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sub saharan africa is known for its crime rate and the drugs and alchlol it sells to lilttel children but if u want your lil boys and girls to get stolen by kony u should go to africa
{{Use dmy dates|date=June 2012}}
[[Image:Sub-Saharan Africa definition UN.png|thumb|299px|'''Dark and lighter green:''' Definition of "Sub-Saharan Africa" as used in the statistics of the UN institutions.<br>'''Lighter green:''' However, the [[Sudan]] is classified as North Africa by the [[United Nations]].<ref>{{cite web|url=http://unstats.un.org/unsd/methods/m49/m49regin.htm |title=Classification of Sudan in both North and Sub-Africa |publisher=Unstats.un.org |date=20 September 2011 }} "The designation sub-Saharan Africa is commonly used to indicate all of Africa except northern Africa, with Sudan included in sub-Saharan Africa." This classification predates the secession of [[South Sudan]] from Sudan.</ref>]]
[[Image:East and southern africa early iron age.png|thumb|299px|Simplified climatic map of Africa: Sub-Saharan Africa consists of the [[Sahel]] and the [[Horn of Africa]] in the north (yellow), the [[tropical savanna]]s (light green) and the [[tropical rainforest]]s (dark green) of [[Equatorial Africa]], and the arid [[Kalahari Basin]] (yellow) and the "[[Mediterranean climate|Mediterranean]]" south coast (olive) of [[Southern Africa]]. The numbers shown correspond to the dates of all [[Iron Age]] artifacts associated with the [[Bantu expansion]].]]

'''Sub-Saharan Africa''' is, geographically, the area of the continent of [[Africa]] that lies south of the [[Sahara]]. Politically, it consists of all [[African countries]] that are fully or partially located south of the Sahara (excluding [[Sudan]]).<ref>{{cite web |url=http://esa.un.org/unpp/definition.html |title=Political definition of "Major regions", according to the UN. |accessdate=15 December 2010}}</ref> It contrasts with [[North Africa]], which is considered a part of the [[Arab world]]. [[Somalia]], [[Djibouti]], [[Comoros]] and [[Mauritania]] are geographically part of Sub-Saharan Africa, but also part of the Arab world.<ref name="Tajudeen Abdul Raheem 1996">Tajudeen Abdul Raheem, ed., Pan Africanism: Politics, Economy and Social Change in the Twenty First Century, Pluto Press, London, 1996.</ref><ref>
*Halim Barakat, ''The Arab World: Society, Culture, and State'', ([[University of California Press]]: 1993), p.80
*[http://www.arableagueonline.org/las/index.jsp Arab League Online: League of Arab States]
*{{cite web|url=http://portal.unesco.org/geography/en/ev.php-URL_ID=2314&URL_DO=DO_TOPIC&URL_SECTION=201.html |title=UNESCO - Arab States |publisher=Portal.unesco.org |date= }}
*{{cite web|author=Infosamak |url=http://www.infosamak.org/english/countries.cfm |title=Centre for Marketing, Information and Advisory Services for Fishery Products in the Arab Region |language={{it icon}} |publisher=Infosamak.org |date= }}
*Khair El-Din Haseeb et al., ''The Future of the Arab Nation: Challenges and Options'', 1 edition (Routledge: 1991), p.54
*John Markakis, ''Resource conflict in the Horn of Africa'', (Sage: 1998), p.39
*Ḥagai Erlikh, The struggle over Eritrea, 1962-1978: war and revolution in the Horn of Africa, ([[Hoover Institution Press]]: 1983), p.59
*Randall Fegley, ''Eritrea'', (Clio Press: 1995), p.xxxviii</ref>

The [[Sahel]] is the transitional zone between the Sahara and the [[tropical savanna]] (the [[Sudan (region)|Sudan region]]) and [[forest-savanna mosaic]] to the south.

Since probably the [[5.9 kiloyear event]],<ref>
*{{Cite journal |last=Claussen |first=Mark |last2=Kubatzki |first2=Claudia |last3=Brovkin |first3=Victor |last4=Ganopolski |first4=Andrey |last5=Hoelzmann |first5=Philipp |last6=Pachur |first6=Hans-Joachim |year=1999 |title=Simulation of an Abrupt Change in Saharan Vegetation in the Mid-Holocene |journal=Geophysical Research Letters |volume=26 |issue=14 |pages=2037–2040 |doi=10.1029/1999GL900494 |postscript=<!--None--> |bibcode=1999GeoRL..26.2037C}}
*{{Cite journal |url=http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/1999/07/990712080500.htm |title=Sahara's Abrupt Desertification Started By Changes In Earth's Orbit, Accelerated By Atmospheric And Vegetation Feedbacks |work=Science Daily |date=12 July 1999 |publisher=[[Science Daily]] |postscript=<!--None--> }}</ref> the Saharan and Sub-Saharan regions of Africa have been separated by the extremely harsh climate of the sparsely populated Sahara, forming an effective barrier interrupted by only the [[Nile River]] in Sudan, though the Nile was blocked by the river's [[Cataracts of the Nile|cataracts]]. The [[Sahara Pump Theory]] explains how [[Floristic province|flora]] and [[Biomes|fauna]] (including ''[[Recent African origin of modern humans|Homo sapiens]]'') left Africa to penetrate the Middle East and beyond. African [[pluvial]] periods are associated with a "wet Sahara" phase during which larger lakes and more rivers exist.<ref>{{cite journal | author = Van Zinderen Bakker E. M. | title = A Late-Glacial and Post-Glacial Climatic Correlation between East Africa and Europe | journal = Nature | volume = 194 | pages = 201–203 |date= 14 April 1962 | doi = 10.1038/194201a0 | issue=4824|bibcode = 1962Natur.194..201V }}</ref>

==Etymology==
[[File:Meyers b11 s0476a.jpg|thumb|Historic ethnographic map depicting the ''[[Sudan (region)|Sudan region]]'' and its eastern equivalent ''[[Zanj]]'' in brown tones. The contrasting ''[[Al-Habash]]'' and ''[[Barbara (region)|Barbara]]'' regions are shown in shaded blue.]]
The Sub-Saharan region is often referred to as '''Black Africa''',<ref>so e.g. ''Africa Works: Disorder as Political Instrument'' (1999, ISBN 0-85255-814-7), p. xxi: "what is usually called Black Africa&nbsp;— that is the former European colonies lying south of the Sahara".</ref> in reference to its numerous [[Black people|black]] populations. However, geographers historically divided the region into several distinct ethnographic sections based on each area's respective inhabitants.<ref name="Raunig"/>

Commentators in Arabic in the medieval period used the general term ''bilâd as-sûdân'' ("Land of the Blacks") for the vast [[Sudan (region)|Sudan region]] (an expression denoting [[West Africa|West]] and [[Central Africa]]<ref>{{citation | author = International Association for the History of Religions | title = Numen | publisher = EJ Brill | place = Leiden | year = 1959 | page = 131 | quote = West Africa may be taken as the country stretching from Senegal in the west, to the Cameroons in the east; sometimes it has been called the central and western Sudan, the Bilad as-Sūdan, 'Land of the Blacks', of the Arabs}}</ref>), or sometimes extending from the coast of West Africa to [[Western Sudan]].<ref name="Levtzion">Nehemia Levtzion, Randall Lee Pouwels, The History of Islam in Africa, (Ohio University Press, 2000), p.255.</ref> Its equivalent in the southeast was ''[[Zanj]]'' ("Country of the Blacks"), which was situated in the vicinity of the [[African Great Lakes|Great Lakes]] region.<ref name="Raunig"/><ref name="Levtzion"/> Also transliterated as Zenj or Zinj, it was inhabited by [[Bantu languages|Bantu]]-speaking peoples called the ''Zanj''.<ref name="Raunig"/><ref name="Bagley">F.R.C. Bagley et al., ''The Last Great Muslim Empires'', (Brill: 1997), p.174</ref><ref name="Ogot">[[Bethwell A. Ogot]], ''Zamani: A Survey of East African History'', (East African Publishing House: 1974), p.104</ref>

The geographers drew an explicit ethnographic distinction between the Sudan region and its analogue Zanj, with the area to their extreme east on the [[Red Sea]] coast in the [[Horn of Africa]].<ref name="Raunig"/> In modern-day Ethiopia was ''[[Al-Habash]]'' or Abyssinia,<ref name="Robinson">Sven Rubenson, The survival of Ethiopian independence, (Tsehai, 2003), p.30.</ref> which was inhabited by the ''Habash'' or Abyssinians, who were the forebears of the [[Habesha people|Habesha]].<ref name="Blank">Jonah Blank, Mullahs on the mainframe: Islam and modernity among the Daudi Bohras, (University of Chicago Press, 2001), p.163.</ref> In northern Somalia was ''[[Barbara (region)|Barbara]]'' or the ''Bilad al-Barbar'' ("Land of the [[Berber people|Berbers]]"), which was inhabited by the Eastern ''Baribah'' or ''Barbaroi'', as the ancestors of the [[Somali people|Somalis]] were referred to by medieval Arab and ancient [[Greeks|Greek]] geographers, respectively.<ref name="Raunig">{{cite book|last=Raunig|first=Walter|title=Afrikas Horn: Akten der Ersten Internationalen Littmann-Konferenz 2. bis 5. Mai 2002 in München|year=2005|publisher=Otto Harrassowitz Verlag|isbn=3-447-05175-2|page=130|url=http://books.google.ca/books?id=JpNY7VPn1WUC&pg=PA130#v=onepage&q&f=false|quote=ancient Arabic geography had quite a fixed pattern in listing the countries from the Red Sea to the Indian Ocean: These are al-Misr (Egypt) -- al-Muqurra (or other designations for Nubian kingdoms) -- al-Habasha (Abyssinia) -- Barbara (Berber, i.e. the Somali coast) -- Zanj (Azania, i.e. the country of the "blacks"). Correspondingly almost all these terms (or as I believe: all of them!) also appear in ancient and medieval Chinese geography}}</ref><ref name="Bagley"/><ref name="Hastings">James Hastings, ''Encyclopedia of Religion and Ethics Part 12: V. 12'', (Kessinger Publishing, LLC: 2003), p.490</ref>

Some note that Sub-Saharan Africa neither exists linguistically ([[Afro-Asiatic]] languages), ethnically ([[Tuareg people|Tuareg]]), politically (African Union, [[Arab league]]), in terms of religion ([[Islam]]), nor economically ([[CEN-SAD]]). The [[African Union]] also prefers to see the Sahara as a bridge, not a barrier.<ref name="Tajudeen Abdul Raheem 1996"/><ref>{{cite web | url=http://www.pambazuka.org/en/category/features/42249 | title= Pambazuka Online | publisher=[[Pambazuka]] | African agency.}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.africannewsworld.com/2009/07/contemptuousness-of-sub-saharan-africa.html |title=[[Chika Onyeani]]|publisher=Africannewsworld.com |date= }}</ref><ref>{{cite web | url=http://www.africanholocaust.net/news_ah/language%20new%20reality.htm| title= Language and reality | publisher=[[Owen Alik Shahadah]], African Holocaust Society | accessdate=4 January 2007}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.africa-union.org/root/au/index/index.htm |title=www.africa-union.org |publisher=www.africa-union.org |date= }}</ref>

==Climate zones and ecoregions==
{{Further|Afrotropic ecozone|Tropical and subtropical grasslands, savannas, and shrublands|List of tropical and subtropical moist broadleaf forests ecoregions}}
[[Image:Africa Koppen Map.png|thumb|249px|[[Climate zone]]s of Africa, showing the ecological break between the [[desert climate]] of the Sahara and the Horn of Africa (red), the [[semi-arid]] Sahel (orange) and the [[tropical climate]] of Central and Western Africa (blue). Southern Africa has a transition to [[semi-tropical]] or [[temperate climate]]s (green), and more desert or semi-arid regions, centered on Namibia and Botswana.]]

Sub-Saharan Africa has a wide variety of [[climate zone]]s or [[biome]]s. [[South Africa]] and the [[Democratic Republic of the Congo]] in particular are considered [[Megadiverse countries]].

* The [[Sahel]] shoots across all of Africa at a latitude of about 10° to 15° N. Countries that include parts of the Sahara proper in their northern territories and parts of the Sahel in their southern region include [[Mali]], [[Niger]] and [[Chad]].
* South of the Sahel, there is a belt of [[savanna]], ([[Guinean forest-savanna mosaic]], [[Northern Congolian forest-savanna mosaic]]) widening to include most of [[South Sudan]] and [[Ethiopia]] in the east ([[East Sudanian savanna]]).
* The [[Horn of Africa]] includes arid [[semi-desert]] along its coast, contrasting with savannah and [[List of tropical and subtropical moist broadleaf forests ecoregions|moist broadleaf forests]] in the interior of Ethiopia.
* Africa's [[tropical rainforest]] stretches along the southern coast of West Africa and dominates Central Africa (the [[Democratic Republic of the Congo|Congo]]) west of the [[African Great Lakes]]
* The [[Eastern Miombo woodlands]] are an ecoregion of [[Tanzania]], [[Malawi]], and [[Mozambique]].
* The [[Serengeti]] ecosystem is located in northwestern Tanzania and extends to southwestern [[Kenya]].
* The [[Kalahari Basin]] includes the [[Kalahari Desert]] surrounded by a belt of semi-desert.
* The [[Bushveld]] is a [[tropical and subtropical grasslands, savannas, and shrublands|tropical savanna]] ecoregion of [[Southern Africa]].
* The [[Karoo]] is a semi-desert in western South Africa.

==History==
{{Main|History of Africa}}
[[Nubia]] in present day Northern [[Sudan]] and Southern [[Egypt]], was referred to as "[[Ethiopia (mythology)|Ethiopia]]" or "Aethiopia" ("land of the burnt face") by the [[Ancient Greece|Greeks]].<ref>{{cite book |last= Thompson |first= Lloyd A. |title= Romans and blacks |url= http://books.google.com/?id=7MQOAAAAQAAJ&pg=PA57&lpg=PA57&dq=%22Sub-Saharan+Africa%22+Ethiopia+Aethiopia&q= |page= 57 |year= 1989 |publisher= Taylor & Francis |isbn= 0-415-03185-0}}</ref>

===Prehistory===

According to [[paleontology]], early hominid skull anatomy was similar to their close cousins, the great African forest [[great ape|apes]], gorilla and chimpanzee, but they had adopted a [[biped]]al locomotion and freed hands giving them a crucial advantage enabling them to live in both forested areas and on the open [[savanna]] at a time when Africa was drying up, with savanna encroaching on forested areas. This occurred 10 million to 5 million years ago.<ref name="Shillington, Kevin 2005 p. 2">Shillington, Kevin(2005). History of Africa, Rev. 2nd Ed. New York: [[Palgrave Macmillan]], p. 2, ISBN 0-333-59957-8.</ref>

By 3 million years ago several [[Australopithecus|australopithecine]] (southern apes) hominid species had developed throughout [[Southern Africa|southern]], [[East Africa|eastern]] and [[central Africa]]. They were tool users, not makers of tools.
About 2.3 million BCE, the next major evolutionary step occurred when primitive stone tools were used to scavenge kills made by other predators and harvest carrion for their bones and marrow. In hunting, ''H. habilis'' was probably not capable of competing with large predators and was more prey than hunter, although ''H. habilis'' probably did steal eggs from nests and may have been able to catch small [[game (food)|game]] and weakened larger prey (cubs and older animals). The tools were classed as [[Oldowan]].<ref name="Shillington, Kevin 2005 p. 2-3">Shillington, Kevin(2005). History of Africa, Rev. 2nd Ed. New York: Palgrave Macmillan, p. 2-3, ISBN 0-333-59957-8.</ref>

Around 1.8 million years ago, ''[[Homo ergaster]]'' first appeared in the fossil record in Africa. From ''Homo ergaster'', ''[[Homo erectus]]'' (upright man) evolved 1.5 million years ago. Some of the earlier representatives of this species were small brained and used primitive stone tools, much like ''H. habilis''. The brain later grew in size, and ''H. erectus'' eventually developed a more complex stone tool technology called the [[Acheulean]]. Possibly the first hunters, ''H. erectus'' mastered the art of making fire and were the first hominids to leave Africa, colonizing the entire [[Old World]] and perhaps later giving rise to ''[[Homo floresiensis]]''. Although some recent writers suggest that ''[[H. georgicus]]'', a ''H. habilis'' [[lineage (anthropology)|descendant]], was the first and most primitive hominid to ever live outside Africa, many scientists consider ''H. georgicus'' to be an early and primitive member of the ''H. erectus'' species.<ref>Shillington, Kevin(2005). History of Africa, Rev. 2nd Ed. New York: Palgrave Macmillan, p. 3, ISBN 0-333-59957-8.</ref><ref>Ehret, Christopher (2002). The Civilizations of Africa. Charlottesville: [[University of Virginia]], pp. 22, ISBN 0-8139-2085-X.</ref>

The fossil record shows ''Homo sapiens'' living in southern and eastern Africa at least 100,000 and possibly 150,000 years ago. Around 50–60 millennia ago their expansion [[Single-origin hypothesis|out of Africa]] launched the colonization of our planet by modern humans. By 10,000 BCE, ''Homo sapiens'' had spread to all corners of the world. Their migration is indicated by linguistic, cultural and [[genetics|genetic]] evidence.<ref name="Shillington, Kevin 2005 p. 2-3"/><ref>The genetic studies by [[Luca Cavalli-Sforza]] are considered pioneering in tracing the spread of modern humans from Africa.</ref><ref>Sarah A. Tishkoff,* Floyd A. Reed, Françoise R. Friedlaender, Christopher Ehret,
Alessia Ranciaro, Alain Froment, Jibril B. Hirbo, Agnes A. Awomoyi, Jean-Marie Bodo, Ogobara Doumbo, Muntaser Ibrahim, Abdalla T. Juma, Maritha J. Kotze, Godfrey Lema, Jason H. Moore, Holly Mortensen, Thomas B. Nyambo, Sabah A. Omar, Kweli Powell, Gideon S. Pretorius, Michael W. Smith, Mahamadou A. Thera, Charles Wambebe, James L. Weber, Scott M. Williams. [http://www.sciencemag.org/cgi/content/full/1172257/DC1 The Genetic Structure and History of Africans and African Americans]. Published 30 April 2009 on Science Express.</ref>

After the Sahara became a desert, it did not present a totally impenetrable barrier for travelers between north and south because of the application of animal husbandry towards carrying water, food, and supplies across the desert. Prior to the introduction of the [[camel]],<ref>Stearns, Peter N. (2001) ''The Encyclopedia of World History'', Houghton Mifflin Books. p. 16. ISBN 0-395-65237-5.</ref> the use of oxen, mule, and horses for desert crossing was common, and trade routes followed chains of [[Oasis|oases]] that were strung across the desert. The [[trans-saharan trade]] was in full motion by 500 BCE with [[Carthage]] being a major economic force for its establishment.<ref>Collins, Robert O. and Burns, James. M(2007). A History of Sub-saharan Africa. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, p. 62, ISBN 978-0-521-86746-7</ref><ref>Davidson, Basil. Africa History, Themes and Outlines, revised and expanded edition. New York: [[Simon and Schuster]], p. 54, ISBN 0-684-82667-4.</ref><ref>Shillington, Kevin(2005). History of Africa, Rev. 2nd Ed. New York: Palgrave Macmillan, p. 47, ISBN 0-333-59957-8.</ref> It is thought that the camel was first brought to [[Egypt]] after the [[Persian Empire]] conquered Egypt in 525 BCE, although large herds did not become common enough in North Africa for camels to be the pack animal of choice for the trans-saharan trade.<ref>McEvedy, Colin (1980) ''Atlas of African History'', p. 44. ISBN 0-87196-480-5.</ref>

===Eastern Africa===
[[Image:African-civilizations-map-pre-colonial.svg|thumb|300px|right|Historical African states and empires]]
{{Main|History of East Africa}}
{{Further|History of Ethiopia|History of Somalia|History of Sudan}}
[[File:SphinxOfTaharqa.jpg|thumb|left| Sphinx of Nubian Emperor [[Taharqa]]]]

The distribution of the [[Nilo-Saharan languages|Nilo-Saharan]] linguistic phylum is evidence of a certain coherence of the central Sahara, the Sahel and East Africa in prehistoric times. [[Kingdom of Kush|Kush]] and [[Nubia]] at her greatest phase is considered Sub-Saharan Africa's oldest urban civilization. Nubia was a major source of gold for the ancient world. Nubians built famous structures like the Deffufa, mud brick temples similar to the [[ziggurats]] of [[Mesopotamia]] in material and function.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.ancientsudan.org/arthistory_01_kermatemples.htm |title=AncientSudan.org |publisher=AncientSudan.org |date= }}</ref> They built numerous pyramids. Sudan, the site of ancient Nubia, has more pyramids than anywhere in the world.<ref>Mokhtar (editor), AnciGent Civilizations of Africa Vo. II, General History of Africa, UNESCO, 1990</ref>

The [[Axumite Empire]] spanned the southern Sahara and the Sahel along the western shore of the [[Red Sea]]. Located in northern [[Ethiopia]] and [[Eritrea]], Aksum was deeply involved in the trade network between India and the Mediterranean. Emerging from ca. the 4th century BCE, it rose to prominence by the 1st century AD. The Aksumites constructed monolithic stelaes to cover the graves of their kings, such as [[King Ezana's Stele]]. The later [[Zagwe dynasty]], established in the 12th century, built churches out of solid rock. These rock-hewn structures include the [[Church of Saint George, Lalibela|Church of St. George at Lalibela]].

In [[History of somalia#Ancient|ancient Somalia]], city-states flourished such as [[Opone]], [[Cape Guardafui|Mosyllon]] and [[Malao (ancient)|Malao]] that competed with the [[Sabaeans]], [[Parthia]]ns and [[Axumite Empire|Axumites]] for the wealthy [[India|Indo]]&ndash;[[Greco-Roman|Greco]]&ndash;[[Ancient Rome|Roman]] trade.<ref>Oman in history By Peter Vine Page 324</ref>
[[File:Gondereshe2008.jpg|right|thumb|185px|[[Architecture of Somalia|Stone city]] of [[Gondershe]], [[Somalia]].]]
In the Middle Ages, several powerful Somali empires dominated the regional trade including the [[Ajuuraan State]], which excelled in [[hydraulic]] [[engineering]] and fortress building,<ref>Shaping of Somali society Lee Cassanelli pg.92</ref> the [[Sultanate of Adal]], whose General [[Ahmed Gurey]] was the first African commander in history to use cannon warfare on the continent during [[Ethiopian–Adal War|Adal's conquest]] of the [[Ethiopian Empire]],<ref>Futuh Al Habash Shibab ad Din</ref> and the [[Gobroon Dynasty]], whose military dominance forced governors of the [[Oman|Omani empire]] north of the city of [[Lamu]] to pay tribute to the [[Somali people|Somali]] Sultan [[Ahmed Yusuf (Gobroon)|Ahmed Yusuf]].<ref>Sudan Notes and Records&nbsp;– Page 147</ref> In the late 19th century after the [[Berlin conference]] had ended, [[Colonial empire|European empires]] sailed with their armies to the [[Horn of Africa]]. The [[imperialism|imperial]] armies in Somalia alarmed the [[Dervish State|Dervish]] leader [[Muhammad Abdullah Hassan]], who gathered Somali soldiers from across the Horn of Africa and began one of the longest colonial resistance wars ever.
[[File:Gonder.jpg|thumb|left|200px|[[Gondar|Fasilides Castle]], [[Ethiopia]].]]
Further south in East Africa, during the first millennium AD, [[Nilotic]] and [[Bantu languages|Bantu]]-speaking peoples [[Bantu expansion|moved into the region]], and the latter now comprise three-quarters of Kenya's population. Increased trade (namely with Arab merchants) and the development of ports helped birth of Swahili culture. Developed from an outgrowth of indigenous Bantu settlements,<ref>African Archaeological Review, Volume 15, Number 3, September 1998, pp. 199-218(20)</ref> the [[Swahili Coast]] of [[Kenya]], [[Tanzania]] and northern [[Mozambique]] was part of the east African region which traded with Persia, China, the Arab world, and India especially for [[ivory]] and [[slavery|slaves]].

In 1498, [[Vasco da Gama]] became the first European to reach the East African coast, and by 1525, the [[Portugal|Portuguese]] had subdued the entire Swahili seaboard. Portuguese control lasted until the early 18th century when Arabs from [[Oman]] established a foothold in the region. Assisted by [[Somali people|Somalis]], [[Ottoman Empire|Ottomans]] and [[Oman|Omani Arabs]],<ref>Portuguese rule and Spanish crown in South Africa, 1581–1640 – Page 25</ref> the indigenous coastal dwellers succeeded in driving the Portuguese from the area north of the [[Ruvuma River]] by the early 18th century.

===Western Africa===
{{Main|History of West Africa}}
{{Further|Ghana Empire|Mali Empire|Songhay Empire|Kingdom of Benin|Kingdom of Nri}}
[[File:Nok sculpture Louvre 70-1998-11-1.jpg|thumb|right|120px|Nok sculpture, terracotta, [[Louvre]]]]
The [[Bantu expansion]] is a major migration movement originating in West Africa around 2500 BCE, reaching East and Central Africa by 1000 BCE and Southern Africa by the early centuries AD.

The [[Nok culture]] is known from a type of terracotta figure found in Nigeria, dating to between 500 BCE and AD 200.

There were a number of medieval empires of the southern Sahara and the Sahel, based on [[trans-Saharan trade]], including the [[Ghana Empire]] and the [[Mali Empire]], [[Songhai Empire]], the [[Kanem Empire]] and the subsequent [[Bornu Empire]].<ref>Davidson, Basil. Africa History, Themes and Outlines, revised and expanded edition. New York: Simon and Schuster, pp. 87-107, ISBN 0-684-82667-4.</ref> They built stone structures like in [http://www.mauritania.mr/fnsva/photo_tichit.htm Tichit] but mainly built in [[adobe]]. The [[Great Mosque of Djenne]] is most reflective of Sahelian architecture and is the largest adobe building in the world.
[[File:Afrifortifiedvillagbige.jpg|thumb|200px|left|Fortifications were significant in West Africa, the [[Walls of Benin]] is the largest man made structure in the world<ref>Wesler,Kit W.(1998). Historical archaeology in Nigeria. Africa World Press pp.143,144 ISBN 0-86543-610-X, 9780865436107.</ref><ref>Pearce, Fred. [http://www.newscientist.com/article/mg16322035.100-the-african-queen.html?page=2 ''African Queen'']. New Scientist, 11 September 1999, Issue 2203.</ref>]]
In the forest zone, several states and empires emerged. The [[Ashanti Empire]] arose in the 16th century in modern day Ghana and Côte d'Ivoire. The oldest kingdom in Nigeria, the [[Kingdom of Nri]], was established by the [[Igbo people|Igbo]] in the 11th century. Nri was famous for having a priest-king who wielded no military power. Nri was a rare African state as it never dealt in the trade of slaves. All slaves and outcasts who sought refuge in their territory were freed. Other major states included the kingdoms of [[Ife|Ifẹ]] and [[Oyo Empire|Oyo]] in the western block of Nigeria which became prominent about 700–900 and 1400 respectively, and center of [[Yoruba people|Yoruba]] culture. The Yoruba's built massive mud walls around their cities, the most famous being [[Sungbo's Eredo]]. Another prominent kingdom in southwestern Nigeria was the [[Kingdom of Benin]] whose power lasted between the 15th and 19th century. Their dominance reached as far as the well known city of Eko which was named [[Lagos]] by the Portuguese traders and other early European settlers. The [[Kingdom of Benin|Edo]] speaking people of Benin are known for the [[Walls of Benin]], which is the largest man-made structure in the world.

In the 18th century, the Oyo and the [[Aro confederacy]] were responsible for most of the slaves exported from Nigeria, with Great Britain, France and Portugal shipping the majority of the slaves.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://countrystudies.us/nigeria/7.htm |title=The Slave Trade |publisher=Countrystudies.us |date= }}</ref> Following the [[Napoleonic Wars]], the British expanded trade with the Nigerian interior. In 1885, British claims to a West African sphere of influence received international recognition, and in the following year the [[Royal Niger Company]] was chartered under the leadership of Sir [[George Taubman Goldie]]. In 1900, the company's territory came under the control of the British Government, which moved to consolidate its hold over the area of modern Nigeria. On 1 January 1901, Nigeria became a British protectorate, part of the [[British Empire]], the foremost world power at the time.

By 1960, most of the region received independence from colonial rule.

===Central Africa===
{{Main|History of Central Africa}}
{{Further|Lunda Empire}}
[[File:Nzinga.jpg|thumb|120px|right|Nzinga Mbande, queen of the [[Ndongo]] and [[Matamba]].]]
During the 14th century, the [[Luba Kingdom]] in southeast Congo came about under a king whose political authority came from religious spiritual legitimacy. The kingdom controlled agriculture and trade in the region of salt and iron from the north and copper from the Zambian/Congo copper belt.<ref name="History of Africa pp. 138,139,142">Shillington, Kevin(2005). History of Africa, Rev. 2nd Ed. New York: Palgrave Macmillan, pp. 138,139,142, ISBN 0-333-59957-8.</ref>
Rival kingship factions which split from the Luba Kingdom later moved among the Lunda people, marrying into its elite and laying the foundation of the [[Lunda Empire]] in the 16th century. The ruling dynasty centralised authority among the Lunda under the Mwata Yamyo or Mwaant Yaav. The Mwata Yamyo's legitimacy, like the Luba king, came from being viewed as a spiritual religious guardian. This system of religious spiritual kings was spread to most of central Africa by rivals in kingship migrating and forming new states. Many new states received legitimacy by claiming descent from the Lunda dynasties.<ref name="History of Africa pp. 138,139,142"/>

The [[Kingdom of Kongo]] existed from the Atlantic west to the Kwango river to the east. During the 15th century, the Bakongo farming community was united with the capital at Mbanza Kongo, under the king title, Manikongo.<ref name="History of Africa pp. 138,139,142"/>
Other significant states and peoples included the [[Kuba Kingdom]], producers of the famous raffia cloth, the [[Eastern Lunda]], [[Bemba people|Bemba]], [[Burundi]], [[Rwanda]], and the [[Kingdom of Ndongo]].

===Southern Africa===
{{Main|History of Southern Africa}}
{{Further|Kingdom of Mutapa}}
Settlements of [[Bantu languages|Bantu]]-speaking peoples, who were [[iron]]-using agriculturists and herdsmen, were already present south of the [[Limpopo River]] by the 4th or 5th century displacing and absorbing the original [[Khoisan languages|Khoisan]] speakers. They slowly moved south, and the earliest ironworks in modern-day [[KwaZulu-Natal|KwaZulu-Natal Province]] are believed to date from around 1050. The southernmost group was the [[Xhosa people|Xhosa]] people, whose language incorporates certain linguistic traits from the earlier Khoi-San people, reaching the [[Great Fish River|Fish River]] in today's [[Eastern Cape|Eastern Cape Province]].
[[File:Great-Zimbabwe-2.jpg|thumb|left|210px|[[Great Zimbabwe]]: Tower in the Great Enclosure.]]
[[Monomotapa]] was a medieval kingdom (c. 1250–1629) that used to exist between the [[Zambezi]] and [[Limpopo River|Limpopo]] rivers of [[Southern Africa]], in the territory of modern-day [[Zimbabwe]] and [[Mozambique]]. Famous are the ruins at its old capital of [[Great Zimbabwe]].

In 1487, [[Bartolomeu Dias]] became the first European to reach the southernmost tip of Africa. In 1652, a [[Victualler|victualling station]] was established at the [[Cape of Good Hope]] by [[Jan van Riebeeck]] on behalf of the [[Dutch East India Company]]. For most of the 17th and 18th centuries, the slowly expanding settlement was a [[Dutch Empire|Dutch]] possession.

[[Kingdom of Great Britain|Great Britain]] seized the Cape of Good Hope area in 1795, ostensibly to prevent it from falling into the hands of the French but also to use [[Cape Town]] in particular as a stop on the route to [[History of Australia (1788–1850)|Australia]] and [[Company rule in India|India]]. It was later returned to the Dutch in 1803, but soon afterwards the Dutch East India Company declared bankruptcy, and the British annexed the [[Cape Colony]] in 1806.

The [[Zulu Kingdom]] (1817–79) was a Southern African tribal state in what is now Kwa-Zulu Natal in southeastern South Africa. The small kingdom gained world fame during and after the [[Anglo-Zulu War]].

During the 1950s and early 1960s, most Sub-Saharan African nations achieved independence from imperialist rule.<ref>M. Martin, Phyllis and O'Meara, Patrick (1995). Africa 3rd edition, Bloomington and Indianapolis: [[Indiana University Press]], p. 156, ISBN 0-253-32916-7.</ref>

==Demographics==
{{Main|Demographics of Africa}}
[[Image:Life expectancy in some Southern African countries 1958 to 2003.png|thumb|right|230px|Life expectancy has fallen drastically in [[Southern Africa]] since the 1990s as a result of HIV.]]
The Sub-Saharan African countries form the bulk of the [[ACP countries]]. [[Malaria]] is a chronic impediment to economic development. The disease slows growth by about 1.3% per year through lost time caused by illness and the cost of treatment and prevention measures. According to the World Bank, the region's GDP would have been 32% higher in 2003 had the disease been eradicated in 1960.<ref name="NatGeo" />

The population of Sub-Saharan Africa was 800 million in 2007.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://ddp-ext.worldbank.org/ext/ddpreports/ViewSharedReport?&CF=&REPORT_ID=9147&REQUEST_TYPE=VIEWADVANCED&HF=N/CPProfile.asp&WSP=N |title=ddp-ext.worldbank.org/ext/ddpreports |publisher=Ddp-ext.worldbank.org |date= }}</ref> The current growth rate is 2.3%. The UN predicts for the region a population of nearly 1.5 billion in 2050.<ref>[http://esa.un.org/unpp World Population Prospects: The 2006 Revision Population Database]{{dead link|date=June 2012}}</ref>

Sub-Saharan African countries top the [[list of countries and territories by fertility rate]] with 40 of the highest 50, all with [[Total fertility rate|TFR]] greater than 4 in 2008. All are above the world average except [[South Africa]]. Figures for [[life expectancy]], [[malnourishment]], [[infant mortality]] and [[HIV/AIDS in Africa|HIV/AIDS]] infections are also dramatic. More than 40% of the population in sub-Saharan countries is younger than 15 years old, as well as in the [[Sudan]] with the exception of South Africa.<ref>According to the [http://www.umsl.edu/services/govdocs/wofact2008/index.html CIA Factbook]: Angola, Benin, Burundi, Burkina Faso, the Central African Republic, Cameroon, Chad, the Republic of Congo, the Democratic Republic of Congo, Djibouti, Equatorial Guinea, Eritrea, Ethiopia, Gabon, the Gambia, Ghana, Guinea, Guinea-Bissau, Kenya, Liberia, Madagascar, Malawi, Mali, Mauritania, Mozambique, Namibia, Nigeria, Rwanda, Senegal, Sierra Leone, Somalia, Sudan, Swaziland, Tanzania, Togo, Uganda, and Zambia</ref>

Sub-Saharan Africa has a very high [[child mortality]] rate. While in 2002, 17% of children died before the age of five,<ref>[http://www.unicef.org/mdg/childmortality.html Goal: Reduce child mortality], Unicef. Retrieved 24 February 2009.</ref> by 2007 this rate had declined to 15%.<ref>[http://go.worldbank.org/ZI8SNQGU60 Goal 4: Reduce Child Mortality], worldbank.org, retrieved 7 8 2009</ref> The leading cause of death was malaria infection.<ref name="NatGeo">[http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2003/06/0612_030612_malaria.html "Africa's Malaria Death Toll Still "Outrageously High"], Afshin Molavi, ''National Geographic News'', 12 June 2003.</ref>

[[Foreign direct investment]] (FDI) in Africa has grown at an average of 146% annually over the last 22 years to reach US$36
billion in 2007, while trade between Africa and the rest of the world (particularly Asia) has been steadily increasing. Bilateral trade between China and Africa jumped 45% in 2008 to reach US$107 billion, the bulk of which went to Sub-Saharan Africa.

{|class="wikitable sortable"
|-
!Country!! [[List of countries by population|Population]]!! [[List of countries and outlying territories by total area|Area]] !! Literacy(M/F)<ref name="Database AFRICAN DEVELOPMENT INDICATORS p. 28">(2009). Africa Development Indicators 2008/2009: From the World Bank Africa Database AFRICAN DEVELOPMENT INDICATORS. World Bank Publications, p. 28, ISBN 0-8213-7787-6, ISBN 978-0-8213-7787-1.</ref>!! GDP per Capita<ref name="Database AFRICAN DEVELOPMENT INDICATORS p. 28"/> !! [http://www.transparency.org/policy_research/surveys_indices/cpi/2009/cpi_2009_table Trans](Rank/Score)<ref>Transparency International. [http://www.transparency.org/policy_research/surveys_indices/cpi/2009/cpi_2009_table Corruption Perception Index(CPI) 2009].</ref> || Life(Exp.)<ref name="Database AFRICAN DEVELOPMENT INDICATORS p. 28"/> || [[List of countries by Human Development Index|HDI]] || [http://www.doingbusiness.org/economyrankings/?direction=Asc&sort=2 EODBR/SAB]<ref>World Bank. [http://www.doingbusiness.org/economyrankings/?direction=Asc&sort=2 Doing Business 2010, ''Economy Ranking'']</ref> || [http://en.rsf.org/press-freedom-index-2009,1001.html PFI](RANK/MARK)
|-
| {{flag|Angola}} || 18,498,000 || 1,246,700 || 82.9%/54.2% || 9000 || 168/2 || 42.4 || 0.486 || 172/171 || 132/58,43
|-
| {{flag|Burundi}} || 8,988,091 || 27,830 || 67.3%/52.2% || 101 || 168/1.8 || 49 || 0.316 || 176/130 || 103/29,00
|-
| {{flag|Democratic Republic of the Congo}} || 68,692,542 || 2,345,410 || 80.9%/54.1% || 91 || 162/11.9 || 46.1 || 0.286 || 182/152 || 146/53,50
|-
| {{flag|Rwanda}} || 10,473,282 || 26,338 || 71.4%/59.8% || 263 || 89/3.3 || 46.8 || 0.429 || 67/11 || 157/64,67
|-
| {{flag|São Tomé and Príncipe}} || 212,679 || 1,001 || 92.2%/77.9%|| N/A || 111/2.8 || 65.2 || 0.509 || 180/140 || NA
|-
| {{flag|Cameroon}} || 18,879,301 || 475,440 || 77%/59.8% || 687 || 146/2.2 || 50.3 || 0.482 || 171/174 || 109/30,50
|-
| {{flag|Central African Republic}} || 4,511,488 || 622,984 || 64.8%/33.5% || 22 || 158/2.8 || 44.4 || 0.343 || 183/159 || 80/17,75
|-
| {{flag|Chad}} || 10,329,208 || 1,284,000 || 40.8%/12.8% || 266 || 175/1.6 || 50.6 || 0.328 || 178/182 || 132/44,50
|-
| {{flag|Republic of the Congo}} || 3,700,000 || 342,000 || 90.5%/ 79.0% ||1,145 || 162/1.9 || 54.8 || 0.533 || N/A || 116/34,25
|-
| {{flag|Equatorial Guinea}} || 633,441 || 28,051 || 93.4%/80.3% || 7,470 || 168/1.8 || 51.1 || 0.537 || 170/178 || 158/65,50
|-
| {{flag|Gabon}} || 1,514,993 || 267,667 || 88.5%/79.7% || 4,263 || 106/2.9 || 56.7 || 0.674 || 158/152 || 129/43,50
|-
| {{flag|Kenya}} || 39,002,772 || 582,650 || 77.7%/70.2 || 440 || 146/2.2 || 53.4 || 0.509 || 95/124 || 96/25,00
|-
| {{flag|Tanzania}} || 41,048,532 || 945,087 || 77.5%/62.2% || 339 || 126/2.6 || 51.9 || 0.466 || 131/120 || NA/15,50
|-
| {{flag|Uganda}} || 32,369,558 || 236,040 || 76.8%/57.7 || 274 || 130/2.5 || 50.7 || 0.446 || 112/129 || 86/21,50
|-
| {{flag|Sudan}} || 31,894,000 || 1,886,068 || 79.6%/60.8% || 2,500<ref name=imf2>{{cite web|url=http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/weo/2012/01/weodata/weorept.aspx?pr.x=62&pr.y=8&sy=2009&ey=2012&scsm=1&ssd=1&sort=country&ds=.&br=1&c=732&s=NGDPD%2CNGDPDPC%2CPPPGDP%2CPPPPC%2CLP&grp=0&a=|title=Sudan|publisher=International Monetary Fund|accessdate=21 April 2012}}</ref>|| 176/1.5 || 62.57<ref>[https://www.cia.gov/library/publications/the-world-factbook/fields/2102.html]</ref> || 0.408 || 154/118 || 148/54,00
|-
| {{flag|South Sudan}} || 8,260,490 || 619,745 || || || || || || ||
|-
| {{flag|Djibouti}} || 516,055 || 23,000 || N/A || 817 || 111/2.8 || 54.5 || 0.430 || 163/177 || 110/31,00
|-
| {{flag|Eritrea}} || 5,647,168 || 121,320 || N/A || 160 || 126/2.6 || 57.3 || 0.349 || 175/181 || 175/115,50
|-
| {{flag|Ethiopia}} || 85,237,338 || 1,127,127 || 50%/28.8% || 161 || 120/2.7 || 52.5 || 0.363 || 107/93 || 140/49,00
|-
| {{flag|Somalia}} || 9,832,017 || 637,657 || N/A || N/A || 180/1.1 || 47.7 || N/A || N/A || 164/77,50
|-
| {{flag|Botswana}} || 1,990,876 || 600,370 || 80.4%/81.8% || 4,511 || 37/5.6 || 49.8 || 0.633 || 45/83 || 62/15,50
|-
| {{flag|Comoros}} || 752,438 || 2,170 || N/A || 382 || 143/2.3 || 63.2 || 0.433 || 162/168 || 82/19,00
|-
| {{flag|Lesotho}} || 2,130,819 || 30,355 || 73.7%/90.3% || 528 || 89/3.3 || 42.9 || 0.450 || 130/131 || 99/27,50
|-
| {{flag|Madagascar}} || 19,625,000 || 587,041 || 76.5%/65.3% || 238 || 99/3.0 || 59 || 0.480 || 134/12 || 134/45,83
|-
| {{flag|Malawi}} || 14,268,711 || 118,480 || N/A || 145 || 89/3.3 || 47.6 || 0.400 || 132/128 || 62/15,50
|-
| {{flag|Mauritius}} || 1,284,264 || 2,040 || 88.2%/80.5% || 4,522 || 42/5.4 || 73.2 || 0.728 || 17/10 || 51/14,00
|-
| {{flag|Mozambique}} || 21,669,278 || 801,590 || N/A || 330 || 130/2.5 || 42.5 || 0.322 || 135/96 || 82/19,00
|-
| {{flag|Namibia}} || 2,108,665 || 825,418 || 86.8%/83.6% || 2166 || 56/4.5 || 52.5 || 0.625 || 66/123 || 35/9,00
|-
| {{flag|Seychelles}} || 87,476 || 455 || 91.4%/92.3% || 7,005 || 54/4.8 || 72.2 || 0.773 || 111/81 || 72/16,00
|-
| {{flag|South Africa}} || 49,052,489 || 1,219,912 || N/A || 3,562 || 55/4.7 || 50.7 || 0.619 || 34/67 || 33/8,50
|-
| {{flag|Swaziland}} || 1,123,913 || 17,363 || 80.9%/78.3% || 1,297 || 79/3.6 || 40.8 || 0.522 || 115/158 || 144/52,50
|-
| {{flag|Zambia}} || 11,862,740 || 752,614 || N/A || 371 || 99/3.0 || 41.7 || 0.430 || 90/94 || 97/26,75
|-
| {{flag|Zimbabwe}} || 11,392,629 || 390,580 || 92.7%/86.2% || N/A || 146/2.2 || 42.7 || 0.376 || 159/155 || 136/46,50
|-
| {{flag|Benin}} || 8,791,832 || 112,620 || 47.9%/42.3% || 323 || 106/2.9 || 56.2 || 0.427 || 172/155 || 97/26,75
|-
| {{flag|Mali}} || 12,666,987 || 1,240,000 || 32.7%/15.9% || 290 || 111/2.8 || 53.8 || 0.359 || 156/139 || 38/8,00
|-
| {{flag|Burkina Faso}} ||15,730,977 ||274,200 ||25.3% ||1,360 ||79/3.6 ||51 ||0.331 ||150/116 ||N/A
|-
| {{flag|Cape Verde}} || || || || || || || || ||
|-
| {{flag|Côte d'Ivoire}} || || || || || || || || ||
|-
| {{flag|Gambia}} || || || || || || || || ||
|-
| {{flag|Ghana}} || || || || || || || || ||
|-
| {{flag|Guinea}} || || || || || || || || ||
|-
| {{flag|Guinea-Bissau}} || || || || || || || || ||
|-
| {{flag|Liberia}} || || || || || || || || ||
|-
| {{flag|Mauritania}} || || || || || || || || ||
|-
| {{flag|Niger}} || || || || || || || || ||
|-
| {{flag|Nigeria}} || || || || || || || || ||
|-
| {{flag|Senegal}} || || || || || || || || ||
|-
| {{flag|Sierra Leone}} || || || || || || || || ||
|-
| {{flag|Togo}} || || || || || || || || ||
|}

'''GDP Per Capital''' ''(2006 in dollars($))'', '''Life(Exp.)''' ''(Life Expectancy 2006)'', '''Literacy(Male/Female 2006)''', '''Trans''' ''(Transparency 2009)'', '''HDI''' ''(Human Development Index)'', '''EODBR''' ''(Ease of Doing Business Rank June 2008 through May 2009)'', '''SAB''' (''Starting a Business June 2008 through May 2009)'', '''PFI''' ''(Press Freedom Index 2009)''

==Economy==
{{Main|Economy of Africa}}

===Energy and power===
Fifty percent of Africa is rural with no access to electricity. Africa generates 47 GW of electricity, less than 0.6% of global market share. Many countries are besieged by power shortages.<ref>Creamer Media. [http://www.engineeringnews.co.za/article/africas-energy-problems-threatens-growth-says-nepad-ceo-2009-11-12 ''Africa’s energy problems threatens growth, says Nepad CEO''] 12 November 2009</ref>

Because of rising prices in commodities such as coal and oil, thermal sources of energy are proving to be too expensive for power generation. Sub-Saharan Africa is expected to build additional [[hydropower]] generation capacity of at least 20,165 MW by 2014. The region has the potential to generate 1,750 TWh of energy, of which only 7% has been explored. The failure to exploit its full energy potential is largely due to significant underinvestment, as at least 4 times as much (approximately $23 billion a year) and what is currently spent is invested in operating highcost power systems and not on expanding the infrastructure.<ref name=ODI1/>

African governments are taking advantage of the readily available water resources to broaden their energy mix. Hydro Turbine Markets in Sub-Saharan Africa generated revenues of $120.0 million in 2007 and is estimated to reach $425.0 million. Asian countries, notably China, India and Japan, are playing an active role in power projects across the African continent. The majority of these power projects are hydro-based because of China's vast experience in the construction of hydro-power projects and part of the Energy & Power Growth Partnership Services programme.<ref>[http://uscdn.creamermedia.co.za/assets/articles/attachments/19642_frost.pdf CreamerMedia.co.za]</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://us-cdn.creamermedia.co.za/assets/articles/attachments/19642_frost.pdf |title=CreamerMedia.co.za |format=PDF |date= }}</ref>

With electrification numbers, Sub-Saharan Africa with access to the Sahara and being in the tropical zones has massive potential for solar [[photovoltaic]] electrical potential.<ref>[http://www.redorbit.com/news/science/441990/nuclear_vs_solar_energy_which RedOrbit.com]{{dead link|date=March 2011}} Redorbit</ref> Six hundred million people could be served with electricity based on its photovoltaic potential.<ref>Flatow, Ira. [http://www.sciencefriday.com/blog/index.php?/archives/306-Could-Africa-Leapfrog-The-U.S.-In-Solar-Power.html Could Africa Leapfrog The U.S. In Solar Power?]. Science Friday 6 June 2008.</ref> China is promising to train 10,000 technicians from Africa and other developing countries in the use of solar energy technologies over the next five years. Training African technicians to use solar power is part of the China-Africa science and technology cooperation agreement signed by the Chinese science minister and African counterparts during premier Wen Jiabao's visit to Ethiopia in December 2003.<ref>Hepeng, Jia. [http://www.scidev.net/en/news/china-to-train-developing-nations-in-solar-technol.html ''China to train developing nations in solar technologies'']. SciDevNet 20 August 2004.</ref>

The [[New Partnership for Africa's Development]] (NEPAD) is developing an integrated, continent-wide
energy strategy.<ref name=ODI1/> This has been funded by, amongst others, the [[African Development Bank]] (AfDB) and the EU-Africa Infrastructure Trust Fund.<ref name=ODI1/> These projects must be:<ref name=ODI1/>
* sustainable
* involve a cross-border dimension and/or have a regional impact
* involve public and private capital
* contribute to poverty alleviation and economic development
* involve at least one country in sub-Saharan Africa.

===Media===
Radio is the major source of information in Sub-Saharan Africa.<ref name="gallup.com">English, Cynthia. [http://www.gallup.com/poll/108235/radio-chief-medium-news-subsaharan-africa.aspx ''Radio the Chief Medium for News in Sub-Saharan Africa'']. Gallup 23 June 2008.</ref> Cell phone usage in Sub-saharan has brought about a revolution. Average coverage stands at more than a third of the population. Countries such as [[Gabon]], [[Seychelles]], and [[South Africa]] boast almost 100% penetration. Only five countries—Burundi, [[Djibouti]], [[Eritrea]], [[Ethiopia]], and [[Somalia]]—still have a penetration of less than 10%. Broadband penetration outside of South Africa has been limited where it is exorbitantly expensive.<ref>[http://www.mg.co.za/article/2009-10-23-africa-calling-cellphone-usage-sees-record-rise ''Africa Calling: Cellphone usage sees record rise'']. Mail&Guardian: 23 October 2009.</ref><ref>Aker, Jenny C.(2008). [http://www.cgdev.org/files/894409_file_Aker_Cell_Phone_Niger.pd “Can You Hear Me Now?”How Cell Phones are Transforming Markets in Sub-Saharan Africa]{{dead link|date=March 2011}}, Center for Global Development.</ref> Access to the internet via cell phones is on the rise.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.mg.co.za/article/2009-12-23-africa-sees-massive-growth-in-mobile-web-usage |title=MG.co.za |publisher=MG.co.za |date=23 December 2009 }}</ref>

Television is the second major source of information.<ref name="gallup.com"/> Because of power shortages, the spread of television viewing has been limited. Eight percent have television, a total of 62 million. But those in the television industry view the region as an untapped green market. Digital television and pay for service are on the rise.<ref>Pfanner, Eric. [http://www.nytimes.com/2007/08/06/technology/06iht-web-africa.6996947.html ''Competition increases for pay TV in sub-Saharan Africa'']. New York Times 6 August 2007.</ref>

===Infrastructure===
According to researchers at the [[Overseas Development Institute]], the lack of infrastructure in many [[developing countries]] represents one of the most significant limitations to [[economic growth]] and achievement of the [[Millennium Development Goals]] (MDGs).<ref name=ODI1>Christian K.M. Kingombe 2011. [http://www.odi.org.uk/resources/details.asp?id=5666&title=latin-america-medellin-colombia-microfinance-post-washington-consensus-microcredit-microenterprise-local-development Mapping the new infrastructure financing landscape]. London: [[Overseas Development Institute]]</ref> Less than 40% of rural Africans live within two kilometers of an all-season road, the lowest level of rural accessibility in the developing world. Spending on roads averages just below 2% of GDP with varying degree among countries. This compares with 1% of GDP that is typical in industrialized countries, and 2–3% of GDP found in fast-growing emerging economies. Although the level of effort is high relative to the size of Africa's economies, it remains little in absolute terms, with low-income countries spending an average of about US$7 per capita per year.<ref>Ken Gwilliam, Vivien Foster, Rodrigo Archondo-Callao, Cecilia Briceño-Garmendia, Alberto Nogales, and Kavita Sethi(2008). [http://www.eu-africa-infrastructure-tf.net/attachments/library/aicd-background-paper-14-roads-sect-summary-en.pdf Africa infrastructure country diagnostic, Roads in Sub-Saharan Africa]. World Bank and the SSATP: p. 4</ref> Infrastructure investments and maintenance can be very expensive, especially in such as areas as landlocked, rural and sparsely populated countries in Africa.<ref name=ODI1/>

It has been argued that infrastructure investments contributed to more than half of Africa's improved growth performance between 1990 and 2005 and increased investment is necessary to maintain growth and tackle poverty.<ref name=ODI1/> The returns to investment in infrastructure are very significant, with on average 30-40% returns for [[telecommunications]] (ICT) investments, over 40% for [[electricity]] generation and 80% for roads.<ref name=ODI1/>

In Africa, it is argued that in order to meet the MDGs by 2015 infrastructure investments would need to reach about 15% of GDP (around $93 billion a year).<ref name=ODI1/> Currently, the source of financing varies significantly across sectors.<ref name=ODI1/> Some sectors are dominated by state spending, others by overseas [[development aid]] (ODA) and yet others by private investors.<ref name=ODI1/> In sub-Saharan Africa, the state spends around $9.4 billion out of a total of $24.9 billion.<ref name=ODI1/> In [[irrigation]], SSA states represent almost all spending; in transport and energy a majority of investment is state spending; in [[Information and communication technologies|ICT]] and [[water supply]] and [[sanitation]], the private sector represents the majority of capital expenditure.<ref name=ODI1/> Overall, aid, the private sector and non-OECD financiers between them exceed state spending.<ref name=ODI1/> The private sector spending alone equals state capital expenditure, though the majority is focused on ICT infrastructure investments.<ref name=ODI1/> External financing increased from $7 billion (2002) to $27 billion (2009). China, in particular, has emerged as an important investor.<ref name=ODI1/>

===Oil and minerals===
The region is a major exporter to the world of [[gold]], [[uranium]], [[Chromium|chrome]], [[vanadium]], [[antimony]], [[coltan]], [[bauxite]], [[iron ore]], [[copper]] and [[manganese]]. South Africa is a major exporter of manganese<ref>{{cite web|url=http://minerals.usgs.gov/minerals/pubs/commodity/manganese/mcs-2009-manga.pdf |title=USGS.gov |format=PDF |date= }}</ref> as well as Chromium. About 42% of world reserves and about 75% of the world reserve base of chromium are located in South Africa.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://minerals.usgs.gov/minerals/pubs/commodity/chromium/chromyb01.pdf |title=USGS.gov |format=PDF |date= }}</ref> South Africa is the largest producer of [[platinum]], with 80% of the total world's annual mine production and 88% of the world's platinum reserve.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.gold-eagle.com/analysis/platinum.html |title=Gold-Eagle.com |publisher=Gold-Eagle.com |date= }}</ref> Sub-saharan Africa produces 33% of the world's bauxite with Guinea as the major supplier.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://minerals.usgs.gov/minerals/pubs/commodity/bauxite/mcs-2009-bauxi.pdf |title=USGS.gov |format=PDF |date= }}</ref> Zambia is a major producer of copper.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://minerals.usgs.gov/minerals/pubs/commodity/copper/mcs-2009-coppe.pdf |title=USGS.gov |format=PDF |date= }}</ref> Democratic Republic of Congo is a major source of coltan. Production from Congo is very small but has 80% of proven reserves.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://works.bepress.com/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1000&context=maheta_molango |title=pp 2-3 Bepress.com |date= }}</ref> Sub-saharan Africa is a major producer of gold, producing up to 30% of global production. Major suppliers are South Africa, Ghana, Zimbabwe, Tanzania, Guinea, and Mali. South Africa had been first in the world in terms of gold production since 1905, but in 2007 it moved to second place, according to GFMS, the precious metals consultancy.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.mbendi.com/indy/ming/gold/af/p0005.htm |title=MBendi.com |publisher=MBendi.com |date= }}</ref> Uranium is major commodity from the region. Significant suppliers are Niger, Namibia, and South Africa. Namibia was the number one supplier from Sub-Saharan Africa in 2008.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.world-nuclear.org/info/inf23.html |title=World-Nuclear.org |publisher=World-Nuclear.org |date= }}</ref> The region produces 49% of the world's [[diamonds]].

By 2015, it is estimated that 25% of North American oil will be from Sub-Saharan Africa, ahead of the Middle East.
Sub-Saharan Africa has been the focus of an intense race for oil by the West and China, India, and other emerging economies, even having only 10% of proven oil reserves, less than the Middle East. This race has been referred to as the second Scramble for Africa. The reasons are all economic. Most Sub-Saharan oil is off the coast of host countries. Transportation cost is low. No pipelines has to be laid as in Central Asia. If political turmoil hits host country, production does not stop since operation is off-shore. Sub-Saharan oil is viscous and has very low sulfur content. This requires less refining and is less costly. New sources of oil are being located in Sub-Saharan Africa more frequently than anywhere else. Of all new sources of oil, 1/3 are in Sub-Saharan Africa.<ref>Ghazvinian, John (2008). Untapped: The Scramble for Africa's Oil. Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, pp. 1-16, ISBN 0-15-603372-0, ISBN 978-0-15-603372-5.</ref>

===Agriculture===
Sub-Saharan Africa has more variety of grains than anywhere in the world. Between 13,000 and 11,000 BCE wild grains began to be collected as a source of food in the cataract region of the Nile, south of Egypt. The collecting of wild grains as source of food spread to Syria, parts of Turkey and Iran by the eleventh millennium BCE. By the tenth and ninth millennia southwest Asians domesticated their wild grains, wheat and barley after the notion of collecting wild grains was spread from the Nile.<ref name="The Civilization of Africa">[[Christopher Ehret]], (2002). The Civilization of Africa. University of Virginia Press: Charlottesville, pp. 98 ISBN 0-8139-2085-X.</ref>

Numerous crops have been domesticated in the region and spread to other parts of the world. These crops included [[sorghum]], [[castor beans]], [[coffee]], [[cotton]]<ref name="Cotton of Kush">Vandaveer, Chelsie(2006). [http://www.killerplants.com/plants-that-changed-history/20020226.asp What was the cotton of Kush?] KillerPlants.com, Plants That Change History Archive.</ref> [[okra]], [[black-eyed peas]], [[watermelon]], [[gourd]], and pearl [[millet]]. Other domesticated crops included [[teff]], [[enset]], [[African rice]], [[Yam (vegetable)|yams]], [[kola nuts]], [[Elaeis guineensis|oil palm]], and [[raffia palm]].<ref name="The Civilization of Africa"/><ref>National Research Council (U.S.). Board on Science and Technology for International Development (1996). Lost Crops of Africa: Grains. National Academy Press, ISBN 0-309-04990-3, ISBN 978-0-309-04990-0.</ref>

Domesticated animals include the [[guinea fowl]] and the [[donkey]].

Agriculture represents 20% to 30% of GDP and 50% of exports. In some cases, 60% to 90% of the labor force are employed in agriculture.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://worlddefensereview.com/pham110309.shtml |title=WorldDefenseReview.com |publisher=WorldDefenseReview.com |date= }}</ref>
Most agricultural activity is subsistence farming. This has made agricultural activity vulnerable to climate change and global warming. Biotechnology has been advocated to create high yield, pest and environmentally resistant crops in the hands of small farmers. The Bill and Malinda Gates foundation is a strong advocate and donor to this cause. Biotechnology and GM crops have met resistance both by natives and environmental groups.<ref>[http://www.business24-7.ae/Articles/2009/11/Pages/10112009/11112009_0b22e598b6e14c18b1223669d7c778e7.aspx Business24-7.ae]{{dead link|date=March 2011}}</ref>

Cash crops include cotton, coffee, tea, cocoa, sugar, and tobacco.<ref name="Africa South of the Sahara"/>

The [[OECD]] says Africa has the potential to become an agricultural superbloc if it can unlock the wealth of the savannahs by allowing farmers to use their land as collateral for credit.<ref>{{cite web|last=Evans |first=Ambrose |url=http://tradeafrica.blogspot.com/2009/10/middle-east-and-africa-bear-untold.html |title=Blogspot.com |publisher=Tradeafrica.blogspot.com |date=12 October 2009 }}</ref> There is such international interest in Sub-Saharan agriculture, that the World Bank increased its financing of African agricultural programs to $1.3 billion in the 2011 fiscal year.<ref>{{cite web| title=Africa Regional Brief| work= [[World Bank]]| url=http://www.saylor.org/site/wp-content/uploads/2012/05/polsc325-4.1-Africa-Regional-Brief.pdf| accessdate= 7 May 2012}}</ref> Recently, there has been a trend to purchase large tracts of land in Sub-Sahara for agricultural use by developing countries.
Early in 2009, [[George Soros]] highlighted a new farmland buying frenzy caused by growing population, scarce water supplies and climate change. Chinese interests bought up large swathes of Senegal to supply it with sesame. Aggressive moves by China, South Korea and Gulf states to buy vast tracts of agricultural land in Sub-Saharan Africa could soon be limited by a new global international protocol.<ref>{{cite news| url=http://www.guardian.co.uk/business/2009/nov/02/global-protocol-subsahara-land-grab | work=The Guardian | location=London | title=Global protocol could limit Sub-Saharan land grab | first=Nick | last=Mathiason | date=2 November 2009 | accessdate=9 April 2010}}</ref>

==Education==
Forty percent of African scientists live in [[OECD]] countries, predominately in Europe, the United States and Canada.<ref name="buanews.gov.za">Gabara, Nthambeleni. [http://www.buanews.gov.za/news/09/09111213051001 ''Developed Nations Should Invest In African Universities'']. Buanews, 12 November 2009</ref> This has been described as an African brain drain. Even with the drain, enrollments in Sub-Saharan African universities tripled between 1991 and 2005, expanding at an annual rate of 8.7%, which is one of the highest regional growth rates in the world. In the last 10 to 15 years interest in pursuing university level degrees abroad has increased. In some OECD countries, like the United States, Sub-Saharan Africans are the [[African immigration to the United States|most educated immigrant group]].<ref name="buanews.gov.za"/>

Sub-Saharan African countries spent an average of 0.3% of their GDP on science and technology on in 2007. This represents an increase from US$1.8 billion in 2002 to US$2.8 billion in 2007, a 50% increase in spending.<ref>Nordling, Linda. [http://www.scidev.net/en/opinions/africa-analysis-progress-on-science-spending-.html ''Africa Analysis: Progress on science spending?'']. '''ScidevNet''', 29 October 2009.</ref><ref>[http://www.dst.gov.za/media-room/press-releases/south-africa2019s-investment-in-research-and-development-on-the-rise ''South Africa’s Investment in Research and Development on the Rise'']. Department of Science and Technology: '''Science and Technology''', 22 June 2006.</ref>

==Health care==
[[Image:HDImap spectrum2006 Africa.png|thumb|300px|Right| Map of Africa indicating [[Human Development Index]] (2004). All 22 countries ranking below 0.5 in the [[List of countries by Human Development Index|report on 2005]] were in Sub-Saharan Africa. The highest value is that of [[Gabon]] at 0.677.]]
In 1987, the [[Bamako Initiative]] conference organized by the [[World Health Organization]] was held in [[Bamako]], the capital of [[Mali]], and helped reshape the health policy of Sub-Saharan Africa.<ref>{{cite web
|url=http://www.eldis.org/healthsystems/userfees/background.htm
|title=User fees for health: a background
|publisher=
|accessdate=28 December 2006
|archiveurl = http://web.archive.org/web/20061128203803/http://www.eldis.org/healthsystems/userfees/background.htm <!-- Bot retrieved archive --> |archivedate = 28 November 2006}}</ref> The new strategy dramatically increased accessibility through community-based [[healthcare reform]], resulting in more efficient and equitable provision of services.
A comprehensive approach strategy was extended to all areas of health care, with subsequent improvement in the health care indicators and improvement in health care efficiency and cost.<ref>{{cite web
|url=http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query.fcgi?cmd=Retrieve&db=PubMed&list_uids=10173105&dopt=Abstract
|title=Implementation of the Bamako Initiative: strategies in Benin and Guinea
|publisher=
|accessdate=28 December 2006
}}</ref><ref>{{cite web
|url=http://www.medicusmundi.ch/mms/services/bulletin/bulletin200201/kap01/07kuechler.html
|title=Manageable Bamako Initiative schemes
|publisher=
|accessdate=28 December 2006
}}</ref>

As of October 2006, many governments face difficulties in implementing policies aimed at tackling the effects of the [[AIDS]] pandemic despite a number of mitigating measures.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://news.xinhuanet.com/english/2006-10/04/content_5167991.htm |title=Xinhua - English |publisher=News.xinhuanet.com |date=4 October 2006 }}</ref>

==Languages and ethnic groups==
[[File:Niger-Congo.svg|thumb|249px|Linguistically, sub-Saharan Africa is dominated by the [[Niger–Congo]] phylum (distribution shown in yellow), with pockets of [[Khoi-San]] in [[Southern Africa]], [[Nilo-Saharan languages|Nilo-Saharan]] in [[Central Africa|Central]] and East Africa, and [[Afro-Asiatic languages|Afro-Asiatic]] in the [[Horn of Africa]]]]
{{Further|Languages of Africa|African people|List of African ethnic groups|Ethnic groups of the Middle East}}

Sub-Saharan Africa displays the most linguistic diversity of any region in the world. This is apparent in the number of languages spoken. The region contains over 1,000 languages, which is 1/6 of the world's total.<ref name="Africa South of the Sahara">Bowden, Rob (2007). Africa South of the Sahara. Coughlan Publishing: p. 37, ISBN 1-4034-9910-1.</ref>

With the exception of extinct [[Sumerian language|Sumerian]], the Afro-Asiatic has the longest documented history of any language phyla in the world. Egyptian was recorded as early as 3200 BCE. The Semitic branch was recorded as early as 2500 BCE.<ref>Brown, Keith and Ogilvie, Sarah(2008). Concise encyclopedia of languages of the world ''Concise Encyclopedias of Language and Linguistics Series''. Elsevier, p. 12, ISBN 0-08-087774-5, ISBN 978-0-08-087774-7.</ref> The distribution of the [[Afro-Asiatic languages]] within Africa is principally concentrated in North Africa and the [[Horn of Africa]]. The Chadic branch is distributed in Central and West Africa.<ref>Peek, Philip M. and Yankah, Kwesi(2004). African folklore: an encyclopedia. London:(Rourledge)Taylor & Francis, p. 205, ISBN 0-415-93933-X, 9780415939331</ref> [[Hausa language|Hausa]] is a [[lingua franca]] in West Africa (Niger, Ghana, Togo, Benin, Cameroon, and Chad).<ref>Schneider, Edgar Werner and Kortmann, Bernd(2004). A handbook of varieties of English: a multimedia reference tool, Volume 1. Berlin: [[Walter de Gruyter]], pp. 867-868, ISBN 3-11-017532-0, ISBN 978-3-11-017532-5.</ref> The [[Semitic languages|Semitic]] branch of the phylum also has a notable presence in [[Western Asia]], making Afro-Asiatic the only language family spoken in Africa that is also attested outside of the continent. In addition to languages now spoken, Afro-Asiatic includes several ancient languages, such as [[Egyptian language|Ancient Egyptian]], [[Biblical Hebrew]] and [[Akkadian language|Akkadian]].

The [[Khoi-San languages]] represent the oldest language family in the world.<ref>Corballis, Michael C.(2003). From hand to mouth: the origins of language. Princeton University Press, p. 130, ISBN 0-691-11673-3, ISBN 978-0-691-11673-0.</ref> They include languages indigenous to [[Southern Africa|Southern]] and [[East Africa|Eastern Africa]], though some, such as the [[Khoi languages]], appear to have moved to their current locations not long before the [[Bantu expansion]].<ref name=GE>Güldemann, Tom and Edward D. Elderkin (forthcoming) [http://email.eva.mpg.de/~gueldema/pdf/Gueldemann_Elderkin.pdf "On external genealogical relationships of the Khoe family".] In Brenzinger, Matthias and Christa König (eds.), ''Khoisan languages and linguistics: the Riezlern symposium 2003.'' Quellen zur Khoisan-Forschung 17. Köln: Rüdiger Köppe.</ref> In Southern Africa, their speakers are the [[Khoi]] and [[Bushmen]] (San), in East Africa, the [[Sandawe people|Sandawe]] and [[Hadza people|Hadza]].
[[Image:San tribesman.jpg|thumb|left|170px|A [[Khoisan|San]] tribesman.]]
The [[Niger–Congo languages|Niger–Congo]] phylum is the largest language family in the world in terms of the number of languages (1,436) it contains.<ref>Bellwood, Peter S.(2005). First farmers: the origins of agricultural societies. Wiley-Blackwell, p. 218, ISBN 0-631-20566-7, ISBN 978-0-631-20566-1.</ref> The vast majority of languages of this family are [[tonal language|tonal]] such as [[Yoruba language|Yoruba]], [[Fulani language|Fulani]] and [[Igbo language|Igbo]]. A major branch of Niger–Congo languages is the [[Bantu languages|Bantu family]], which covers a greater geographic area than the rest of the family put together. Bantu speakers represent the majority of inhabitants in southern, central and southeastern Africa, though [[Pygmy]], Khoisan ([[Bushmen]]), and [[Nilotic]] groups, respectively, can also be found in those regions. Bantu-speakers can also be found in parts of [[Central Africa]] such as the [[Gabon]], [[Equatorial Guinea]] and southern [[Cameroon]]. [[Swahili language|Swahili]], a Bantu language with many [[Arabic language|Arabic]], [[Farsi|Persian]] and other Middle Eastern and South Asian [[loan word]]s, developed as a ''[[lingua franca]]'' for trade between the different peoples in southeastern Africa. In the [[Kalahari Desert]] of Southern Africa, the distinct people known as the Bushmen (also "San", closely related to, but distinct from "[[Khoikhoi|Hottentots]]") have long been present. The San evince unique physical traits, and are the indigenous people of southern Africa. Pygmies are the pre-Bantu indigenous peoples of central Africa.

The [[Nilo-Saharan languages]] are concentrated in the upper parts of the [[Chari River|Chari]] and [[Nile]] rivers. They are principally spoken by [[Nilotic]] peoples and are also spoken in Sudan among the [[Fur]], [[Masalit people|Masalit]], [[Nubian people|Nubian]] and [[Zaghawa people|Zaghawa]] peoples and in West and Central Africa among the [[Songhai people|Songhai]] and [[Kanuri people|Kanuri]]. The [[Old Nubian language]] is also a member of this phylum.
[[Image:TrekBoerPortrait.jpg|thumb|right|200px|[[Afrikaner]] [[Trekboer]]s in the [[Karoo]] of [[South Africa]].]]
[[South Africa]] has the largest populations of [[White Africans of European ancestry|Whites]], Indians and [[Coloured]]s in Africa. The term "[[Coloured]]" is used to describe persons of mixed race in South Africa and [[Namibia]]. People of European descent in South Africa include the [[Afrikaner]] and a sizeable populations of [[Anglo-Africans]] and [[Portuguese Africans]]. [[Madagascar]]'s population is predominantly of mixed [[Austronesian people|Austronesian]] ([[Pacific Islander]]) and [[African people|African]] origin. The area of southern [[Sudan]] is inhabited by Nilotic people.

List of major languages of Sub-Saharan Africa by region, family and total number of native speakers in millions:

;Eastern Africa
[[Image:Eritrean Women.jpeg|right|thumb|170px|[[Saho people|Saho]] women.]]
[[Image:Maasai women and children.jpg|thumb|170px|[[Maasai people|Maasai]] women and children.]]

*Afro-Asiatic
**[[Amharic language|Amharic]]: 35–42
**[[Oromo language|Oromo]]: 30-35
**[[Somali language|Somali]]: 15-18
**[[Tigrinya language|Tigrinya]]: 7
**[[Gurage language|Gurage]]: 2

*Niger–Congo
**[[Swahili language|Swahili]]: 5–10
**[[Chichewa language|Chichewa]]: 9
**[[Gikuyu language|Gikuyu]] (Kenya): 5
**[[Luhya languages|Luhya]]: 4

*Nilo-Saharan
** [[Luo languages|Luo]]: 5-10
** [[Shilluk language|Shilluk]]: 1-2
** [[Nubian language|Nubian]]: 5-10<ref name="southsudaninfo.net">http://southsudaninfo.net/wp-content/uploads/reference_library/reports/5th_sudan_census26_april_2009.pdf</ref>
** [[Maasai language|Maasai]]: 1-2
** [[Fur language|Fur]]: 5-10<ref name="southsudaninfo.net"/>
** [[Dinka language|Dinka]]:2
** [[Masalit language|Masalit]]:2<ref name="southsudaninfo.net"/>
** [[Zaghawa language|Zaghawa]]:2<ref name="southsudaninfo.net"/>

;Western Africa
[[Image:Hausa harpist.jpg|thumb|170px|A [[Hausa people|Hausa]] harpist]]
*Niger–Congo
**[[Yoruba language|Yoruba]]: 25
**[[Ibibio language|Ibibio]] (Nigeria): 2
**[[Igbo language|Igbo]] (Nigeria): 20–25
**[[Akan language|Akan]] (Ghana): 19
**[[Fula language|Fula]] (West Africa): 10–16
**[[Mandingo language|Mandingo]]:5
**[[Wolof language|Wolof]]: 3

*Afro-Asiatic
**[[Hausa language|Hausa]]: 24

*Nilo-Saharan
**[[Kanuri language|Kanuri]]: 4

;Southern Africa
[[Image:Zulu dance (cropped).PNG|thumb|170px|[[Zulu people|Zulus]] in traditional garment.]]

*Niger–Congo
**[[Zulu language|Zulu]]: 10
**[[Xhosa language|Xhosa]]: 8
**[[Shona language|Shona]]: 7
**[[Sotho language|Sotho]]: 5
**[[Tswana language|Tswana]]: 4
**[[Umbundu language|Umbundu]] (Angola): 4
**[[Northern Sotho language|Northern Sotho]]: 4

*Khoisan
**[[Khoisan language|Khoi]]

*Indo-European
**[[Afrikaans]]: 6–7

;Central Africa
*Niger–Congo
**[[Kinyarwanda]] 7
**[[Kongo language|Kongo]]: 7
**[[Tshiluba language|Tshiluba]]: 6
**[[Kirundi]]: 5

*Nilo-Saharan
** [[Zaghawa language|Zaghawa]]

==Religion==
{{Further|African traditional religion|Religion in Africa|Christianity in Africa|Islam in Africa}}
Sub-Saharan Africa is largely [[Christianity|Christian]], while North Africa is predominantly [[Islam|Muslim]]. However, there are Muslim majorities in the [[Sahel]] and [[Sudan (region)|Sudan regions]] and along the East African coast (Muslim majorities in [[The Gambia]], [[Sierra Leone]], [[Guinea]], [[Mali]], [[Niger]], [[Senegal]], [[Somalia]]; comparable numbers of Christians and Muslims in [[Chad]], [[Nigeria]], [[Burkina Faso]] and [[Côte d'Ivoire]] with significant Muslim communities in [[Ethiopia]], [[Tanzania]] and [[Eritrea]]).<ref>Encyclopædia Britannica. Britannica Book of the Year 2003. Encyclopædia Britannica, (2003) ISBN 978-0-85229-956-2 p. 306 <br /> Southern Africa is predominately Christian however. According to the Encyclopædia Britannica, as of mid-2002, there were 376,453,000 Christians, 329,869,000 Muslims and 98,734,000 people who practiced traditional religions in Africa. [http://www.greenwoodsvillage.com/gor/islam.htm Ian S. Markham,(A World Religions Reader. Cambridge, MA: Blackwell Publishers, 1996.)] is cited by Morehouse University as giving the mid 1990s figure of 278,250,800 Muslims in Africa, but still as 40.8% of the total. These numbers are estimates and remain a matter of conjecture. See Amadu Jacky Kaba. The spread of Christianity and Islam in Africa: a survey and analysis of the numbers and percentages of Christians, Muslims and those who practice indigenous religions. The Western Journal of Black Studies, Vol 29, Number 2, June 2005. Discusses the estimations of various almanacs and encyclopedium, placing Britannica's estimate as the most agreed figure. Notes the figure presented at the [http://www.afrikaworld.net/afrel/Statistics.htm World Christian Encyclopedia, summarized here], as being an outlier. On rates of growth, Islam and Pentecostal Christianity are highest, see: [http://www.foreignpolicy.com/story/cms.php?story_id=3835 The List: The World’s Fastest-Growing Religions], Foreign Policy, May 2007.</ref>
Traditional African religions can be broken into down linguistic cultural groups, with common themes. Among [[Niger–Congo languages|Niger–Congo]]-speakers is a belief in a creator God; ancestor spirits; territorial spirits; evil caused by human ill will and neglecting ancestor spirits; priest of territorial spirits. New world religions such as [[Santería]], [[West African Vodun|Vodun]], and [[Candomblé]], would be derived from this world view. Among [[Nilo-Saharan languages|Nilo-Saharan]] speakers is the belief in Divinity; evil is caused by divine judgement and retribution; prophets as middlemen between Divinity and man. Among [[Afro-Asiatic languages|Afro-Asiatic]]-speakers is [[henotheism]], the belief in one's own gods but accepting the existence of other gods; evil here is caused by malevolent spirits. The Semitic [[Abrahamic religion]] of [[Judaism]] is comparable to the latter world view.<ref>Baldick, Julian (1997). [http://books.google.com/books?id=JBzGsr1bw6cC&printsec=frontcover&dq=christianity+judaism+islam+afroasiatics&source=bl&ots=w_AOA-fbkt&sig=Vee5ya1z2umJZ1iEi7TaqTDF1_E&hl=en&ei=-TzWS-3eCpKesgOG-fWlAg&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=5&ved=0CBkQ6AEwBA#v=onepage&q&f=false Black God: the Afroasiatic roots of the Jewish, Christian, and Muslim religions]. Syracuse University Press:ISBN 0-8156-0522-6</ref> [[Khoisan]] religion is non-theistic but a belief in a Spirit or Power of existence which can be tapped in a trance-dance; trance-healers.<ref>[[Christopher Ehret]], (2002). The Civilizations of Africa. Charlottesville: University of Virginia, pp. 102-103, ISBN 0-8139-2085-X.</ref>

Traditional Sub-Saharan African religion displays very complex ontology, cosmology, and metaphysics. Mythologies, for example, demonstrated the difficulty fathers of creation had in bringing about order from chaos. Order is what is right and natural and any deviation is chaos. Sub-Saharan [[cosmology]] and [[ontology]] is neither simple or linear. It defines duality, the material and immaterial, male and female, heaven and earth. Common principles of being and becoming are widespread: Among the Dogon, the principle of ''Amma'' (being) and ''Nummo'' (becoming), among the Bambara ''Pemba'' (being) and ''Faro'' (becoming),<ref>Davidson, Basil(1969). The African Genius,An Introduction to African Social and Cultural History. Little Brown and Company: Boston, pp. 168-180. [[Library of Congress]] 70-80751.</ref>
[[File:Ifedivination.JPG|thumb|right| [[Ifá]] divination and its four digit binary code]]
;West Africa
*[[Akan mythology]]
*[[Ashanti mythology]] (Ghana)
*[[Dahomey mythology|Dahomey (Fon) mythology]]
*[[Efik mythology]] (Nigeria, Cameroon)
*[[Igbo mythology]] (Nigeria, Cameroon)
*[[Isoko mythology]] (Nigeria)
*[[Yoruba mythology]] (Nigeria, Benin)

;Central Africa
*[[Bushongo mythology]] (Congo)
*[[Bambuti mythology|Bambuti (Pygmy) mythology]] (Congo)
*[[Lugbara mythology]] (Congo)

;East Africa
*[[Akamba mythology]] (East Kenya)
*[[Dinka mythology]] (South Sudan)
*[[Lotuko mythology]] (South Sudan)
*[[Masai mythology]] (Kenya, Tanzania)

;Southern Africa
*[[Khoisan religion]]
*[[Lozi mythology]] (Zambia)
*[[Tumbuka mythology]] (Malawi)
*[[Zulu mythology]] (South Africa)

Sub-Saharan traditional divination systems displays great sophistication. For example the bamana sand divinition uses well establish symbolic codes that can be reproduce using four bits or marks. A binary system of one or two marks are combined. Random outcomes are generated using a [[fractal]] recursive process. It is analogous to a digital circuit but can be reproduced on any surface with one or two marks. This system is widespread in Sub-Saharan Africa.<ref>Eglash, Ron: "African Fractals: Modern computing and indigenous design." Rutgers 1999 ISBN 0-8135-2613-2</ref>

==Music==
{{Further|Music of Africa|African popular music}}

Traditional Sub-Saharan African music is as diverse as the region's various populations. The common perception of Sub-Saharan African music is that it is rhythmic music centered around the drums. It is partially true. A large part of Sub-Saharan music, mainly among speakers of [[Niger–Congo]] and [[Nilo-Saharan]] languages, is rhythmic and centered around the drum. Sub-Saharan music is polyrhythmic, usually consisting of multiple rhythms in one composition. Dance involves moving multiple body parts. These aspect of Sub-Saharan music has been transferred to the new world by enslaved Sub-Saharan Africans and can be seen in its influence on music forms as [[Samba]], [[Jazz]], [[Rhythm and Blues]], [[Rock & Roll]], [[Salsa music|Salsa]], [[Reggae]] and [[Rap]] music.<ref name=autogenerated1>Bowden, Rob(2007). Africa South of the Sahara. Coughlan Publishing: p. 40, ISBN 1-4034-9910-1.</ref>

But Sub-Saharan music involves a lot of music with strings, horns, and very little poly-rhythms. Music from the eastern sahel and along the nile, among the [[Nilo-Saharan]], made extensive use of strings and horns in ancient times. Among the [[Afro-Asiatic]]s, we see extensive use of string instruments. Dancing involve swaying body movements and footwork. Among the [[Khoisan]]s extensive use of string instruments with emphasis on footwork.<ref>[[Christopher Ehret]], (2002). The Civilizations of Africa. Charlottesville: University of Virginia, p. 103, ISBN 0-8139-2085-X.</ref>

Modern Sub-Saharan African music has been influence by music from the New World (Jazz, Salsa, Rhythm and Blues etc.) vice-versa being influenced by enslaved Sub-Saharan Africans. Popular styles are [[Mbalax]] in [[Senegal]] and [[Gambia]], [[Highlife]] in [[Ghana]], [[Zoblazo]] in [[Côte d'Ivoire]], [[Makossa]] in [[Cameroon]], [[Soukous]] in the [[Democratic Republic of Congo]], [[Kizomba]] in [[Angola]], and [[Mbaqanga]] in [[South Africa]]. New World styles like Salsa, R&B/Rap, Reggae, and Zouk also have widespread popularity.

==Art==
{{Further|African art}}

The oldest abstract art in the world is a shell necklace dated 82,000 years in the Cave of Pigeons in Taforalt, eastern Morocco.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2007/06/070618091210.htm |title=ScienceDaily.com |publisher=ScienceDaily.com |date=18 June 2007 }}</ref> The second oldest abstract form of art and the oldest rock art is found in the [[Blombos Cave]] at the Cape in South Africa, dated 77,000 years.<ref>{{cite news| url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/science/nature/1753326.stm | work=BBC News | title='Oldest' prehistoric art unearthed | date=10 January 2002 | accessdate=9 April 2010}}</ref> Sub-saharan Africa has some of the oldest and most varied style of rock art in the world.<ref>[http://www.africanrockart.org/rockafrica/main.html ''Rock Art In Africa'', Trust for African Rock Art (TARA)]{{dead link|date=June 2012}}</ref>

Although Sub-saharan African art is very diverse there are some common themes. One is the use of the human figure. Second, there is a preference for [[sculpture]]. Sub-saharan art is meant to be experience in three dimensions, not two. A house is meant to be experienced from all angles. Third, art is meant to be performed. Sub-saharan Africans have specific name for mask. The name incorporates the sculpture, the dance, and the spirit that incorporates the mask. The name denotes all three elements. Fourth, art that serves a practical function, utilitarian. The artist and craftsman are not separate. A sculpture shaped like a hand can be used as a stool. Fifth, the use of [[fractals]] or non-linear scaling. The shape of the whole is the shape of the parts at different scales. Before the discovery of fractal geometry], Louis Senghor, Senegal's first president, referred to this as "dynamic symmetry." William Fagg, the British art historian, compared it to the logarithmic mapping of natural growth by biologist D’Arcy Thompson. Lastly, Sub-saharan art is visually abstract, instead of naturalistic. Sub-saharan art represents spiritual notions, social norms, ideas, values, etc. An artist might exaggerated the head of a sculpture in relations to the body not because he does not know anatomy but because he wants to illustrate that the head is the seat of knowledge and wisdom. The visual abstraction of African art was very influential in the works of [http://www.metmuseum.org/toah/hd/aima/hd_aima.htm modernist] artist like Pablo Picasso, Henri Matisse, and Jacques Lipchitz.<ref>[http://www.metmuseum.org/toah/hd/aima/hd_aima.htm ''African Influences in Modern Art'', Metropolitan Museum of Art].</ref><ref>Alexandre, Marc(1998). World Bank Publication: DC. ISBN 0-8213-4195-2, ISBN 978-0-8213-4195-7</ref>

==Cuisine==
{{Further|African cuisine}}

[[Image:Ugali and cabbage.jpg|thumb|150px|Ugali and [[cabbage]]]]
Sub-Saharan African cuisine like everything about Africa is very diverse. A lot of regional overlapping occurs, but there are dominant elements region by region.
[[Image:Fufu.jpg|thumb|left|150px|A plate of fufu accompanied with peanut soup]]
West African cuisine can be described as starchy, flavorfully spicey. Dishes include [[fufu]], [[kenkey]], [[couscous]], [[garri]], foutou, and banku. Ingredients are of native starchy tubers, [[Yam (vegetable)|yams]], [[Eddoe|cocoyams]], and [[cassava]]. Grains include millet, sorghum, and rice, usually in the sahel, are incorporated. Oils include palm oil and shea butter(sahel). One finds recipes that mixes fish and meat. Beverages are palm wine(sweet or sour) and millet beer. Roasting, baking, boiling, frying, mashing, and spicing are all cooking techniques.

East African cuisine reflects its Islamic, geographical Indian Ocean cultural links. Dishes include [[ugali]], [[injera]], [[Wat (food)|wat]], sukumi wiki, and halva. Spices such as curry, saffron, cloves, cinnamon, pomegranate juice, cardamon, ghee, and sage are used, especially among Muslims. Meat includes cattle, sheep, and goats, but is rarely eaten since its viewed as currency and wealth.

In the [[Horn of Africa]], pork and non-fish seafood is avoided by Christians and Muslims. Dairy products and all meats are avoided during lent by Ethiopians. Maize (corn) is a major staple . Cornmeal is used to make [[ugali]], a popular dish with different names. [[Teff]] is used to make [[injera]] or canjeero (Somali) bread. Other important foods include [[enset]], [[noog]], lentils, rice, banana, leafy greens, chiles, peppers, cocconut milk and tomatoes. Beverages are coffee (domesticated in Ethiopia), chai tea, fermented beer from banana or millet. Cooking techniques include roasting and marinating.

[[Image:Alicha 1.jpg|thumb|right|150px|This meal, consisting of ''injera'' and several kinds of ''wat'' (stew), is typical of [[Ethiopia]]n and [[Eritrea]]n cuisine.]] Central African cuisine connects with all major regions of Sub-Saharan Africa: Its cuisine reflects that. Ugali and fufu are eaten in the region. Central African cuisine is very starchy and spicy hot. Dominant crops include plantains, cassava, peanuts, chillis, and okra. Meats include beef, chicken, and sometimes exotic meats called bush meat (antelope, warthog, crocodile). Widespread spicy hot fish cuisine is one of the differentiating aspects. Mushroom is sometimes used as a meat substitute.

Traditional Southern African cuisine surrounds meat. Traditional society typically focused on raising, sheep, goats, and especially cattle. Dishes include braai (barbecue meat), sadza, bogobe, [[pap (food)|pap]] (fermented cornmeal), milk products (buttermilk, yoghurt). Crops utilized are sorghum, maize (corn), pumpkin beans, leafy greens, and cabbage. Beverages include ting (fermented sorghum or maize), milk, chibuku (milky beer). Influences from the Indian and Malay community can be seen its use of curries, sambals, pickled fish, fish stews, chutney, and samosa. European influences can be seen in cuisines like [[biltong]] (dried beef strips), potjies (stews of maize, onions, tomatoes), French wines, and crueler or koeksister (sugar syrup cookie).

==Clothing==
{{Further|Clothing in Africa}}

[[Image:Kangas drying in Zanzibar.jpg|thumb|150px|right|Kangas]]
[[File:Amadou & Mariam.jpg|thumb|left|150px|A man wearing a Boubou and woman wearing a Kaftan.]]
[[File:Kent wove.jpg||thumb|left|160px|[[The Ashanti]] Kente cloth patterns]]
Like most of the world, Sub-Saharan Africans have adopted Western-style clothing. In some country like Zambia, used Western clothing has flooded markets, causing great angst in the retail community. Sub-Saharan Africa boasts its own traditional [http://www.hamillgallery.com/SITE/Textiles.html clothing style]. Cotton seems to be the dominant material.

In East Africa, one finds extensive use cotton clothing. Shemma, shama, and kuta are types of Ethiopian clothing. [[Kanga (African garment)|Kanga]] are [[Swahili culture|Swahili]] cloth that comes in rectangular shapes, made of pure cotton, and put together to make clothing. Kitenges are similar to kangas and kikoy, but are of a thicker cloth, and have an edging only on a long side. [[Kenya]], [[Uganda]], [[Tanzania]], and [[South Sudan]] are some of the African countries where kitenge is worn. In [[Malawi]], [[Namibia]] and [[Zambia]], kitenge is known as Chitenge. One of the unique materials, which is not a fiber and is used to make clothing is [http://www.unesco.org/culture/ich/index.php?cp=UG&topic=mp barkcloth], an innovation of the baganda people of Uganda. It came from the Mutuba tree (Ficus natalensis).<ref>Yoshida, Reiko. [http://www.unesco.org/culture/ich/index.php?cp=UG&topic=mp ''Proclamation 2005: Barcloth making in Uganda''] Unesco: Intangible Cultural Heritage (Uganda) 13 May 2009</ref> On Madagascar a type of draped cloth called [[Lamba (garment)|lamba]] is worn.

In West Africa, again cotton is the material of choice. In the Sahel and other parts of West Africa the [[boubou (clothing)|boubou]] and [[kaftan]] style of clothing are featured. [[Kente cloth]] is created by the [[Akan people]] of Ghana and Côte d'Ivoire, from silk of the various moth species in West Africa. Kente comes from the [[The Ashanti]] [[twi]] word ''kenten'' which means basket. It is sometimes used to make [[dashiki]] and [[kufi]]. Adire is a type of Yoruba cloth that is starch resistant. [http://www.metmuseum.org/toah/ho/11/sfc/ho_1999.522.15.htm Raffia cloth] and barkcloth are also utilized in the region.

In Central Africa, the Kuba people developed [http://www.metmuseum.org/toah/ho/11/sfc/ho_1999.522.15.htm raffia cloth] from the raffia plant fibers. It was widely used in the region. Barkcloth was also extensively used.

In Southern Africa one finds numerous uses of animal hide and skins for clothing. The Ndau in central Mozambique and the Shona mix hide with barkcloth and cotton cloth. Cotton cloth is referred to as machira. Xhosa, Tswana, Sotho, and Swazi also made extensive use of hides. Hides come from cattle, sheep, goat, and elephant. Leopard skins were coveted and were a symbol of kingship in Zulu society. Skins were tanned to form leather, dyed, and embedded with beads.

==Sports==

Football (soccer) is the most popular sport in Sub-Saharan Africa. Sub-Saharan men are its main patrons. Major leagues are the [[CAF Champions League|African Champions League]], a gathering of various football clubs. [[Africa Cup of Nations]] is a gathering of 16 teams from various African nations held every two years (20 January – 10 February 2008). The Confederation Cup is a competition for the National Cup winner in each African country. Finals are in November. Cameroon played in the [[FIFA World Cup|World Cup]] for the sixth time, a record for a Sub-saharan team. South Africa hosted the 2010 FIFA World Cup, a first for a Sub-Saharan country. In [[Nigeria at the 1996 Summer Olympics|1996 Nigeria won the gold for football]], a momentous achievement for Sub-Saharan African football. Famous Sub-saharan football stars are [[Emmanuel Adebayor]], [[Obafemi Martins]], [[Michael Essien]], [[Didier Drogba]], [[Kanu Nwankwo]] [[Jay-Jay Okocha]], [[Taye Taiwo]] and [[Samuel Eto'o Fils]]. The most talented Sub-saharan African football players find themselves courted and sought after by European leagues. There are currently more than 1000 Africans playing for European clubs. Sub-Saharan Africans have found themselves the target of racism by European fans. FIFA has been trying hard to crack down on racist outburst during games.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://goafrica.about.com/od/workinafrica/a/football.htm |title=About.com |publisher=Goafrica.about.com |date= }}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://allafrica.com/stories/200911161557.html |title=AllAfrica.com |publisher=AllAfrica.com |date=16 November 2009 }}</ref><ref>{{Cite journal |url=http://www.dw-world.de/dw/article/0,2144,1798795,00.html |title=European Soccer's Racism Problem |date=2 December 2005 |work=[[Deutsche Welle]] |publisher=[[Deutsche Welle]] |postscript=<!--None--> }}</ref>

[[Rugby union|Rugby]] is also popular in Sub-Saharan Africa. The [[Confederation of African Rugby]] governs rugby games in the region and chooses the best team to play in the [[Rugby World Cup]]. South Africa is a major force in the game and won the [[2007 Rugby World Cup|championship in 2007]].

Boxing is also a popular sport in Sub-Saharan Africa with a long history with Senegalese born fighter [[Battling Siki]] the first world champion to come out of Sub-Saharan Africa. Countries such as Nigeria, Ghana and South Africa have produced numerous professional world champions such as [[Dick Tiger]], [[Hogan Bassey]], [[Samuel Peter]], [[Azumah Nelson]] and [[Jake Matlala]].

Cricket has a following. The [[African Cricket Association]] is an international body which oversees cricket in African countries. South Africa and Zimbabwe have their own governing bodies. In 2003 the [[Cricket World Cup]] was held in South Africa, first time it was held in Sub-Saharan Africa.

Over the years, [[Ethiopia]] and [[Kenya]] have produced many notable long-distance athletes. Each country has federations that identify and cultivate top talent. Athletes from Ethiopia and Kenya hold all the distance records (except the 1500 metres) from 800m to the [[marathon]].<ref>Bicourt, John. [http://www.insidethegames.biz/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=6761:john-bicourt-do-kenyan-and-ethiopian-runners-have-a-genetic-advantage&catid=37:blogcontent&Itemid=241 ''John Bicourt: Do Kenyan and Ethiopian runners have a genetic advantage?''] Inside the Games,Tuesday, 28 April 2009.</ref> Famous runners are [[Haile Gebrselassie]], [[Kenenisa Bekele]], [[Paul Tergat]], and [[John Cheruiyot Korir]].<ref>Tucker, Ross and Dugas, Jonathan. [http://www.sportsscientists.com/2008/07/kenya-vs-ethiopia.html ''Sport's great rivalries: Kenya vs. Ethiopia, and a one-sided battle (at least on the track)''], The Science of Sport, 14 July 2008.</ref>

==List of countries and regional organization==
Only eight African countries are not geopolitically a part of Sub-Saharan Africa: [[Algeria]], [[Egypt]], [[Libya]], [[Morocco]], [[Tunisia]], [[Western Sahara]] (claimed by Morocco), [[Sudan]] and [[South Sudan]], they form the [[UN subregion]] of [[Northern Africa]] which also makes up the largest bloc of the [[Arab World]]. Nevertheless, many international organizations include Sudan and South Sudan as part of Sub-Saharan Africa. Although a long-standing member of the [[Arab League]], Sudan has around 30% non-Arab populations in the west ([[Darfur]], [[Masalit people|Masalit]], [[Zaghawa people|Zaghawa]]), far north ([[Nubian people|Nubian]]) and south ([[Kordofan]], [[Nuba]]).<ref>{{cite news| url=http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/2009/nov/23/nubian-monkey-arab-racism | work=The Guardian | location=London | title='Nubian monkey' song and Arab racism | first=Nesrine | last=Malik | date=23 November 2009 | accessdate=9 April 2010}}</ref><ref>Al-Shalachi, Hadeel(2009-11-19).[http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2009/11/19/haifa-wehbe-controversy-o_n_364392.html Haifa Wehbe: Controversy Over 'Nubian Monkey' Song]. www.huffingtonpost.com, retrieved 19 04 2010.</ref><ref>[http://pages.towson.edu/thompson/Courses/Regional/Reference/SSA.Physical.pdf Towson.edu]{{dead link|date=June 2012}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://web.worldbank.org/WBSITE/EXTERNAL/COUNTRIES/AFRICAEXT/EXTPUBREP/EXTSTATINAFR/0,,contentMDK:21106218~menuPK:824080~pagePK:64168445~piPK:64168309~theSitePK:824043,00.html |title=Worldbank.org |publisher=Web.worldbank.org |date=27 October 2006 }}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.cdcdevelopmentsolutions.org/africa |title=CDCdevelopmentSolutions.org |publisher=CDCdevelopmentSolutions.org |date= }}</ref><ref>[http://www.usaid.gov/locations/sub-saharan_africa/sudan/ USaid.gov]</ref><ref>[http://www.transparency.org/regional_pages/africa_middle_east/sub_saharan_africa Transparency.org]{{dead link|date=June 2012}}</ref> Likewise in South Sudan the majority of the population is non-Arab and the since succession the state has not indicated any interest in re-joining the [[Arab League]].<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.thememriblog.org/blog_personal/en/39177.htm |title=Arab League Invites South Sudan to Join Its Ranks |publisher=Thememriblog.org |date= }}</ref> For these reasons, these countries are often included as part of Sub-Saharan Africa, while indisputably also part of North Africa. [[Mauritania]] and [[Niger]] only include a band of the Sahel along their southern borders. All other African countries have at least significant portions of their territory within Sub-Saharan Africa.

===West Africa===
[[Image:LocationWesternAfrica.png|right|thumb|201px|
{{legend|#00a000|Western Africa ([[subregion|UN subregion]])}}
{{legend|#00ff00|[[Maghreb]]}}]]
*{{flag|Mauritania}} ''cap.'' [[Nouakchott]] '''''cur.''''' [[Mauritanian ouguiya]] (UM)
;ECOWAS ([[Economic Community of West African States]])
*{{flag|The Gambia}} ''cap.'' [[Banjul]] '''''cur.''''' [[Gambian dalasi]] (D)
*{{flag|Ghana}} ''cap.'' [[Accra]] '''''cur.''''' [[Ghanaian cedi]] (GH₵)
*{{flag|Guinea}} ''cap.'' [[Conakry]] '''''cur.''''' [[Guinean franc]] (FG)
*{{flag|Liberia}} ''cap.'' [[Monrovia]] '''''cur.''''' [[Liberian dollar]] (L$)
*{{flag|Nigeria}} ''cap.'' [[Abuja]] '''''cur'''.'' [[Nigerian naira]] (N)
*{{flag|Sierra Leone}} ''cap.'' [[Freetown]] '''''cur.''''' [[Sierra Leonean leone]] (Le)

;UEMOA ([[West African Economic and Monetary Union]])
*{{flag|Benin}} ''cap.'' [[Porto-Novo]] '''''cur.''''' [[West African CFA franc]] (CFA)
*{{flag|Burkina Faso}} ''cap.'' [[Ouagadougou]] '''''cur.''''' [[West African CFA franc]] (CFA)
*{{flag|Côte d'Ivoire}} ''cap.'' [[Abidjan]], [[Yamoussoukro]] '''''cur.''''' [[West African CFA franc]] (CFA)
*{{flag|Guinea-Bissau}} ''cap.'' [[Bissau]] '''''cur.''''' [[West African CFA franc]] (CFA)
*{{flag|Mali}} ''cap.'' [[Bamako]] '''''cur.''''' [[West African CFA franc]] (CFA)
*{{flag|Niger}} ''cap.'' [[Niamey]] '''''cur.''''' [[West African CFA franc]] (CFA)
*{{flag|Senegal}} ''cap.'' [[Dakar]] '''''cur.''''' [[West African CFA franc]] (CFA)
*{{flag|Togo}} ''cap.'' [[Lomé]] '''''cur.''''' [[West African CFA franc]] (CFA)

===Central Africa===
[[Image:LocationCentralMiddleAfrica.png|right|thumb|201px|
{{legend|#00a000|Central Africa}}
{{legend|#00d000|Middle Africa ([[subregion|UN subregion]])}}
{{legend|#00ff00|[[Federation of Rhodesia and Nyasaland|Central African Federation]] (defunct)}}]]

; ECCAS ([[Economic Community of Central African States]])
*{{flag|Angola}} (also in SADC) '''''cap.''''' [[Luanda]] '''''cur.''''' [[Angolan kwanza]] (Kz) '''''lang.''''' Portuguese
*{{flag|Burundi}} (also in EAC) '''''cap.''''' [[Bujumbura]] '''''cur.''''' [[Burundian franc]] (FBu) '''''lang.''''' French
*{{flag|Democratic Republic of the Congo}} (also in SADC) '''''cap.''''' [[Kinshasa]] '''''cur.''''' [[Congolese franc]] (FC) '''''lang.''''' Kurundi, French
*{{flag|Rwanda}} (also in EAC) '''''cap.''''' [[Kigali]] '''''cur.''''' [[Rwandan franc]] (RF) '''''lang.''''' [[Kinyarwanda]], French, English
*{{flag|São Tomé and Príncipe}} '''''cap.''''' [[São Tomé]] '''''cur.''''' [[São Tomé and Príncipe dobra]] (Db) '''''lang.''''' Portuguese

;CEMAC ([[Economic and Monetary Community of Central Africa]])
*{{flag|Cameroon}} '''''cap.''''' [[Yaoundé]] '''''cur.''''' [[Central African CFA franc]] (FCFA) '''''lang.''''' English, French
*{{flag|Central African Republic}} '''''cap.''''' [[Bangui]] '''''cur.''''' [[Central African CFA franc]] (FCFA) '''''lang.''''' [[Sango]],French
*{{flag|Chad}} '''''cap.''''' [[N'Djamena]] '''''cur.''''' [[Central African CFA franc]] (FCFA) '''''lang.''''' French, Arabic
*{{flag|Republic of the Congo}} '''''cap.''''' [[Brazzaville]] '''''cur.''''' [[Central African CFA franc]] (FCFA) '''''lang.''''' French
*{{flag|Equatorial Guinea}} '''''cap.''''' [[Malabo]] '''''cur.''''' [[Central African CFA franc]] (FCFA) '''''lang.''''' Spanish, Portuguese, French
*{{flag|Gabon}} '''''cap.''''' [[Libreville]] '''''cur.''''' [[Central African CFA franc]] (FCFA) '''''lang.''''' French

===East Africa===
[[Image:LocationEasternAfrica.png|right|thumb|201px|
{{legend|#00a000|Eastern Africa ([[subregion|UN subregion]])}}
{{legend|#177245|[[East African Community]]}}
{{legend|#ACE1AF|[[Federation of Rhodesia and Nyasaland|Central African Federation]] (defunct)}}
{{legend|#00f000|Geographic East Africa, including the UN subregion and East African Community}}]]

===Sudan===
Depending on classification [[Sudan]] and [[South Sudan]] are often not considered part of Sub-Saharan Africa, as they are considered part of North Africa.
*{{flag|Sudan}} '''''cap.''''' [[Khartoum]] '''''cur.''''' [[Sudanese pound]] (SDG) '''''lang.''''' Arabic and English
*{{flag|South Sudan}} '''''cap.''''' [[Juba]] '''''cur.''''' [[Sudanese pound]] (SDG) '''''lang.''''' English

===East African Community===
*{{flag|Burundi}} (also in ECCAS) '''''cap.''''' [[Bujumbura]] '''''cur.''''' [[Burundian franc]] (FBu) '''''lang.''''' [[Kirundi]], French
*{{flag|Kenya}} '''''cap.''''' [[Nairobi]] '''''cur.''''' [[Kenyan shilling]] (KSh) '''''lang.''''' [[Swahili culture|Swahili]], English
*{{flag|Rwanda}} (also in ECCAS) '''''cap.''''' [[Kigali]] '''''cur.''''' [[Rwandan franc]] (RF) '''''lang.''''' [[Kinyarwanda]], French, English
*{{flag|Tanzania}} (also in SADC) '''''cap.''''' [[Dodoma]] '''''cur.''''' [[Tanzanian shilling]] (x/y) '''''lang.''''' [[Swahili culture|Swahili]], English
*{{flag|Uganda}} '''''cap.''''' [[Kampala]] '''''cur.''''' [[Ugandan shilling]] (USh) '''''lang.''''' [[Swahili culture|Swahili]], English

===Horn of Africa===
*{{flag|Djibouti}} '''''cap.''''' [[Djibouti]] '''''cur.''''' [[Djiboutian franc]] (Fdj) '''''lang.''''' [[Arabic]], Somali, French
*{{flag|Eritrea}} '''''cap.''''' [[Asmara]] '''''cur.''''' [[Eritrean nakfa]] (Nfk) ''''''lang.'''''' [[Tigrinya]], Arabic, Italian, English
*{{flag|Ethiopia}} '''''cap.''''' [[Addis Ababa]] '''''cur.''''' [[Ethiopian birr]] (Br) '''''lang.''''' [[Amharic]]
*{{flag|Somalia}} '''''cap.''''' [[Mogadishu]] '''''cur.''''' [[Somali shilling]] (So.Sh) '''''lang.''''' [[Somali language|Somali]], Arabic

===Southern Africa and SADC===
[[Image:LocationSouthernAfrica.png|right|thumb|201px|
{{legend|#00a000|Southern Africa ([[subregion|UN subregion]])}}
{{legend|#00d000|geographic, including above}}
{{legend|#00ff00|[[Southern African Development Community]] (SADC)}}]]

*{{flag|Angola}} (also in ECCAS) '''''cap.''''' [[Luanda]] '''''cur.''''' [[Angolan kwanza]] (Kz) '''''lang.''''' Portuguese
*{{flag|Botswana}} '''''cap.''''' [[Gaborone]] '''''cur.''''' [[Botswana pula]] (P) '''''lang.''''' [[Tswana language|Tswana]], English
*{{flag|Comoros}} '''''cap.''''' [[Moroni, Comoros|Moroni]] '''''cur.''''' [[Comorian franc]] (CF) '''''lang.''''' [[Comorian language|Comorian]], Arabic, French
*{{flag|Lesotho}} '''''cap.''''' [[Maseru]] '''''cur.''''' [[Lesotho loti]] (L)(M) '''''lang.''''' [[Sesotho]], English
*{{flag|Madagascar}} '''''cap.''''' [[Antananarivo]] '''''cur.''''' [[Malagasy ariary]] (MGA) '''''lang.''''' [[Malagasy language|Malagasy]], French, English
*{{flag|Malawi}} '''''cap.''''' [[Lilongwe]] '''''cur.''''' [[Malawian kwacha]] (MK) '''''lang.''''' English
*{{flag|Mauritius}} '''''cap.''''' [[Port Louis]] '''''cur.''''' [[Mauritian rupee]] (R) '''''lang.''''' English
*{{flag|Mozambique}} '''''cap.''''' [[Maputo]] '''''cur.''''' [[Mozambican metical]] (MTn) '''''lang.''''' Portuguese
*{{flag|Namibia}} '''''cap.''''' [[Windhoek]] '''''cur.''''' [[Namibian dollar]] (N$) '''''lang.''''' English
*{{flag|Seychelles}} '''''cap.''''' [[Victoria, Seychelles|Victoria]] '''''cur.''''' [[Seychellois rupee]] (SR)(SRe) '''''lang.''''' [[Seychellois Creole]], English, French
*{{flag|South Africa}} '''''cap.''''' [[Bloemfontein]], [[Cape Town]], [[Pretoria]] '''''cur.''''' [[South African rand]] (R) '''''lang.'''''[[South Africa|11 off. lang.]]
*{{flag|Swaziland}} '''''cap.''''' [[Mbabane]] '''''cur.''''' [[Swazi lilangeni]] (L)(E) '''''lang.''''' [[SiSwati]],English
*{{flag|Zambia}} '''''cap.''''' [[Lusaka]] '''''cur.''''' [[Zambian kwacha]] (ZK) '''''lang.''''' English
*{{flag|Zimbabwe}} '''''cap.''''' [[Harare]] '''''cur.''''' [[Zimbabwean dollar]] ($) '''''lang.''''' English

==See also==
* [[Geography of Africa]]
* [[African Uplands]]
* [[Water scarcity in Africa]]

== Notes ==
{{Reflist|colwidth=30em}}

== References ==
* ''Taking Action to Reduce Poverty in Sub-Saharan Africa'', [[World Bank]] Publications (1997), ISBN 0-8213-3698-3.

==Further reading==
* Petringa, Maria: ''Brazza, A Life for Africa''. Bloomington, Indiana: AuthorHouse, 2006. ISBN 978-1-4259-1198-0
* Wm. Roger Louis and Jean Stengers: ''E.D. Morel's History of the Congo Reform Movement'', Clarendon Press Oxford, 1968.

==External links==
* [http://www.africanpeople.info African People Website]
*[http://web.worldbank.org/WBSITE/EXTERNAL/COUNTRIES/AFRICAEXT/EXTPUBREP/EXTSTATINAFR/0,,contentMDK:21106218~menuPK:824080~pagePK:64168445~piPK:64168309~theSitePK:824043,00.html 50 Factoids about Sub-Saharan Africa]
* [http://www.bbc.co.uk/worldservice/africa/features/storyofafrica/index.shtml The Story of Africa - BBC World Service]

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[[Category:Geography of Africa]]
[[Category:Sub-Saharan Africa| ]]

[[ar:أفريقيا جنوب الصحراء]]
[[frp:Africa sub-saharièna]]
[[az:سئحرا آلتی آفریکاسی]]
[[bn:সাহারা-নিম্ন আফ্রিকা]]
[[bg:Субсахарска Африка]]
[[bs:Subsaharska Afrika]]
[[br:Afrika issahara]]
[[ca:Àfrica subsahariana]]
[[cs:Subsaharská Afrika]]
[[da:Subsaharisk Afrika]]
[[de:Subsahara-Afrika]]
[[el:Υποσαχάρια Αφρική]]
[[es:África negra]]
[[eo:Afriko sude de Saharo]]
[[eu:Saharaz hegoaldeko Afrika]]
[[fa:آفریقای سیاه]]
[[fr:Afrique subsaharienne]]
[[gl:África subsahariana]]
[[ko:사하라 이남 아프리카]]
[[hy:Ենթասահարա]]
[[hi:उप-सहारा अफ़्रीका]]
[[hr:Subsaharska Afrika]]
[[id:Afrika Sub-Sahara]]
[[is:Afríka sunnan Sahara]]
[[it:Africa subsahariana]]
[[he:אפריקה שמדרום לסהרה]]
[[ka:სუბსაჰარული აფრიკა]]
[[la:Africa Subsahariana]]
[[lt:Užsachario Afrika]]
[[hu:Fekete-Afrika]]
[[mk:Супсахарска Африка]]
[[nl:Sub-Saharisch Afrika]]
[[ja:ブラックアフリカ]]
[[no:Afrika sør for Sahara]]
[[nn:Afrika sør for Sahara]]
[[pl:Czarna Afryka]]
[[pt:África subsariana]]
[[ro:Africa Subsahariană]]
[[ru:Африка южнее Сахары]]
[[sk:Subsaharská Afrika]]
[[sr:Подсахарска Африка]]
[[sh:Subsaharska Afrika]]
[[su:Afrika Sub-Sahara]]
[[fi:Saharan eteläpuolinen Afrikka]]
[[sv:Subsahariska Afrika]]
[[tr:Sahraaltı Afrika]]
[[uk:Африка південніше Сахари]]
[[ur:افریقہ جنوب صحرا]]
[[vec:Africa subsahariana]]
[[vi:Châu Phi hạ Sahara]]
[[war:Ubos-ha-Sahara nga Apriká]]
[[wo:Afrig gu bëj-saalumu-Sahara]]
[[zh:撒哈拉以南非洲]]

Revision as of 20:11, 10 December 2012

Dark and lighter green: Definition of "Sub-Saharan Africa" as used in the statistics of the UN institutions.
Lighter green: However, the Sudan is classified as North Africa by the United Nations.[1]
Simplified climatic map of Africa: Sub-Saharan Africa consists of the Sahel and the Horn of Africa in the north (yellow), the tropical savannas (light green) and the tropical rainforests (dark green) of Equatorial Africa, and the arid Kalahari Basin (yellow) and the "Mediterranean" south coast (olive) of Southern Africa. The numbers shown correspond to the dates of all Iron Age artifacts associated with the Bantu expansion.

Sub-Saharan Africa is, geographically, the area of the continent of Africa that lies south of the Sahara. Politically, it consists of all African countries that are fully or partially located south of the Sahara (excluding Sudan).[2] It contrasts with North Africa, which is considered a part of the Arab world. Somalia, Djibouti, Comoros and Mauritania are geographically part of Sub-Saharan Africa, but also part of the Arab world.[3][4]

The Sahel is the transitional zone between the Sahara and the tropical savanna (the Sudan region) and forest-savanna mosaic to the south.

Since probably the 5.9 kiloyear event,[5] the Saharan and Sub-Saharan regions of Africa have been separated by the extremely harsh climate of the sparsely populated Sahara, forming an effective barrier interrupted by only the Nile River in Sudan, though the Nile was blocked by the river's cataracts. The Sahara Pump Theory explains how flora and fauna (including Homo sapiens) left Africa to penetrate the Middle East and beyond. African pluvial periods are associated with a "wet Sahara" phase during which larger lakes and more rivers exist.[6]

Etymology

Historic ethnographic map depicting the Sudan region and its eastern equivalent Zanj in brown tones. The contrasting Al-Habash and Barbara regions are shown in shaded blue.

The Sub-Saharan region is often referred to as Black Africa,[7] in reference to its numerous black populations. However, geographers historically divided the region into several distinct ethnographic sections based on each area's respective inhabitants.[8]

Commentators in Arabic in the medieval period used the general term bilâd as-sûdân ("Land of the Blacks") for the vast Sudan region (an expression denoting West and Central Africa[9]), or sometimes extending from the coast of West Africa to Western Sudan.[10] Its equivalent in the southeast was Zanj ("Country of the Blacks"), which was situated in the vicinity of the Great Lakes region.[8][10] Also transliterated as Zenj or Zinj, it was inhabited by Bantu-speaking peoples called the Zanj.[8][11][12]

The geographers drew an explicit ethnographic distinction between the Sudan region and its analogue Zanj, with the area to their extreme east on the Red Sea coast in the Horn of Africa.[8] In modern-day Ethiopia was Al-Habash or Abyssinia,[13] which was inhabited by the Habash or Abyssinians, who were the forebears of the Habesha.[14] In northern Somalia was Barbara or the Bilad al-Barbar ("Land of the Berbers"), which was inhabited by the Eastern Baribah or Barbaroi, as the ancestors of the Somalis were referred to by medieval Arab and ancient Greek geographers, respectively.[8][11][15]

Some note that Sub-Saharan Africa neither exists linguistically (Afro-Asiatic languages), ethnically (Tuareg), politically (African Union, Arab league), in terms of religion (Islam), nor economically (CEN-SAD). The African Union also prefers to see the Sahara as a bridge, not a barrier.[3][16][17][18][19]

Climate zones and ecoregions

Climate zones of Africa, showing the ecological break between the desert climate of the Sahara and the Horn of Africa (red), the semi-arid Sahel (orange) and the tropical climate of Central and Western Africa (blue). Southern Africa has a transition to semi-tropical or temperate climates (green), and more desert or semi-arid regions, centered on Namibia and Botswana.

Sub-Saharan Africa has a wide variety of climate zones or biomes. South Africa and the Democratic Republic of the Congo in particular are considered Megadiverse countries.

History

Nubia in present day Northern Sudan and Southern Egypt, was referred to as "Ethiopia" or "Aethiopia" ("land of the burnt face") by the Greeks.[20]

Prehistory

According to paleontology, early hominid skull anatomy was similar to their close cousins, the great African forest apes, gorilla and chimpanzee, but they had adopted a bipedal locomotion and freed hands giving them a crucial advantage enabling them to live in both forested areas and on the open savanna at a time when Africa was drying up, with savanna encroaching on forested areas. This occurred 10 million to 5 million years ago.[21]

By 3 million years ago several australopithecine (southern apes) hominid species had developed throughout southern, eastern and central Africa. They were tool users, not makers of tools. About 2.3 million BCE, the next major evolutionary step occurred when primitive stone tools were used to scavenge kills made by other predators and harvest carrion for their bones and marrow. In hunting, H. habilis was probably not capable of competing with large predators and was more prey than hunter, although H. habilis probably did steal eggs from nests and may have been able to catch small game and weakened larger prey (cubs and older animals). The tools were classed as Oldowan.[22]

Around 1.8 million years ago, Homo ergaster first appeared in the fossil record in Africa. From Homo ergaster, Homo erectus (upright man) evolved 1.5 million years ago. Some of the earlier representatives of this species were small brained and used primitive stone tools, much like H. habilis. The brain later grew in size, and H. erectus eventually developed a more complex stone tool technology called the Acheulean. Possibly the first hunters, H. erectus mastered the art of making fire and were the first hominids to leave Africa, colonizing the entire Old World and perhaps later giving rise to Homo floresiensis. Although some recent writers suggest that H. georgicus, a H. habilis descendant, was the first and most primitive hominid to ever live outside Africa, many scientists consider H. georgicus to be an early and primitive member of the H. erectus species.[23][24]

The fossil record shows Homo sapiens living in southern and eastern Africa at least 100,000 and possibly 150,000 years ago. Around 50–60 millennia ago their expansion out of Africa launched the colonization of our planet by modern humans. By 10,000 BCE, Homo sapiens had spread to all corners of the world. Their migration is indicated by linguistic, cultural and genetic evidence.[22][25][26]

After the Sahara became a desert, it did not present a totally impenetrable barrier for travelers between north and south because of the application of animal husbandry towards carrying water, food, and supplies across the desert. Prior to the introduction of the camel,[27] the use of oxen, mule, and horses for desert crossing was common, and trade routes followed chains of oases that were strung across the desert. The trans-saharan trade was in full motion by 500 BCE with Carthage being a major economic force for its establishment.[28][29][30] It is thought that the camel was first brought to Egypt after the Persian Empire conquered Egypt in 525 BCE, although large herds did not become common enough in North Africa for camels to be the pack animal of choice for the trans-saharan trade.[31]

Eastern Africa

Historical African states and empires
Sphinx of Nubian Emperor Taharqa

The distribution of the Nilo-Saharan linguistic phylum is evidence of a certain coherence of the central Sahara, the Sahel and East Africa in prehistoric times. Kush and Nubia at her greatest phase is considered Sub-Saharan Africa's oldest urban civilization. Nubia was a major source of gold for the ancient world. Nubians built famous structures like the Deffufa, mud brick temples similar to the ziggurats of Mesopotamia in material and function.[32] They built numerous pyramids. Sudan, the site of ancient Nubia, has more pyramids than anywhere in the world.[33]

The Axumite Empire spanned the southern Sahara and the Sahel along the western shore of the Red Sea. Located in northern Ethiopia and Eritrea, Aksum was deeply involved in the trade network between India and the Mediterranean. Emerging from ca. the 4th century BCE, it rose to prominence by the 1st century AD. The Aksumites constructed monolithic stelaes to cover the graves of their kings, such as King Ezana's Stele. The later Zagwe dynasty, established in the 12th century, built churches out of solid rock. These rock-hewn structures include the Church of St. George at Lalibela.

In ancient Somalia, city-states flourished such as Opone, Mosyllon and Malao that competed with the Sabaeans, Parthians and Axumites for the wealthy IndoGrecoRoman trade.[34]

Stone city of Gondershe, Somalia.

In the Middle Ages, several powerful Somali empires dominated the regional trade including the Ajuuraan State, which excelled in hydraulic engineering and fortress building,[35] the Sultanate of Adal, whose General Ahmed Gurey was the first African commander in history to use cannon warfare on the continent during Adal's conquest of the Ethiopian Empire,[36] and the Gobroon Dynasty, whose military dominance forced governors of the Omani empire north of the city of Lamu to pay tribute to the Somali Sultan Ahmed Yusuf.[37] In the late 19th century after the Berlin conference had ended, European empires sailed with their armies to the Horn of Africa. The imperial armies in Somalia alarmed the Dervish leader Muhammad Abdullah Hassan, who gathered Somali soldiers from across the Horn of Africa and began one of the longest colonial resistance wars ever.

Fasilides Castle, Ethiopia.

Further south in East Africa, during the first millennium AD, Nilotic and Bantu-speaking peoples moved into the region, and the latter now comprise three-quarters of Kenya's population. Increased trade (namely with Arab merchants) and the development of ports helped birth of Swahili culture. Developed from an outgrowth of indigenous Bantu settlements,[38] the Swahili Coast of Kenya, Tanzania and northern Mozambique was part of the east African region which traded with Persia, China, the Arab world, and India especially for ivory and slaves.

In 1498, Vasco da Gama became the first European to reach the East African coast, and by 1525, the Portuguese had subdued the entire Swahili seaboard. Portuguese control lasted until the early 18th century when Arabs from Oman established a foothold in the region. Assisted by Somalis, Ottomans and Omani Arabs,[39] the indigenous coastal dwellers succeeded in driving the Portuguese from the area north of the Ruvuma River by the early 18th century.

Western Africa

Nok sculpture, terracotta, Louvre

The Bantu expansion is a major migration movement originating in West Africa around 2500 BCE, reaching East and Central Africa by 1000 BCE and Southern Africa by the early centuries AD.

The Nok culture is known from a type of terracotta figure found in Nigeria, dating to between 500 BCE and AD 200.

There were a number of medieval empires of the southern Sahara and the Sahel, based on trans-Saharan trade, including the Ghana Empire and the Mali Empire, Songhai Empire, the Kanem Empire and the subsequent Bornu Empire.[40] They built stone structures like in Tichit but mainly built in adobe. The Great Mosque of Djenne is most reflective of Sahelian architecture and is the largest adobe building in the world.

File:Afrifortifiedvillagbige.jpg
Fortifications were significant in West Africa, the Walls of Benin is the largest man made structure in the world[41][42]

In the forest zone, several states and empires emerged. The Ashanti Empire arose in the 16th century in modern day Ghana and Côte d'Ivoire. The oldest kingdom in Nigeria, the Kingdom of Nri, was established by the Igbo in the 11th century. Nri was famous for having a priest-king who wielded no military power. Nri was a rare African state as it never dealt in the trade of slaves. All slaves and outcasts who sought refuge in their territory were freed. Other major states included the kingdoms of Ifẹ and Oyo in the western block of Nigeria which became prominent about 700–900 and 1400 respectively, and center of Yoruba culture. The Yoruba's built massive mud walls around their cities, the most famous being Sungbo's Eredo. Another prominent kingdom in southwestern Nigeria was the Kingdom of Benin whose power lasted between the 15th and 19th century. Their dominance reached as far as the well known city of Eko which was named Lagos by the Portuguese traders and other early European settlers. The Edo speaking people of Benin are known for the Walls of Benin, which is the largest man-made structure in the world.

In the 18th century, the Oyo and the Aro confederacy were responsible for most of the slaves exported from Nigeria, with Great Britain, France and Portugal shipping the majority of the slaves.[43] Following the Napoleonic Wars, the British expanded trade with the Nigerian interior. In 1885, British claims to a West African sphere of influence received international recognition, and in the following year the Royal Niger Company was chartered under the leadership of Sir George Taubman Goldie. In 1900, the company's territory came under the control of the British Government, which moved to consolidate its hold over the area of modern Nigeria. On 1 January 1901, Nigeria became a British protectorate, part of the British Empire, the foremost world power at the time.

By 1960, most of the region received independence from colonial rule.

Central Africa

Nzinga Mbande, queen of the Ndongo and Matamba.

During the 14th century, the Luba Kingdom in southeast Congo came about under a king whose political authority came from religious spiritual legitimacy. The kingdom controlled agriculture and trade in the region of salt and iron from the north and copper from the Zambian/Congo copper belt.[44] Rival kingship factions which split from the Luba Kingdom later moved among the Lunda people, marrying into its elite and laying the foundation of the Lunda Empire in the 16th century. The ruling dynasty centralised authority among the Lunda under the Mwata Yamyo or Mwaant Yaav. The Mwata Yamyo's legitimacy, like the Luba king, came from being viewed as a spiritual religious guardian. This system of religious spiritual kings was spread to most of central Africa by rivals in kingship migrating and forming new states. Many new states received legitimacy by claiming descent from the Lunda dynasties.[44]

The Kingdom of Kongo existed from the Atlantic west to the Kwango river to the east. During the 15th century, the Bakongo farming community was united with the capital at Mbanza Kongo, under the king title, Manikongo.[44] Other significant states and peoples included the Kuba Kingdom, producers of the famous raffia cloth, the Eastern Lunda, Bemba, Burundi, Rwanda, and the Kingdom of Ndongo.

Southern Africa

Settlements of Bantu-speaking peoples, who were iron-using agriculturists and herdsmen, were already present south of the Limpopo River by the 4th or 5th century displacing and absorbing the original Khoisan speakers. They slowly moved south, and the earliest ironworks in modern-day KwaZulu-Natal Province are believed to date from around 1050. The southernmost group was the Xhosa people, whose language incorporates certain linguistic traits from the earlier Khoi-San people, reaching the Fish River in today's Eastern Cape Province.

Great Zimbabwe: Tower in the Great Enclosure.

Monomotapa was a medieval kingdom (c. 1250–1629) that used to exist between the Zambezi and Limpopo rivers of Southern Africa, in the territory of modern-day Zimbabwe and Mozambique. Famous are the ruins at its old capital of Great Zimbabwe.

In 1487, Bartolomeu Dias became the first European to reach the southernmost tip of Africa. In 1652, a victualling station was established at the Cape of Good Hope by Jan van Riebeeck on behalf of the Dutch East India Company. For most of the 17th and 18th centuries, the slowly expanding settlement was a Dutch possession.

Great Britain seized the Cape of Good Hope area in 1795, ostensibly to prevent it from falling into the hands of the French but also to use Cape Town in particular as a stop on the route to Australia and India. It was later returned to the Dutch in 1803, but soon afterwards the Dutch East India Company declared bankruptcy, and the British annexed the Cape Colony in 1806.

The Zulu Kingdom (1817–79) was a Southern African tribal state in what is now Kwa-Zulu Natal in southeastern South Africa. The small kingdom gained world fame during and after the Anglo-Zulu War.

During the 1950s and early 1960s, most Sub-Saharan African nations achieved independence from imperialist rule.[45]

Demographics

Life expectancy has fallen drastically in Southern Africa since the 1990s as a result of HIV.

The Sub-Saharan African countries form the bulk of the ACP countries. Malaria is a chronic impediment to economic development. The disease slows growth by about 1.3% per year through lost time caused by illness and the cost of treatment and prevention measures. According to the World Bank, the region's GDP would have been 32% higher in 2003 had the disease been eradicated in 1960.[46]

The population of Sub-Saharan Africa was 800 million in 2007.[47] The current growth rate is 2.3%. The UN predicts for the region a population of nearly 1.5 billion in 2050.[48]

Sub-Saharan African countries top the list of countries and territories by fertility rate with 40 of the highest 50, all with TFR greater than 4 in 2008. All are above the world average except South Africa. Figures for life expectancy, malnourishment, infant mortality and HIV/AIDS infections are also dramatic. More than 40% of the population in sub-Saharan countries is younger than 15 years old, as well as in the Sudan with the exception of South Africa.[49]

Sub-Saharan Africa has a very high child mortality rate. While in 2002, 17% of children died before the age of five,[50] by 2007 this rate had declined to 15%.[51] The leading cause of death was malaria infection.[46]

Foreign direct investment (FDI) in Africa has grown at an average of 146% annually over the last 22 years to reach US$36 billion in 2007, while trade between Africa and the rest of the world (particularly Asia) has been steadily increasing. Bilateral trade between China and Africa jumped 45% in 2008 to reach US$107 billion, the bulk of which went to Sub-Saharan Africa.

Country Population Area Literacy(M/F)[52] GDP per Capita[52] Trans(Rank/Score)[53] Life(Exp.)[52] HDI EODBR/SAB[54] PFI(RANK/MARK)
 Angola 18,498,000 1,246,700 82.9%/54.2% 9000 168/2 42.4 0.486 172/171 132/58,43
 Burundi 8,988,091 27,830 67.3%/52.2% 101 168/1.8 49 0.316 176/130 103/29,00
 Democratic Republic of the Congo 68,692,542 2,345,410 80.9%/54.1% 91 162/11.9 46.1 0.286 182/152 146/53,50
 Rwanda 10,473,282 26,338 71.4%/59.8% 263 89/3.3 46.8 0.429 67/11 157/64,67
 São Tomé and Príncipe 212,679 1,001 92.2%/77.9% N/A 111/2.8 65.2 0.509 180/140 NA
 Cameroon 18,879,301 475,440 77%/59.8% 687 146/2.2 50.3 0.482 171/174 109/30,50
 Central African Republic 4,511,488 622,984 64.8%/33.5% 22 158/2.8 44.4 0.343 183/159 80/17,75
 Chad 10,329,208 1,284,000 40.8%/12.8% 266 175/1.6 50.6 0.328 178/182 132/44,50
 Republic of the Congo 3,700,000 342,000 90.5%/ 79.0% 1,145 162/1.9 54.8 0.533 N/A 116/34,25
 Equatorial Guinea 633,441 28,051 93.4%/80.3% 7,470 168/1.8 51.1 0.537 170/178 158/65,50
 Gabon 1,514,993 267,667 88.5%/79.7% 4,263 106/2.9 56.7 0.674 158/152 129/43,50
 Kenya 39,002,772 582,650 77.7%/70.2 440 146/2.2 53.4 0.509 95/124 96/25,00
 Tanzania 41,048,532 945,087 77.5%/62.2% 339 126/2.6 51.9 0.466 131/120 NA/15,50
 Uganda 32,369,558 236,040 76.8%/57.7 274 130/2.5 50.7 0.446 112/129 86/21,50
 Sudan 31,894,000 1,886,068 79.6%/60.8% 2,500[55] 176/1.5 62.57[56] 0.408 154/118 148/54,00
 South Sudan 8,260,490 619,745
 Djibouti 516,055 23,000 N/A 817 111/2.8 54.5 0.430 163/177 110/31,00
 Eritrea 5,647,168 121,320 N/A 160 126/2.6 57.3 0.349 175/181 175/115,50
 Ethiopia 85,237,338 1,127,127 50%/28.8% 161 120/2.7 52.5 0.363 107/93 140/49,00
 Somalia 9,832,017 637,657 N/A N/A 180/1.1 47.7 N/A N/A 164/77,50
 Botswana 1,990,876 600,370 80.4%/81.8% 4,511 37/5.6 49.8 0.633 45/83 62/15,50
 Comoros 752,438 2,170 N/A 382 143/2.3 63.2 0.433 162/168 82/19,00
 Lesotho 2,130,819 30,355 73.7%/90.3% 528 89/3.3 42.9 0.450 130/131 99/27,50
 Madagascar 19,625,000 587,041 76.5%/65.3% 238 99/3.0 59 0.480 134/12 134/45,83
 Malawi 14,268,711 118,480 N/A 145 89/3.3 47.6 0.400 132/128 62/15,50
 Mauritius 1,284,264 2,040 88.2%/80.5% 4,522 42/5.4 73.2 0.728 17/10 51/14,00
 Mozambique 21,669,278 801,590 N/A 330 130/2.5 42.5 0.322 135/96 82/19,00
 Namibia 2,108,665 825,418 86.8%/83.6% 2166 56/4.5 52.5 0.625 66/123 35/9,00
 Seychelles 87,476 455 91.4%/92.3% 7,005 54/4.8 72.2 0.773 111/81 72/16,00
 South Africa 49,052,489 1,219,912 N/A 3,562 55/4.7 50.7 0.619 34/67 33/8,50
 Swaziland 1,123,913 17,363 80.9%/78.3% 1,297 79/3.6 40.8 0.522 115/158 144/52,50
 Zambia 11,862,740 752,614 N/A 371 99/3.0 41.7 0.430 90/94 97/26,75
 Zimbabwe 11,392,629 390,580 92.7%/86.2% N/A 146/2.2 42.7 0.376 159/155 136/46,50
 Benin 8,791,832 112,620 47.9%/42.3% 323 106/2.9 56.2 0.427 172/155 97/26,75
 Mali 12,666,987 1,240,000 32.7%/15.9% 290 111/2.8 53.8 0.359 156/139 38/8,00
 Burkina Faso 15,730,977 274,200 25.3% 1,360 79/3.6 51 0.331 150/116 N/A
 Cape Verde
 Côte d'Ivoire
 Gambia
 Ghana
 Guinea
 Guinea-Bissau
 Liberia
 Mauritania
 Niger
 Nigeria
 Senegal
 Sierra Leone
 Togo

GDP Per Capital (2006 in dollars($)), Life(Exp.) (Life Expectancy 2006), Literacy(Male/Female 2006), Trans (Transparency 2009), HDI (Human Development Index), EODBR (Ease of Doing Business Rank June 2008 through May 2009), SAB (Starting a Business June 2008 through May 2009), PFI (Press Freedom Index 2009)

Economy

Energy and power

Fifty percent of Africa is rural with no access to electricity. Africa generates 47 GW of electricity, less than 0.6% of global market share. Many countries are besieged by power shortages.[57]

Because of rising prices in commodities such as coal and oil, thermal sources of energy are proving to be too expensive for power generation. Sub-Saharan Africa is expected to build additional hydropower generation capacity of at least 20,165 MW by 2014. The region has the potential to generate 1,750 TWh of energy, of which only 7% has been explored. The failure to exploit its full energy potential is largely due to significant underinvestment, as at least 4 times as much (approximately $23 billion a year) and what is currently spent is invested in operating highcost power systems and not on expanding the infrastructure.[58]

African governments are taking advantage of the readily available water resources to broaden their energy mix. Hydro Turbine Markets in Sub-Saharan Africa generated revenues of $120.0 million in 2007 and is estimated to reach $425.0 million. Asian countries, notably China, India and Japan, are playing an active role in power projects across the African continent. The majority of these power projects are hydro-based because of China's vast experience in the construction of hydro-power projects and part of the Energy & Power Growth Partnership Services programme.[59][60]

With electrification numbers, Sub-Saharan Africa with access to the Sahara and being in the tropical zones has massive potential for solar photovoltaic electrical potential.[61] Six hundred million people could be served with electricity based on its photovoltaic potential.[62] China is promising to train 10,000 technicians from Africa and other developing countries in the use of solar energy technologies over the next five years. Training African technicians to use solar power is part of the China-Africa science and technology cooperation agreement signed by the Chinese science minister and African counterparts during premier Wen Jiabao's visit to Ethiopia in December 2003.[63]

The New Partnership for Africa's Development (NEPAD) is developing an integrated, continent-wide energy strategy.[58] This has been funded by, amongst others, the African Development Bank (AfDB) and the EU-Africa Infrastructure Trust Fund.[58] These projects must be:[58]

  • sustainable
  • involve a cross-border dimension and/or have a regional impact
  • involve public and private capital
  • contribute to poverty alleviation and economic development
  • involve at least one country in sub-Saharan Africa.

Media

Radio is the major source of information in Sub-Saharan Africa.[64] Cell phone usage in Sub-saharan has brought about a revolution. Average coverage stands at more than a third of the population. Countries such as Gabon, Seychelles, and South Africa boast almost 100% penetration. Only five countries—Burundi, Djibouti, Eritrea, Ethiopia, and Somalia—still have a penetration of less than 10%. Broadband penetration outside of South Africa has been limited where it is exorbitantly expensive.[65][66] Access to the internet via cell phones is on the rise.[67]

Television is the second major source of information.[64] Because of power shortages, the spread of television viewing has been limited. Eight percent have television, a total of 62 million. But those in the television industry view the region as an untapped green market. Digital television and pay for service are on the rise.[68]

Infrastructure

According to researchers at the Overseas Development Institute, the lack of infrastructure in many developing countries represents one of the most significant limitations to economic growth and achievement of the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs).[58] Less than 40% of rural Africans live within two kilometers of an all-season road, the lowest level of rural accessibility in the developing world. Spending on roads averages just below 2% of GDP with varying degree among countries. This compares with 1% of GDP that is typical in industrialized countries, and 2–3% of GDP found in fast-growing emerging economies. Although the level of effort is high relative to the size of Africa's economies, it remains little in absolute terms, with low-income countries spending an average of about US$7 per capita per year.[69] Infrastructure investments and maintenance can be very expensive, especially in such as areas as landlocked, rural and sparsely populated countries in Africa.[58]

It has been argued that infrastructure investments contributed to more than half of Africa's improved growth performance between 1990 and 2005 and increased investment is necessary to maintain growth and tackle poverty.[58] The returns to investment in infrastructure are very significant, with on average 30-40% returns for telecommunications (ICT) investments, over 40% for electricity generation and 80% for roads.[58]

In Africa, it is argued that in order to meet the MDGs by 2015 infrastructure investments would need to reach about 15% of GDP (around $93 billion a year).[58] Currently, the source of financing varies significantly across sectors.[58] Some sectors are dominated by state spending, others by overseas development aid (ODA) and yet others by private investors.[58] In sub-Saharan Africa, the state spends around $9.4 billion out of a total of $24.9 billion.[58] In irrigation, SSA states represent almost all spending; in transport and energy a majority of investment is state spending; in ICT and water supply and sanitation, the private sector represents the majority of capital expenditure.[58] Overall, aid, the private sector and non-OECD financiers between them exceed state spending.[58] The private sector spending alone equals state capital expenditure, though the majority is focused on ICT infrastructure investments.[58] External financing increased from $7 billion (2002) to $27 billion (2009). China, in particular, has emerged as an important investor.[58]

Oil and minerals

The region is a major exporter to the world of gold, uranium, chrome, vanadium, antimony, coltan, bauxite, iron ore, copper and manganese. South Africa is a major exporter of manganese[70] as well as Chromium. About 42% of world reserves and about 75% of the world reserve base of chromium are located in South Africa.[71] South Africa is the largest producer of platinum, with 80% of the total world's annual mine production and 88% of the world's platinum reserve.[72] Sub-saharan Africa produces 33% of the world's bauxite with Guinea as the major supplier.[73] Zambia is a major producer of copper.[74] Democratic Republic of Congo is a major source of coltan. Production from Congo is very small but has 80% of proven reserves.[75] Sub-saharan Africa is a major producer of gold, producing up to 30% of global production. Major suppliers are South Africa, Ghana, Zimbabwe, Tanzania, Guinea, and Mali. South Africa had been first in the world in terms of gold production since 1905, but in 2007 it moved to second place, according to GFMS, the precious metals consultancy.[76] Uranium is major commodity from the region. Significant suppliers are Niger, Namibia, and South Africa. Namibia was the number one supplier from Sub-Saharan Africa in 2008.[77] The region produces 49% of the world's diamonds.

By 2015, it is estimated that 25% of North American oil will be from Sub-Saharan Africa, ahead of the Middle East. Sub-Saharan Africa has been the focus of an intense race for oil by the West and China, India, and other emerging economies, even having only 10% of proven oil reserves, less than the Middle East. This race has been referred to as the second Scramble for Africa. The reasons are all economic. Most Sub-Saharan oil is off the coast of host countries. Transportation cost is low. No pipelines has to be laid as in Central Asia. If political turmoil hits host country, production does not stop since operation is off-shore. Sub-Saharan oil is viscous and has very low sulfur content. This requires less refining and is less costly. New sources of oil are being located in Sub-Saharan Africa more frequently than anywhere else. Of all new sources of oil, 1/3 are in Sub-Saharan Africa.[78]

Agriculture

Sub-Saharan Africa has more variety of grains than anywhere in the world. Between 13,000 and 11,000 BCE wild grains began to be collected as a source of food in the cataract region of the Nile, south of Egypt. The collecting of wild grains as source of food spread to Syria, parts of Turkey and Iran by the eleventh millennium BCE. By the tenth and ninth millennia southwest Asians domesticated their wild grains, wheat and barley after the notion of collecting wild grains was spread from the Nile.[79]

Numerous crops have been domesticated in the region and spread to other parts of the world. These crops included sorghum, castor beans, coffee, cotton[80] okra, black-eyed peas, watermelon, gourd, and pearl millet. Other domesticated crops included teff, enset, African rice, yams, kola nuts, oil palm, and raffia palm.[79][81]

Domesticated animals include the guinea fowl and the donkey.

Agriculture represents 20% to 30% of GDP and 50% of exports. In some cases, 60% to 90% of the labor force are employed in agriculture.[82] Most agricultural activity is subsistence farming. This has made agricultural activity vulnerable to climate change and global warming. Biotechnology has been advocated to create high yield, pest and environmentally resistant crops in the hands of small farmers. The Bill and Malinda Gates foundation is a strong advocate and donor to this cause. Biotechnology and GM crops have met resistance both by natives and environmental groups.[83]

Cash crops include cotton, coffee, tea, cocoa, sugar, and tobacco.[84]

The OECD says Africa has the potential to become an agricultural superbloc if it can unlock the wealth of the savannahs by allowing farmers to use their land as collateral for credit.[85] There is such international interest in Sub-Saharan agriculture, that the World Bank increased its financing of African agricultural programs to $1.3 billion in the 2011 fiscal year.[86] Recently, there has been a trend to purchase large tracts of land in Sub-Sahara for agricultural use by developing countries. Early in 2009, George Soros highlighted a new farmland buying frenzy caused by growing population, scarce water supplies and climate change. Chinese interests bought up large swathes of Senegal to supply it with sesame. Aggressive moves by China, South Korea and Gulf states to buy vast tracts of agricultural land in Sub-Saharan Africa could soon be limited by a new global international protocol.[87]

Education

Forty percent of African scientists live in OECD countries, predominately in Europe, the United States and Canada.[88] This has been described as an African brain drain. Even with the drain, enrollments in Sub-Saharan African universities tripled between 1991 and 2005, expanding at an annual rate of 8.7%, which is one of the highest regional growth rates in the world. In the last 10 to 15 years interest in pursuing university level degrees abroad has increased. In some OECD countries, like the United States, Sub-Saharan Africans are the most educated immigrant group.[88]

Sub-Saharan African countries spent an average of 0.3% of their GDP on science and technology on in 2007. This represents an increase from US$1.8 billion in 2002 to US$2.8 billion in 2007, a 50% increase in spending.[89][90]

Health care

Map of Africa indicating Human Development Index (2004). All 22 countries ranking below 0.5 in the report on 2005 were in Sub-Saharan Africa. The highest value is that of Gabon at 0.677.

In 1987, the Bamako Initiative conference organized by the World Health Organization was held in Bamako, the capital of Mali, and helped reshape the health policy of Sub-Saharan Africa.[91] The new strategy dramatically increased accessibility through community-based healthcare reform, resulting in more efficient and equitable provision of services. A comprehensive approach strategy was extended to all areas of health care, with subsequent improvement in the health care indicators and improvement in health care efficiency and cost.[92][93]

As of October 2006, many governments face difficulties in implementing policies aimed at tackling the effects of the AIDS pandemic despite a number of mitigating measures.[94]

Languages and ethnic groups

Linguistically, sub-Saharan Africa is dominated by the Niger–Congo phylum (distribution shown in yellow), with pockets of Khoi-San in Southern Africa, Nilo-Saharan in Central and East Africa, and Afro-Asiatic in the Horn of Africa

Sub-Saharan Africa displays the most linguistic diversity of any region in the world. This is apparent in the number of languages spoken. The region contains over 1,000 languages, which is 1/6 of the world's total.[84]

With the exception of extinct Sumerian, the Afro-Asiatic has the longest documented history of any language phyla in the world. Egyptian was recorded as early as 3200 BCE. The Semitic branch was recorded as early as 2500 BCE.[95] The distribution of the Afro-Asiatic languages within Africa is principally concentrated in North Africa and the Horn of Africa. The Chadic branch is distributed in Central and West Africa.[96] Hausa is a lingua franca in West Africa (Niger, Ghana, Togo, Benin, Cameroon, and Chad).[97] The Semitic branch of the phylum also has a notable presence in Western Asia, making Afro-Asiatic the only language family spoken in Africa that is also attested outside of the continent. In addition to languages now spoken, Afro-Asiatic includes several ancient languages, such as Ancient Egyptian, Biblical Hebrew and Akkadian.

The Khoi-San languages represent the oldest language family in the world.[98] They include languages indigenous to Southern and Eastern Africa, though some, such as the Khoi languages, appear to have moved to their current locations not long before the Bantu expansion.[99] In Southern Africa, their speakers are the Khoi and Bushmen (San), in East Africa, the Sandawe and Hadza.

A San tribesman.

The Niger–Congo phylum is the largest language family in the world in terms of the number of languages (1,436) it contains.[100] The vast majority of languages of this family are tonal such as Yoruba, Fulani and Igbo. A major branch of Niger–Congo languages is the Bantu family, which covers a greater geographic area than the rest of the family put together. Bantu speakers represent the majority of inhabitants in southern, central and southeastern Africa, though Pygmy, Khoisan (Bushmen), and Nilotic groups, respectively, can also be found in those regions. Bantu-speakers can also be found in parts of Central Africa such as the Gabon, Equatorial Guinea and southern Cameroon. Swahili, a Bantu language with many Arabic, Persian and other Middle Eastern and South Asian loan words, developed as a lingua franca for trade between the different peoples in southeastern Africa. In the Kalahari Desert of Southern Africa, the distinct people known as the Bushmen (also "San", closely related to, but distinct from "Hottentots") have long been present. The San evince unique physical traits, and are the indigenous people of southern Africa. Pygmies are the pre-Bantu indigenous peoples of central Africa.

The Nilo-Saharan languages are concentrated in the upper parts of the Chari and Nile rivers. They are principally spoken by Nilotic peoples and are also spoken in Sudan among the Fur, Masalit, Nubian and Zaghawa peoples and in West and Central Africa among the Songhai and Kanuri. The Old Nubian language is also a member of this phylum.

File:TrekBoerPortrait.jpg
Afrikaner Trekboers in the Karoo of South Africa.

South Africa has the largest populations of Whites, Indians and Coloureds in Africa. The term "Coloured" is used to describe persons of mixed race in South Africa and Namibia. People of European descent in South Africa include the Afrikaner and a sizeable populations of Anglo-Africans and Portuguese Africans. Madagascar's population is predominantly of mixed Austronesian (Pacific Islander) and African origin. The area of southern Sudan is inhabited by Nilotic people.

List of major languages of Sub-Saharan Africa by region, family and total number of native speakers in millions:

Eastern Africa
Saho women.
Maasai women and children.
Western Africa
A Hausa harpist
Southern Africa
Zulus in traditional garment.
Central Africa

Religion

Sub-Saharan Africa is largely Christian, while North Africa is predominantly Muslim. However, there are Muslim majorities in the Sahel and Sudan regions and along the East African coast (Muslim majorities in The Gambia, Sierra Leone, Guinea, Mali, Niger, Senegal, Somalia; comparable numbers of Christians and Muslims in Chad, Nigeria, Burkina Faso and Côte d'Ivoire with significant Muslim communities in Ethiopia, Tanzania and Eritrea).[102] Traditional African religions can be broken into down linguistic cultural groups, with common themes. Among Niger–Congo-speakers is a belief in a creator God; ancestor spirits; territorial spirits; evil caused by human ill will and neglecting ancestor spirits; priest of territorial spirits. New world religions such as Santería, Vodun, and Candomblé, would be derived from this world view. Among Nilo-Saharan speakers is the belief in Divinity; evil is caused by divine judgement and retribution; prophets as middlemen between Divinity and man. Among Afro-Asiatic-speakers is henotheism, the belief in one's own gods but accepting the existence of other gods; evil here is caused by malevolent spirits. The Semitic Abrahamic religion of Judaism is comparable to the latter world view.[103] Khoisan religion is non-theistic but a belief in a Spirit or Power of existence which can be tapped in a trance-dance; trance-healers.[104]

Traditional Sub-Saharan African religion displays very complex ontology, cosmology, and metaphysics. Mythologies, for example, demonstrated the difficulty fathers of creation had in bringing about order from chaos. Order is what is right and natural and any deviation is chaos. Sub-Saharan cosmology and ontology is neither simple or linear. It defines duality, the material and immaterial, male and female, heaven and earth. Common principles of being and becoming are widespread: Among the Dogon, the principle of Amma (being) and Nummo (becoming), among the Bambara Pemba (being) and Faro (becoming),[105]

Ifá divination and its four digit binary code
West Africa
Central Africa
East Africa
Southern Africa

Sub-Saharan traditional divination systems displays great sophistication. For example the bamana sand divinition uses well establish symbolic codes that can be reproduce using four bits or marks. A binary system of one or two marks are combined. Random outcomes are generated using a fractal recursive process. It is analogous to a digital circuit but can be reproduced on any surface with one or two marks. This system is widespread in Sub-Saharan Africa.[106]

Music

Traditional Sub-Saharan African music is as diverse as the region's various populations. The common perception of Sub-Saharan African music is that it is rhythmic music centered around the drums. It is partially true. A large part of Sub-Saharan music, mainly among speakers of Niger–Congo and Nilo-Saharan languages, is rhythmic and centered around the drum. Sub-Saharan music is polyrhythmic, usually consisting of multiple rhythms in one composition. Dance involves moving multiple body parts. These aspect of Sub-Saharan music has been transferred to the new world by enslaved Sub-Saharan Africans and can be seen in its influence on music forms as Samba, Jazz, Rhythm and Blues, Rock & Roll, Salsa, Reggae and Rap music.[107]

But Sub-Saharan music involves a lot of music with strings, horns, and very little poly-rhythms. Music from the eastern sahel and along the nile, among the Nilo-Saharan, made extensive use of strings and horns in ancient times. Among the Afro-Asiatics, we see extensive use of string instruments. Dancing involve swaying body movements and footwork. Among the Khoisans extensive use of string instruments with emphasis on footwork.[108]

Modern Sub-Saharan African music has been influence by music from the New World (Jazz, Salsa, Rhythm and Blues etc.) vice-versa being influenced by enslaved Sub-Saharan Africans. Popular styles are Mbalax in Senegal and Gambia, Highlife in Ghana, Zoblazo in Côte d'Ivoire, Makossa in Cameroon, Soukous in the Democratic Republic of Congo, Kizomba in Angola, and Mbaqanga in South Africa. New World styles like Salsa, R&B/Rap, Reggae, and Zouk also have widespread popularity.

Art

The oldest abstract art in the world is a shell necklace dated 82,000 years in the Cave of Pigeons in Taforalt, eastern Morocco.[109] The second oldest abstract form of art and the oldest rock art is found in the Blombos Cave at the Cape in South Africa, dated 77,000 years.[110] Sub-saharan Africa has some of the oldest and most varied style of rock art in the world.[111]

Although Sub-saharan African art is very diverse there are some common themes. One is the use of the human figure. Second, there is a preference for sculpture. Sub-saharan art is meant to be experience in three dimensions, not two. A house is meant to be experienced from all angles. Third, art is meant to be performed. Sub-saharan Africans have specific name for mask. The name incorporates the sculpture, the dance, and the spirit that incorporates the mask. The name denotes all three elements. Fourth, art that serves a practical function, utilitarian. The artist and craftsman are not separate. A sculpture shaped like a hand can be used as a stool. Fifth, the use of fractals or non-linear scaling. The shape of the whole is the shape of the parts at different scales. Before the discovery of fractal geometry], Louis Senghor, Senegal's first president, referred to this as "dynamic symmetry." William Fagg, the British art historian, compared it to the logarithmic mapping of natural growth by biologist D’Arcy Thompson. Lastly, Sub-saharan art is visually abstract, instead of naturalistic. Sub-saharan art represents spiritual notions, social norms, ideas, values, etc. An artist might exaggerated the head of a sculpture in relations to the body not because he does not know anatomy but because he wants to illustrate that the head is the seat of knowledge and wisdom. The visual abstraction of African art was very influential in the works of modernist artist like Pablo Picasso, Henri Matisse, and Jacques Lipchitz.[112][113]

Cuisine

Ugali and cabbage

Sub-Saharan African cuisine like everything about Africa is very diverse. A lot of regional overlapping occurs, but there are dominant elements region by region.

A plate of fufu accompanied with peanut soup

West African cuisine can be described as starchy, flavorfully spicey. Dishes include fufu, kenkey, couscous, garri, foutou, and banku. Ingredients are of native starchy tubers, yams, cocoyams, and cassava. Grains include millet, sorghum, and rice, usually in the sahel, are incorporated. Oils include palm oil and shea butter(sahel). One finds recipes that mixes fish and meat. Beverages are palm wine(sweet or sour) and millet beer. Roasting, baking, boiling, frying, mashing, and spicing are all cooking techniques.

East African cuisine reflects its Islamic, geographical Indian Ocean cultural links. Dishes include ugali, injera, wat, sukumi wiki, and halva. Spices such as curry, saffron, cloves, cinnamon, pomegranate juice, cardamon, ghee, and sage are used, especially among Muslims. Meat includes cattle, sheep, and goats, but is rarely eaten since its viewed as currency and wealth.

In the Horn of Africa, pork and non-fish seafood is avoided by Christians and Muslims. Dairy products and all meats are avoided during lent by Ethiopians. Maize (corn) is a major staple . Cornmeal is used to make ugali, a popular dish with different names. Teff is used to make injera or canjeero (Somali) bread. Other important foods include enset, noog, lentils, rice, banana, leafy greens, chiles, peppers, cocconut milk and tomatoes. Beverages are coffee (domesticated in Ethiopia), chai tea, fermented beer from banana or millet. Cooking techniques include roasting and marinating.

This meal, consisting of injera and several kinds of wat (stew), is typical of Ethiopian and Eritrean cuisine.

Central African cuisine connects with all major regions of Sub-Saharan Africa: Its cuisine reflects that. Ugali and fufu are eaten in the region. Central African cuisine is very starchy and spicy hot. Dominant crops include plantains, cassava, peanuts, chillis, and okra. Meats include beef, chicken, and sometimes exotic meats called bush meat (antelope, warthog, crocodile). Widespread spicy hot fish cuisine is one of the differentiating aspects. Mushroom is sometimes used as a meat substitute.

Traditional Southern African cuisine surrounds meat. Traditional society typically focused on raising, sheep, goats, and especially cattle. Dishes include braai (barbecue meat), sadza, bogobe, pap (fermented cornmeal), milk products (buttermilk, yoghurt). Crops utilized are sorghum, maize (corn), pumpkin beans, leafy greens, and cabbage. Beverages include ting (fermented sorghum or maize), milk, chibuku (milky beer). Influences from the Indian and Malay community can be seen its use of curries, sambals, pickled fish, fish stews, chutney, and samosa. European influences can be seen in cuisines like biltong (dried beef strips), potjies (stews of maize, onions, tomatoes), French wines, and crueler or koeksister (sugar syrup cookie).

Clothing

Kangas
A man wearing a Boubou and woman wearing a Kaftan.
The Ashanti Kente cloth patterns

Like most of the world, Sub-Saharan Africans have adopted Western-style clothing. In some country like Zambia, used Western clothing has flooded markets, causing great angst in the retail community. Sub-Saharan Africa boasts its own traditional clothing style. Cotton seems to be the dominant material.

In East Africa, one finds extensive use cotton clothing. Shemma, shama, and kuta are types of Ethiopian clothing. Kanga are Swahili cloth that comes in rectangular shapes, made of pure cotton, and put together to make clothing. Kitenges are similar to kangas and kikoy, but are of a thicker cloth, and have an edging only on a long side. Kenya, Uganda, Tanzania, and South Sudan are some of the African countries where kitenge is worn. In Malawi, Namibia and Zambia, kitenge is known as Chitenge. One of the unique materials, which is not a fiber and is used to make clothing is barkcloth, an innovation of the baganda people of Uganda. It came from the Mutuba tree (Ficus natalensis).[114] On Madagascar a type of draped cloth called lamba is worn.

In West Africa, again cotton is the material of choice. In the Sahel and other parts of West Africa the boubou and kaftan style of clothing are featured. Kente cloth is created by the Akan people of Ghana and Côte d'Ivoire, from silk of the various moth species in West Africa. Kente comes from the The Ashanti twi word kenten which means basket. It is sometimes used to make dashiki and kufi. Adire is a type of Yoruba cloth that is starch resistant. Raffia cloth and barkcloth are also utilized in the region.

In Central Africa, the Kuba people developed raffia cloth from the raffia plant fibers. It was widely used in the region. Barkcloth was also extensively used.

In Southern Africa one finds numerous uses of animal hide and skins for clothing. The Ndau in central Mozambique and the Shona mix hide with barkcloth and cotton cloth. Cotton cloth is referred to as machira. Xhosa, Tswana, Sotho, and Swazi also made extensive use of hides. Hides come from cattle, sheep, goat, and elephant. Leopard skins were coveted and were a symbol of kingship in Zulu society. Skins were tanned to form leather, dyed, and embedded with beads.

Sports

Football (soccer) is the most popular sport in Sub-Saharan Africa. Sub-Saharan men are its main patrons. Major leagues are the African Champions League, a gathering of various football clubs. Africa Cup of Nations is a gathering of 16 teams from various African nations held every two years (20 January – 10 February 2008). The Confederation Cup is a competition for the National Cup winner in each African country. Finals are in November. Cameroon played in the World Cup for the sixth time, a record for a Sub-saharan team. South Africa hosted the 2010 FIFA World Cup, a first for a Sub-Saharan country. In 1996 Nigeria won the gold for football, a momentous achievement for Sub-Saharan African football. Famous Sub-saharan football stars are Emmanuel Adebayor, Obafemi Martins, Michael Essien, Didier Drogba, Kanu Nwankwo Jay-Jay Okocha, Taye Taiwo and Samuel Eto'o Fils. The most talented Sub-saharan African football players find themselves courted and sought after by European leagues. There are currently more than 1000 Africans playing for European clubs. Sub-Saharan Africans have found themselves the target of racism by European fans. FIFA has been trying hard to crack down on racist outburst during games.[115][116][117]

Rugby is also popular in Sub-Saharan Africa. The Confederation of African Rugby governs rugby games in the region and chooses the best team to play in the Rugby World Cup. South Africa is a major force in the game and won the championship in 2007.

Boxing is also a popular sport in Sub-Saharan Africa with a long history with Senegalese born fighter Battling Siki the first world champion to come out of Sub-Saharan Africa. Countries such as Nigeria, Ghana and South Africa have produced numerous professional world champions such as Dick Tiger, Hogan Bassey, Samuel Peter, Azumah Nelson and Jake Matlala.

Cricket has a following. The African Cricket Association is an international body which oversees cricket in African countries. South Africa and Zimbabwe have their own governing bodies. In 2003 the Cricket World Cup was held in South Africa, first time it was held in Sub-Saharan Africa.

Over the years, Ethiopia and Kenya have produced many notable long-distance athletes. Each country has federations that identify and cultivate top talent. Athletes from Ethiopia and Kenya hold all the distance records (except the 1500 metres) from 800m to the marathon.[118] Famous runners are Haile Gebrselassie, Kenenisa Bekele, Paul Tergat, and John Cheruiyot Korir.[119]

List of countries and regional organization

Only eight African countries are not geopolitically a part of Sub-Saharan Africa: Algeria, Egypt, Libya, Morocco, Tunisia, Western Sahara (claimed by Morocco), Sudan and South Sudan, they form the UN subregion of Northern Africa which also makes up the largest bloc of the Arab World. Nevertheless, many international organizations include Sudan and South Sudan as part of Sub-Saharan Africa. Although a long-standing member of the Arab League, Sudan has around 30% non-Arab populations in the west (Darfur, Masalit, Zaghawa), far north (Nubian) and south (Kordofan, Nuba).[120][121][122][123][124][125][126] Likewise in South Sudan the majority of the population is non-Arab and the since succession the state has not indicated any interest in re-joining the Arab League.[127] For these reasons, these countries are often included as part of Sub-Saharan Africa, while indisputably also part of North Africa. Mauritania and Niger only include a band of the Sahel along their southern borders. All other African countries have at least significant portions of their territory within Sub-Saharan Africa.

West Africa

  Western Africa (UN subregion)
ECOWAS (Economic Community of West African States)
UEMOA (West African Economic and Monetary Union)

Central Africa

  Central Africa
  Middle Africa (UN subregion)
ECCAS (Economic Community of Central African States)
CEMAC (Economic and Monetary Community of Central Africa)

East Africa

  Eastern Africa (UN subregion)
  Geographic East Africa, including the UN subregion and East African Community

Sudan

Depending on classification Sudan and South Sudan are often not considered part of Sub-Saharan Africa, as they are considered part of North Africa.

East African Community

Horn of Africa

Southern Africa and SADC

  Southern Africa (UN subregion)
  geographic, including above

See also

Notes

  1. ^ "Classification of Sudan in both North and Sub-Africa". Unstats.un.org. 20 September 2011. "The designation sub-Saharan Africa is commonly used to indicate all of Africa except northern Africa, with Sudan included in sub-Saharan Africa." This classification predates the secession of South Sudan from Sudan.
  2. ^ "Political definition of "Major regions", according to the UN". Retrieved 15 December 2010.
  3. ^ a b Tajudeen Abdul Raheem, ed., Pan Africanism: Politics, Economy and Social Change in the Twenty First Century, Pluto Press, London, 1996.
  4. ^
  5. ^
  6. ^ Van Zinderen Bakker E. M. (14 April 1962). "A Late-Glacial and Post-Glacial Climatic Correlation between East Africa and Europe". Nature. 194 (4824): 201–203. Bibcode:1962Natur.194..201V. doi:10.1038/194201a0.
  7. ^ so e.g. Africa Works: Disorder as Political Instrument (1999, ISBN 0-85255-814-7), p. xxi: "what is usually called Black Africa — that is the former European colonies lying south of the Sahara".
  8. ^ a b c d e Raunig, Walter (2005). Afrikas Horn: Akten der Ersten Internationalen Littmann-Konferenz 2. bis 5. Mai 2002 in München. Otto Harrassowitz Verlag. p. 130. ISBN 3-447-05175-2. ancient Arabic geography had quite a fixed pattern in listing the countries from the Red Sea to the Indian Ocean: These are al-Misr (Egypt) -- al-Muqurra (or other designations for Nubian kingdoms) -- al-Habasha (Abyssinia) -- Barbara (Berber, i.e. the Somali coast) -- Zanj (Azania, i.e. the country of the "blacks"). Correspondingly almost all these terms (or as I believe: all of them!) also appear in ancient and medieval Chinese geography
  9. ^ International Association for the History of Religions (1959), Numen, Leiden: EJ Brill, p. 131, West Africa may be taken as the country stretching from Senegal in the west, to the Cameroons in the east; sometimes it has been called the central and western Sudan, the Bilad as-Sūdan, 'Land of the Blacks', of the Arabs
  10. ^ a b Nehemia Levtzion, Randall Lee Pouwels, The History of Islam in Africa, (Ohio University Press, 2000), p.255.
  11. ^ a b F.R.C. Bagley et al., The Last Great Muslim Empires, (Brill: 1997), p.174
  12. ^ Bethwell A. Ogot, Zamani: A Survey of East African History, (East African Publishing House: 1974), p.104
  13. ^ Sven Rubenson, The survival of Ethiopian independence, (Tsehai, 2003), p.30.
  14. ^ Jonah Blank, Mullahs on the mainframe: Islam and modernity among the Daudi Bohras, (University of Chicago Press, 2001), p.163.
  15. ^ James Hastings, Encyclopedia of Religion and Ethics Part 12: V. 12, (Kessinger Publishing, LLC: 2003), p.490
  16. ^ "Pambazuka Online". Pambazuka. {{cite web}}: Text "African agency." ignored (help)
  17. ^ "[[Chika Onyeani]]". Africannewsworld.com. {{cite web}}: URL–wikilink conflict (help)
  18. ^ "Language and reality". Owen Alik Shahadah, African Holocaust Society. Retrieved 4 January 2007.
  19. ^ "www.africa-union.org". www.africa-union.org.
  20. ^ Thompson, Lloyd A. (1989). Romans and blacks. Taylor & Francis. p. 57. ISBN 0-415-03185-0.
  21. ^ Shillington, Kevin(2005). History of Africa, Rev. 2nd Ed. New York: Palgrave Macmillan, p. 2, ISBN 0-333-59957-8.
  22. ^ a b Shillington, Kevin(2005). History of Africa, Rev. 2nd Ed. New York: Palgrave Macmillan, p. 2-3, ISBN 0-333-59957-8.
  23. ^ Shillington, Kevin(2005). History of Africa, Rev. 2nd Ed. New York: Palgrave Macmillan, p. 3, ISBN 0-333-59957-8.
  24. ^ Ehret, Christopher (2002). The Civilizations of Africa. Charlottesville: University of Virginia, pp. 22, ISBN 0-8139-2085-X.
  25. ^ The genetic studies by Luca Cavalli-Sforza are considered pioneering in tracing the spread of modern humans from Africa.
  26. ^ Sarah A. Tishkoff,* Floyd A. Reed, Françoise R. Friedlaender, Christopher Ehret, Alessia Ranciaro, Alain Froment, Jibril B. Hirbo, Agnes A. Awomoyi, Jean-Marie Bodo, Ogobara Doumbo, Muntaser Ibrahim, Abdalla T. Juma, Maritha J. Kotze, Godfrey Lema, Jason H. Moore, Holly Mortensen, Thomas B. Nyambo, Sabah A. Omar, Kweli Powell, Gideon S. Pretorius, Michael W. Smith, Mahamadou A. Thera, Charles Wambebe, James L. Weber, Scott M. Williams. The Genetic Structure and History of Africans and African Americans. Published 30 April 2009 on Science Express.
  27. ^ Stearns, Peter N. (2001) The Encyclopedia of World History, Houghton Mifflin Books. p. 16. ISBN 0-395-65237-5.
  28. ^ Collins, Robert O. and Burns, James. M(2007). A History of Sub-saharan Africa. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, p. 62, ISBN 978-0-521-86746-7
  29. ^ Davidson, Basil. Africa History, Themes and Outlines, revised and expanded edition. New York: Simon and Schuster, p. 54, ISBN 0-684-82667-4.
  30. ^ Shillington, Kevin(2005). History of Africa, Rev. 2nd Ed. New York: Palgrave Macmillan, p. 47, ISBN 0-333-59957-8.
  31. ^ McEvedy, Colin (1980) Atlas of African History, p. 44. ISBN 0-87196-480-5.
  32. ^ "AncientSudan.org". AncientSudan.org.
  33. ^ Mokhtar (editor), AnciGent Civilizations of Africa Vo. II, General History of Africa, UNESCO, 1990
  34. ^ Oman in history By Peter Vine Page 324
  35. ^ Shaping of Somali society Lee Cassanelli pg.92
  36. ^ Futuh Al Habash Shibab ad Din
  37. ^ Sudan Notes and Records – Page 147
  38. ^ African Archaeological Review, Volume 15, Number 3, September 1998, pp. 199-218(20)
  39. ^ Portuguese rule and Spanish crown in South Africa, 1581–1640 – Page 25
  40. ^ Davidson, Basil. Africa History, Themes and Outlines, revised and expanded edition. New York: Simon and Schuster, pp. 87-107, ISBN 0-684-82667-4.
  41. ^ Wesler,Kit W.(1998). Historical archaeology in Nigeria. Africa World Press pp.143,144 ISBN 0-86543-610-X, 9780865436107.
  42. ^ Pearce, Fred. African Queen. New Scientist, 11 September 1999, Issue 2203.
  43. ^ "The Slave Trade". Countrystudies.us.
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References

  • Taking Action to Reduce Poverty in Sub-Saharan Africa, World Bank Publications (1997), ISBN 0-8213-3698-3.

Further reading

  • Petringa, Maria: Brazza, A Life for Africa. Bloomington, Indiana: AuthorHouse, 2006. ISBN 978-1-4259-1198-0
  • Wm. Roger Louis and Jean Stengers: E.D. Morel's History of the Congo Reform Movement, Clarendon Press Oxford, 1968.