”.[24] Diop's chapter was followed by a summary of the 1974 Cairo symposium where Diop presented his ideas to 19 other historians.[25]

The reactions to Diop's arguments at the symposion were wide-ranging. French professor Jean Leclant stressed the "African character of Egyptian civilization" but felt it was important to differentiate between 'race' and 'culture' and that there was no reason to rely on "outmoded studies" from Ernest Chantre, Grafton Elliot Smith, Giuseppe Sergi and Douglas Erith Derry as Diop had done.[26] Sudanese professor Abdelgadir M. Abdalla noted that iconographic evidence showed that the "creators of the Napata culture had nothing in common with the Egyptians" and had "completely different" anatomical characteristics.[27] He further argued that Diop's linguistic comparisons between Egyptian and Wolof were "neither convincing nor conclusive" and "it was hazardous to make too uncompromising a correlation between a language and an ethnic structure ".[27] Abdalla's criticism of Diop's arguments lead to a "lively exchange of views on linguistic matters between Professors Abdalla and Diop".[27] Egyptian professor Abu Bakr argued that "Egyptians had never been isolated from other peoples" and "never constituted a pure race".[28] Congolese professor Theophile Obenga was however more supportive of Diop's views. He argued that "morphological, lexicological and syntactic similarities" provided "convincing proof of the close relationship between ancient Egyptian and negro-African languages of today" and that this was not the case "between Semitic, Berber and Egyptian".[29] French professor Jean Vercoutter agreed with Diop that "that the populations of the Egyptian reaches of the Nile Valley was homogenous as far as the southern extremity of the Delta" during the proto-dynastic and pre-dynastic periods.[30] Overall, Diop's chapter was credited in the general conclusion of the 1974 symposium report by the International Scientific Committee's Rapporteur, Professor Jean Devisse,[31] as a "painstakingly researched contribution" which nevertheless led to a "real lack of balance" in the discussion among participants.[32][33]

Jan Vansina, who contributed chapters to volumes 1, 3–5, 7 and 8, noted that there had previously been a "clash" between Cheikh Anta Diop and Gamal Mokhtar on the matter of topics that would be included in the second volume.[34] The committee then decided on the "principle of heterogeneity" and that uniformity on the interpretation of historical evidence would not be imposed on any historian writing for the UNESCO General History of Africa.[34]

Larissa Nordholt argued that Diop's chapter was politically motivated, having been published only due to being in line with UNESCO's political imperatives, despite clashing with accepted historical methods and standards of academic rigor. Nordholdt argued that Diop's views aligned with the decolonisation efforts of the General History of Africa but he premised his arguments on outdated, racialism which classified humanity into distinct groups with a biological essence. Nordholdt specified the point of contention between Diop and other historians such as the basis of methodology and his reliance on outdated, eighteenth century and nineteenth century European sources. However, she did state that the contributors did “come to a general consensus that the Egyptians could not not have been “white” in the same way that Europeans were” and the dissemination of Diop's ideas contributed to a wider recognition that the Ancient Egypt was an African civilisation although his methods were “not considered entirely permissible by most of the other GHA historians”.[35]

Bethwell Allan Ogot, a Kenyan historian and editor of UNESCO General History of Africa Volume 5, stated that “Cheikh Anta Diop wrested Egyptian civilization from the Egyptologists and restored it to the mainstream of African history”.[36]

John Parkington's "Southern Africa" chapter edit

John Parkington contributed a chapter on hunters and food-gatherers in Southern Africa for the second volume of the UNESCO series.[37] The committee behind the UNESCO series however expressed "serious reservations" on the methods used in the chapter by the author, as these would cause confusion for the reader by presenting them with information on both the Palaeolithic era and contemporary southern Africa at the same time.[38] Parkington was asked to partially alter his text but did not consider it possible.[38] An agreement was therefore reached that the chapter be published in this form but with a note warning the reader of reservations expressed by the committee.[38]

Chapter on the Bantu Expansion edit

Volume 3 included a chapter on the Bantu expansion written by Samwiri Lwanga-Lunyiigo and Jan Vansina.[39] The editor's note on this chapter explained that the two authors had "different scientific training and divergent opinions", though could agree on "the most important questions".[40] There was however one remaining "serious disagreement" on a theory presented by Samwiri Lwanga-Lunyiigo that differs from the opinion of most specialists on the field of the Bantu expansion but this had been retained for inclusion in the volume.[40]

Withdrawn chapter from Volume 3 edit

An unnamed author was asked to write a chapter on the east African coast and supported Neville Chittick's belief that cities on the east African coast were "basically Asian".[34] All but two of the committee members disagreed with this argument and the committee as a whole agreed that Chittick's position did not account for all known archaeological evidence.[34] This chapter was replaced by another written by Fidelis T. Masao and Henry W. Mutoro.[34]

Map in Volume 5 edit

A debate arose over the correct terminology to use for a map to accompany the chapter "The African diaspora in the old and new worlds". Delegates from different countries were sent to UNESCO to argue either for the use of the term "Persian Gulf" or "Arabian Gulf".[41] The debate over this minor point would block the publication of the fifth volume until 1992.[41]

Reception edit

Volumes 1 and 2 edit

Christopher Ehret reviewed volume 1 for the African Studies Review and described it as an "essential reference book", referring to the first seven chapters as "useful summaries" for non-specialists. Ehret commended the selection of "most contributors in most volumes were scholastically apt choices" across the eight-volume series. However, he noted a number of limitations with the first volume such as the broad focus on historical geography and non-written sources across several chapters.[42] Also, he criticised the over-representation of older, non-African scholars as contributors with some scholars "thwarting Ki-Zerbo's aspirations 'to bring the picture up to date',[having] no more to tell us than in the 1950s".[42] Similarly, he criticised the inclusion of speculative, theories of David Dalby into chapters which examine African linguistic classification and the lack of focus on the current developments in the linguistic field.[42]

In his review of the first two volumes for The International Journal of African Historical Studies, Ivor Wilks described the volumes as "handsome" and available at "so modest a price" compared to most other works on similar topics released by major commercial publishers.[43] Wilks further described the series as "a useful monument to the state of African historiography in the 1970s and 1980s", though also noted that it would have to go through a "continuous process of revision" in order to "retain its value as a reliable work of reference".[43] He also stated that the quality of individual chapters "vary considerably", with some chapters showing "an original contribution to the field" while others "make no pretense to be more than surveys".[43] Wilks noted that "probably few of [the chapters] would otherwise have seen the light of day in the regular learned journals".[43] Wilks described Volume 2 as having "less thematic unity" than the first volume, singling out Cheikh Anta Diop's "shrill" chapter on his "idiosyncratic" views of Ancient Egypt and the unusual step of the editor providing a warning to the reader on this particular chapter.[43]

Michael Brett reviewed volume 2 for The Journal of African History, noting that while it would become "a necessary part of the library of anyone interested in the history of Africa as a whole", it would nonetheless "daunt the uninitiated" and "disappoint the specialist".[44] He observed that despite the length of the book there was a problem with "compression" of information, with most chapters being "too short to allow the subject the exposition it deserves".[44] In discussing the chapters on Egypt, which made up a third of the volume, Brett felt that space had been "simply wasted" with some chapters repeating information mentioned earlier in the volume.[44] He also felt that much of the historical context of Ancient Egypt had been "squeezed almost out of existence", partly due to Cheikh Anta Diop's chapter on the 'Origins of the Ancient Egyptians' which was simply a "restatement" of this author's views and the "long résumé of [the 1974 Cairo Symphosium] on the subject" inserted afterwards seemingly as a "corrective to [Diop]'s idosyncratic view".[44] As a result of space being taken up by this debate, the volume lacked any "discussion [...] of pre-dynastic Egypt and the settlement of the Nile valley which made possible the subsequent civilization".[44] Brett further criticized the later chapters on Egypt, such as the one on Hellenistic Egypt which had "virtually no dates" or profile given for the rulers of the Ptolemaic dynasty.[44] Brett did however praise the chapters on Nubia as providing a "satisfying account" of the Egyptian Empire south of Aswan, as well as the kingdoms based at Napata and Meroe.[44]

Brett found fault with the chapters dealing with Aksum, which had a focus that was "resolutely South Arabian Semitic" with "extremely scant attention paid to the Abyssinian region as a whole".[44] He singled out the chapter on the hunters and food-gatherers of Southern Africa, which included a note by the committee stating that they were unhappy with the author relying on recent ethnographic material, far beyond the chronological limits of this volume, to give an idea of what life was like for these people in ancient times. Brett however felt this chapter was a "most readable account" compared to the "rigidly archeological approach" used by other chapters on sub-Saharan Africa.[44]

Adeline Apena reviewed the second volume for the Comparative Civilizations Review as a "major document in African history" and "dismisses the general sense of invalidity that surrounds use of African oral traditions as historical source material for African history".[45] Apena noted the second volume has an emphasis on the relationship between environment, local resources and the growth of civilisations. However, she remained critical of "the Egyptian scholars in this debate who do not seem to accept that the ancient Egyptians were the same as the dark-skinned Sub-Saharans, in spite of the cultural similarities".[45] Apena concluded that "the lower Nile and its Delta are likely to have blended the stocks of peoples that inhabited the region from Libya to Near East and southwards towards Nubia" but scholarly judgements in the second volume were inconclusive due to the obscurity of the period, scarcity of sources and dated sources.[45]

Volume 3 edit

J. E. G. Sutton reviewed Volume 3 for The Journal of African Study, noting that the chapters were of "varying quality and lucidity" but could be used for scholarly reference or education provided that the reader is "patient enough to sift and select" from among the chapters.[46] He further noted that not all authors in the volume had the "breadth of vision and experience" needed for this kind of book, with some possibly receiving "insufficient editorial guidance" or conversely having "suffered excessive interference".[46] Sutton also felt that the dating system used in the series (which avoids the B.C./A.D. system in order to be culturally neutral) would be confusing to most readers and that the overall presentation of the volume was not "sufficiently inviting".[46] Sutton additionally noted that, like Volume 2, this volume was more heavily focused on Northern Africa than Africa further to the South, though there was a "valiant" attempt to draw together information on the continent as a whole in the final chapter and he commended the "obvious and strenuous effort" to include every region of Africa in the discussion.[46]

Volume 4 edit

Volume 5 edit

Volume 6 edit

In a review for The Journal of African Study, E. Ann McDougell stated that this volume fared well in regards to quality but felt dated and could be considered "state of the art" of African historiography in the years c. 1975–1980, with only a handful of post-1980s publications listed in the bibliography.[47] She did however praise the book for its "genuinely continental" geographical coverage, the "excellent quality" maps and photographs, establishing both "regional [and] world linkages" and the range of "eminent scholars" who are given "sufficient space to cover their commissioned subject matter".[47] She also sympathised with the "logistical and financial problems" of such an ambitious project which made the publication delay inevitable, but this was still "too long" given the range of quality works that historians were producing by the mid-1980s.[47]

Volume 7 edit

Reviewing the abridged edition of volume 7 for The Journal of African Study, Kirstin Mann felt that "none of the [volume]'s goals [are] wholly realized".[48] She noted that while the individual essays may have adequately "summarized the state of knowledge when they were written", they were now out of date and "little debate emerges within them".[48] Mann however welcomed the chapters on North Africa which can "bridge the divide that too often separates scholarship on North and Sub-Saharan Africa" and commended Albert Adu Boahen on the difficult task of editing the volume.[48] She singled out chapters by Ranger, Ibrahim and Ali, Isaacman and Vansina, Chanaiwa, Crowder, Coquery-Vidrovitch, Afigbo and Atieno-Odhaimbo as those that made "lasting contributions" to African historiography but observed that most chapters lacked any "systematic analysis of struggle, conflict and cleavage within African societies" during the period of study.[48] Mann ultimately summarised the volume as "[passionate] and engaged, if dated, unwieldy and uneven" and criticised the abridged edition's lack of notes and "good bibliography".[48]

Volume 8 edit

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Listed as being from the Republic of Upper Volta.[2] This later became Burkina Faso in 1984.
  2. ^ Listed as being from Czechoslovakia.[2] In 1993 the country split into the Czech Republic and Slovakia.
  3. ^ Listed as being from the USSR,[2] which devolved into separate states by 1991.
  4. ^ Listed as British in the Volume itself.
  5. ^ The Arabic, French, Portuguese and Spanish versions of this volume move this chapter to end of the book, after the conclusion.[4][5][6][7]
  6. ^ Listed as being from the USSR,[3] which devolved into separate states by 1991.
  7. ^ Listed as being from the Algeria in the volume itself.[3]
  8. ^ Listed as being from Senegal.[9]
  9. ^ Listed as being from Zaire.[10] This later became the Democratic Republic of Congo in 1997.
  10. ^ Listed as being from Zaire.[10] This later became the Democratic Republic of Congo in 1997.
  11. ^ Mistakenly listed as "M. Asiwaju" in the contents page.[13]
  12. ^ Listed as being from the USSR,[12] which devolved into separate states by 1991.
  13. ^ Listed as being from Zaire.[14] This later became the Democratic Republic of Congo in 1997.
  14. ^ Listed as being from Zaire.[14] This later became the Democratic Republic of Congo in 1997.
  15. ^ Mistakenly listed as being from the United States.[14]

References edit

  1. ^ "General History of Africa". UNESCO. 15 March 2019. Retrieved 11 June 2019.
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  3. ^ a b c d Mokhtar, Gamal, ed. (1981). General History of Africa Volume II: Ancient Civilizations of Africa. California: Heinemann/UNESCO. pp. vi–vii, 740–741. ISBN 978-92-3-101708-7.
  4. ^ Mokhtar, Gamal, ed. (1985). General History of Africa Volume II: Ancient Civilizations of Africa. UNESCO/Jeune Afrique. ISBN 92-3-601708-8.
  5. ^ Mokhtar, Gamal, ed. (1980). Histoire Générale de l'Afrique II: Afrique Ancienne. UNESCO. ISBN 92-3-201708-3.
  6. ^ Mokhtar, Gamal, ed. (1983). História Geral da Africa II: A Africa Antiga. Sao Paulo: Atica/UNESCO.
  7. ^ Mokhtar, Gamal, ed. (1983). Historia General de Africa II: Antiguas Civilizaciones de Africa. Madrid: Tecnos/UNESCO. ISBN 84-309-0898-6.
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  9. ^ a b c Niane, D.T., ed. (1984). General History of Africa Volume IV: Africa from the Twelfth to the Sixteenth Century. California: Heinemann/UNESCO. p. v-vii, 689–691. ISBN 978-92-3-101710-0.
  10. ^ a b c d Ogot, Bethwell Alan, ed. (1992). General History of Africa Volume V: Africa from the Sixteenth to the Eighteenth Century. California: Heinemann/UNESCO. p. v-vii, 908–911. ISBN 0-520 039165.
  11. ^ a b Ajayi, J. F. Ade, ed. (1989). General History of Africa Volume VI: Africa from the Nineteenth century until the 1880s. California: Heinemann/UNESCO. p. v-vii, 794–796. ISBN 978-92-3-101712-4.
  12. ^ a b c Boahen, Albert Adu, ed. (1985). General History of Africa Volume VII: Africa under colonial domination, 1880-1935. California: Heinemann/UNESCO. p. v-vii, 812–814. ISBN 978-92-3-101713-1.
  13. ^ Boahen, Albert Adu, ed. (1985). General History of Africa Volume VII: Africa under colonial domination, 1880-1935. California: Heinemann/UNESCO. p. vi. ISBN 978-92-3-101713-1.
  14. ^ a b c d e Mazrui, Ali A.; Wondji, Christophe, eds. (1993). General History of Africa Volume VIII: Africa since 1935. California: Heinemann/UNESCO. p. v-vii, 937–941. ISBN 978-92-3-102758-1.
  15. ^ a b c https://unesdoc.unesco.org/ark:/48223/pf0000387378
  16. ^ a b c d e f g h i "General History of Africa - The Collection". UNESCO. 15 March 2019. Retrieved 9 November 2022.
  17. ^ a b Santos, Vanicleia Silva, ed. (2023). General History of Africa Volume X: Africa and Its Diasporas. UNESCO. p. ix-xiv.
  18. ^ "Address by Ms Irina Bokova Director-General of UNESCO on the occasion of the Regional Conference on the "Pedagogical Use of the General history of Africa"" (PDF). UNESCO. 16 June 2010. Retrieved 11 January 2011.
  19. ^ "Report by the Director-General on the execution of the programme (34 C/5) (01 January 2008 - 30 June 2009) Coordination and monitoring of action to benefit Africa" (PDF). UNESCO. 24 February 2009. Retrieved 11 January 2011.
  20. ^ "Pedagogical Use of the General History of Africa Expert Meeting" (PDF). Pedagogical Use of the General History of Africa. UNESCO. 16–17 March 2009. Retrieved 11 January 2011.
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  29. ^ Mokhtar, Gamal, ed. (1981). General History of Africa Volume II: Ancient Civilizations of Africa. California: Heinemann/UNESCO. pp. 64–65. ISBN 978-92-3-101708-7.
  30. ^ Mokhtar, Gamal, ed. (1981). General History of Africa Volume II: Ancient Civilizations of Africa. California: Heinemann/UNESCO. pp. 47–48. ISBN 978-92-3-101708-7.
  31. ^ Mokhtar, Gamal (1990). Ancient Civilizations of Africa (Unesco International Scientific Committee for the Drafting of a General History of Africa). Currey. p. 33. ISBN 978-0-85255-092-2.
  32. ^ Ancient civilizations of Africa (Abridged ed.). London [England]: J. Currey. 1990. pp. 43–46. ISBN 0852550928.
  33. ^ The peopling of ancient Egypt and the deciphering of Meroitic script : proceedings of the symposium held in Cairo from 28 January to 3 February 1974. Paris: Unesco. 1978. pp. 86, 93–94, 99. ISBN 92-3-101605-9.
  34. ^ a b c d e Jan Vansina (1993). "Unesco and African Historiography". History in Africa. 20: 343. doi:10.2307/3171979. JSTOR 3171979. S2CID 162327008.
  35. ^ Schulte Nordholt, Larissa (2021). "Multiple Hamitic Theories and Black Egyptians: Negotiating Tensions between Standards of Scholarship and Political Imperatives in UNESCO's General History of Africa (1964–1998)". History of Humanities. 6 (2): 449–469. doi:10.1086/715866. hdl:1887/3242830. ISSN 2379-3163.
  36. ^ Ogot, Bethwell (2011). AFRICAN Historiography: From colonial historiography to UNESCO's general history of Africa. p. 72. S2CID 55617551.
  37. ^ Mokhtar, Gamal, ed. (1981). General History of Africa Volume II: Ancient Civilizations of Africa. California: Heinemann/UNESCO. pp. 640–670. ISBN 978-92-3-101708-7.
  38. ^ a b c Mokhtar, Gamal, ed. (1981). General History of Africa Volume II: Ancient Civilizations of Africa. California: Heinemann/UNESCO. p. 640. ISBN 978-92-3-101708-7.
  39. ^ El Fasi, Mohammad; Hrbek, Ivan, eds. (1988). General History of Africa Volume III: Africa from the Seventh to the Eleventh Century. California: Heinemann/UNESCO. pp. 140–162. ISBN 978-92-3-101709-4.
  40. ^ a b El Fasi, Mohammad; Hrbek, Ivan, eds. (1988). General History of Africa Volume III: Africa from the Seventh to the Eleventh Century. California: Heinemann/UNESCO. p. 161. ISBN 978-92-3-101709-4.
  41. ^ a b Jan Vansina (1993). "Unesco and African Historiography". History in Africa. 20: 344. doi:10.2307/3171979. JSTOR 3171979. S2CID 162327008.
  42. ^ a b c Ehret, Christopher (December 1981). "J. Ki-Zerbo, ed. UNESCO General History of Africa, Vol. 1: Methodology and African Prehistory. Berkeley: University o California Press; London: Heinemann Educational Books, 1981. xxvii + 819 pp. Plates, maps, notes, biblio., indices. $35.00, hardcover". African Studies Review. 24 (4): 133–134. doi:10.2307/524342. ISSN 0002-0206. JSTOR 524342.
  43. ^ a b c d e Wilks, Ivor (1982). "Book Reviews: UNESCO General History of Africa". The International Journal of African Historical Studies. 15 (2): 283–285. doi:10.2307/218551. JSTOR 218551.
  44. ^ a b c d e f g h i Brett, Michael (1982). "The UNESCO History: Volume Two". The Journal of African History. 23 (1): 117–120. doi:10.1017/S0021853700020284. S2CID 245909418.
  45. ^ a b c Apena, Adeline (1 October 1994). "G. Mokhtar, ed. UNESCO General History of Africa". Comparative Civilizations Review. 31 (31). ISSN 0733-4540.
  46. ^ a b c d Sutton, J. E. G. (1989). "History by Committee". The Journal of African Study. 30 (3): 493–494. JSTOR 182921.
  47. ^ a b c McDougell, E. Ann (1994). "The Sands of Time". The Journal of African Study. 35 (2): 314–316. JSTOR 183225.
  48. ^ a b c d e Mann, Kirsten (1992). "Colonial Abridgements". The Journal of African Study. 33 (1): 151–153. JSTOR 182289.

Bibliography edit

UNESCO General History of Africa

  • Ki-Zerbo, Joseph, ed. (1981). General History of Africa Volume I: Methodology and African Prehistory. California: Heinemann. ISBN 978-0520039124.
  • Mokhtar, Gamal, ed. (1981). General History of Africa Volume II: Ancient Civilizations of Africa. California: Heinemann/UNESCO. ISBN 978-92-3-101708-7.
  • El Fasi, Mohammad; Hrbek, Ivan, eds. (1988). General History of Africa Volume III: Africa from the Seventh to the Eleventh Century. California: Heinemann/UNESCO. p. v-vii, 796–798. ISBN 978-92-3-101709-4.
  • Niane, D.T., ed. (1984). General History of Africa Volume IV: Africa from the Twelfth to the Sixteenth Century. California: Heinemann/UNESCO. ISBN 978-92-3-101710-0.
  • Ogot, Bethwell Alan, ed. (1992). General History of Africa Volume V: Africa from the Sixteenth to the Eighteenth Century. California: Heinemann/UNESCO. ISBN 0-520 039165.
  • Ajayi, J. F. Ade, ed. (1989). General History of Africa Volume VI: Africa from the Nineteenth century until the 1880s. California: Heinemann/UNESCO. ISBN 978-92-3-101712-4.
  • Boahen, Albert Adu, ed. (1985). General History of Africa Volume VII: Africa under colonial domination, 1880-1935. California: Heinemann/UNESCO. ISBN 978-92-3-101713-1.
  • Mazrui, Ali A.; Wondji, Christophe, eds. (1993). General History of Africa Volume VIII: Africa since 1935. California: Heinemann/UNESCO. ISBN 978-92-3-102758-1.

Additional Sources

  • Schulte Nordholt, Larissa. "From Metropole to Margin in UNESCO's General History of Africa – Documents of Historiographical Decolonization in Paris and Ibadan" History in Africa Volume 46, (2019), pp. 403–412
  • Christopher Saunders (2006). "The 'General History of Africa' and Southern Africa's Recent Past". Présence Africaine (173): 117–126. JSTOR 43617262.
  • Jan Vansina (1993). "UNESCO and African Historiography". History in Africa. 20: 337–352. doi:10.2307/3171979. JSTOR 3171979.

general, history, africa, phase, project, launched, unesco, 1964, 1964, general, conference, unesco, during, 13th, session, instructed, organization, undertake, this, initiative, after, newly, independent, african, member, states, expressed, strong, desire, re. The General History of Africa GHA is a two phase project launched by UNESCO in 1964 1 The 1964 General Conference of UNESCO during its 13th Session instructed the Organization to undertake this initiative after the newly independent African Member States expressed a strong desire to reclaim their cultural identity to rectify widespread ignorance about their Continent s history and to break free of discriminatory prejudices Phase One which began in 1964 and was completed in 1999 consisted of writing and publishing eight volumes which highlight the shared heritage of the peoples of Africa Phase Two which began in 2009 focuses on the elaboration of history curricula and pedagogical materials for primary and secondary schools on the basis of the eight volumes of the GHA Phase Two also focuses on the promotion of the use and harmonization of the teaching of this collection in higher education institutions throughout the Continent Phase Two also concerns the implementation of these materials in schools in Africa and the diaspora The objective of both Phase One and Phase Two of the project is to re appropriate the interpretation and writing of African histories and to demonstrate the contribution of African cultures past and present to the history of humanity at large General History of Africa in Portuguese Contents 1 Volumes and contributors 1 1 Volume 1 Methodology and African Historiography 1981 1 2 Volume 2 Ancient Civilizations of Africa 1981 1 3 Volume 3 Africa from the Seventh to the Eleventh Century 1988 1 4 Volume 4 Africa from the Twelfth to the Sixteenth Century 1984 1 5 Volume 5 Africa from the Sixteenth to the Eighteenth Century 1992 1 6 Volume 6 Africa from the Nineteenth century until the 1880s 1989 1 7 Volume 7 Africa under colonial domination 1880 1935 1985 1 8 Volume 8 Africa since 1935 1993 1 9 Volume 9 to be published in 2024 1 10 Volume 10 Africa and Its Diasporas November 2023 1 11 Volume 11 to be published in 2024 2 History 3 Phase One 4 Phase Two 5 Conflicting views between historians 5 1 Cheikh Anta Diop s Origin of the ancient Egyptians chapter 5 2 John Parkington s Southern Africa chapter 5 3 Chapter on the Bantu Expansion 5 4 Withdrawn chapter from Volume 3 5 5 Map in Volume 5 6 Reception 6 1 Volumes 1 and 2 6 2 Volume 3 6 3 Volume 4 6 4 Volume 5 6 5 Volume 6 6 6 Volume 7 6 7 Volume 8 7 See also 8 Notes 9 References 10 BibliographyVolumes and contributors editVolume 1 Methodology and African Historiography 1981 edit Chapter No Chapter Title 2 Author and Nationality 2 General Introduction Joseph Ki Zerbo Burkina Faso nb 1 1 The development of African historiography John Donnelly Fage U K 2 The place of history in African society Boubou Hama Niger and Joseph Ki Zerbo Burkina Faso 3 Recent trends in African historiography and their contribution to history in general Philip Dearmond Curtin U S A 4 Sources and specific techniques used in African history general outline Theophile Obenga Republic of the Congo 5 Written sources before the fifteenth century Hichem Djait Tunisia 6 Written sources from the fifteenth century onwards Ivan Hrbek cs Czech Republic nb 2 7 Oral tradition and its methodology Jan Vansina Belgium 8 The living tradition Amadou Hampate Ba Mali 9 African archeology and its techniques including dating techniques Zaky Iskander Egypt 10 History and linguistics Pathe Diagne Senegal Editorial Note Theories on the races and history of Africa Joseph Ki Zerbo Burkina Faso 11 Migrations and ethnic and linguistic differentiations Dmitri Olderogge Russia nb 3 12 African linguistic classification Joseph Harold Greenberg U S A Appendix to Chapter 12 The language map of Africa David Dalby U K 13 Historical geography physical aspects Sekouba Diarra Mali 14 Historical geography economic aspects Akin Ladipo Mabogunje Nigeria 15 The interdisciplinary methods adopted in this study Joseph Ki Zerbo Burkina Faso 16 Chronological framework African pluvial and glacial epochs Rushdi Said Egypt and Hugues Faure France 17 Homonization General problems Yves Coppens France and Lionel Balout France 18 African fossil man Richard Leakey Kenya nb 4 19 The prehistory of East Africa John Edward Giles Sutton U K 20 The prehistory of Southern Africa John Desmond Clark U S A 21 The prehistory of Central Africa Roger de Bayle des Hermens France and Francis Van Noten Belgium with Pierre de Maret Belgium Jan Moeyersons Belgium K Muya and Emile Roche France 22 The prehistory of North Africa Lionel Balout France 23 The prehistory of the Sahara Henri Jean Hougot France 24 The prehistory of West Africa Charles Thurstan Shaw U K 25 The prehistory of the Nile Valley Fernand Debono U K 26 African prehistoric art Joseph Ki Zerbo Burkina Faso 27 The origins development and expansion of agricultural techniques Roland Porteres fr France and Jacques Barrau France 28 Discovery and diffusion of metals and the development of social systems until the fifth century before the Christian era Jean Vercoutter France Conclusion From nature in the raw to liberated humanity Joseph Ki Zerbo Burkina Faso Volume 2 Ancient Civilizations of Africa 1981 edit Chapter No Chapter Title 3 Author and Nationality 3 Introduction Gamal Eddin Mokhtar Egypt with Jean Vercoutter France 1 Origin of the Ancient Egyptians Cheikh Anta Diop Senegal nb 5 Annex to Chapter 1 Report on the symposium on The Peopling of Ancient Egypt and the Deciphering of the Meroitic Script Cairo 28 January 3 February 1974 2 Pharaonic Egypt Abdel Moneim Abu Bakr Egypt 3 Pharaonic Egypt society economy and culture Jean Yoyotte France 4 Egypt s relations with the rest of Africa Abd el Hamid Zayid Egypt with Jean Devisse fr France 5 The legacy of Pharaonic Egypt Rashid El Nadoury Egypt with Jean Vercoutter France 6 Egypt in the Hellenistic era Henry Riad Egypt with Jean Devisse fr France 7 Egypt under Roman domination Sergio Donadoni Italy 8 The importance of Nubia a link between Central Africa and the Mediterranean S Adam Egypt with Jean Vercoutter France 9 Nubia before Napata 3100 to 750 Negm el Din Mohammed Sherif Sudan 10 The Empire of Kush Napata and Meroe Jean Leclant France 11 The civilization of Napata and Meroe Ahmed Ali Hakem Sudan with Ivan Hrbek cs Czech Republic and Jean Vercoutter France 12 The spreading of Christianity in Nubia Kazimierz Michalowski Poland 13 Pre Axumite culture H de Contension France 14 The civilization of Axum from the first to the seventh century Francis Anfray France 15 Axum political system economics and culture first to fourth century Yuri Mikhailovich Kobishanov Russia nb 6 16 Christian Axum Tekle Tsadik Mekouria Ethiopia 17 The proto Berbers Jehan Desanges France 18 The Carthaginian period Brian Herbert Warmington U K 19 The Roman and post Roman period in North Africa Ammar Mahjoubi fr Tunisia and Pierre Salama France nb 7 20 The Sahara in classical antiquity Pierre Salama France 21 Introduction to the later prehistory of Sub Saharan Africa Merrick Posnansky U K 22 The East African coast and its role in maritime trade Abdul Sheriff Tanzania 23 East Africa before the seventh century John Edward Giles Sutton U K 24 West Africa before the seventh century Bassey Wai Andah Nigeria 25 Central Africa Francis Van Noten Belgium with Daniel Cahen Belgium and Pierre de Maret Belgium 26 Southern Africa hunters and food gatherers John Parkington U K 27 The beginnings of the Iron Age in Southern Africa David Walter Phillipson U K 28 Madagascar Pierre Verin fr France 29 The societies of Africa south of the Sahara in the Early Iron Age Merrick Posnansky U K Conclusion Gamal Eddin Mokhtar Egypt Volume 3 Africa from the Seventh to the Eleventh Century 1988 edit Chapter No Chapter Title 8 Author and Nationality 8 1 Africa in the context of world history Ivan Hrbek cs Czech Republic 2 The coming of Islam and the expansion of the Muslim empire Muhammad al Fasi Morocco and Ivan Hrbek cs Czech Republic 3 Stages in the development of Islam and its dissemination in Africa 4 Islam as a social system in Africa since the seventh century Zakari Dramani Issifou fr Benin 5 The peoples of the Sudan Population movements Francois de Medeiros Benin 6 The Bantu speaking peoples and their expansion Samwiri Lwanga Lunyiigo Uganda and Jan Vansina Belgium 7 Egypt from the Arab conquest until the end of the Fatimid state 1171 Thierry Bianquis France 8 Christian Nubia at the height of its civilization Stefan Jakobielski Poland 9 The conquest of North Africa and the Berber resistance H Mones Egypt 10 The independence of the Maghrib Mohamed Talbi Tunisia 11 The role of the Sahara and Saharians in relationships between North and South Tadeusz Lewicki pl Poland 12 The emergence of the Fatimids Ivan Hrbek cs Czech Republic 13 The Almovarids Ivan Hrbek cs Czech Republic and Jean Devisse fr France 14 Trade and trade routes in West Africa Jean Devisse fr France 15 The Chad region as a crossroads Dierk Lange Germany and Bawuro Barkindo Nigeria 16 The Guinea zone General situation Thurston Shaw U K 17 The Guinean belt The peoples between Mount Cameroon and the Ivory Coast Bassey Wai Andah Nigeria with James Anquandah Ghana 18 The peoples of Upper Guinea between Ivory Coast and the Casamance Bassey Wai Andah Nigeria 19 The Horn of Africa Tekle Tsadik Mekouria Ethiopia 20 Ethiopia s relations with the Muslim world Enrico Cerulli Italy 21 The East African coast and the Comoro Islands Fidelis T Masao Tanzania and Henry W Mutoro Kenya 22 The East African interior Christopher Ehret U S A 23 Central Africa to the north of the Zambezi David Walter Phillipson U K 24 Southern Africa to the south of the Zambezi Thomas N Huffman U S A 25 Madagascar Madame Bakoly Domenichini Ramiaramanana Madagascar 26 The African diaspora in Asia Yusof Talib Singapore with F El Samir Iraq 27 Relations between different regions of Africa Abdoulaye Bathily Senegal with Claude Meillassoux France 28 Africa from the seventh to the eleventh century Five formative centuries Jean Devisse fr France and Jan Vansina Belgium Volume 4 Africa from the Twelfth to the Sixteenth Century 1984 edit Chapter No Chapter Title 9 Author and Nationality 9 1 Introduction Djibril Tamsir Niane Guinea nb 8 2 The unification of the Maghreb under the Alhomads O Saidi Tunisia 3 The spread of civilization in the Maghreb and its impact on Western civilization Mohamed Talbi Tunisia 4 The disintrigation of the political unity of the Maghreb Ivan Hrbek cs Czech Republic 5 Society in the Maghrib after the disappearance of the Alhomads R Idris France 6 Mali and the second Mandigo expansion Djibril Tamsir Niane Guinea 7 The decline of the Mali empire Madina Ly Tall Mali 8 The Songhay from the 12th to the 16th century Sekene Mody Cissoko Senegal 9 The peoples and kingdoms of the Niger Bend and the Volta basin from the 12th to 16th century Michel Izard France 10 The kingdoms and peoples of Chad Dierk Lange Germany 11 The Hausa and their neighbours in central Sudan Mahdi Adamu Nigeria with Andre Salifou Niger 12 The coastal peoples From Casamance to the Ivory Coast lagoons Yves Person France 13 From the Ivory Coast lagoons to the Volta Pierre Kipre Ivory Coast 14 From the Volta to the Cameroon Alan Frederick Charles Ryder U K 15 Egypt and the Muslim world Jean Claude Garcin fr France 16 Nubia from the late 12th century to the Funj conquest in the early 15th century Lubos Kropacek cs Czech Republic 17 The Horn of Africa The Solomonids in Ethiopia and the states of the Horn of Africa Taddesse Tamrat Ethiopia 18 The development of Swahili civilization Victor V Matveiev U S S R 19 Between the coast and the great lakes Christopher Ehret U S A 20 The Great Lakes region Bethwell Allan Ogot Kenya 21 The Zambezi and Limpopo basins 1100 1500 Brian Murray Fagan U K 22 Equatorial Africa and Angola Migrations and the emergence of the first states Jan Vansina Belgium 23 Southern Africa Its peoples and social structures Leonard Diniso Ngcongco Botswana with Jan Vansina Belgium 24 Madagascar and the neighbouring islands from the 12th to the 16th century Faranirina Esoavelomandroso Madagascar 25 Relationships and exchanges among the different groups Djibril Tamsir Niane Guinea 26 Africa in inter continental relations Jean Devisse fr France with S Labib Egypt 27 Conclusion Djibril Tamsir Niane Guinea Volume 5 Africa from the Sixteenth to the Eighteenth Century 1992 edit Chapter No Chapter Title 10 Author and Nationality 10 1 The struggle for international trade and its implications for Africa Marian Malowist pl Poland 2 African political economic and social structures during this period Pathe Diagne Senegal 3 Population movements and the emergence of new social political forms in Africa Jan Vansina Belgium 4 Africa in world history the export slave trade from Africa and the emergence of an Atlantic economic order Joseph E Inikori Nigeria 5 The African diaspora in the old and new worlds Joseph E Harris U S A 6 The Ottoman conquest of Egypt Rudolf Vesely Czechoslovakia 7 The Sudan 1500 1800 Yusuf Fadl Hasan Sudan and Bethwell Allan Ogot Kenya 8 Morocco Mohammad El Fasi Morocco 9 Algeria Tunisia and Libya The Ottomans and their heirs Mohamed Hedi Cherif Tunisia 10 Senegambia from the sixteenth to the eighteenth century evolution of the Wolof Sereer and Tukuloor Boubacar Barry Senegal 11 The end of the Songhay empire Michel Abitbol Israel 12 From the Niger to the Volta Michel Izard fr France and Joseph Ki Zerbo Burkina Faso 13 The states and cultures of the Upper Guinea coast Christophe Wondji Ivory Coast 14 The states and cultures of the Lower Guinea coast Albert Adu Boahen Ghana 15 Fon and Yoruba the Niger delta and Cameroon Ebiegberi Joe Alagoa Nigeria 16 The Hausa states Dioulde Laya Niger 17 Kanem Borno its relations with the Mediterranean sea Bagirmi and other states in the Chad basin Bawuro M Barkindo Nigeria 18 From the Cameroon grasslands to the Upper Nile Elikia M Bokolo fr Democratic Republic of Congo nb 9 19 The Kongo kingdom and its neighbours Jan Vansina Belgium based on a contribution by Theophile Obenga Republic of Congo 20 The political system of the Luba and Lunda its emergence and expansion Isidore Ndaywel e Nziem Democratic Republic of Congo nb 10 21 The northern Zambezia Lake Malawi region Kings Mbacazwa Phiri Malawi Owen J M Kalinga Malawi and Hoyini H K Bhila Zimbabwe 22 Southern Zambezia Hoyini H K Bhila Zimbabwe 23 Southern Africa Donald Denoon U K 24 The Horn of Africa Eike Haberland Germany 25 East Africa The coast Ahmed Idha Salim Kenya 26 The Great Lakes region 1500 1800 James Bertin Webster Canada Bethwell Allan Ogot Kenya and Jean Pierre Chretien fr France 27 The interior of East Africa The peoples of Kenya and Tanzania 1500 1800 William Robert Ochieng Kenya 28 Madagascar and the islands of the Indian Ocean Raymond K Kent U S A 29 The historical development of African societies 1500 1800 Conclusion Bethwell Allan Ogot Kenya Volume 6 Africa from the Nineteenth century until the 1880s 1989 edit Chapter No Chapter Title 11 Author and Nationality 11 1 Africa at the beginning of the nineteenth century Issues and prospects Jacob Festus Ade Ajayi Nigeria 2 Africa and the world economy Immanuel Wallerstein U S A 3 New trends and processes in Africa in the nineteenth century Albert Adu Boahen Ghana 4 The abolition of the slave trade Serge Daget France 5 The Mfecane and the rise of the new African states Leonard Diniso Ngcongco Botswana 6 The impact of Mfecane on the Cape colony Elleck Kufakunesu Mashingaidze Zimbabwe 7 The British Boers and Africans in South Africa 1850 80 Ngwabi Mulunge Bhebe Zimbabwe 8 The countries of the Zambezi basin Allen F Isaacman U S A 9 The East African coast and hinterland 1800 45 Ahmed Idha Salim Kenya 10 The East African coast and hinterland 1845 80 Isaria Ndelahiyosa Kimambo Tanzania 11 Peoples and states of the Great Lakes region David William Cohen U S A 12 The Congo basin and Angola Jean Luc Vellut Belgium 13 The renaissance of Egypt 1805 81 Anouar Abdel Malek Egypt 14 The Sudan in the nineteenth century H A Ibrahim Sudan with Bethwell Allan Ogot Kenya 15 Ethiopia and Somalia Richard Pankhurst U K with Lee V Cassanelli U S A 16 Madagascar 1800 80 Phares Mukasa Mutibwa Uganda with Faranirina V Esoavelomandroso Madagascar 17 New trends in the Maghreb Algeria Tunisia and Libya Mohamed Hedi Cherif Tunisia 18 Morocco from the beginning of the nineteenth century to 1880 Abdallah Laroui Morocco 19 New patterns of European intervention in the Maghreb Nikolay A Ivanov U S S R 20 The Sahara in the nineteenth century Stephen Baier U S A 21 The nineteenth century Islamic revolutions in West Africa Aziz A Batran Sudan 22 The Sokoto caliphate and Borno Murray Last U K 23 Massina and Torodbe Tukuloor empire until 1878 Madina Ly Tall Mali 24 States and peoples of Senegambia and Upper Guinea Y Person France 25 States and peoples of the Niger Bend and the Volta Kwame Arhin Ghana and Joseph Ki Zerbo Burkina Faso 26 Dahomy Yorubaland Borgu and Benin in the nineteenth century Anthony Ijaola Asiwaju Nigeria 27 The Niger delta and the Cameroon region Ebiegberi Joe Alagoa Nigeria with Lovett Zephaniah Elango Cameroon and Nicolas Metegue N nah Gabon 28 The African diaspora Franklin W Knight Jamaica with Yusof Talib Singapore and Philip D Curtin U S A 29 Conclusion Africa on the eve of the European conquest Jacob Festus Adeniyi Ajayi Nigeria Volume 7 Africa under colonial domination 1880 1935 1985 edit Chapter No Chapter Title 12 Author and Nationality 12 1 Africa and the colonial challenge Albert Adu Boahen Ghana 2 European partition and conquest of Africa An overview Godfrey Nwanoruo Uzoigwe Nigeria 3 African initiatives and resistance in the face of partition and conquest Terence Osborn Ranger U K 4 African initiatives and resistance in North East Africa H A Ibrahim Sudan with Abbas I Ali Sudan 5 African initiatives and resistance in North Africa and the Sahara Abdallah Laroui Morocco 6 African initiatives and resistance in West Africa 1880 1914 M Baye Gueye Senegal and Albert Adu Boahen Ghana 7 African initiatives and resistance in East Africa 1880 1914 Henry A Mwanzi Kenya 8 African initiatives and resistance in Central Africa 1880 1914 Allen F Isaacman U S A and Jan Vansina Belgium 9 African initiatives and resistance in Southern Africa David Chanaiwa Zimbabwe 10 Madagascar 1880s 1930s African initiatives and reaction to colonial conquest and domination M Esoavelomandroso Madagascar 11 Liberia and Ethiopia 1880 1914 The survival of two African states M B Akpan Nigeria with A B Jones Liberia and Richard Pankhurst U K 12 The First World War and its consequences Michael Crowder U K 13 Methods and institutions of European domination R F Betts U S A with Anthony Ijaola Asiwaju Nigeria nb 11 14 The colonial economy Walter Rodney Guyana 15 The colonial economy of the former French Belgian and Portuguese zones 1914 35 Catherine Coquery Vidrovitch France 16 The colonial economy The former British zones Martin H Y Kaniki Tanzania 17 The colonial economy North Africa Ahmed Kassab Tunisia A A Abdussalam Libya and F S Abusedra Egypt 18 The social repercussions of colonial rule Demographic aspects John Charles Caldwell Australia 19 The social repercussions of colonial rule The new social structures Adiele Eberechukwu Afigbo Nigeria 20 Religion in Africa during the colonial era Kofi Asare Opoku Ghana 21 The arts in Africa during the period of colonial rule Wole Soyinka Nigeria 22 African politics and nationalism 1919 35 B Olatunji Oloruntimehin Nigeria 23 Politics and nationalism in North East Africa 1919 35 H A Ibrahim Sudan 24 Politics and nationalism in the Maghrib and the Sahara 1919 35 Jacques Berque France 25 Politics and nationalism in West Africa 1919 35 Albert Adu Boahen Ghana 26 Politics and nationalism in East Africa 1919 35 Eisha Stephen Atieno Odhiambo Kenya 27 Politics and nationalism in Central and Southern Africa 1919 35 Apollon Borisovich Davidson Russia nb 12 Allen Isaacman U S A and R Pelissier France 28 Ethiopia and Liberia 1914 35 Two independent African states in the colonial era M B Akpan Nigeria with A B Jones Liberia and Richard Pankhurst U K 29 Africa and the New World R D Ralston U S A with Fernando Augusto Albuquerque Mourao Brazil 30 Colonialism in Africa Its impact and significance Albert Adu Boahen Ghana Y Kwarteng Ghana Editorial assistant Volume 8 Africa since 1935 1993 edit Chapter No Chapter Title 14 Author and Nationality 14 1 Introduction Ali Al amin Mazrui Kenya 2 The Horn and North Africa 1935 45 Crises and change Tayeb Chenntouf Algeria 3 Tropical and equatorial Africa under French Portuguese and Spanish domination 1935 45 Majhemout Diop Senegal with David Birmingham U K Ivan Hrbek cs Czech Republic Alfredo Margarido Portugal and Djibril Tamsir Niane Guinea 4 Africa under British and Belgium domination 1935 45 Michael Crowder U K 5 Seek ye first the political kingdom Ali Al amin Mazrui Kenya 6 North Africa and the Horn Ivan Hrbek cs Czech Republic 7 West Africa 1945 60 Jean Suret Canale France and Albert Adu Boahen Ghana 8 Equatorial West Africa Elikia M Bokolo fr Democratic Republic of Congo nb 13 9 The struggle for political sovereignty in Eastern Africa 1945 to independence Michael Twaddle U K with Lucille Rabearimanana Madagascar and Isaria Ndelahiyosa Kimambo Tanzania 10 Southern Africa since 1945 David Chanaiwa Zimbabwe 11 Economic changes in Africa in the world context Catherine Coquery Vidrovitch France 12 Agriculture and rural development since 1935 Maxwell Owusu Ghana 13 Industrial development and urban growth 1935 80 Pierre Kipre Ivory Coast 14 Comparative strategies of economic decolonization in Africa Adebayo Adedeji Nigeria 15 Nation building and changing political structures Jonah Isawa Elaigwu Nigeria with Ali Al amin Mazrui Kenya 16 Nation building and changing political values Joseph Ki Zerbo Burkina Faso Ali Al amin Mazrui Kenya and Christophe Wondji Ivory Coast with Albert Adu Boahen Ghana 17 Religion and social evolution Tshishiku Tshibangu Democratic Republic of Congo nb 14 with Jacob Festus Ade Ajayi Nigeria and Lemin Sanneh Ghana 18 Language and social change Alfa Ibrahima Sow fr Guinea and Mohamed Hassan Abdulaziz Ghana 19 The development of modern literature since 1935 Ali Al amin Mazrui Kenya with Mario de Andrade Angola M hamed Alaoui Abdalaoui Morocco Daniel P Kunene South Africa and Jan Vansina Belgium 20 Arts and society since 1935 Jan Vansina Belgium 21 Trends in philosophy and science in Africa Ali Al amin Mazrui Kenya and Jacob Festus Ade Ajayi Nigeria with Albert Adu Boahen Ghana and Tshishiku Tshibangu Democratic Republic of Congo 22 Education and social change Aklilu Habte Ethiopia and Teshome Wagaw Ethiopia nb 15 with Jacob Festus Ade Ajayi Nigeria 23 Africa and its diaspora since 1935 Joseph E Harris U S A with Slimane Zeghidour Algeria 24 Pan Africanism and regional integration Samuel Kingsley Botwe Asante Ghana with David Chanaiwa Zimbabwe 25 Pan Africanism and Liberation Edem Kodjo Togo and David Chanaiwa Zimbabwe 26 Africa and the capitalist countries Chinweizu Nigeria 27 Africa and the socialist countries Iba Der Thiam Senegal and James Mulira Uganda with Christophe Wondji Ivory Coast 28 Africa and the developing regions Locksley Edmonson Jamaica 29 Africa and the United Nations since 1945 Edmund Kwam Kouassi Togo 30 Toward the year 2000 Ali Al amin Mazrui Kenya Volume 9 to be published in 2024 edit Source 15 A future ninth volume is planned which will update the knowledge of previous volumes in the light of new developments in research 16 This volume will be made up of four sections Section 1 Will explore the epistemological methodological and theoretical foundations of writing on the history of Africa and people of African descent in the twenty first century 16 Section 2 Reviewing content from the first eight volumes 16 Section 3 Updating of early history of Africa 16 Section 4 New developments in historical studies over the past two thousand years 16 Volume 10 Africa and Its Diasporas November 2023 edit Chapter No 15 Chapter Title 17 Author 17 Section I Redefining Global Africanity and Blackness Introduction The Epistemological Basis for Claiming Black Identities Carole Boyce Davis 1 Blackness Beyond the United States Understanding New Diasporic Definitions Michelle M Wright 2 Conceptualising Colour Representation in Antiquity From Kmt The Greco Roman World to The Middle Ages Amon Saba Saakana 3 North Africa and the Origins of Epistemic Blackness Jesse Benjamin 4 What s in a Name Complications of Blackness and Afrodescendant Definitions in Latin America and the Spanish speaking Caribbean Augustin Lao Montes 5 Becoming Black Brazil s Long Search for Racial History Elaine Rocha 6 The Indian Ocean as Diasporic Field Francoise Verges 7 African Diaspora in South Asia A Theoretical Perspective Shihan de Silva Jayasuriya 8 Blacks Africans in China Historical Process and Diasporic Experience Anshan Li 9 Being Black in Australia Karina Smith Christopher Sonn and Tracy Cooper 10 Transnationalism Diasporas and the African Diaspora Some Theoretical Considerations Harry Goulbourne 11 Economics of the Translantic African Diaspora Joseph E Inikori 12 Reflections in Indigeneity and African Belonging in the Caribbean and the Americas Shona N Jackson 13 Black Studies Epistemologies in the United States of America Charisse Burden Stelly 14 Transnational Feminism for Global Africa Amina Mama 15 Intellectual Genealogies of Black Queer Diaspora Jafari S Allen 16 Genealogy of a Discriminatory Rhetoric in the Classical Arab Muslim World Sarah Trabelsi Section II Mapping the African Diasporas Introduction Vanicleia Silva Santos 1 Africans in Ancient China 900 1600 CE Don J Wyatt 2 The Afro Indian Diaspora and the Rise of European Influence 1500 1700 Faaeza Jasdanwalla 3 Iranian People of African Descent Local Boundary and National Unity Behnaz Mirzai 4 The African Diaspora in Oceania 1700 1800 Cassandra Pybus 5 The Masombika or Makoa in Madagascar Klara Boyer Rossol 6 Mauritius between Community Compartmentalisation and Cultural Melting Pots Catherine Servan Schreiber 7 Africans in Portugal Integration and Africanity Fifteenth Nineteenth Centuries Isabel Castro Henriques 8 Afro Atlantic Communities in the Atlantic World Roquinaldo Ferreira and Carlos de Silva Jr 9 Creolization in Early Modern West Africa and African Diaspora Lowcountry Creola and the Making of Gullah Geeche ca 1500 1860 Edda L Fields Black 10 Communities of African Descent in Canada Michele A Johnson 11 African Mexican Communities Excluded from the Mexican Nation Paulette A Ramsay 12 African Communities in Costa Rica and Central America Rina Caceres 13 Blackness Across Borders Jamaican Diasporas and New Politics of Citizenship Deborah A Thomas 14 Resistance of Malagasy Slaves to Enslavement in the Seventeenth and Eighteenth Centuries Rafael Thiebaut 15 Enslaved Revolt in Brazil Joao Jose Reis 16 Enslaved Resistance in North America Sylviane Diouf 17 The Participation of Berber Nubian and Sudanese Soldiers in the Muslim Conquest of the Iberian Peninsula Eighth Twelfth centuries Sarah Trabelsi 18 Haiti and Global Africa Matthew J Smith 19 Maroonism and Resistance in the Afro Columban Pacific Rafael Antonio Diaz Diaz 20 African Brazil Geographies Cartographies and Invisibilities Rafael Sanzio Araujo Dos Anjos 21 Comparative Perspectives of Abolition of Slavery in the Americas and Africa Ana Lucia Araujo 22 Muslims Resistance in the Americas Sylviane Diouf 23 Lady of the Rosary Mameto Kalunga Black Brotherhoods and Devotions in the Luso African Atlantic Lucilene Reginaldo 24 African Nations in Afro Brazilian Religions Luis Nicolau Pares 25 The Invisible Linguistic Ties Between Africa and the Other Side Alain Anselin 26 The Presence of African Languages in Latin America Margarida Petter 27 African Oral Traditions in Brazil Sonia Maria de Melo Queiroz 28 Slavery and Gender in the Americas and Africa Mariana P Candido 29 The Origins of African Foodways in the Americas Judith A Carney 30 Technologies Inheritances and Redefinitions in the Experience of the African Diaspora Ceramics Metallurgy and Quilombos Luis Claudio Pereira Symanksi and Flavio dos Santo Gomes 31 Africans in the Diaspora and the Experience of Navigation Jaime Rodrigues 32 Returnee Africans of the Indian Ocean The Bombay Africans Clifford Pereira 33 African Diaspora Sierra Leone and Protestant Christianity circa 1780 1860 Suzanne Schwarz 34 The Krios People of Sierra Leone A Rooted Errance Seventeenth Nineteenth Centuries Sylvie Kande 35 Agudas The Brazilians of Benin Milton Guran 36 Back to Africa The Return of Slaves Freed in Brazil Monica Lima E Souza Section III Life Stories and Freedom Narratives of Global Africa Introduction Life Stories and Freedom Narratives of Global Africa Paul E Lovejoy 1 Children in the Indian Ocean Edward A Alpers 2 Juan Correa a Baroque Painter of African Descent from New Spanish Mexico Maria Elisa Velasquez 3 Biographies of Africans in Diaspora Individual Trajectories and Collective Identities Nielson Rosa Bezerra 4 Joseph Bologne De Saint Georges 1745 1799 Margaret Crosby Arnold 5 Notices for Fugitive Slaves in the Atlantic World Life Stories and Little s Pace s of Narrative Jean Pierre Le Glaunec 6 I am not a Slave Liberated Africans and their Usage of the Judicial System in Nineteenth Century Rio de Janeiro Daniela Carvalho Cavalheiro 7 Biography History and Diaspora The Bight of Benin and Bahia Kristin Mann and Lisa Earl Castillo 8 Dona Ana Joaquina dos Santos Silva A Woman Merchant of Nineteenth Century Luanda Vanessa S Oliveira 9 Testimonies of Slavery amp Freedom The North American Slave Narrative Mary Miall Mitchell 10 Osifekunde of Ijebu Yorubaland Olatunji Ojo 11 Nadir Agha The Life of a Black Eunuch A Journey from Abyssinia to the Ottoman Palace c 1870 to 1957 Ozgul Ozdemir 12 Nicholas Said of Borno American Civil War Veteran Mohammed Bashir Salau 13 From Slavery to Freedom The Interesting Narrative of Gustavus Vassa the African aka Olaudah Equiano Chika Unigwe 14 Fragments of the Life History of Fuseng Be A Temne Woman Sold in Freetown Sierra Leone in the Early Nineteenth Century Susanne Schwarz 15 From Captives to Heroes Liberated Africans in Calabar 1850 1920 David Lishilinimle Imbua 16 The Whitney Plantation Habitation Haydel of the German Coast of Louisiana 1750 1860 Ibrahima Seck 17 Catherine Mulgrave Zimmermann Maureen Warner Lewis 18 The Slavery and Freedom Narrative of Mahommah Gardo Baquaqua in the Nineteenth Century Atlantic World Bruno Rafael Veras Volume 11 to be published in 2024 edit Source 15 This volume will address contemporary challenges for Africa and its diasporas around the world 16 Section 1 Exploring the concept of Global Africa 16 Section 2 The current situation of gloablized Africans on the continent and beyond the continent 16 Section 3 How Africa is participating in the challenges of the contemporary world 16 History edit My own background the experience I gained as a teacher and as chairman taught me how necessary it was for the education of young people and for the information of the public at large to have a history book produced by scholars with inside knowledge of the problems and hopes of Africa and with the ability to apprehend the Continent in its entirety Amadou Mahtar M Bow former Director General of UNESCO 1974 1987 dd The project encompasses two of UNESCO s key priorities Africa and Education Africa in terms of a response to urgent development needs at the national level and to accompany the regional integration process and education because this issue is a fundamental human right and the very basis of development and responsible citizenry African peoples expressed their desire to decolonize the history of their Continent in order to deconstruct the traditional prejudices and clarify the truth of the African past The project also takes into consideration modern teaching tools such as internet resources and multimedia platforms to ensure that learning is an interactive discovery process Africa was never cut off from the rest of the world and benefitted from mutual exchange and influences with Asia the Middle East Europe and the Americas The slave trade slavery and colonization had a considerable impact on the fragmentation of the Continent The African Diaspora that resulted contributed in a significant manner to the creation of new cultures and societies The Pedagogical Use of the General History of Africa aims to develop curriculum that highlights the African contribution to the progress of Humanity African shared values interaction with the rest of the world In this perspective the creation of the African Union AU and the implementation of the NEPAD philosophy of developing Africa led solutions to African challenges offered a new and favorable context for a political leadership committed to African regional integration and provided a mechanism for addressing history teaching within the continent as a whole Furthermore the Action Plan of the Second Decade for Education in Africa 2006 to 2015 which emphasizes the strengthening of the links between education and culture and improving the quality of pedagogical content constitutes an ideal framework for the implementation of the project Article 7 of the Charter of African Cultural Renaissance adopted in 2006 in Khartoum at the Heads of State Summit stipulates that African States commit themselves to work for African Renaissance They agree on the need for reconstruction of the historical memory and conscience of Africa and the African Diaspora They consider that the general History published by UNESCO constitutes a valid base for teaching the History of Africa and recommend its dissemination including in African languages as well as the publication of its abridged and simplified versions for wider audiences nbsp 1977 Meeting for the General History of Africa nbsp 2010 Scientific Committee Meeting for the General History of AfricaPhase One edit 1964 1999 Following their decolonization in the early 1960s African countries expressed a strong desire to recover their ownership of their past and the production of knowledge regarding their heritage The African member states of UNESCO were then called upon to re affirm their cultural identities and reinforce the common aspiration to achieve African unity Part of these efforts included combating certain preconceptions including the assumption that the lack of written sources made it difficult to engage in serious study or production of African history The conventional reading of history also needed to be challenged in order to depict a more accurate picture of the African continent of its cultural diversity and its contribution to the general progress of humankind Thus at its 16th Session 1964 the General Conference of UNESCO invited the Director General to undertake the elaboration of a General History of Africa In this framework the General History of Africa was written and published in eight volumes with a main edition in English French and Arabic Additional publications have been produced in Chinese Portuguese Russian German Italian Spanish and Japanese Furthermore twelve studies and documents on related themes as well as an abridged version of the main edition in English French Kiswahili Hausa and Fulfulde were published This tremendous undertaking represented thirty five years of cooperation between three hundred and fifty experts from Africa and from the rest of the world This work involved some of the most eminent African scholars such as Cheikh Anta Diop Joseph Ki Zerbo Theophile Obenga Ali Mazrui Gamal Mokhtar Bethwell A Ogot etc It also included non African experts such as Jan Vansina Jean Devisse fr and Philip Curtin The main preoccupation of Phase 1 was to provide a culturally relevant perspective based on an interdisciplinary approach with a focus on the history of ideas and civilizations societies and institutions To that end it was envisaged to develop an African centered point of view using African sources such as oral traditions art forms and linguistics It was decided as well to adopt a continental perspective of Africa as a whole avoiding the usual dichotomy between North Africa and Sub Saharan Africa This shift in perspective is reflected by the significant number of renowned African scholars who contributed to this project as members of the International Scientific Committee editors and authors To tackle this task made all the more complex and difficult by the vast range of sources and the fact that documents were widely scattered UNESCO had to proceed in stages The first stages 1965 to 1969 consisted of gathering documentation and planning the work Several meetings were held and campaigns were conducted in the field to collect oral traditions and establish regional documentation centers In addition several activities were undertaken including the collection of unpublished manuscripts in Arabic and Ajami manuscripts in African languages written with Arabic alphabet the compilation of archival inventories and the preparation of a Guide to the Sources of the History of Africa culled from the archives and libraries of a number of European and Asian countries and later published in nine volumes The second stage 1969 to 1971 was devoted to the deliberation of complex substantial and methodological questions raised by the compilation of the GHA It was decided that the GHA should cover three million years of African history in eight volumes published in English Arabic French and in African languages such as Kiswahili Hausa and Fulfulde The next stage 1971 to 1999 consisted of the drafting and publication This began with the establishment of the International Scientific Committee to ensure the intellectual and scientific responsibility of the work and oversee the drafting and publication of the volumes During this period UNESCO organized scientific colloquia and symposia on topics related to the history of Africa most of which were overlooked by researchers The results of these meetings were published in a series of books entitled UNESCO Studies and Documents The General History of Africa Twelve studies were published covering a wide range of subjects including the Slave trade relations between Africa and the Arab world relations between Africa and the Indian Ocean and the role of youth and women Bearing in mind that history teaching is instrumental in shaping peoples identities and in understanding the common ties underlying the cultural diversity in any region and in order to implement one of the goals initially set for the General History of Africa by its initiators UNESCO in collaboration with the African Union Commission launched in March 2009 Phase II of GHA entitled the Pedagogical Use of the General History of Africa project nbsp Eight volumes of the General History of AfricaPhase Two editIn 2009 UNESCO launched the second phase of the project focusing on the implementation of the GHA entitled the Pedagogical Use of the General History of Africa This phase which constitutes a priority in the cooperation between UNESCO and the African Union falls within the framework of the Action Plan of the Second Decade for Education in Africa 2006 2015 The Action Plan emphasizes the strengthening of the links between education and culture and improving the quality of pedagogical contents such as internet resources and audiovisual materials It further corresponds to recommendations made following several meetings organized by UNESCO before and after the completion of the first phase of the GHA In order to successfully implement the second phase of the project UNESCO has had to have the project validated by different African institutional and academic stakeholders including the Ministers of Education and various professional associations including historians history teachers pedagogues et al At the Ministers of Education of the COMEDAF meeting in November 2009 the African Ministers reaffirmed their support for the project and recalled the political leadership of the African Union on the Project This continued cooperation between the Commission of the African Union and UNESCO has been necessary to facilitate the appropriation of the project Objectives This project gives us a formidable opportunity to develop a pan African vision that also highlights the contribution of African cultures and civilizations to humankind 18 Irina Bokova Director General of UNESCO June 16 2010 dd nbsp The Pedagogical Use of the General History of Africa Brochure The main objective of Phase Two entitled The Pedagogical Use of the General History of Africa is to contribute to the regenerating of the teaching of African history on the basis of the General History of Africa in African Union member States with the view to promote the African regional integration process In particular the project aims to develop common content for use in African primary and secondary schools for three different age groups under 12 13 16 and 17 19 as well as an historical atlas and an educational CD Rom The content could if necessary be adapted to local circumstances without changing the regional scope improve teacher training in light of the latest findings in historical research and advances made in the methodology and methods of history teaching A teachers guide will be elaborated and guidelines to reinforce initial and in service training of primary and secondary school teachers will be defined promote the teaching of and harmonize the use of the GHA in higher education institutions across the continent Implementation To implement the project UNESCO established a ten member Scientific Committee SC representing the five sub regions of the Continent entrusted with the intellectual and scientific responsibility of the project The committee members were designated by the Director General of UNESCO in February 2009 after a series of consultations held with different partners and stakeholders including the African Union the Africa Group of UNESCO the donor country the African Historian Association the International Association of Historians and members of the former International Scientific Committee established for the first phase of the Project These members are Professor Alaa El din Shaheen Egypt Professor Taieb El Bahloul Libyan Arab Jamahiriya Professor Sifiso Ndlovu South Africa Professor Amakobe Florida Karani Kenya Professor Adame Ba Konare Mali Professor Jean Michel Mabeko Tali Congo Professor Lily Mafela Botswana Professor Elikia M bokolo D R Congo Professor Mamadou N doye Senegal Professor Bahru Zewde Ethiopia The aforementioned members were installed on February 24 2009 in the framework of the Forum for African Regional and Sub Regional Organizations to Support Cooperation between UNESCO and NEPAD FORASUN that took place in Tripoli Libya from February 20 24 2009 19 UNESCO organized an Expert Meeting on March 16 17 2009 20 to discuss the proposed methodology for the implementation of the project This meeting was immediately followed by the first meeting of the Scientific Committee SC which took place from March 18 20 2009 Major developments since the launch of Phase Two 1 Organization of an expert meeting UNESCO organized on March 16 17 2009 an Expert Meeting which gathered 35 experts from the different African sub regions including members of the former International Scientific Committee for the first Phase of the GHA editors and authors of the GHA volumes representatives of African sub regional organizations et al During the meeting the experts discussed the proposed methodology for the implementation of the project and made concrete recommendations to the SC 2 Organization of the 1st meeting of the SC The SC for the Pedagogical Use of the General History of Africa held its First Meeting from March 18 20 2009 at UNESCO HQ 7 The Committee Elected its Bureau Prof Mbokolo Chairman Prof N doye 1st Vice Chairman Prof El Bahloul 2nd Vice Chairman Prof Mafela Rapporteur Determined the functioning of the Committee Discussed the methodology and activities proposed for the implementation of the project Examined the recommendations formulated to that end by the Experts Meeting Stressed the need to make the most of any relevant political and cultural events to present the Project and to advocate for it 3 Endorsement by the Executive Council of the African Union AU During its Sixth Ordinary Session held in Khartoum on 24 25 January 2006 the African Union Heads of States took a decision regarding the strengthening of the links between education and culture Assembly AU dec 96 VI as one of the main focus areas of the Plan of Action for the Second Decade of Education for Africa 2006 2015 During its Fifteenth Ordinary Session held in Syrte Libya from 24 to 30 June 2009 the Council adopted a decision in which it expressed its support for the project and urged the African Union Member States to contribute to its implementation Decision EX CL Dec 492 XV Rev 1 4 Endorsement by the Conference of Ministers of Education of the African Union COMEDAF During their Second Extraordinary Session COMEDAF II which took place from 4 to 8 September 2006 in Maputo Mozambique the African Ministers of Education pointed out in their Declaration the teaching of African history as one of the issues critical to successfully eradicate deficiencies in Africa s Education systems and to ensure that education plays its role in the vision of the African Union and this within the Second Decade of Education for Africa During their Fourth Ordinary Session COMEDAF IV held in Mombasa Kenya 23 26 November 2009 the African Ministers in their communique reaffirmed their support for the project and recalled the political leadership of the African Union on the project 5 Designation of focal points within the African Ministers of Education MoE 46 African Ministers of Education out of 51 have designated focal points within their ministries to participate in and follow up the implementation of the project 6 Designation of the drafting committees for the elaboration of pedagogical tools on the basis of the GHA The SC for the project met from 24 to 28 October 2010 to designate members of the drafting committees for the common pedagogical content and teachers guides The Committee selected 30 experts who will compose the above mentioned committees taking into account competency gender and geographical balance Conflicting views between historians editDue to the nature of the series different historians had contrasting and conflicting views on certain subject matters Cheikh Anta Diop s Origin of the ancient Egyptians chapter edit Cheikh Anta Diop s contribution to the second volume focused on the ancient Egyptian race controversy and his argument that the whole of the ancient Egyptian population was negro barring an infiltration of white nomads in the proto dynastic epoch 21 and that the black population of Upper Egypt began to retreat only at the time of the Persian occupation 22 This argument was not universally accepted by the other contributors to the UNESCO series Diop s chapter had a note from editor Gamal Mokhtar warning the reader that The opinions expressed by Professor Cheikh Anta Diop in this chapter are those which he presented and developed at the Unesco symposium on The peopling of ancient Egypt The arguments put forward in this chapter have not been accepted by all the experts interested in the problem 23 In the introduction to the volume Mokhtar himself argued that it is highly doubtful whether the inhabitants that introduced civilization into the Nile valley ever belonged to one single pure race Mokhtar later added in the introduction that It is more than probable that the African strain black or light is preponderant in the Ancient Egyptian but in the present state of our knowledge it is impossible to say more 24 Diop s chapter was followed by a summary of the 1974 Cairo symposium where Diop presented his ideas to 19 other historians 25 The reactions to Diop s arguments at the symposion were wide ranging French professor Jean Leclant stressed the African character of Egyptian civilization but felt it was important to differentiate between race and culture and that there was no reason to rely on outmoded studies from Ernest Chantre Grafton Elliot Smith Giuseppe Sergi and Douglas Erith Derry as Diop had done 26 Sudanese professor Abdelgadir M Abdalla noted that iconographic evidence showed that the creators of the Napata culture had nothing in common with the Egyptians and had completely different anatomical characteristics 27 He further argued that Diop s linguistic comparisons between Egyptian and Wolof were neither convincing nor conclusive and it was hazardous to make too uncompromising a correlation between a language and an ethnic structure 27 Abdalla s criticism of Diop s arguments lead to a lively exchange of views on linguistic matters between Professors Abdalla and Diop 27 Egyptian professor Abu Bakr argued that Egyptians had never been isolated from other peoples and never constituted a pure race 28 Congolese professor Theophile Obenga was however more supportive of Diop s views He argued that morphological lexicological and syntactic similarities provided convincing proof of the close relationship between ancient Egyptian and negro African languages of today and that this was not the case between Semitic Berber and Egyptian 29 French professor Jean Vercoutter agreed with Diop that that the populations of the Egyptian reaches of the Nile Valley was homogenous as far as the southern extremity of the Delta during the proto dynastic and pre dynastic periods 30 Overall Diop s chapter was credited in the general conclusion of the 1974 symposium report by the International Scientific Committee s Rapporteur Professor Jean Devisse 31 as a painstakingly researched contribution which nevertheless led to a real lack of balance in the discussion among participants 32 33 Jan Vansina who contributed chapters to volumes 1 3 5 7 and 8 noted that there had previously been a clash between Cheikh Anta Diop and Gamal Mokhtar on the matter of topics that would be included in the second volume 34 The committee then decided on the principle of heterogeneity and that uniformity on the interpretation of historical evidence would not be imposed on any historian writing for the UNESCO General History of Africa 34 Larissa Nordholt argued that Diop s chapter was politically motivated having been published only due to being in line with UNESCO s political imperatives despite clashing with accepted historical methods and standards of academic rigor Nordholdt argued that Diop s views aligned with the decolonisation efforts of the General History of Africa but he premised his arguments on outdated racialism which classified humanity into distinct groups with a biological essence Nordholdt specified the point of contention between Diop and other historians such as the basis of methodology and his reliance on outdated eighteenth century and nineteenth century European sources However she did state that the contributors did come to a general consensus that the Egyptians could not not have been white in the same way that Europeans were and the dissemination of Diop s ideas contributed to a wider recognition that the Ancient Egypt was an African civilisation although his methods were not considered entirely permissible by most of the other GHA historians 35 Bethwell Allan Ogot a Kenyan historian and editor of UNESCO General History of Africa Volume 5 stated that Cheikh Anta Diop wrested Egyptian civilization from the Egyptologists and restored it to the mainstream of African history 36 John Parkington s Southern Africa chapter edit John Parkington contributed a chapter on hunters and food gatherers in Southern Africa for the second volume of the UNESCO series 37 The committee behind the UNESCO series however expressed serious reservations on the methods used in the chapter by the author as these would cause confusion for the reader by presenting them with information on both the Palaeolithic era and contemporary southern Africa at the same time 38 Parkington was asked to partially alter his text but did not consider it possible 38 An agreement was therefore reached that the chapter be published in this form but with a note warning the reader of reservations expressed by the committee 38 Chapter on the Bantu Expansion edit Volume 3 included a chapter on the Bantu expansion written by Samwiri Lwanga Lunyiigo and Jan Vansina 39 The editor s note on this chapter explained that the two authors had different scientific training and divergent opinions though could agree on the most important questions 40 There was however one remaining serious disagreement on a theory presented by Samwiri Lwanga Lunyiigo that differs from the opinion of most specialists on the field of the Bantu expansion but this had been retained for inclusion in the volume 40 Withdrawn chapter from Volume 3 edit An unnamed author was asked to write a chapter on the east African coast and supported Neville Chittick s belief that cities on the east African coast were basically Asian 34 All but two of the committee members disagreed with this argument and the committee as a whole agreed that Chittick s position did not account for all known archaeological evidence 34 This chapter was replaced by another written by Fidelis T Masao and Henry W Mutoro 34 Map in Volume 5 edit A debate arose over the correct terminology to use for a map to accompany the chapter The African diaspora in the old and new worlds Delegates from different countries were sent to UNESCO to argue either for the use of the term Persian Gulf or Arabian Gulf 41 The debate over this minor point would block the publication of the fifth volume until 1992 41 Reception editVolumes 1 and 2 edit Christopher Ehret reviewed volume 1 for the African Studies Review and described it as an essential reference book referring to the first seven chapters as useful summaries for non specialists Ehret commended the selection of most contributors in most volumes were scholastically apt choices across the eight volume series However he noted a number of limitations with the first volume such as the broad focus on historical geography and non written sources across several chapters 42 Also he criticised the over representation of older non African scholars as contributors with some scholars thwarting Ki Zerbo s aspirations to bring the picture up to date having no more to tell us than in the 1950s 42 Similarly he criticised the inclusion of speculative theories of David Dalby into chapters which examine African linguistic classification and the lack of focus on the current developments in the linguistic field 42 In his review of the first two volumes for The International Journal of African Historical Studies Ivor Wilks described the volumes as handsome and available at so modest a price compared to most other works on similar topics released by major commercial publishers 43 Wilks further described the series as a useful monument to the state of African historiography in the 1970s and 1980s though also noted that it would have to go through a continuous process of revision in order to retain its value as a reliable work of reference 43 He also stated that the quality of individual chapters vary considerably with some chapters showing an original contribution to the field while others make no pretense to be more than surveys 43 Wilks noted that probably few of the chapters would otherwise have seen the light of day in the regular learned journals 43 Wilks described Volume 2 as having less thematic unity than the first volume singling out Cheikh Anta Diop s shrill chapter on his idiosyncratic views of Ancient Egypt and the unusual step of the editor providing a warning to the reader on this particular chapter 43 Michael Brett reviewed volume 2 for The Journal of African History noting that while it would become a necessary part of the library of anyone interested in the history of Africa as a whole it would nonetheless daunt the uninitiated and disappoint the specialist 44 He observed that despite the length of the book there was a problem with compression of information with most chapters being too short to allow the subject the exposition it deserves 44 In discussing the chapters on Egypt which made up a third of the volume Brett felt that space had been simply wasted with some chapters repeating information mentioned earlier in the volume 44 He also felt that much of the historical context of Ancient Egypt had been squeezed almost out of existence partly due to Cheikh Anta Diop s chapter on the Origins of the Ancient Egyptians which was simply a restatement of this author s views and the long resume of the 1974 Cairo Symphosium on the subject inserted afterwards seemingly as a corrective to Diop s idosyncratic view 44 As a result of space being taken up by this debate the volume lacked any discussion of pre dynastic Egypt and the settlement of the Nile valley which made possible the subsequent civilization 44 Brett further criticized the later chapters on Egypt such as the one on Hellenistic Egypt which had virtually no dates or profile given for the rulers of the Ptolemaic dynasty 44 Brett did however praise the chapters on Nubia as providing a satisfying account of the Egyptian Empire south of Aswan as well as the kingdoms based at Napata and Meroe 44 Brett found fault with the chapters dealing with Aksum which had a focus that was resolutely South Arabian Semitic with extremely scant attention paid to the Abyssinian region as a whole 44 He singled out the chapter on the hunters and food gatherers of Southern Africa which included a note by the committee stating that they were unhappy with the author relying on recent ethnographic material far beyond the chronological limits of this volume to give an idea of what life was like for these people in ancient times Brett however felt this chapter was a most readable account compared to the rigidly archeological approach used by other chapters on sub Saharan Africa 44 Adeline Apena reviewed the second volume for the Comparative Civilizations Review as a major document in African history and dismisses the general sense of invalidity that surrounds use of African oral traditions as historical source material for African history 45 Apena noted the second volume has an emphasis on the relationship between environment local resources and the growth of civilisations However she remained critical of the Egyptian scholars in this debate who do not seem to accept that the ancient Egyptians were the same as the dark skinned Sub Saharans in spite of the cultural similarities 45 Apena concluded that the lower Nile and its Delta are likely to have blended the stocks of peoples that inhabited the region from Libya to Near East and southwards towards Nubia but scholarly judgements in the second volume were inconclusive due to the obscurity of the period scarcity of sources and dated sources 45 Volume 3 edit J E G Sutton reviewed Volume 3 for The Journal of African Study noting that the chapters were of varying quality and lucidity but could be used for scholarly reference or education provided that the reader is patient enough to sift and select from among the chapters 46 He further noted that not all authors in the volume had the breadth of vision and experience needed for this kind of book with some possibly receiving insufficient editorial guidance or conversely having suffered excessive interference 46 Sutton also felt that the dating system used in the series which avoids the B C A D system in order to be culturally neutral would be confusing to most readers and that the overall presentation of the volume was not sufficiently inviting 46 Sutton additionally noted that like Volume 2 this volume was more heavily focused on Northern Africa than Africa further to the South though there was a valiant attempt to draw together information on the continent as a whole in the final chapter and he commended the obvious and strenuous effort to include every region of Africa in the discussion 46 Volume 4 edit This section needs expansion You can help by adding to it April 2022 Volume 5 edit This section needs expansion You can help by adding to it April 2022 Volume 6 edit In a review for The Journal of African Study E Ann McDougell stated that this volume fared well in regards to quality but felt dated and could be considered state of the art of African historiography in the years c 1975 1980 with only a handful of post 1980s publications listed in the bibliography 47 She did however praise the book for its genuinely continental geographical coverage the excellent quality maps and photographs establishing both regional and world linkages and the range of eminent scholars who are given sufficient space to cover their commissioned subject matter 47 She also sympathised with the logistical and financial problems of such an ambitious project which made the publication delay inevitable but this was still too long given the range of quality works that historians were producing by the mid 1980s 47 Volume 7 edit Reviewing the abridged edition of volume 7 for The Journal of African Study Kirstin Mann felt that none of the volume s goals are wholly realized 48 She noted that while the individual essays may have adequately summarized the state of knowledge when they were written they were now out of date and little debate emerges within them 48 Mann however welcomed the chapters on North Africa which can bridge the divide that too often separates scholarship on North and Sub Saharan Africa and commended Albert Adu Boahen on the difficult task of editing the volume 48 She singled out chapters by Ranger Ibrahim and Ali Isaacman and Vansina Chanaiwa Crowder Coquery Vidrovitch Afigbo and Atieno Odhaimbo as those that made lasting contributions to African historiography but observed that most chapters lacked any systematic analysis of struggle conflict and cleavage within African societies during the period of study 48 Mann ultimately summarised the volume as passionate and engaged if dated unwieldy and uneven and criticised the abridged edition s lack of notes and good bibliography 48 Volume 8 edit This section needs expansion You can help by adding to it April 2022 See also editThe Cambridge History of Africa published 1975 1986 African historiographyNotes edit Listed as being from the Republic of Upper Volta 2 This later became Burkina Faso in 1984 Listed as being from Czechoslovakia 2 In 1993 the country split into the Czech Republic and Slovakia Listed as being from the USSR 2 which devolved into separate states by 1991 Listed as British in the Volume itself The Arabic French Portuguese and Spanish versions of this volume move this chapter to end of the book after the conclusion 4 5 6 7 Listed as being from the USSR 3 which devolved into separate states by 1991 Listed as being from the Algeria in the volume itself 3 Listed as being from Senegal 9 Listed as being from Zaire 10 This later became the Democratic Republic of Congo in 1997 Listed as being from Zaire 10 This later became the Democratic Republic of Congo in 1997 Mistakenly listed as M Asiwaju in the contents page 13 Listed as being from the USSR 12 which devolved into separate states by 1991 Listed as being from Zaire 14 This later became the Democratic Republic of Congo in 1997 Listed as being from Zaire 14 This later became the Democratic Republic of Congo in 1997 Mistakenly listed as being from the United States 14 References edit General History of Africa UNESCO 15 March 2019 Retrieved 11 June 2019 a b c d e Ki Zerbo Joseph ed 1981 General History of Africa Volume I Methodology and African Prehistory California Heinemann p v vii 749 751 ISBN 978 0520039124 a b c d Mokhtar Gamal ed 1981 General History of Africa Volume II Ancient Civilizations of Africa California Heinemann UNESCO pp vi vii 740 741 ISBN 978 92 3 101708 7 Mokhtar Gamal ed 1985 General History of Africa Volume II Ancient Civilizations of Africa UNESCO Jeune Afrique ISBN 92 3 601708 8 Mokhtar Gamal ed 1980 Histoire Generale de l Afrique II Afrique Ancienne UNESCO ISBN 92 3 201708 3 Mokhtar Gamal ed 1983 Historia Geral da Africa II A Africa Antiga Sao Paulo Atica UNESCO Mokhtar Gamal ed 1983 Historia General de Africa II Antiguas Civilizaciones de Africa Madrid Tecnos UNESCO ISBN 84 309 0898 6 a b El Fasi Mohammad Hrbek Ivan eds 1988 General History of Africa Volume III Africa from the Seventh to the Eleventh Century California Heinemann UNESCO p v vii 796 798 ISBN 978 92 3 101709 4 a b c Niane D T ed 1984 General History of Africa Volume IV Africa from the Twelfth to the Sixteenth Century California Heinemann UNESCO p v vii 689 691 ISBN 978 92 3 101710 0 a b c d Ogot Bethwell Alan ed 1992 General History of Africa Volume V Africa from the Sixteenth to the Eighteenth Century California Heinemann UNESCO p v vii 908 911 ISBN 0 520 039165 a b Ajayi J F Ade ed 1989 General History of Africa Volume VI Africa from the Nineteenth century until the 1880s California Heinemann UNESCO p v vii 794 796 ISBN 978 92 3 101712 4 a b c Boahen Albert Adu ed 1985 General History of Africa Volume VII Africa under colonial domination 1880 1935 California Heinemann UNESCO p v vii 812 814 ISBN 978 92 3 101713 1 Boahen Albert Adu ed 1985 General History of Africa Volume VII Africa under colonial domination 1880 1935 California Heinemann UNESCO p vi ISBN 978 92 3 101713 1 a b c d e Mazrui Ali A Wondji Christophe eds 1993 General History of Africa Volume VIII Africa since 1935 California Heinemann UNESCO p v vii 937 941 ISBN 978 92 3 102758 1 a b c https unesdoc unesco org ark 48223 pf0000387378 a b c d e f g h i General History of Africa The Collection UNESCO 15 March 2019 Retrieved 9 November 2022 a b Santos Vanicleia Silva ed 2023 General History of Africa Volume X Africa and Its Diasporas UNESCO p ix xiv Address by Ms Irina Bokova Director General of UNESCO on the occasion of the Regional Conference on the Pedagogical Use of the General history of Africa PDF UNESCO 16 June 2010 Retrieved 11 January 2011 Report by the Director General on the execution of the programme 34 C 5 01 January 2008 30 June 2009 Coordination and monitoring of action to benefit Africa PDF UNESCO 24 February 2009 Retrieved 11 January 2011 Pedagogical Use of the General History of Africa Expert Meeting PDF Pedagogical Use of the General History of Africa UNESCO 16 17 March 2009 Retrieved 11 January 2011 Mokhtar Gamal ed 1981 General History of Africa Volume II Ancient Civilizations of Africa California Heinemann UNESCO p 30 ISBN 978 92 3 101708 7 Mokhtar Gamal ed 1981 General History of Africa Volume II Ancient Civilizations of Africa California Heinemann UNESCO p 66 ISBN 978 92 3 101708 7 Mokhtar Gamal ed 1981 General History of Africa Volume II Ancient Civilizations of Africa California Heinemann UNESCO p 51 ISBN 978 92 3 101708 7 Mokhtar Gamal ed 1981 General History of Africa Volume II Ancient Civilizations of Africa California Heinemann UNESCO pp 14 15 ISBN 978 92 3 101708 7 Mokhtar Gamal ed 1981 General History of Africa Volume II Ancient Civilizations of Africa California Heinemann UNESCO pp 58 78 ISBN 978 92 3 101708 7 Mokhtar Gamal ed 1981 General History of Africa Volume II Ancient Civilizations of Africa California Heinemann UNESCO p 62 ISBN 978 92 3 101708 7 a b c Mokhtar Gamal ed 1981 General History of Africa Volume II Ancient Civilizations of Africa California Heinemann UNESCO p 63 ISBN 978 92 3 101708 7 Mokhtar Gamal ed 1981 General History of Africa Volume II Ancient Civilizations of Africa California Heinemann UNESCO p 67 ISBN 978 92 3 101708 7 Mokhtar Gamal ed 1981 General History of Africa Volume II Ancient Civilizations of Africa California Heinemann UNESCO pp 64 65 ISBN 978 92 3 101708 7 Mokhtar Gamal ed 1981 General History of Africa Volume II Ancient Civilizations of Africa California Heinemann UNESCO pp 47 48 ISBN 978 92 3 101708 7 Mokhtar Gamal 1990 Ancient Civilizations of Africa Unesco International Scientific Committee for the Drafting of a General History of Africa Currey p 33 ISBN 978 0 85255 092 2 Ancient civilizations of Africa Abridged ed London England J Currey 1990 pp 43 46 ISBN 0852550928 The peopling of ancient Egypt and the deciphering of Meroitic script proceedings of the symposium held in Cairo from 28 January to 3 February 1974 Paris Unesco 1978 pp 86 93 94 99 ISBN 92 3 101605 9 a b c d e Jan Vansina 1993 Unesco and African Historiography History in Africa 20 343 doi 10 2307 3171979 JSTOR 3171979 S2CID 162327008 Schulte Nordholt Larissa 2021 Multiple Hamitic Theories and Black Egyptians Negotiating Tensions between Standards of Scholarship and Political Imperatives in UNESCO s General History of Africa 1964 1998 History of Humanities 6 2 449 469 doi 10 1086 715866 hdl 1887 3242830 ISSN 2379 3163 Ogot Bethwell 2011 AFRICAN Historiography From colonial historiography to UNESCO s general history of Africa p 72 S2CID 55617551 Mokhtar Gamal ed 1981 General History of Africa Volume II Ancient Civilizations of Africa California Heinemann UNESCO pp 640 670 ISBN 978 92 3 101708 7 a b c Mokhtar Gamal ed 1981 General History of Africa Volume II Ancient Civilizations of Africa California Heinemann UNESCO p 640 ISBN 978 92 3 101708 7 El Fasi Mohammad Hrbek Ivan eds 1988 General History of Africa Volume III Africa from the Seventh to the Eleventh Century California Heinemann UNESCO pp 140 162 ISBN 978 92 3 101709 4 a b El Fasi Mohammad Hrbek Ivan eds 1988 General History of Africa Volume III Africa from the Seventh to the Eleventh Century California Heinemann UNESCO p 161 ISBN 978 92 3 101709 4 a b Jan Vansina 1993 Unesco and African Historiography History in Africa 20 344 doi 10 2307 3171979 JSTOR 3171979 S2CID 162327008 a b c Ehret Christopher December 1981 J Ki Zerbo ed UNESCO General History of Africa Vol 1 Methodology and African Prehistory Berkeley University o California Press London Heinemann Educational Books 1981 xxvii 819 pp Plates maps notes biblio indices 35 00 hardcover African Studies Review 24 4 133 134 doi 10 2307 524342 ISSN 0002 0206 JSTOR 524342 a b c d e Wilks Ivor 1982 Book Reviews UNESCO General History of Africa The International Journal of African Historical Studies 15 2 283 285 doi 10 2307 218551 JSTOR 218551 a b c d e f g h i Brett Michael 1982 The UNESCO History Volume Two The Journal of African History 23 1 117 120 doi 10 1017 S0021853700020284 S2CID 245909418 a b c Apena Adeline 1 October 1994 G Mokhtar ed UNESCO General History of Africa Comparative Civilizations Review 31 31 ISSN 0733 4540 a b c d Sutton J E G 1989 History by Committee The Journal of African Study 30 3 493 494 JSTOR 182921 a b c McDougell E Ann 1994 The Sands of Time The Journal of African Study 35 2 314 316 JSTOR 183225 a b c d e Mann Kirsten 1992 Colonial Abridgements The Journal of African Study 33 1 151 153 JSTOR 182289 Bibliography editUNESCO General History of Africa Ki Zerbo Joseph ed 1981 General History of Africa Volume I Methodology and African Prehistory California Heinemann ISBN 978 0520039124 Mokhtar Gamal ed 1981 General History of Africa Volume II Ancient Civilizations of Africa California Heinemann UNESCO ISBN 978 92 3 101708 7 El Fasi Mohammad Hrbek Ivan eds 1988 General History of Africa Volume III Africa from the Seventh to the Eleventh Century California Heinemann UNESCO p v vii 796 798 ISBN 978 92 3 101709 4 Niane D T ed 1984 General History of Africa Volume IV Africa from the Twelfth to the Sixteenth Century California Heinemann UNESCO ISBN 978 92 3 101710 0 Ogot Bethwell Alan ed 1992 General History of Africa Volume V Africa from the Sixteenth to the Eighteenth Century California Heinemann UNESCO ISBN 0 520 039165 Ajayi J F Ade ed 1989 General History of Africa Volume VI Africa from the Nineteenth century until the 1880s California Heinemann UNESCO ISBN 978 92 3 101712 4 Boahen Albert Adu ed 1985 General History of Africa Volume VII Africa under colonial domination 1880 1935 California Heinemann UNESCO ISBN 978 92 3 101713 1 Mazrui Ali A Wondji Christophe eds 1993 General History of Africa Volume VIII Africa since 1935 California Heinemann UNESCO ISBN 978 92 3 102758 1 Additional Sources Schulte Nordholt Larissa From Metropole to Margin in UNESCO s General History of Africa Documents of Historiographical Decolonization in Paris and Ibadan History in Africa Volume 46 2019 pp 403 412 Christopher Saunders 2006 The General History of Africa and Southern Africa s Recent Past Presence Africaine 173 117 126 JSTOR 43617262 Jan Vansina 1993 UNESCO and African Historiography History in Africa 20 337 352 doi 10 2307 3171979 JSTOR 3171979 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title General History of Africa amp oldid 1210819559, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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