Northwest Africa
Gold Trade
Gold Trade and the Kingdom of Ancient Ghana
Around the fifth century, thanks to
the availability of the camel, Berber-speaking people began crossing the Sahara
Desert. From the eighth century onward, annual trade caravans followed routes
later described by Arabic authors with minute attention to detail. Gold, sought
from the western and central Sudan, was the main commodity of the trans-Saharan
trade. The traffic in gold was spurred by the demand for and supply of coinage.
The rise of the Soninke empire of
Ghana appears to be related to the beginnings of the trans-Saharan gold
trade in the fifth century.
From the seventh to the eleventh century,
trans-Saharan trade linked the Mediterranean economies that demanded gold—and
could supply salt—to the sub-Saharan economies, where gold was abundant.
Although local supply of salt was sufficient in sub-Saharan Africa, the
consumption of Saharan salt was promoted for trade purposes. In the eighth and
ninth centuries, Arab merchants operating in southern Moroccan towns such as
Sijilmasa bought gold from the Berbers, and financed more caravans. These commercial
transactions encouraged further conversion of the Berbers to Islam.
Increased demand for gold in the North Islamic states, which sought the raw
metal for minting, prompted scholarly attention to Mali and Ghana, the latter
referred to as the "Land of Gold." For instance, geographer al-Bakri described
the eleventh-century court at Kumbi Saleh, where he saw gold-embroidered caps,
golden saddles, shields and swords mounted with gold, and dogs' collars adorned
with gold and silver. The Soninke managed to keep the source of their gold (the
Bambuk mines, most notably) secret from Muslim traders. Yet gold production and
trade were important activities that undoubtedly mobilized hundreds of thousands
of African people. Leaders of the ancient kingdom of Ghana accumulated wealth by
keeping the core of pure metal, leaving the unworked native gold to be marketed
by their people.
Gold Trade and the Mali Empire

By 1050 A.D., Ghana was strong enough
to assume control of the Islamic Berber town of Audaghost. By the end of the
twelfth century, however, Ghana had lost its domination of the western Sudan
gold trade. Trans-Saharan routes began to bypass Audaghost, expanding instead
toward the newly opened Bure goldfield. Soso, the southern chiefdom of the
Soninke, gained control of Ghana as well as the Malinke, the latter eventually
liberated by Sundiata Keita, who founded the Mali empire. Mali
rulers did not encourage gold producers to convert to Islam, since
prospecting and production of the metal traditionally depended on a number of
beliefs and magical practices that were alien to Islam. In the fourteenth
century, cowrie shells were introduced from the eastern coast as local currency,
but gold and salt remained the principal mediums of long-distance
trade.
The flow of sub-Saharan gold to the northeast probably occurred in
a steady but small stream. Mansa Musa's arrival in Cairo carrying a ton of the
metal (1324–25) caused the market in gold to crash, suggesting that the average
supply was not as great. Undoubtedly, some of this African gold was also used in
Western gold coins. African gold was indeed so famous worldwide that a Spanish
map of 1375 represents the king of Mali holding a gold nugget. When Mossi raids
destroyed the Mali empire, the rising Songhai empire
relied on the same resources. Gold remained the principal product in the
trans-Saharan trade, followed by kola nuts and slaves. The Moroccan scholar Leo
Africanus, who visited Songhai in 1510 and 1513, observed that the governor of
Timbuktu owned many articles of gold, and that the coin of Timbuktu was made of
gold without any stamp or superscription.
from The Metropolitan Museum of Art.