Trans-Saharan Trade Routes

By Bennett Sherry
A huge trading network stretched across the Sahara Desert. The network was particularly significant from 1200 to 1450. This network linked wealthy empires together.

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A vast and mountainous desert landscape under blue skies with large white clouds that cast dramatic shadows on the desert below. In the foreground there is a group of people on horses and other animals who have large loads of goods strapped onto them.

A dry sea

The largest desert in the world is the Sahara. The Sahara is so big that the United States would fit inside of it.

In the Sahara, there are only a few islands where people can live permanently. It seems like a barrier. Describing the Sahara Desert is like describing an ocean. The desert’s name comes from the Arabic word for “shores.” How does our understanding of the Sahara change when we imagine it as a sea, linking people together?

Image of northern Africa. The top two thirds of the land is yellow, indicating desert, and the bottom third of the land included in the image is green.
A sea of sand. A satellite image of the Sahara Desert. © Getty Images.

From 1200 to 1450, the trans-Saharan trading system reached its peak. Caravans of camels and merchants transported goods. Trade connected the great kingdoms of West Africa to Eurasia.

Why would someone try and cross the Sahara? Merchants took the risk because they wanted to trade valuable goods. They needed a way to move goods across the desert.

The ship of the desert

Caravans in the Sahara faced windstorms that could endanger the caravan. Any successful caravan required experienced guides. The best were Berbers. Some Berbers were nomadic peoples who often moved around with their animals, also called “pastoralists.” Like pastoralists in Eurasia, the Berbers were essential to trans-Saharan trade. They captained the “ship of the desert”—the camel.

Developments in travel technologies enabled long-distance trade. The introduction of the camel was the most important. Camels are better than horses for desert travel. The Berbers improved the camel saddle. A single camel could carry around 400 pounds of trade goods. Over shorter distances, they could carry up to 1,200 pounds.

A caravan guide dressed in a white tunic and headcloth sits on top of a camel.
Nineteenth-century watercolor painting of Bedouin encampment. © Getty Images.

Saharan caravans1 were difficult to organize. Usually, merchants rented camels. Caravans set out during the cooler months, traveling at the coolest times of day. A caravan traveled around 20 miles a day, following water sources.

Pastoralists often acted as guides and were essential for the trade. But they also posed a threat. Some might attack caravans. States and merchants paid pastoralists for safe passage. By the 1200s, it was common for caravans to travel with thousands of camels. Timbuktu in the Mali Empire started out as a stop for caravans and grew into a major city.

A group of people, some on foot, some on camels and some on horseback walk toward a city in the distance.
Painting of a nineteenth-century caravan approaching Timbuktu. © Getty Images.

A land of gold: The Mali and Songhai Empires

Many goods were traded, but it was gold and salt that drove the trade. Salt is necessary for human life. Yet it was in short supply in West Africa. Berber tribes controlled several salt mines, which allowed them to buy goods like gold from West African cities. They could also purchase enslaved people. Goods and enslaved people were taken to the Mediterranean and Egypt. The trans-Saharan routes reached their peak from the 1100s to 1400s.

The region of West Africa south of the Sahara had powerful empires and large cities. Farming societies like the Mali and Songhai empires thrived. These empires depended on trade across the desert. Emperors controlled merchants’ movements. They closely guarded the secret locations of gold mines. The empires became wealthy and large.

A map of the various empires in West Africa with shaded areas.
Map of communities in West Africa c. 1450. By WHP, CC BY-SA 4.0. Explore full map here.

Waves of change: The arrival of Islam

Powerful Islamic empires developed, along with Muslim merchants. They united much of Afro-Eurasia into one trading system. West Africans converted to Islam, and trade grew.

Arab merchants traded for gold in West Africa. West Africans also traveled north. Many of them were enslaved.2 But plenty of West Africans made the journey voluntarily. Many made a religious pilgrimage to Mecca.

Islam was the most important factor in the expansion of trade. After the Arab conquests of the 600s CE, the Berbers converted to Islam. Many West African merchants converted as well. Islam offered a shared system of values. And Arabic was now used in business dealings. This provided a common language, making trade easier.

In West Africa, Islam spread first to cities. Most converts lived in cities and were wealthy. Since most people did not live in cities, local religions remained important.

A map of the trans-Saharan trade routes that uses red dashed lines to show major trade routes that connect areas such as the Empire of Ghana, Kanem-Bornou, Ethiopia, Egypt and Arabia.
A map of trans-Saharan trade routes. By WHP, CC BY-SA 4.0. Explore full map here.

New routes

Trade, cross-cultural exchange, and Islam created a golden age for the empires of West Africa. Travelers and scholars moved around the world. Mansa Musa was the ruler of Mali. He traveled to Mecca in the 1320s. He traveled with tens of thousands of camels and servants, carrying gold. He helped create myths that West Africa was a land where gold grew like plants.

Europeans began exploring the West African coast. During the 1400s, Portuguese sailors looked for a route around Africa to the Indian Ocean trade. They established new sea routes. But large caravans continued to cross the desert right up until the early 1900s.

Two panels from a Catalan Atlas illustrate the caravan trade routes using lines and descriptions. The atlas is extremely detailed and contains ornate and colorful illustrations throughout of leaders, buildings, animals, features of the landscape and so on.
A detail from the fourteenth-century Catalan Atlas, depicting caravan trade routes across the Sahara and the Mali emperor, Mansa Musa, holding a gold coin. © PHAS/Universal Images Group via Getty Images.

 


1 A caravan is a group of people travelling together for protection, often for religious pilgrimage or trade. Caravans were common on the overland trade routes of Afro-Eurasia.
2 Slavery in this era had little to do with race or skin color. West African slaves were usually prisoners captured in war. White people from the Caucasus joined black people from East and West Africa in enslavement in the Mediterranean and Indian Ocean markets.

Sources

Abu-Lughod, Janet. Before European Hegemony: The World System A.D. 1250-1350. New York: Oxford University Press, 1989.

Austen, Ralph. “Regional Study: Trans-Saharan Trade.” In The Cambridge World History, edited by Craig Benjamin, 662-86. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2015.

Austen, Ralph A. Trans-Saharan Africa in World History. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2010.

Bulliet, Richard. The Camel and the Wheel. New York: Columbia University Press, 1990.

Krä and Ghislaine Lydon. Trans-Saharan Book Trade: Manuscript Culture, Arabic Literacy and Intellectual History in Muslim Africa. Leiden: Brill, 2010.

Masonen, Pekka. “Trans-Saharan Trade and the West African Discovery of the Mediterranean.” In Ethnic Encounter and Culture Change, edited by M’hammed Sabour and Knut S. Vikør, 116-42. London: Hurst, 1997.

Northrup, Cynthia Clark, Jerry H. Bentley, and Alfred E. Eckes, Jr. Encyclopedia of World Trade: From Ancient Times to the Present. Florence: Routledge, 2004.

Bennett Sherry

Bennett Sherry holds a PhD in history from the University of Pittsburgh and has undergraduate teaching experience in world history, human rights, and the Middle East at the University of Pittsburgh and the University of Maine at Augusta. Additionally, he is a research associate at Pitt’s World History Center. Bennett writes about refugees and international organizations in the twentieth century.

Image credits

Creative Commons This work is licensed under CC BY 4.0 except for the following:

Cover image: oil on canvas. © DeAgostini / Getty Images.

A sea of sand. A satellite image of the Sahara Desert. © Getty Images.

Nineteenth-century watercolor painting of Bedouin encampment. © Getty Images.

Painting of a nineteenth-century caravan approaching Timbuktu. © Getty images.

Map of communities in West Africa c. 1450. By WHP, CC BY-SA 4.0. Explore full map here: https://www.oerproject.com/OER- Materials/OER-Media/Images/WHP-Maps/1450-layer-2

A map of trans-Saharan trade routes. By WHP, CC BY-SA 4.0. Explore full map here: https://www.oerproject.com/OER- Materials/OER-Media/Images/WHP-Maps/1450-layer-3

A selection from the fourteenth-century Catalan Atlas, depicting caravan trade routes across the Sahara and the Mali emperor, Mansa Musa, holding a gold coin. © PHAS/Universal Images Group via Getty Images.


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