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Africans were knowledgeable people but slave trade disrupted their progressir

syed putra

Alfrescian
Loyal

Mathematics in Africa has been written out of history books – it’s time we reminded the world of its rich past​

It is impossible to quantify how much the slave trade impacted the reputation of African mathematics, but we are slowly regaining a better perspective​

Michael Brooks
5 days ago
8 comments

<p>Ancient manuscripts on display at the library in Timbuktu. Mali was home to many prolific mathematicians.</p>

Ancient manuscripts on display at the library in Timbuktu. Mali was home to many prolific mathematicians.
(AFP/Getty)
Leer en Español

In Trinidad and Ghana, it’s known as susu. In Senegal and Benin it’s tontines. In Nigeria, where it began in the 1700s, it’s esusu. Whatever you call it, this system of large-scale money-pooling for mutual benefit shows that Africa has never had a problem with mathematics.
When we learn the history of mathematics, we tend to learn about the achievements of Greek, Hindu, Chinese and Arabic civilisations. If we learn anything about African mathematics, it’s almost entirely about Egypt. But sub-Saharan Africa has a rich mathematical history too – and it is possible that the world’s museums hold the key to bringing it back to life.


Sub-Saharan Africa has largely been written out of the history of mathematics because many of its traditions were passed down by word of mouth and then lost because of disruptive events such as the slave trade. It also suited Europeans to spread the idea that the peoples that they had captured and enslaved were not intelligent in any meaningful way. But the records we do have, some written, and some bound up in historical artefacts that give a glimpse of daily life, tell us that complex mathematics was always central to the activities of African civilisations, just as it always has been to civilisations in other regions of the world.
Some of the evidence comes from those who were in contact with slaves and slavers. European captains of slave-trading ships, for instance, marvelled at the mathematical abilities of the African traders they encountered. Sailors who made bargains with African slave dealers described them as “sharp arithmeticians” who could skillfully convert currencies and exchange rates in their heads. According to one account, a broker might have 10 slaves to sell, “and for each of these he demands 10 different articles. He reduces them immediately by the head into bars, coppers, ounces, according to the medium of exchange that prevails in the part of the country in which he resides, and immediately strikes the balance”.

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That shouldn’t surprise us when we look at the number system used in the Yoruba language spoken in what is now Nigeria. The phrase for “forty-five” translates as “take five and 10 from three twenties”. It might sound cumbersome, but it is a sign of a people comfortable with subtraction and multiplication. The Yoruba started esusu too. Records of complex financial systems in pre-colonial Nigeria – banks and mutual societies, effectively – suggest that dealing with complicated accounts, loans, credits and debits was just part of everyday life. These were not people who were uncomfortable with mathematics.
The fact that the instructions for these systems of calculation were passed on by word of mouth makes it all the more impressive, but it also meant that the slave trade decimated their use. We know, for example, that at least one brilliant African arithmetician ended up enslaved in America. His given English name, after being stolen away from Africa at the age of 14, was Thomas Fuller. However, he was also known as the Virginia Calculator because of his extraordinary arithmetical skills. It is impossible to say how many more great mathematical minds were stolen away to Europe, the Caribbean and the Americas, their skills and tutelage lost to those who were left behind.

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It is also impossible to quantify how much these losses impacted the reputation of African mathematics and contributed to 19th- and 20th-century notions of the intellectual inferiority of the African people. However, we are slowly regaining a better perspective.
Recently, for example, a French researcher has shown that the Akan people, who lived in the region we know today as Ghana and Côte d’Ivoire, developed their own number system, and did not borrow Arab and Persian systems as historians had suggested. Jean-Jacques Crappier found the evidence in the Akan gold-weights that were used to weigh gold powder – the prevailing currency of the region we know today as Ghana and Côte d’Ivoire – during trades with the Arabs, Portuguese, Dutch and English from the 15th to the late 19th centuries.


To carry out the study, which was published last year, Crappier pulled together a team of collectors and mathematicians. Between them, they determined the masses of as many gold-weights as they could lay their hands on. The team ended up with records of 9,301 weights from museum and private collections around the world. The distribution of their masses showed that the system was based on the weights of West African seeds, not Arab measures, and they were used in sophisticated ways that helped convert between the various currencies of the Akan’s trading partners.
It shouldn’t be surprising that complex mathematics was developed and practiced in West Africa. The Sankore University at Timbuktu in Mali was home to many mathematicians, who used their skills in astronomy and accounting. The university became world-renowned during the 14th-century reign of Malian king Mansa Musa, the richest man in the world at the time. Mansa Musa used his vast gold reserves to attract the best scholars, establish libraries and educate hundreds of thousands of students.




We can see the legacy of centuries of African mathematics in some of the games that are still played throughout the continent. One, known by various names such as Ayo, Mankala or Lela, might look to western eyes a little like backgammon, but it involves using lightning-fast arithmetic skills that have long
There is almost certainly much more to bring to light. Crappier is now looking to collaborate with African scholars to delve deeper into the implications of his team’s discovery about the Akan gold-weights, for example. There are plenty of open questions, he says: how did the Akan people develop their sophisticated trading system? How did they manufacture the necessary weights and balances, and just how sensitive and accurate were they? The answers to these and other questions, which may still be scattered among the world’s museum collections, will surely help us rediscover the impressive but forgotten truth about African mathematical innovation.

Michael Brooks’s latest book is The Art of More: How Mathematics Created Civilisation

More about​

Mathematics
 

tanwahtiu

Alfrescian
Loyal

Mathematics in Africa has been written out of history books – it’s time we reminded the world of its rich past​

It is impossible to quantify how much the slave trade impacted the reputation of African mathematics, but we are slowly regaining a better perspective​

Michael Brooks
5 days ago
8 comments

<p>Ancient manuscripts on display at the library in Timbuktu. Mali was home to many prolific mathematicians.</p>

Ancient manuscripts on display at the library in Timbuktu. Mali was home to many prolific mathematicians.
(AFP/Getty)
Leer en Español

In Trinidad and Ghana, it’s known as susu. In Senegal and Benin it’s tontines. In Nigeria, where it began in the 1700s, it’s esusu. Whatever you call it, this system of large-scale money-pooling for mutual benefit shows that Africa has never had a problem with mathematics.
When we learn the history of mathematics, we tend to learn about the achievements of Greek, Hindu, Chinese and Arabic civilisations. If we learn anything about African mathematics, it’s almost entirely about Egypt. But sub-Saharan Africa has a rich mathematical history too – and it is possible that the world’s museums hold the key to bringing it back to life.


Sub-Saharan Africa has largely been written out of the history of mathematics because many of its traditions were passed down by word of mouth and then lost because of disruptive events such as the slave trade. It also suited Europeans to spread the idea that the peoples that they had captured and enslaved were not intelligent in any meaningful way. But the records we do have, some written, and some bound up in historical artefacts that give a glimpse of daily life, tell us that complex mathematics was always central to the activities of African civilisations, just as it always has been to civilisations in other regions of the world.
Some of the evidence comes from those who were in contact with slaves and slavers. European captains of slave-trading ships, for instance, marvelled at the mathematical abilities of the African traders they encountered. Sailors who made bargains with African slave dealers described them as “sharp arithmeticians” who could skillfully convert currencies and exchange rates in their heads. According to one account, a broker might have 10 slaves to sell, “and for each of these he demands 10 different articles. He reduces them immediately by the head into bars, coppers, ounces, according to the medium of exchange that prevails in the part of the country in which he resides, and immediately strikes the balance”.

Top Articles




That shouldn’t surprise us when we look at the number system used in the Yoruba language spoken in what is now Nigeria. The phrase for “forty-five” translates as “take five and 10 from three twenties”. It might sound cumbersome, but it is a sign of a people comfortable with subtraction and multiplication. The Yoruba started esusu too. Records of complex financial systems in pre-colonial Nigeria – banks and mutual societies, effectively – suggest that dealing with complicated accounts, loans, credits and debits was just part of everyday life. These were not people who were uncomfortable with mathematics.
The fact that the instructions for these systems of calculation were passed on by word of mouth makes it all the more impressive, but it also meant that the slave trade decimated their use. We know, for example, that at least one brilliant African arithmetician ended up enslaved in America. His given English name, after being stolen away from Africa at the age of 14, was Thomas Fuller. However, he was also known as the Virginia Calculator because of his extraordinary arithmetical skills. It is impossible to say how many more great mathematical minds were stolen away to Europe, the Caribbean and the Americas, their skills and tutelage lost to those who were left behind.

Promoted stories
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It is also impossible to quantify how much these losses impacted the reputation of African mathematics and contributed to 19th- and 20th-century notions of the intellectual inferiority of the African people. However, we are slowly regaining a better perspective.
Recently, for example, a French researcher has shown that the Akan people, who lived in the region we know today as Ghana and Côte d’Ivoire, developed their own number system, and did not borrow Arab and Persian systems as historians had suggested. Jean-Jacques Crappier found the evidence in the Akan gold-weights that were used to weigh gold powder – the prevailing currency of the region we know today as Ghana and Côte d’Ivoire – during trades with the Arabs, Portuguese, Dutch and English from the 15th to the late 19th centuries.


To carry out the study, which was published last year, Crappier pulled together a team of collectors and mathematicians. Between them, they determined the masses of as many gold-weights as they could lay their hands on. The team ended up with records of 9,301 weights from museum and private collections around the world. The distribution of their masses showed that the system was based on the weights of West African seeds, not Arab measures, and they were used in sophisticated ways that helped convert between the various currencies of the Akan’s trading partners.
It shouldn’t be surprising that complex mathematics was developed and practiced in West Africa. The Sankore University at Timbuktu in Mali was home to many mathematicians, who used their skills in astronomy and accounting. The university became world-renowned during the 14th-century reign of Malian king Mansa Musa, the richest man in the world at the time. Mansa Musa used his vast gold reserves to attract the best scholars, establish libraries and educate hundreds of thousands of students.




We can see the legacy of centuries of African mathematics in some of the games that are still played throughout the continent. One, known by various names such as Ayo, Mankala or Lela, might look to western eyes a little like backgammon, but it involves using lightning-fast arithmetic skills that have long
There is almost certainly much more to bring to light. Crappier is now looking to collaborate with African scholars to delve deeper into the implications of his team’s discovery about the Akan gold-weights, for example. There are plenty of open questions, he says: how did the Akan people develop their sophisticated trading system? How did they manufacture the necessary weights and balances, and just how sensitive and accurate were they? The answers to these and other questions, which may still be scattered among the world’s museum collections, will surely help us rediscover the impressive but forgotten truth about African mathematical innovation.

Michael Brooks’s latest book is The Art of More: How Mathematics Created Civilisation

More about​

Mathematics

Fuck China then.

Go mapped the world in AD1422 by Admiral Cheng Ho... then got it stolen by evil Westerners.

These bastard Whites used this world map to go round the world to steal, kidnapped, loot, raped, genocide the root natives countries.

They abused China 5 major inventions and technology to commit crimes all over the world.

1. Compass.
2. Paper
3. Printing
4. Gunpowder
5. World atlas mapped by China Admiral Cheng Ho in 1422.

All types of world crimes committed by the bastard Westerners to many countries were after AD1422, after the world atlas mapped by China .... go check this history....

Now China can demand to the shares of their looting, invasion of lands, where China supplied the technologies and the Westerners go do the crimes, brotherhood in crimes. China want shares of Australia land today, brotherhood in crimes in 1788 BE invasion of Greater Java...

If no sharing, China will go help the root natives to take back the lands from the Western invaders and evil BE...
 

JohnTan

Alfrescian (InfP)
Generous Asset
According to one account, a broker might have 10 slaves to sell, “and for each of these he demands 10 different articles. He reduces them immediately by the head into bars, coppers, ounces, according to the medium of exchange that prevails in the part of the country in which he resides, and immediately strikes the balance”.

So the article praises niggers who can count fast while selling their fella niggers into slavery but bitches nonstop about white slave traders fucking up africa? Gimme a break!
 

syed putra

Alfrescian
Loyal
10 Pieces of Evidence That Prove
Black People Sailed to the Americas
Long Before Columbus
Posted by Taylor Gordon
Columbus Himself
According to renowned American historian and linguist Leo Weiner of Harvard University, one
of the strongest pieces of evidence to support the fact that Black people sailed to America before
Christopher Columbus was a journal entry from Columbus himself. In Weiner’s book, “Africa
and the Discovery of America,” he explains that Columbus noted in his journal that the Native
Americans confirmed “black skinned people had come from the south-east in boats, tra

https://www.lahc.edu › bsuPDF
Web results
10 Pieces of Evidence That Prove Black People Sailed to the Americas Long Before Columbus Columbus Himself
 

JohnTan

Alfrescian (InfP)
Generous Asset
10 Pieces of Evidence That Prove
Black People Sailed to the Americas
Long Before Columbus
Posted by Taylor Gordon
Columbus Himself
According to renowned American historian and linguist Leo Weiner of Harvard University, one
of the strongest pieces of evidence to support the fact that Black people sailed to America before
Christopher Columbus was a journal entry from Columbus himself. In Weiner’s book, “Africa
and the Discovery of America,” he explains that Columbus noted in his journal that the Native
Americans confirmed “black skinned people had come from the south-east in boats, tra

https://www.lahc.edu › bsuPDF
Web results
10 Pieces of Evidence That Prove Black People Sailed to the Americas Long Before Columbus Columbus Himself

Columnbus may not have been the first European explorer to reach the Americas. But it is a historical fact that it was his voyage to America that was groundbreaking and changed the course of human history.
 

tanwahtiu

Alfrescian
Loyal
10 Pieces of Evidence That Prove
Black People Sailed to the Americas
Long Before Columbus
Posted by Taylor Gordon
Columbus Himself
According to renowned American historian and linguist Leo Weiner of Harvard University, one
of the strongest pieces of evidence to support the fact that Black people sailed to America before
Christopher Columbus was a journal entry from Columbus himself. In Weiner’s book, “Africa
and the Discovery of America,” he explains that Columbus noted in his journal that the Native
Americans confirmed “black skinned people had come from the south-east in boats, tra

https://www.lahc.edu › bsuPDF
Web results
10 Pieces of Evidence That Prove Black People Sailed to the Americas Long Before Columbus Columbus Himself
Sure is.

The Chinese sailed to the West Coast of America land and Africans go to the East.

Whereas the barbarian Europeans were still killing each other without ends in sight...
 

mudhatter

Alfrescian
Loyal
Ibn Battuta travelled all over, across most of the known world

His accounts of Nigs in Mali and elsewhere (all the way to east africa) is not very encouraging news for historical revisionists or Orientalists zionist radical terrorists




Sultan Mansa Sulayman was visited by a party of ...[non-Muslim] negro cannibals, including one of their [princes]. They have a custom of wearing in their ears large pendants, each pendant having an opening of half a span. They wrap themselves in silk mantles, and in their country there is a gold mine. The sultan received them with honour, and gave them as his hospitality-gift a servant, a [black woman]. They killed and ate her, and having smeared their faces and hands with her blood came to the sultan to thank him. I was informed that this is their regular custom whenever they visit his court. Someone told me about them that they say that the choicest parts of women's flesh are the palm of the hand and the breast. [Fordham University Medieval Sourcebook(link is external)]

Ibn Battuta must have wanted to see the ruler quickly, but ten days after his arrival, he reported that became seriously ill after eating some undercooked yams(link is external). One of his traveling companions died from the same food! Ibn Battuta remained ill for two months. After he finally recovered, he went to observe a public ceremony - an audience with the sultan Mansa Sulayman.
"[The sultan] has a lofty pavilion ... where he sits most of the time... There came forth from the gate of the palace about 300 slaves, some carrying in their hands bows and others having in their hands short lances and shields... Then two saddled and bridled horses are brought, with two rams which, they say, are effective against the evil eye... The interpreter stands at the gate of the council-place wearing fine garments of silk... and on his head a turban with fringes which they have a novel way of winding... The troops, governors, young men, slaves, ... and others sit outside the council-place in a broad street where there are trees... Anyone who wishes to address the sultan addresses the interpreter and the interpreter addresses a man standing [near the sultan] and that man standing addresses the sultan." [Dunn, p. 302]
He described those who came to the palace:
"Each commander has his followers before him with their spears, bows, drums and bugles made of elephant tusks. Their instruments of music are made of reeds and calabashes, and they beat them with sticks and produce a wonderful sound. Each commander has a quiver which he places between his shoulders. He holds his bow in his hand and is mounted on a mare. Some of his men are on foot and some on mounts." [Hamdun & King, pp. 47 - 48]
At another session (part of a festival) he describes:
"The men-at-arms come with wonderful weaponry: quivers of silver and gold, swords covered with gold... Four of the amirs stand behind him to drive off flies, with ornaments of silver in their hands... .... The Interpreter brings in his four wives and his concubines, who are about a hundred in number. On them are fine clothes and on their heads they have bands of silver and gold with silver and gold apples as pendants. ... A chair is there for the Interpreter and he beats on an instrument which is made of reeds with tiny calabashes below it [a "balophon"] praising the sultan, recalling in his song his expeditions and deeds. The wives and the concubines sing with him... about thirty of his pages... each has a drum tied to him and he beats it. Then ...[come acrobats and jugglers of swords]..." [Hamdun & King, pp. 52 - 53]
Ibn Battuta ended his eight-month stay in Mali with mixed feelings. On the one hand he respected the parents' strict teaching of the Qur'an to their children: "They place fetters [ropes or chains] on their children if there appears ... a failure to memorize the Qur'an, and they are not undone until they memorize it." He also admired the safety of the empire. "Neither traveler there nor dweller has anything to fear from thief or usurper."
On the other hand he criticized many local practices:
"Female slaves and servants who went stark naked into the court for all to see; subjects who groveled before the sultan, beating the ground with their elbows and throwing dust and ashes over their heads; royal poets who romped about in feathers and bird masks."
He also complained about the small gift of bread, meat and yogurt given to him by the king.
"When I saw it I laughed, and was long astonished at their feeble intellect and their respect for mean things."
Later he complained directly to the king:
"I have journeyed to the countries of the world and met their kings. I have been four months in your country without your giving me a reception gift or anything else. What shall I say of you in the presence of other sultans?" [Dunn, p. 300, 303]
That evidently made a difference, though it is hard to know what the locals thought of their demanding guest.
"Then the sultan ordered a house for me in which I stayed and he fixed an allowance for me... He was gracious to me at my departure, to the extent of giving me one hundred mithqals of gold." [Hamdun and King, p. 46]
On his return trip, Ibn Battuta continued to explore parts of Mali. He went to Timbuktu, a town that was just beginning to flower as a center of Islamic scholarship and trade. Mansa Musa himself had a mosque built there. But Ibn Battuta was evidently not very impressed with Timbuktu - a city that would become great in the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries.
 

Cottonmouth

Alfrescian
Loyal
Niggers are the best scammers.
Some sinkie bitches got their money cheated and cheebye torn by the big black cock.

1656486876418.png
 
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