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Tinto Maps #14 - 9th of August 2024 - Western Africa

Hello, and welcome one more week to Tinto Maps, the day of the week for map nerds lovers! This week we will be taking a look at Western Africa! These lands were named historically in different ways, although probably the most widespread naming was Guinea, which also names the Gulf that makes for the southern limit of the region, with the Atlantic Ocean being to the west, the Sahara desert to the north, and the lands around Lake Chad making for the approximate eastern border.

With these regions, we’re also leaving the ‘Easy Mode Map-Making’ of Project Caesar, as getting comprehensive sources of information for 1337 for most of Sub-Saharan Africa is challenging, as the traditional historical record was oral, in contrast with the written records usual in Eurasia. In any case, we did our best to depict the rich history and geography of the region and its diversity, which is stunning. Let’s start, then!

Countries:
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The most important country, and one of the world's great powers, is the Empire of Mali, which in 1337 is at its zenit, still ruled by the infamous Mansa Mūsā. It controls not only the core lands of the Mandé-speaking peoples, but also holds the overlordship over Jolof, most of the fertile Niger river basin, and some of the most important Saharan outposts. To its south-east, the Mossi are organized in several polities (Ougadagou, Gwiriko, Yatenga, Boussouma, Tenkodogo, and Liptako). South into the coast, Kong, Dagbon, Bonoman, and Mankessim are polities ruled by the Dyula, the Dagbani, and the Akan (the last two). To the east, Fada N’gourma, Borgu, and Mamprugu connect with the lands of the Hausa, which rule from several city-states: Kebbi, Gobir, Zafara, Katsina, Daura, Kano, Rano, and Zazzau. Further to the east, the Empire of Kanem rules the lands around Lake Chad from its capital in Njimi, and over some of the Saharan corridors, making it the region's second wealthiest country. And finally, further to the south, there are the lands of the Nupe, the Yoruba (Oyo, Ife, Ijebu, Owo), the Edo (Benin), and the Igbo (Nri).

Dynasties:
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The dynasties of the region are a mix of well-known ones, such as the Keita of Mali, the Ndiaye of Jolof, or the Sayfawa of Kanem, and randomly generated ones for the rest of the polities, as we don’t have good enough sources on who was ruling over most of them in 1337.

Locations:
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The locations of Western Africa. We’ve tried our best to find suitable locations, correct naming, etc., although I’m sure there might be plenty of feedback to apply.

Provinces:
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Areas:
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Terrain:
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This week we have proper Terrain mapmodes at the release of the Tinto Maps… Not much to say about them, though, as the climate and vegetation are pretty straightforward, being divided into Arid and Tropical; while the vegetation goes from desert and sparse beside the Sahara, to increasingly more forested terrain, until reaching the tropical jungles by the coast. The topography is not very fragmented, with the Guinean Highlands and the Adamawa Plateau being the most important landmarks.

Natural Harbors:
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A new map mode this week, coming from the latest Tinto Talks! There are some decent natural harbors in the region, with Banana Islands (where Freetown would be founded), Elmina, and Calabar being the best ones.

Cultures:
Cultures.png

A beautiful map this week… I may repeat that we tried our best to approach the region, taking into account that this was the first African region we completed, around 3 years ago. When we review it, we may add some more diversity, as we have now some more tools than the ones we had back in time, but we think that it’s way best to read your feedback first, to make sure we are on the same page.

Religions:
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Take this map as very WIP. The Sunni-Animism division is kind of accurate, with the expected division for 1337 (Islam would later on advance more to the South, but we think this is the best for this date). What we have yet to do is to divide the ‘Animism’ population into some of the regional variants; we already have plenty of data, but we also want to read your feedback on this first.

Raw Materials:
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The goods of the region are quite diverse and very dependent on the geography. In the Saharan lands, there are plenty of locations with resources such as Salt, Copper, or Alum (regarding this resource, the lands to the north of Lake Chad make for the densest Alum hub in the world for 1337, something the historical sources talk about). Livestock is king in the Sahelian lands, while there are plenty of agricultural goods in the Niger river basin. The region is also full of luxury goods, of which Gold is the most relevant, as being the biggest supply of this metal to the Mediterranean and Europe in the Late Middle Ages, while also having others such as Ivory, Gems, or Spices (which in this region are portraying some goods such as kola nuts, or malagueta pepper). Finally, the coasts of the Gulf of Guinea have plenty of Fish. Maybe the only type of good that is not very abundant in the region is metals, as having some Iron, Tin, etc., but not much in comparison with other regions.

Markets:
Markets.png

Markets of the region, have an interesting distribution. The most important ones in 1337 are Niani, Kano, and Njimi, which are also connected to the Northern African markets, making it possible to get plenty of wealth by exporting well-demanded goods throughout the Sahara (for instance, exporting Gold or Alum for good money is a very viable strategy ATM). Later on, after the Age of Discovery, the coastal markets may get connected to other markets, making them more relevant, and maybe switching the power balance of the region from the North to the South, as historically happened (but take it as a ‘maybe’, not for granted, OFC!).

Population:
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Population of the region. We’ve improved a bit our tracking of the population data, to avoid further problems like the one we had with Germany. I can tell you that the total population of Western Africa is around 5.6M people, which is divided into 2.2M for the Sahel, and 3.3M for the coast of Guinea. You may very well notice that the hegemonic power here may be Mali, with around 700k people, but also that there are many more people not living under the rule of a polity, than living under it, which will make for interesting gameplay on how to deal with it (more about this in a later Tinto Talks, soon…).

And, speaking of that, I have the sad news that next Friday there is a bank holiday here in Spain, so there won’t be a Tinto Maps. The next one will be on Friday 23rd, and we will be taking a look at Eastern Africa! Until then, you may still stay tuned, as we will be replying to feedback, as usual, and we may have some informal maps incoming. Cheers!
 
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Similar logic should apply to the "berber language". It should be made a language family instead and split between the guanche, tuareg and northern berber "languages".
Doing it this way would not only better reflect the linguistical variation in the area, but it would work better for allowing the tuareg to be divided in either 2 or 4 subcultures (as I proposed in the sahara thread) since they would all share the same tuareg "language" (to be noted that I'm just using in-game terminology here, but tuareg is more of a linguistical family, with each of the proposed subcultures representing the "actual" tuareg languages).
 
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As above, language diversity should be part of West Africa's challenges and making it harder to integrate, rule, and propagate various forms of control through language is an immersive way to make the region difficult. To avoid additional work these could be single dialect languages
Could be wrong here, but I don’t think that was the primary hurdle to larger states. It shouldn’t be that much more difficult between cultures that had an established familiarity with each other in this time period.

What should be the source of the difficulty you’re looking for is the greater risk imperial states have of collapsing aa result of running afoul of too many rebelling people (or with a single successful rebellion under ambitious leadership seeking not only independence but to replicate their success by replacing them, cough, Songhai, cough).

While something like a decentralized structure could work to the favor of a large empire keeping non-primary cultures satisfied (or at least not malcontent) with the rule of their homelands (since their own traditional rulers bear most of the responsibility) it should also run the risk of those rulers being more receptive to local demands or becoming ambitious on their own.

The way Malian expansion was set up a newly added province was assigned military rule so the it could be “pacified” before restoring traditional rulers (who, for their part, would have their succession confirmed by the Mansa). In Mali’s earlier, westward conquests this included a wave of Mandinka settlement led by Sundiata’s general, Tiramakhan Traore. That’s really the only detailed example I know is out there. But, from Timbuktu being placed under a commander in the time of Ibn Battuta following the reasoning of vital commercial importance, it’s probably right to guess Gao had a similar arrangement.

As for the Jolof Empire (I don’t remember if I’ve already said this but) I’d argue it’s not right to have them represented as a separate polity on the map without having the same for most Malian provinces, and that would require working out which provinces are which and covering all ground no matter how sparse the details are. On the other hand… France.

What we can rule out in 1337 is that the Jolof Empire does not yet exist and the preexisting state was probably much smaller. Instead, they were neighbored by Serer, Mandinka, and Fula* kingdoms that were also Malian vassals after the same conquests.

More on that note:
The Jolof Empire was founded by a voluntary confederacy of States.[15] It was not an empire built on military conquest.[15] Ndiadiane Ndiayethe possibly mythical founder of the Empire is said to have been nominated and elected by Maad a Sining Maysa Wali to rule the Jolof Empire – his contemporary.[16]
Attempting to date Ndiadiane Ndiaye and the establishment of the Jolof Empire, John Donnelly Fage suggests, "the rise of the empire was associated with the growth of Wolof power at the expense of the ancient Sudanese state of Takrur, and that this was essentially a fourteenth-century development."[10] Ogot proposes that the Jolof became permanently independent during a succession dispute in 1360 between two rival lineages within the Mali Empire.[14] There is no consensus among scholars, however.[15]
According to the epics of both Ndiadiane and Maysa Wali, it was Maysa Wali who elected Ndiadiane Ndiaye and called upon all the Senegambian kings to co-operate with Ndiadiane and join the confederacy which they did.[16][17]That was ten years after Maysa Wali sat on the throne - 1360 (the year of Ndiadiane's reign[18]). Maysa Wali is thus seen as a prominent figure in the formation of the Jolof Empire and the election of Ndiadiane. According to Charles Becker, Victor Martin the Jolof Empire was probably founded in order to repulse the dominant power at the time (the Mali Empire).[19]
That crucially important king of Sine just so happened to come from the Guewolars, one of the twin maternal clans of Kaabu, a Mandinka realm founded by Mali’s western expansion (and not the only one**). They only just started living in the area of Sine and Saloum 2 years before the start date, leaving power in Kaabu entirely to the maternal Nyancho (or Ñaanco) clan. There are also the paternal Sanneh or Sané and Manneh or Mané clans (the latter were eventually crucial to Songhai’s rapid expansion), but succession in Kaabu is matrilineal, derived from the Bainuk kingdom on which it was born, and it would become so in the Serer kingdoms the Guewolars spread to.

Since it is said Maysa Waali had been serving as an advisor to the great council of the Lamanes (Serer nobility) for 15 years at the time of his nomination and election as Maad a Sinig (King of Sine) in 1350, he would already be an advisor by the start date. I don’t know the extent of how trusted he was at that time, or how extensively the Guewolars had intermarried with Serer noblemen yet, but I can at least say that by the time of his historical election all of these were true.

*Takrur (at the time extending further north of the Senegal river valley than Futa Toro; the extent of inhospitability is overestimated, IMO) is debated to have been more Serer in origin (as is the founding dynasty), if these ethnicities were even applicable at the time of its founding as are the first ruling dynasties, but it is known that Serers started fleeing the Senegal river valley after a Soninke dynasty made Takrur the first state in West Africa to adopt Islamic orthodoxy (you can guess why given the way their nobility worked). By 1337, it’s been two centuries since a Fula dynasty gained power deposing a dynasty the Almoravids had placed on the throne and continuing Serer emigration after prolonged strife in the 1200s.

**Other than Kaabu, both the kingdoms of Niumi (on the northern bank of the Gambia) and Wuli were founded earlier on. The Kingdom of Niani, however, was supposedly founded by a clan that fled Niani after a failed rebellion (so the name is not a coincidence) only in this century, and either somehow took half of Wuli on their own or were granted their territory by the Buurba of the Jolof Empire. If we go with the latter, it’s most likely this failed rebellion occurred in or after the 1360s, the time the Jolof Empire was formed and most surrounding kingdoms were subsumed into its own vassal states.
 
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Seeing the latest TT, what kind of artworks would you like to see present in West Africa at the start?

My initial thought are the Ife Head(s) and maybe the traditional crowns: https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bronze_Head_from_Ife

The Ife heads were likely a regnal decoration, with this one showing a realistic depiction of the face of a king of Ife. They are also representative of the high level of Ife and Yoruba craftsmanship and artistic sophistication. It is also estimated that it was made by just a single artist in a workshop.

It also has an interesting history:
When Frobenius discovered the first example of a similar head it undermined existing Western understanding of African civilisation. Experts did not want to believe that Africa had ever had a civilisation capable of creating artefacts of this quality. Attempting to explain what was thought an anomaly, Frobenius offered his theory that these had been cast by a colony of ancient Greeks established in the thirteenth century BC
 
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Seeing the latest TT, what kind of artworks would you like to see present in West Africa at the start?

My initial thought are the Ife Head(s) and maybe the traditional crowns: https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bronze_Head_from_Ife

The Ife heads were likely a regnal decoration, with this one showing a realistic depiction of the face of a king of Ife. They are also representative of the high level of Ife and Yoruba craftsmanship and artistic sophistication. It is also estimated that it was made by just a single artist in a workshop.

It also has an interesting history:
At start:
Epic of Sundiata
Igbo-Ukwu bronzes
Great Mosque of Djenné

Scripted artworks past the start date:
Benin Bronzes
Golden Stool
Sankoré Madrasa
Gidan Rumfa

Forgive me if any of these don't qualify as artworks, the tinto talks just dropped today.
 
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it is known that Serers started fleeing the Senegal river valley after a Soninke dynasty made Takrur the first state in West Africa to adopt Islamic orthodoxy (you can guess why given the way their nobility worked)
How did their nobility work?
 
Could be wrong here, but I don’t think that was the primary hurdle to larger states. It shouldn’t be that much more difficult between cultures that had an established familiarity with each other in this time period.

What should be the source of the difficulty you’re looking for is the greater risk imperial states have of collapsing aa result of running afoul of too many rebelling people (or with a single successful rebellion under ambitious leadership seeking not only independence but to replicate their success by replacing them, cough, Songhai, cough).
Not sure how the Sahelian states are relevant here? I'm talking about the tree savanna and Guinean jungle states: the Igbo kingdoms, Ife, Benin, Oyo, Nupe, etc. You can argue that the rainforest itself is the reason for the size of states in the region but the resultant linguistic diversity matters too imo

While something like a decentralized structure could work to the favor of a large empire keeping non-primary cultures satisfied (or at least not malcontent) with the rule of their homelands (since their own traditional rulers bear most of the responsibility) it should also run the risk of those rulers being more receptive to local demands or becoming ambitious on their own.

The way Malian expansion was set up a newly added province was assigned military rule so the it could be “pacified” before restoring traditional rulers (who, for their part, would have their succession confirmed by the Mansa). In Mali’s earlier, westward conquests this included a wave of Mandinka settlement led by Sundiata’s general, Tiramakhan Traore. That’s really the only detailed example I know is out there. But, from Timbuktu being placed under a commander in the time of Ibn Battuta following the reasoning of vital commercial importance, it’s probably right to guess Gao had a similar arrangement.

As for the Jolof Empire (I don’t remember if I’ve already said this but) I’d argue it’s not right to have them represented as a separate polity on the map without having the same for most Malian provinces, and that would require working out which provinces are which and covering all ground no matter how sparse the details are. On the other hand… France.

What we can rule out in 1337 is that the Jolof Empire does not yet exist and the preexisting state was probably much smaller. Instead, they were neighbored by Serer, Mandinka, and Fula* kingdoms that were also Malian vassals after the same conquests.
Again this is all interesting and much of it is true but I'm not sure how it's a response to what I said? I'm not talking about all of West Africa, especially not the part that famously had geographically large states during this timeframe
 
I would suggest adding wine as a resource to the region and even other parts of Africa possibly to represent the culturally and often religiously important Palm wine that was present. Importantly so that West Africans don't have to import European wine to satisfy pop demand in a somewhat ahistorical manner.
 
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The locations of Nri/Igboland are all very geographically close in real life, making the layout very inaccurate. I'd recommend renaming Azia to Aboh and Nnewi to Oguta. If I can find suitable replacements for the others, I will add them. Onitsha is accurate and should be kept though.
 
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Nupe shouldn’t be a unified entity but split between confederacies. The largest of these confederacies was the Beni confederacy.
I know this was half a year ago, but do you remember what the other confederacies were and where they were based geographically, for the sake of map design? Also, this video seems to imply that they were only formed around the 1400s and the Nupe were previously organized into smaller polities.

Your suggestion is amazing and I really hope something like it is implemented in the feedback. The current political setup just does not do the region justice.
 
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I know this was half a year ago, but do you remember what the other confederacies were and where they were based geographically, for the sake of map design? Also, this video seems to imply that they were only formed around the 1400s and the Nupe were previously organized into smaller polities.

Your suggestion is amazing and I really hope something like it is implemented in the feedback. The current political setup just does not do the region justice.

Unfortunately, I don't, the only reference I've seen anywhere is to that Beni confederacy. It seems to me that maybe the Nupe might need to be represented as a Society of Pops, though that doesn't do full justice to them.
 
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Ok, now that we've seen that the population of Mali is 61% Sunni, I can say there is definitely some inaccuracy there. For starters, the Bambara were animist throughout the PC period, in fact their name means infidels.

The Mandinka should be majority animist, but also have some Muslims of course, probably mainly the nobility and urban population. The warrior and artisan castes seem to have been mainly animist. The Islamic influence would probably be more significant the further north you go, around Timbuktu for example. I will see if I can dig up some sources on this later today.

The Soninke are correctly shown as mainly Muslim.

Update: The Spread of Islam in West Africa: Containment, Mixing, and Reform from the Eighth to the Twentieth Century (Margari Hill, Stanford University, January 2009) (link) claims that the Songhai Empire was majority animist, and seeing as how it covered roughly the Mande and Songhai heartlands, that supports increasing the animist population in these areas imo.

The expansion of Islam among the Bambara under French rule: 1890 to 1940 (Harmon, Stephen Albert. University of California, Los Angeles) looks like it'd be a good source on the Bambara still being animist, but I can't read it. AfricaGuide claims they were 3% Muslim in 1912 (link).
 
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Doing this on a phone so apologies if image quality isn't good, I might come back and use my computer this evening so I'll be able to properly put my suggestions on the map

I'm pulling from General History of Africa IV and I know there have already been suggestions for the Yoruba cities, the Delta, and Igboland (I think all of these should have more tags and SoPs) so I'll try to help fill the Ewe, Fon, and Ajan land along the coast per the following image:

1000014667.png


And give some options for SoPs to the West of the Akan tags we already have

Allada/Aradra: capital of a kingdom of the same name. This kingdom would become the main political force along the Mono river by the start date and expand to be a local hegemon, Portuguese trade contact, and rival of Oyo. The Kingdom would eventually split into three giving birth to Dahomey (Abomey) in the north and Ajatche (Porto Novo, capital of Benin) to the East around 1600. Assuming Dahomey is going to be in the game allowing it to spawn from Allada if a succession crisis happens could be an interesting bit of flavor. The culture would be Fon, the religion would be Vodun/Vodzu, and the state is most known for being a major participant in the Slave Trade to the Portuguese. Ardra location (off coast if we get higher density here)

Hulagan/Popo: another slave trading state this kingdom is interesting mostly because it was founded by Xwla/Phla speakers who are argued by some to be the population of the region prior to Fon migration to the coast. If not a tag they're a good candidate for an SoP that stretches from Èkó to Little Popo that would be likely to settle as trading posts along the coast start to become common. Xwla/Hula culture, Vodun/Vodzu religion

Tado: is and was a historic pilgrimage spot for the people of this region including those in the kingdoms listed above. It is considered the origin of these peoples in the same way Ife is for the Yoruba so it's a good candidate for a kingdom with a theocratic bend. Aja culture, Vodun/Vodzu religion, Tado location

To the West:
The Bijago were island dwellers living in the location of Bishagos (?) and the other islands in the area, which I'd suggest dividing between a couple of locations. They were known to be hostile to Mali and the Portuguese. They're a good candidate for a Navy-Based Country as they were able to retain their independence until the 1800s through the use of naval forces that they used to raided the coast, defeated an attempted Portuguese invasion, and would be a natural fit for piracy against any Mali-based colonial empire (maybe when we start seeing more alt history). They are also fairly matriarchal today: marking matrilineal descent and having female priests, though I'm unsure how far back that tradition goes. Bijago(s) culture, Bijago or Balboa religion

There are a couple of cultures that are already in the game and would make for good SoPs namely the Tenme, Tenda, Bullom, Kissi, and Sherbro as they were either living in agrarian communities of as many as 3000 people or managed to hold off or evade Mali expansion until it's collapse. Historically a wave of invasions would sweep across the region after that collapse bringing Mande speakers to the southern coast. That process in turn fed the creation of more martial states that participated more fully in the growing slave trade

TLDR: out of these the most interesting to me would be a Bijago NBC, Allada, and a Tenme SoP but I think generally putting more roadblocks in front of Mali down toward Liberia and fleshing out the southern coast of the region would go a long way to making gameplay here more fun and making it so that playing the south coast isn't just a speed 5 simulator and Mali gameplay isn't just: survive disaster -> win because of its position on the world map
 
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The Cambridge History of Africa argues that the Bonoman and Begho were kingdoms, or at least different settlements - unlike shown in the map where the Begho are the dynasty of Bonoman. Instead, it references that the dynasty of Bonoman could be called the Tekyiman. There is disagreement when it arose but there is evidence pointing to 1295, in which case the ruler of Bonoman in 1337 would be Akumfi Ameyaw I.
 
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