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Emeka

by Rhenish History Gr 10

Pages 4 and 5 of 5

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Landmark
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The architectural remains of the Songhai Empire’s mosques
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The landmarks left behind from the Songhai Empire are mostly in the style of traditional West Africa Sahel, along with influences from muslim builders. These buildings were flat roofed, rectangular and built of pear shaped mud bricks and stone called tabali. We can also see the remnants of some decoration, with calligraphy and shapes painted onto the house’s facades.

There are also many mosques still surviving, which often display the merging of the islamic and indigenous ancestral shrines. These are for example the Ziggarut in Gao, the Komoguel Mosque in Mopti, and what is widely considered one of the greatest achievements of this style, the Great Mosque of Djenné.
 
Perhaps the most well preserved example is connected to a complex of mosques, called the Tomb of Askia, which was built around 1495 by Songhai Emperor Askia Mohamed. The UNESCO site contains two mosques, a necropolis, white stone square, and what is rumoured to be where Askia Mohammed was laid to rest. The tomb is shaped like a pyramid with steps and large wood timbers sticking out, which allowed the builders easy access to reinforce the walls following heavy rains. However, like many landmarks from the past, it faces many challenges in terms of environmental damage, as well as socio-political uncertainty. 
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Learning
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Manuscripts and scholarships
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When Askia Mohammed returned from Haji, he brought with scholars from Egypt and Morocco to create learning institutions for the Songhai people. The Sankore Madrasah was one of many religious schools in the empire. Askia was also very interested in astronomy, which led to astronomers living within the capitol. 

He encouraged the development of learning and scholarship in Songhai. Scholars traveled from all over the world to the university of Sankore in Timbuktu to study the numerous manuscripts there. The works of ancient philosophers like Aristotle and Plato were translated there in Arabic and made available for study at Sankore. The city of Jenne was another centre of learning in Songhai. It had a university with thousands of teachers that taught and researched medicine, theology, law, grammar, astronomy, history and geography and many other academic subjects 
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