this post was submitted on 28 Aug 2025
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The Mali Empire (1240-1645) of West Africa was founded by Sundiata Keita (r. 1230-1255) following his victory over the kingdom of Sosso (c. 1180-1235). Sundiata's centralised government, diplomacy and well-trained army permitted a massive military expansion which would pave the way for a flourishing of the Mali Empire, making it the largest yet seen in Africa.

The reign of Mansa Musa I (1312-1337) saw the empire reach new heights in terms of territory controlled, cultural florescence, and the staggering wealth brought through Mali's control of regional trade routes. Acting as a middle-trader between North Africa via the Sahara desert and the Niger River to the south, Mali exploited the traffic in gold, salt, copper, ivory, and slaves that crisscrossed West Africa. Muslim merchants were attracted to all this commercial activity, and they converted Mali rulers who in turn spread Islam via such noted centres of learning as Timbuktu. In contrast to cities like Niani (the capital), Djenne, and Gao, most of the rural Mali population remained farmers who clung to their traditional animist beliefs. The Mali Empire collapsed in the 1460s following civil wars, the opening up of trade routes elsewhere, and the rise of the neighbouring Songhai Empire, but it did continue to control a small part of the western empire into the 17th century.

Sundiata Keita & Government

Sundiata Keita (aka Sunjaata or Sundjata, r. 1230-1255) was a Malinke prince, whose name means 'lion prince', and he waged war against the kingdom of Sosso from the 1230s. Sundiata formed a powerful alliance of other disgruntled chiefs tired of Sumanguru's harsh rule and defeated the Sosso in a decisive battle at Krina (aka Kirina) in 1235. In 1240 Sundiata captured the old Ghana capital. Forming a centralised government of tribal leaders and a number of influential Arab merchants, this assembly (gbara) declared Sundiata the supreme monarch and gave him such honorary titles as Mari Diata (Lord Lion). The name Sundiata gave to his empire, Africa's largest up to that point, was Mali, meaning 'the place where the king lives'. It was also decreed that all future kings would be selected from the Keita clan, although the title was not necessarily given to the eldest son of a ruler, which sometimes led to fierce disputes among candidates.

The Mansa, or king, would be assisted by an assembly of elders and local chiefs throughout the Mali Empire's history, with audiences held in the royal palace or under a large tree. The king was also the supreme source of justice, but he did make use of legal advisors. In addition, the king was helped by a number of key ministers such as the chief of the army and master of the granaries (later treasury), as well as other officials like the master of ceremonies and leader of the royal orchestra. Nevertheless, the Mansa acted as a supreme monarch and monopolised key trade goods, for example, only he was permitted to possess gold nuggets, traders had to make do with gold dust.

Trade & Timbuktu

Like its political predecessors, the Mali Empire prospered thanks to trade and its prime location, situated between the rain forests of southern West Africa and the powerful Muslim caliphates of North Africa. The Niger River provided ready access to Africa's interior and Atlantic coast, while the Berber-controlled camel caravans that crossed the Sahara desert ensured valuable commodities came from the north. The Mali rulers had a triple income: they taxed the passage of trade goods, bought goods and sold them on at much higher prices, and had access to their own valuable natural resources. Significantly, the Mali Empire controlled the rich gold-bearing regions of Galam, Bambuk, and Bure. One of the main trade exchanges was gold dust for salt from the Sahara. Gold was in particular demand from European powers like Castille in Spain and Venice and Genoa in Italy, where coinage was now being minted in the precious metal.

Timbuktu, founded c. 1100 by the nomadic Tuaregs, was a semi-independent trade port which had the double advantage of being on the Niger River bend and the starting point for the trans-Saharan caravans. The city would be monopolised and then taken over by the Mali kings who made it into one of the most important and most cosmopolitan trade centres in Africa. Through Timbuktu there passed such lucrative goods as ivory, textiles, horses (important for military use), glassware, weapons, sugar, kola nuts (a mild stimulant), cereals (e.g. sorghum and millet), spices, stone beads, craft products, and slaves. Goods were bartered for or paid using an agreed upon commodity such as copper or gold ingots, set quantities of salt or ivory, or even cowry shells (which came from Persia).

Mansa Musa I

After a string of seemingly lacklustre rulers, the Mali Empire enjoyed its second golden era during the reign of Mansa Musa I in the first half of the 13th century. With an army numbering around 100,000 men, including an armoured cavalry corps of 10,000 horses, and with the talented general Saran Mandian, Mansa Musa was able to maintain and extend Mali's empire, doubling its territory. He controlled lands up to the Gambia and lower Senegal in the west; in the north, tribes were subdued along the whole length of the Western Sahara border region; in the east, control spread up to Gao on the Niger River and, to the south, the Bure region and the forests of what became known as the Gold Coast came under Mali oversight. The Mali Empire thus came to include many different religious, ethnic, and linguistic groups.

To govern these diverse peoples, Mansa Musa divided his empire into provinces with each one ruled by a governor (farba) appointed personally by him and responsible for local taxes, justice, and settling tribal disputes. The administration was further improved with greater records kept and sent to the centralised government offices at Niani. With more tribute from more conquered chiefs, more trade routes under Mali control, and even more natural resources to exploit, Mansa Musa and the Mali elite became immensely rich. When the Mali king visited Cairo in 1324, he spent or simply gave away so much gold that the price of bullion crashed by 20%. Such riches set off a never-ending round of rumours that Mali was a kingdom paved with gold. In Spain c. 1375, a mapmaker was inspired to create Europe's first detailed map of West Africa, part of the Catalan Atlas. The map has Mansa Musa wearing an impressive gold crown and triumphantly brandishing a huge lump of gold in his hand. European explorers would spend the next five centuries trying to locate the source of this gold and the fabled trading city of Timbuktu.

Decline

The Mali Empire was in decline by the 15th century. The ill-defined rules for royal succession often led to civil wars as brothers and uncles fought each other for the throne. Then, as trade routes opened up elsewhere, several rival kingdoms developed to the west, notably the Songhai. European ships, especially those belonging to the Portuguese, were now regularly sailing down the west coast of Africa and so the Saharan caravans faced stiff competition as the most efficient means to transport goods from West Africa to the Mediterranean. There were attacks on Mali by the Tuareg in 1433 and by the Mossi people, who at that time controlled the lands south of the Niger River. Around 1468, King Sunni Ali of the Songhai Empire (r. 1464-1492) conquered the rump of the Mali Empire which was now reduced to controlling a small western pocket of its once great territory. What remained of the Mali Empire would be absorbed into the Moroccan Empire in the mid-17th century.

Full Article on the Mali empire

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[–] S4ck@hexbear.net 5 points 4 days ago (1 children)

Does Trump actually have heart failure?

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[–] WhyEssEff@hexbear.net 6 points 4 days ago* (last edited 4 days ago)

jaby-vance "What are you talking about, Barron? You say you'll become President Trump…?!"

~~(no Barron emote)~~ "Yeah. I'll reenact it. I'll become Father and disappear from this room."

[–] HarryLime@hexbear.net 5 points 4 days ago* (last edited 4 days ago) (2 children)

You can live in a 1 bedroom apartment for like $500 a month, in a big northeast city with great public transit and culture and parks and things, but it's Gotham City. Do you take it? It's like living in New York but way cheaper, except that you may have to deal with Joker gas exploding in your face sometimes.

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[–] Goblin@hexbear.net 8 points 5 days ago (1 children)

Playing lies of p dlc and seeing a dead giraffe model made me feel like shit

I'm pretty emotionally stunted so I'm surprised seeing this made me feel so weird. Idk if just cause it's an animal you dont see dead a lot or what

Looking into it

I actually gasped when I watched Elysium in theaters with the opening shot of earth like totally desertified. I dunno why that effected me so much either

[–] Euergetes@hexbear.net 9 points 5 days ago (1 children)

it kinda gives me whiplash how reactionary reddit is but they still hate cops.

[–] hexaflexagonbear@hexbear.net 4 points 4 days ago (1 children)

Everyone hates cops, it’s like the most normie belief on earth.

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[–] ClathrateG@hexbear.net 5 points 4 days ago (1 children)

you know about that band The 4 Tops?

what about The 4 Bottoms?

[–] Dort_Owl@hexbear.net 16 points 5 days ago* (last edited 5 days ago)

Brainfog is getting really bad. The fuck is going on with me?

[–] CrispyFern@hexbear.net 5 points 4 days ago (3 children)

Imagine you wake up one morning and have a nice wonderful meal of flies or whatever insects are around because you're a gross Frog

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[–] MF_COOM@hexbear.net 7 points 5 days ago (2 children)

I think I just have to accept I will never understand why people care about Timothy Chalamet

Hes handsome and twinky, I think thats about it. Plus, hes French.

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[–] BeanisBrain@hexbear.net 9 points 5 days ago

Alternate history flash fiction idea: Fidel Castro throws the opening pitch of the United Soviets of America's 1966 World Series

[–] DragonBallZinn@hexbear.net 8 points 5 days ago* (last edited 5 days ago)

Shout-out to the comrade who mentioned how stir-fries are made. All I really added was some soy sauce for some extra umami and it came out great. That’s going in the backburner for recipes to master.

[–] comrade_pibb@hexbear.net 11 points 5 days ago (1 children)

rode my bike to get some brunch, hexbears stay mad lmao

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[–] dougfir@hexbear.net 18 points 6 days ago* (last edited 6 days ago)

i often see reactionaries online defending the genocide of the americas or being racist against the indigenous people here by saying that they didn't use wheels for anything other than toys before the europeans arrived. what i didn't know is that wheeled vehicles for transporting goods or people over large distances were also pretty rare in large parts of the mediterranean until centuries after the colonization of the americas. they only appeared in the Pelopponese peninsula in Greece in the 20th century, according to Braudel! turns out wheels are pretty fucking useless if you don't have well paved and maintained roads

[–] Euergetes@hexbear.net 8 points 5 days ago (1 children)

Napoleon abolished the jewish ghetto in Venice in case you were looking for more ways he was right :serrenissima: :napoleone-fireball:

[–] forcefemjdwon@hexbear.net 8 points 5 days ago (3 children)

Legalized homosexuality in the low countries, too

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[–] Des@hexbear.net 11 points 5 days ago (1 children)

gamer-gulag

paradox map game shower thoughts didn't want to take up half the thread

of all the paradox map games (excluding the new Victoria 3 aka Marxism the Game), i've noticed Stellaris seems to be the most honest about ideology. with MAXIMUM DEMOCRACY = communism/socialism and having authoritarianism/egalitarianism axis basically just be exploitation vs equality. yeah it's not perfect. ideally I'd like fanatic egal + xenophile + materialism to get a fully realized socialist society but you can't do that.

having a worker owned megacorp option is interesting though, but i've had trouble getting a game going with it. It's like, if a single or cartel of megacorps becomes your entire government and the worker's take full control of it what the hell does that become? I just find it had to RP because it's a concept so distant i think only Kim Stanley Robinson explored it briefly in the mars trilogy and just as a way to facilitate Earth's socialist revolution (his megacorp turned megacooperative was called Praxis i bet you didn't see that coming)

If you throw the Government & Civics mod (which i adore, best paired with a 3 civics mod) on top which adds an actual socialism/capitalism layer using the same system it's still less brainwormed then the average HOI4 mod (or base game with it's NO ELECTIONS communism).

Now you can get some "authoritarian" socialist government types but they are plainly described as anomalies (hijacking by bourgeois) or due to siege/permanent revolution. there's an opinion bonus for comrade empires, even if "astray". love the leftist infighting no notes

And the expansion of govts adds everything from anarcho-syndicalist (workers councils civic), ML/councilcom governments of different maturity levels (communal democracy (D) or socialist plenary (O): instutional collectivsm plus workers councils civics), early soviet republics (worker's republic: civics of workers councils plus republicanism), and even FALSC (automated world-commune (Asimov AI central planning): technocracy plus institutional collectivism civics).

There's even a fun one: the Conspiracy of Equals (worker councils plus shadow council civics). It's like your Vanguard Party got bored of politics and decided to become masked heroes snuffing out exploitation in the darkness of night. Somebody should make a webcomic about this.

there's still always Shared Burdens; fully realized socialism. And you can still smack that red communism button when you are ready labeled "UTOPIAN ABUNDANCE".


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[–] miz@hexbear.net 4 points 4 days ago (1 children)

is anyone a HEI Network member and want to make a referral bonus of HEI points? thinking about joining up

[–] Hohsia@hexbear.net 4 points 4 days ago

I really used to live for tim heidecker and office hours, then he fully embraced the subscription model. Would love to be wrong, but I don’t think he has any right to be charging the shit he does with his career in Hollywood shrug-outta-hecks

[–] CrispyFern@hexbear.net 9 points 5 days ago (2 children)

Our house, in the middle of our house

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[–] HarryLime@hexbear.net 3 points 4 days ago

"Holy God, what are ya showin' meeeeeeee, come ooooooooooon"

[–] ClathrateG@hexbear.net 4 points 4 days ago* (last edited 4 days ago) (1 children)

Broke my only drinking glass, so I have to go nick a couple from the pub, le sigh

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