While Europe built cathedrals and Asia's silk roads hummed with commerce, West Africa was doing something the history books have largely ignored - constructing the medieval world's most sophisticated political systems, richest trading networks, and most enduring empires.
Most readers know the names Ghana, Mali, Songhai. Few know what lay beyond them.
Queens, Merchants, and Empires recovers the forgotten kingdoms whose achievements rival anything the medieval world produced. The Kanem-Bornu empire outlasted every European dynasty of its era, maintaining political continuity for nearly a thousand years through institutional arrangements whose sophistication modern scholars are still mapping. The Hausa city-states built commercial networks stretching from the Mediterranean to the forest zone, their merchant princes handling credit, currency, and long-distance trade with a precision that would not look out of place in a Renaissance counting house. Among them rose warrior queens like Amina of Zaria, who conquered territory from horseback and whose name the Hausa world has never forgotten. The Mossi kingdoms defied the most powerful religious and military force in the medieval Sahel - not through weakness, but through a political intelligence that recognised exactly what Islam offered and exactly what it threatened.
These were not primitive societies waiting for history to happen to them. They were history - generating it, shaping it.
The story of medieval West Africa has been hiding in plain sight. It is time it was told.
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