Unit 1: Origins of the African Diaspora

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50 Terms

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African American Studies

An interdisciplinary field that combines scholarly inquiry with a community-centered approach to studying the history, culture, and politics of people of African descent in the U.S. and across the African diaspora.

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Interdisciplinary

Using methods and insights from multiple academic fields (e.g., history, politics, anthropology, literature) to analyze a topic.

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African diaspora

Communities of people of African descent living outside Africa due to movement and dispersal over time, especially shaped by the Atlantic slave trade and Atlantic World.

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Atlantic World

A network of connections among Africa, Europe, and the Americas that expanded rapidly after transatlantic voyages, linking trade, migration, and power.

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Racialized chattel slavery

A system in which enslaved people were treated as movable property, and enslavement was made hereditary and tied to racial categories (especially Blackness).

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Primary source

Evidence produced during the time being studied (e.g., letters, inventories, laws) that provides direct historical testimony.

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Secondary source

Later interpretation or analysis of the past (e.g., historians’ books/articles) based on primary evidence.

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Causation (historical thinking)

Explaining why events happened by tracing the factors, incentives, and decisions that produced outcomes over time.

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Continuity and change

A historical skill that identifies what stayed the same and what shifted over a period, and explains why.

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Cultural retention

The continuation of cultural practices from earlier contexts (e.g., musical structures, spiritual practices, agricultural knowledge) within diaspora communities.

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Creolization

The blending and creation of new cultural forms under new conditions (e.g., new languages, religions, cuisines) in diaspora societies.

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New identities (diaspora formation)

Group identities shaped both by external imposition through slavery and by community-building within the diaspora.

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Black Campus Movement (1965–1972)

Nationwide student protests that helped institutionalize African American Studies, demanding culturally relevant curricula and support for Black students and faculty.

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Paleoanthropologists

Scientists who study human origins and early humans using fossil and archaeological evidence.

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Homo habilis

An early human species associated in many summaries with early tool use and hunter-gatherer life; often linked (in course timelines) to fire use and shelter.

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Homo erectus

An early human species associated in many summaries with migrations into Asia, crossing water, and speech.

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Homo sapiens

Modern humans; commonly dated in course summaries to around 200,000 years ago.

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Mitochondrial Eve hypothesis

A hypothesis emphasizing a shared maternal lineage tracing back to a single African woman (as a most recent common maternal ancestor).

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Sahara

A major desert in North Africa covering close to the northern third of the continent, historically limiting contact with much of sub-Saharan Africa for long periods.

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Sahel

A semiarid transition zone south of the Sahara that connected desert and savanna regions and supported commerce (including livestock trade).

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Savanna

Broad grasslands across central and parts of southern Africa where agriculture and animal domestication supported major population centers.

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Rainforest (African climate zone)

A climate zone concentrated in parts of West and Central Africa with distinct crops and trade (e.g., yams, kola, and gold trade in some regions).

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Nile River Valley

An agriculturally rich region supporting dense settlement; central to the development of Egypt and Nubia/Kush.

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Bilad es Sudan

A phrase meaning “land of the Black people,” associated with regions south of the Sahara.

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Bantu expansion

Large-scale migrations (about 1500 BCE–500 CE) that spread Bantu languages and cultural practices across much of Africa.

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Migration theory (Bantu expansion)

An explanation that Bantu-speaking peoples moved and used technological advantages to claim territory, spreading language and practices.

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Diffusion theory (Bantu expansion)

An explanation that Bantu practices spread through contact as families moved alongside new groups rather than replacing them entirely.

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Adoption theory (Bantu expansion)

An explanation that Bantu language and technologies spread even where large populations stayed in place, through uptake by local communities.

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West Africa (Atlantic era relevance)

A broad region tied to early forced migrations to the Americas, linked to river systems (Senegal, Gambia, Niger) and the Atlantic coast.

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West Central Africa

A broad region (including the Congo–Angola area) that became the largest source region in the transatlantic slave trade to the Americas.

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Lineage

A kin-based structure (often a clan) claiming descent from a single ancestor, shaping identity and political alliances.

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Matrilineal

A kinship system in which social rank and property pass through the female line (e.g., succession to a chief via a sister’s son).

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Sande society

A secret society in parts of West Africa described as initiating girls into adulthood and providing forms of instruction (including sex education) and values.

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Queen Idia

The first iyoba (queen mother) of Benin (late 15th century), remembered as a political advisor and leader associated with military victories.

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Iyoba

A title meaning “queen mother” in the Kingdom of Benin, associated with political influence and leadership.

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FESTAC (Second World Black Festival of Arts and Culture)

A 1977 festival where an ivory mask of Queen Idia was adopted as a symbol of Black women’s leadership across the diaspora.

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Queen Njinga

A 17th-century ruler of Ndongo and Matamba (Angola) who led long resistance against Portuguese intrusion and used diplomacy and warfare to defend sovereignty.

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Pawnship

A form of unfreedom in some African contexts where a person could be held as collateral for a debt, distinct from Atlantic chattel slavery.

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Household incorporation (pre-Atlantic captivity)

A pattern in some African systems where captives could be absorbed into households or kin networks and, in some cases, see status shift over time.

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Chattel (as a slavery category)

A legal-economic concept treating a person as movable property that can be bought, sold, mortgaged, and inherited.

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Hereditary slavery

A system where enslaved status is passed to children through law (often tied to the mother in many colonies).

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Mercantilism

Colonial-era policies aimed at increasing national wealth by controlling trade, securing colonies, and accumulating bullion; colonies were expected to serve metropolitan interests.

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Plantation complex

A system of large-scale export agriculture (especially sugar) requiring intensive coerced labor, major capital investment, and long-distance trade.

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Middle Passage

The ocean-crossing stage of the transatlantic slave trade characterized by extreme crowding, disease, brutality, and high mortality, alongside resistance.

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Seasoning

The period after sale in the Americas when enslaved people were forced to adjust to new disease environments, labor regimes, and control systems.

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Kingdom of Kongo

A major West Central African state that developed deep ties with Portugal; converted to Roman Catholicism in 1491 and became central to Atlantic slave trading pressures.

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Afonso I (Nzinga Mbemba)

A Christian king of Kongo who corresponded about illegal enslavement and disorder linked to Portuguese slave trading in the early 1500s.

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Syncretism

The blending of religious and cultural elements (e.g., African spiritual systems combining with Christianity or Islam in Africa and the Americas).

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Griot

A prestigious historian/storyteller/musician in West Africa who preserves and transmits community history and tradition through oral performance.

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Race (historical construction)

A set of ideas and practices created to categorize people and distribute power; in the Atlantic World it justified permanent enslavement and legal inequality tied to Blackness.

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