12320367650 | African Diaspora | The separation of Africans from their homeland through centuries of forced removal to serve as slaves in the Americas and elsewhere. | 0 | |
12320367651 | Country: Angola | Capital: Luanda | 1 | |
12320378841 | Antonian Movement | Was a syncretic Christian movement formed in the kingdom of Kongo. | 2 | |
12320380776 | Asante | African kingdom on the Gold Coast that expanded rapidly after 1680. A major participant in the Atlantic economy, trading gold, slaves, and ivory. It resisted British imperial ambitions for a quarter century before being absorbed into Britain. | 3 | |
12320380777 | Atlantic Slave Trade | Lasted from 16th century until the 19th century. Trade of African peoples from Western Africa to the Americas. One part of a three-part economical system known as the Middle Passage of the Triangular Trade. | 4 | |
12320383350 | Candombie | African religious ideas and practices in Brazil, particularly among the Yoruba people. | 5 | |
12320386489 | Creole language | A language that results from the mixing of a colonizer's language with the indigenous language of the people being dominated. | 6 | |
12320389017 | Dona Beatriz | former priestess of African Religion, taught that Kongo was the Holy Land of Christianity | 7 | |
12320392374 | Fulani | Pastoral people of western Sudan; adopted purifying Sufi variant of Islam; under Usuman Dan Fodio in 1804, launched revolt against Hausa kingdoms; established state centered on Sokoto. | 8 | |
12320398623 | Ghana | First known kingdom in sub-Saharan West Africa between the sixth and thirteenth centuries C.E. Also the modern West African country once known as the Gold Coast. gold and salt trade. | 9 | |
12320406254 | Great Zimbabwe | City, now in ruins (in the modern African country of Zimbabwe), whose many stone structures were built between about 1250 and 1450, when it was a trading center and the capital of a large state. | 10 | |
12320409237 | Gullah/Geechee | -Spoken language and shared culture of Africans -Mix of many languages and new words | 11 | |
12320412404 | Haiti | Name that revolutionaries gave to the former French colony of Saint Domingue; the term means "mountainous" or "rugged" in the Taino language. | 12 | |
12320416078 | Islamic Slave Trade | 10 million slaves have been shipped out of Africa by this slave trade between the 8th and 18th centuries. Europeans used these existing networks and expanded the slave trade | 13 | |
12320430360 | Kongo Empire | Emerged in 14th century along the mouth of the Congo River. Had a & centralized government allowed empire to grow. Traded with Portuguese. | 14 | |
12320433357 | Mali Empire | Formed in 1240 when Sundiata took control of Ghana Empire. It controlled trade across Sahara, the South and the Niger River. | 15 | |
12320436634 | Manioc | The most important American crop introduced into Africa in the sixteenth century. | 16 | |
12320439424 | Middle Passage | A voyage that brought enslaved Africans across the Atlantic Ocean to North America and the West Indies | 17 | |
12320443560 | Saint Domingue | Haiti half of island of Hispaniola; where the Toussaint L'Overture revolt occurred | 18 | |
12320446646 | Santeria | Cuban religion that combines Catholic and West African beliefs | 19 | |
12320448855 | Songhay Empire | A state located in western Africa from the early 15th to the late 16th centuries following the decline of the Mali Empire. | 20 | |
12320451736 | Swahili | Bantu language with Arabic loanwords spoken in coastal regions of East Africa. | 21 | |
12320456017 | Timbuktu | City on the Niger River in the modern country of Mali. It was founded by the Tuareg as a seasonal camp sometime after 1000. As part of the Mali empire, Timbuktu became a major major terminus of the trans-Saharan trade and a center of Islamic learning. | 22 | |
12320459717 | Triangular Trade | A three way system of trade during 1600-1800s Africa sent slaves to America, America sent Raw Materials to Europe, and Europe sent Guns and Rum to Africa | 23 | |
12320462429 | Voudou | A religious practice that the African Americans Practiced in Saint Domingue, it was banned because the whites saw it as a threat. | 24 |
AP World History: Traditions & Encounters Chapter 25 Flashcards
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