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Small kingdoms in Ghana unite to form the Mali Empire, led by Black king Sundiata Keita.
c. 1230 AD
A number of tiny Malinke Kingdoms in Ghana that were located around the upper Niger River were united to become the Mali Empire. In the 1300s and 1400s, Arab historians compiled the majority of the information that exists on the early history of the Empire of Mali. The Susu Kingdom, which had subdued the Malinké populace in the early 13th century, was controlled by a monarch by the name of Sumanguru Kanté. Many historians, like Conrad David and Innes Gordon, believe Sundiata to have formed Mali when he overcame Sumanguru Kanté in 1235. Sundiata, also known as Sunjata, organized the Malinké rebellion against the Susu Kingdom. The empire's growth started in Niani, which also happened to be the city where King Sundiata, the empire's monarch, was born. From the Atlantic Coast south of the Senegal River to Goa on the eastern side of the Middle Niger bend, Sundiata established a large kingdom.
References:
- • Conrad, D. C. (2010). Empires of Medieval West Africa: Ghana, Mali, and Songhay. Infobase Publishing.